We’re Marching and Singing to Zion…Pt 1

“Come, we that love the Lord, and let our joys be known; Join in a song with sweet accord and thus surround the throne.…”  This spiritual song, written by Isaac Watts, is more than 300 years old and yet it still admonishes the Christian to stay faithful as we’re ‘Marching to Zion.’  Singing we strive to praise God and encourage His people, but how do we do that effectively and in a pleasing manner?

As a child of God you know the importance of singing songs of praise and edification.  Many who are reading this article identify with the song above and truly believe its message.  Every Sunday morning world-wide, we come together and strive to fulfill Ephesians 5 & Colossians 3.  But in a culture where singers are evaluated as ‘Idols,’ and singing is ‘best left to the professionals,’ we tend to listen and judge rather than praise and sing. We consider one voice better than another and place more value on the ‘talent’ of an individual while burying our own God-given talents.  To be honest… that’s a mistake. It fails to follow the pattern set forth in Bible.  Singing songs of praise and admonishing one another is the expectation we have in the Lord’s church.

In hopes of teaching valuable lessons of God’s love and stirring the hearts of those who hear, we sing psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs.  This commentary is written to help us look at the blessings we find in singing. Since the Lord commands us to worship Him in spirit and in truth (John 4:24), we must ask ourselves this basic question: “As I’m marching to Zion, how do I sing and truly worship God in spirit and in truth?”

To learn the truth about Christian worship in song, we go to the New Testament. Consider for a moment I Corinthians 14:15 & 26: “I will sing with the spirit and I will sing with the mind also…What is the outcome then, brethren?  When you assemble, each one has a psalm, has a teaching, has a revelation, has a tongue, has an interpretation.  Let all things be done for edification.”  Have you thought about your singing when it comes to your mind?  Do you think about what you’re singing?  Singing by rote (repetition) is singing by memory. We learn to drive, write, walk, and talk by rote.  It is the same with singing.  We memorize songs by singing them over and over and over again.  But in so doing we often sing without thinking what we’re saying.  Check yourself to see if you know what you’re singing by asking yourself these questions:

 

*How is God’s goodness ‘like a fetter’? (Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing) 
*Is there Biblical support for referring to Jesus as a “rose of Sharon”?  (Jesus, Rose of Sharon)
*Do you know how to arm yourself with “the panoply of God”? (Soldiers of Christ, Arise) 
*And what is the ‘standard’ that He, Jesus, has raised? (The Battle Belongs to the Lord) 

 

Brothers and sisters…I truly believe we need to investigate the meaning of our songs, ask ourselves what we’re singing, and teach our young people the meaning behind the songs we sing.  “How shall the young secure their hearts and guard their lives from sin?”  If we are to ‘sing with the mind also’ we must know what we’re singing. Too many times we just toss those old songs out, or sing the new ones without thinking, because we don’t truly know what they mean.  Brethren, we can’t afford to make that kind of mistake, because there are dangers when we just ‘go through the motions’ in worship.