Isaac Watts is
generally considered the “Father of English Hymnody.” Before his day
Psalmody reigned virtually unopposed in the public and private praises of
English Christians. In spite of some dissatisfaction with the current state of
Psalmody sporadic efforts to introduce hymns had met with such limited
acceptance that hymnody seemed doomed to perpetual failure. Religious poetry was
popular and some of it was being turned into hymns despite the authors intention
to the contrary. Yet most of this incipient hymnody was for private and personal
use. To date hymnody had no place in the public worship of God. Watts is the
person who changed all that. “For him it was reserved to overthrow the tyranny
of Psalmody.”[1]
It is therefore important to study not only the man, but also his times. The
nature of his era is well articulated by Brawley.
“The
early years of the eighteenth century were in England a period of materialism
and compromise. A spirit of self-interest pervaded both church and state, and
principle was subordinated to expediency. The day of Puritanism was over;
complacency succeeded a great war of ideals; faith retreated before the sway of
Deism…by the close of the seventeenth century the Psalters were losing
ground.”[2]
It was in this
cultural setting that Watts made his successful onslaught on Psalmody. Most
people are familiar with how Watts (1674-1748) got his start in hymnody as a
teenager.
“When
Watts complained one day about the untuneful Psalm–versions that were sung in
his father’s church, one of the church officers retorted, “give us something
better, young man.” Watts was just in the mood to take up the challenge, and
although he was quite young, he wrote a new hymn, “Behold the Glories of the
Lamb.” Sung the following Sunday, it was so highly praised that the youthful
poet decided to write others. In the next two years he composed nearly all the
210 hymns in his volume “Hymns and Spiritual Songs,” Published in 1707. This
was the first real hymn-book in the English language.”[3]
It hardly inspires
us with confidence that English hymnody got its biggest boost when a church
flippantly turned the matter of its praise over to a discontented teenager.
However, young as he may have been, Watts was no fool. He had a well thought out
philosophy with respect to both the Scriptures in general and the matter of
God’s praises in particular. It is to these views that we can attribute his
lifelong campaign to replace the Psalms in the worship of God.
In
the preface to his Hymns and Spiritual
Songs Watts definitively and
clearly sets forth his views with respect to the Psalms. The title itself is
instructive in that regard. He has obviously not only rejected the historic view
that the Biblical phrase “Psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs” refers to the
contents of the Psalter, but he eliminated the Psalms while he was at it.
Watts was not merely a well-known and successful hymnist. He was the man who introduced hymnody into the evagelical churches of the English speaking world. And his motovation was his hatred of the Psalms. His motivation was his dispensational rejection of the Old Testament in general and the Book of Psalms in particular. His purpose was to destroy the reigning psalmody and replace the inspired songs of the Spirit with the compositions of men, particularly his own. It is in this context that his lifes work must be seen and judged.
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[1] Phillips, Op. cited, p. 166. His sentiment is typical of defenders of hymnody and demonstrates their antipathy to the divine Songs of Zion. Elsewhere he states of Watts’ opposition to the Psalms, “Thus the tyranny of the Genevan principle of ‘The Bible and the Bible only’ was swept away.” (See p. 167).
[2] Brawley, Op. cited, p. 67.
[3] Cecelia Margaret Rudin, Stories of Hymns We Love, John Rudin & Co., 1944, p. 9.
[4] Brawley, Op. cited, pp. 69-70.
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