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			 HEZEKIAH: THE RELIGIOUS 
			VALUE OF MUSIC 
			2 Chronicles 29-32 
			THE bent of the chronicler’s mind is well illustrated by the 
			proportion of space assigned to ritual by him and by the book of 
			Kings respectively. In the latter a few lines only are devoted to 
			ritual, and the bulk of the space is given to the invasion of 
			Sennacherib, the embassy from Babylon, etc., while in Chronicles 
			ritual occupies about three times as many verses as personal and 
			public affairs. 
			 
			Hezekiah, though not blameless, was all but perfect in his loyalty 
			to Jehovah. The chronicler reproduces the customary formula for a 
			good king: "He did that which was right in the eyes of Jehovah, 
			according to all that David his father had done"; but his cautious 
			judgment rejects the somewhat rhetorical statement in Kings that 
			"after him was none like him among all the kings of Judah, nor any 
			that were before him." 
			 
			Hezekiah’s policy was made clear immediately after his accession. 
			His zeal for reformation could tolerate no delay; the first month of 
			the first year of his reign saw him actively engaged in the good 
			work. It was no light task that lay before him. Not only were there 
			altars in every corner of Jerusalem and idolatrous high places in 
			every city of Judah, but the Temple services had ceased, the lamps 
			were put out, the sacred vessels cut in pieces, the Temple had been 
			polluted and then closed, and the priests and Levites were 
			scattered. Sixteen years of licensed idolatry must have fostered all 
			that was vile in the country, have put wicked men in authority, and 
			created numerous vested interests connected by close ties with 
			idolatry, notably the priests of all the altars and high places. On 
			the other hand, the reign of Ahaz had been an unbroken series of 
			disasters; the people had repeatedly endured the horrors of 
			invasion. His government as time went on must have become more and 
			more unpopular, for when he died he was not buried in the sepulchers 
			of the kings. As idolatry was a prominent feature of his policy, 
			there would be a reaction in favor of the worship of Jehovah, and 
			there would not be wanting true believers to tell the people that 
			their sufferings were a consequence of idolatry. To a large party in 
			Judah Hezekiah’s reversal of his father’s religious policy would be 
			as welcome as Elizabeth’s declaration against Rome was to most 
			Englishmen. 
			 
			Hezekiah began by opening and repairing the doors of the Temple. Its 
			closed doors had been a symbol of the national repudiation of 
			Jehovah; to reopen them was necessarily the first step in the 
			reconciliation of Judah to its God, but only the first step. The 
			doors were open as a sign that Jehovah was invited to return to His 
			people and again to manifest His presence in the Holy of holies, so 
			that through those open doors Israel might have access to Him by 
			means of the priests. But the Temple was as yet no fit place for the 
			presence of Jehovah. With its lamps extinguished, its sacred vessels 
			destroyed, its floors and walls thick with dust and full of all 
			filthiness, it was rather a symbol of the apostasy of Judah. 
			Accordingly Hezekiah sought the help of the Levites. It is true that 
			he is first said to have collected together priests and Levites, but 
			from that point onward the priests are almost entirely ignored. 
			 
			Hezekiah reminded the Levites of the misdoings of Ahaz and his 
			adherents and the wrath which they had brought upon Judah and 
			Jerusalem; he told them it was his purpose to conciliate Jehovah by 
			making a covenant with Him; he appealed to them as the chosen 
			ministers of Jehovah and His temple to co-operate heartily in this 
			good work. 
			 
			The Levites responded to his appeal apparently rather in acts than 
			words. No spokesman replies to the king’s speech, but with prompt 
			obedience they set about their work forthwith; they arose, 
			Kohathites, sons of Merari, Gershonites, sons of Elizaphan, Asaph, 
			Heman, and Jeduthun-the chronicler has a Homeric fondness for 
			catalogues of high-sounding names - the leaders of all these 
			divisions are duly mentioned. Kohath, Gershon, and Merari are well 
			known as the three great clans of the house of Levi; and here we 
			find the three guilds of singers-Asaph, Heman, and Jeduthun-placed 
			on a level with the older clans. Elizaphan was apparently a division 
			of the clan Kohath, which, like the guilds of singers, had obtained 
			an independent status. The result is to recognize seven divisions of 
			the tribe. 
			 
			The chiefs of the Levites gathered their brethren together, and 
			having performed the necessary rites of ceremonial cleansing for 
			themselves, went in to cleanse the Temple; that is to say, the 
			priests went into the holy place and the Holy of holies and brought 
			out "all the uncleanness" into the court, and the Levites carried it 
			away to the brook Kidron: but before the building itself could be 
			reached eight days were spent in cleansing the courts, and then the 
			priests went into the Temple itself and spent eight days in 
			cleansing it, in the manner described above. Then they reported-to 
			the king that the cleansing was finished, and especially that "all 
			the vessels which King Ahaz cast away" had been recovered and 
			reconsecrated with due ceremony. We were told in the previous 
			chapter that Ahaz had cut to pieces the vessels of the Temple, but 
			these may have been other vessels. 
			 
			Then Hezekiah celebrated a great dedication feast; seven bullocks, 
			seven rams, seven lambs, and seven he-goats were offered as a 
			sin-offering for the dynasty, for the Temple, for Judah, and (by 
			special command of the king) for all Israel, i.e., for the northern 
			tribes as well as for Judah and Benjamin. Apparently this 
			sin-offering was made in silence, but afterwards the king set the 
			Levites and priests in their places with their musical instruments, 
			and when the burnt-offering began the song of Jehovah began with the 
			trumpets together with the instruments of David king of Israel. And 
			all the congregation worshipped, and the singers sang, and the 
			trumpeters sounded, and all this continued till the burnt-offering 
			was finished. 
			 
			When the people had been formally reconciled to Jehovah by this 
			representative national sacrifice, and thus purified from the 
			uncleanness of idolatry and consecrated afresh to their God, they 
			were permitted and invited to make individual sacrifices, 
			thank-offerings and burnt-offerings. Each man might enjoy for 
			himself the renewed privilege of access to Jehovah, and obtain the 
			assurance of pardon for his sins, and offer thanksgiving for his own 
			special blessings. And they brought offerings in abundance: seventy 
			bullocks, a hundred rams, and two hundred lambs for a 
			burnt-offering; and six hundred oxen and three thousand sheep for 
			thank-offerings. Thus were the Temple services restored and 
			re-inaugurated; and Hezekiah and the people rejoiced because they 
			felt that this unpremeditated outburst of enthusiasm was due to the 
			gracious influence of the Spirit of Jehovah. 
			 
			The chronicler’s narrative is somewhat marred by a touch of 
			professional jealousy. According to the ordinary ritual, {Lev 1:6} 
			the offerer flayed the burnt-offerings; but for some special reason, 
			perhaps because of the exceptional solemnity of the occasion, this 
			duty now devolved upon the priests. But the burnt-offerings were 
			abundant beyond all precedent; the priests were too few for the 
			work, and the Levites were called in to help them, "for the Levites 
			were more upright in heart to purify themselves than the priests." 
			Apparently even in the second Temple brethren did not always dwell 
			together in unity. 
			 
			Hezekiah had now provided for the regular services of the Temple, 
			and had given the inhabitants of Jerusalem a full opportunity of 
			returning to Jehovah; but the people of the provinces were chiefly 
			acquainted with the Temple through the great annual festivals. 
			These, too, had long been in abeyance; and special steps had to be 
			taken to secure their future observance. In order to do this, it was 
			necessary to recall the provincials to their allegiance to Jehovah. 
			Under ordinary circumstances the great festival of the Passover 
			would have been observed in the first month, but at the time 
			appointed for the paschal feast the Temple was still unclean, and 
			the priests and Levites were occupied in its purification, But 
			Hezekiah could not endure that the first year of his reign should be 
			marked by the omission of this great feast. He took counsel with the 
			princes and public assembly-nothing is said about the priests-and 
			they decided to hold the Passover in the second month instead of the 
			first. We gather from casual allusions in 2Ch 30:6-8 that the 
			kingdom of Samaria had already come to an end; the people had been 
			carried into captivity, and only a remnant were left. in the land. 
			From this point the kings of Judah act as religious heads of the 
			whole nation and territory of Israel. Hezekiah sent invitations to 
			all Israel from Dan to Beersheba. He made special efforts to secure 
			a favorable response from the northern tribes, sending letters to 
			Ephraim and Manasseh, i.e., to the ten tribes under their 
			leadership. He reminded them that their brethren had gone into 
			captivity because the northern tribes had deserted the Temple; and 
			held out to them the hope that, if they worshipped at the Temple and 
			served Jehovah, they should themselves escape further calamity, and 
			their brethren and children who had gone into captivity should 
			return to their own land. 
			 
			"So the posts passed from city to city through the country of 
			Ephraim and Manasseh, even unto Zebulun." Either Zebulun is used in 
			a broad sense for all the Galilean tribes, or the phrase "from 
			Beersheba to Dan" is merely rhetorical, for to the north, between 
			Zebulun and Dan, lay the territories of Asher and Naphtali. It is to 
			be noticed that the tribes beyond Jordan are nowhere referred to; 
			they had already fallen out of the history of Israel, and were 
			scarcely remembered in the time of the chronicler. 
			 
			Hezekiah’s appeal to the surviving communities of the Northern 
			Kingdom failed; they laughed his messengers to scorn, and mocked 
			them; but individuals responded to his invitation in such numbers 
			that they are spoken of as "a multitude of the people, even many of 
			Ephraim and Manasseh, Issachar and Zebulun." There were also men of 
			Asher among the northern pilgrims. {Cf. 2Ch 30:11; 2Ch 30:18} 
			 
			The pious enthusiasm of Judah stood out in vivid contrast to the 
			stubborn impenitence of the majority of the ten tribes. By the grace 
			of God, Judah was of one heart to observe the feast appointed by 
			Jehovah through the king and princes, so that there was gathered in 
			Jerusalem a very great assembly of worshippers, surpassing even the 
			great gatherings which the chronicler had witnessed at the annual 
			feasts. 
			 
			But though the Temple had been cleansed, the Holy City was not yet 
			free from the taint of idolatry. The character of the Passover 
			demanded that not only the Temple, but the whole city, should be 
			pure. The paschal lamb was eaten at home, and the doorposts of the 
			house were sprinkled with its blood. But Ahaz had set up altars at 
			every corner of the city; no devout Israelite could tolerate the 
			symbols of idolatrous worship close to the house in which he 
			celebrated the solemn rites Of the Passover. Accordingly before the 
			Passover was killed these altars were removed. 
			 
			Then the great feast began; but after long years of idolatry neither 
			the people nor the priests and Levites were sufficiently familiar 
			with the rites of the festival to be able to perform them without 
			some difficulty and confusion. As a rule each head of a household 
			killed his own lamb; but many of the worshippers, especially those 
			from the north, were not ceremonially clean: and this task devolved 
			upon the Levites. The immense concourse of worshippers and the 
			additional work thrown upon the Temple ministry must have made 
			extraordinary demands on their zeal and energy. {Cf. 2Ch 29:34; 2Ch 
			30:3} At first apparently they hesitated, and were inclined to 
			abstain from discharging their usual duties. A passover in a month 
			not appointed by Moses, but decided on by the civil authorities 
			without consulting the priesthood, might seem a doubtful and 
			dangerous innovation. Recollecting Azariah’s successful assertion of 
			hierarchical prerogative against Uzziah, they might be inclined to 
			attempt a similar resistance to Hezekiah. But the pious enthusiasm 
			of the people clearly showed that the Spirit of Jehovah inspired 
			their somewhat irregular zeal; so that the ecclesiastical officials 
			were shamed out of their unsympathetic attitude, and came forward to 
			take their full share and even more than their full share in this 
			glorious rededication of Israel to Jehovah. 
			 
			But a further difficulty remained: uncleanness not only disqualified 
			from killing the paschal lambs, but from taking any part in the 
			Passover; and a multitude of the people were unclean. Yet it would 
			have been ungracious and even dangerous to discourage their newborn 
			zeal by excluding them from the festival; moreover, many of them 
			were worshippers from among the ten tribes, who had come in response 
			to a special invitation, which most of their fellow-country-men had 
			rejected with scorn and contempt. If they had been sent back because 
			they had failed to cleanse themselves according to a ritual of which 
			they were ignorant, and of which Hezekiah might have known they 
			would be ignorant, both the king and his guests would have incurred 
			measureless ridicule from the impious northerners. Accordingly they 
			were allowed to take part in the Passover despite their uncleanness. 
			But this permission could only be granted with serious apprehensions 
			as to its consequences. The Law threatened with death any one who 
			attended the services of the sanctuary in a state of uncleanness. 
			{Lev 15:31} Possibly there were already signs of an outbreak of 
			pestilence; at any rate, the dread of Divine punishment for 
			sacrilegious presumption would distress the whole assembly and mar 
			their enjoyment of Divine fellowship. Again it is no priest or 
			prophet, but the king, the Messiah, who comes forward as the 
			mediator between God and man. Hezekiah prayed for them, saying, 
			"Jehovah, in His grace and mercy, pardon every one that setteth his 
			heart to seek Elohim Jehovah, the God of his fathers, though he be 
			not cleansed according to the ritual of the Temple. And Jehovah 
			hearkened to Hezekiah, and healed the people," i.e., either healed 
			them from actual disease or relieved them from the fear of 
			pestilence. 
			 
			And so the feast went on happily and prosperously, and was prolonged 
			by acclamation for an additional seven days. During fourteen days 
			king and princes, priests and Levites, Jews and Israelites, rejoiced 
			before Jehovah; thousands of bullocks and sheep smoked upon the 
			altar; and now the priests were not backward: great numbers purified 
			themselves to serve the popular devotion. The priests and Levites 
			sang and made melody to Jehovah, so that the Levites earned the 
			king’s special commendation. The great festival ended with a solemn 
			benediction: "The priests arose and blessed the people, and their 
			voice was heard, and their prayer came to His holy habitation, even 
			unto heaven." The priests, and through them the people, received the 
			assurance that their solemn and prolonged worship had met with 
			gracious acceptance. 
			 
			We have already more than once had occasion to consider the 
			chronicler’s main theme: the importance of the Temple, its ritual, 
			and its ministers. Incidentally and perhaps unconsciously, he here 
			suggests another lesson, which is specially significant as coming 
			from an ardent ritualist, namely the necessary limitations of 
			uniformity in ritual. Hezekiah’s celebration of the Passover is full 
			of irregularities: it is held in the wrong month; it is prolonged to 
			twice the usual period; there are amongst the worshippers multitudes 
			of unclean persons, whose presence at these services ought to have 
			been visited with terrible punishment. All is condoned on the ground 
			of emergency, and the ritual laws are set aside without consulting 
			the ecclesiastical officials. Everything serves to emphasize the 
			lesson we touched on in connection with David’s sacrifices at the 
			threshing-floor of Ornan the Jebusite: ritual is made for man, and 
			not man for ritual. Complete uniformity may be insisted on in 
			ordinary times, but can be dispensed with in any pressing emergency; 
			necessity knows no law, not even the Torah of the Pentateuch. 
			Moreover, in such emergencies it is not necessary to wait for the 
			initiative or even the sanction of ecclesiastical officials; the 
			supreme authority in the Church in all its great crises resides in 
			the whole body of believers. No one is entitled to speak with 
			greater authority on the limitations of ritual than a strong 
			advocate of the sanctity of ritual like the chronicler; and we may 
			well note, as one of the most conspicuous marks of his inspiration, 
			the sanctified common sense shown by his frank and sympathetic 
			record of the irregularities of Hezekiah’s passover. Doubtless 
			emergencies had arisen even in his own experience of the great 
			feasts of the Temple that had taught him this lesson; and it says 
			much for the healthy tone of the Temple community in his day that he 
			does not attempt to reconcile the practice of Hezekiah with the law 
			of Moses by any harmonistic quibbles. 
			 
			The work of purification and restoration, however, was still 
			incomplete: the Temple had been cleansed from the pollutions of 
			idolatry, the heathen altars had been removed from Jerusalem, but 
			the high places remained in all the cities of Judah. When the 
			Passover was at last finished, the assembled multitude, "all Israel 
			that were present," set out, like the English or Scotch Puritans, on 
			a great iconoclastic expedition. Throughout the length and breadth 
			of the Land of Promise, throughout Judah and Benjamin, Ephraim and 
			Manasseh, they brake in pieces the sacred pillars, and hewed down 
			the Asherim, and brake down the high places and altars; then they 
			went home. 
			 
			Meanwhile Hezekiah was engaged in reorganizing the priests and 
			Levites and arranging for the payment and distribution of the sacred 
			dues. The king set an example of liberality by making provision for 
			the daily, weekly, monthly, and festival offerings. The people were 
			not slow to imitate him; they brought first-fruits and tithes in 
			such abundance that four months were spent in piling up heaps of 
			offerings. 
			 
			"Thus did Hezekiah throughout all Judah; and he wrought that which 
			was good, and right, and faithful before Jehovah his God; and in 
			every work that he began in the service of the Temple, and in the 
			Law, and in the commandments, to seek his God, he did it with all 
			his heart, and brought it to a successful issue." 
			 
			Then follow an account of the deliverance from Sennacherib and of 
			Hezekiah’s recovery from sickness, a reference to his undue pride in 
			the matter of the embassy from Babylon, and a description of the 
			prosperity of his reign, all for the most part abridged from the 
			book of Kings. The prophet Isaiah, however, is almost ignored. A few 
			of the more important modifications deserve some little attention. 
			We are told that the Assyrian invasion was "after these things and 
			this faithfulness," in order that we may not forget that the Divine 
			deliverance was a recompense for Hezekiah’s loyalty to Jehovah. 
			While the book of Kings tells us that Sennacherib took all the 
			fenced cities of Judah, the chronicler feels that even this measure 
			of misfortune would not have been allowed to befall a king who had 
			just reconciled Israel to Jehovah, and merely says that Sennacherib 
			purposed to break these cities up. 
			 
			The chronicler has preserved an account of the measures taken by 
			Hezekiah for the defense of his capital: how he stopped up the 
			fountains and water-courses outside the city, so that a besieging 
			army might not find water, and repaired and strengthened the walls, 
			and encouraged his people to trust in Jehovah. 
			 
			Probably the stopping of the water supply outside the walls was 
			connected with an operation mentioned at the close of the narrative 
			of Hezekiah’s reign: "Hezekiah also stopped the upper spring of the 
			waters of Gihon, and brought them straight down on the west side of 
			the city of David." {2Ch 32:30} Moreover, the chronicler’s 
			statements are based upon 2Ki 20:20, where it is said that "Hezekiah 
			made the pool and the conduit and brought water to the city." The 
			chronicler was of course intimately acquainted with the topography 
			of Jerusalem in his own days, and uses his knowledge to interpret 
			and expand the statement in the book of Kings. He was possibly 
			guided in part by Isa 22:9; Isa 22:11, where the "gathering together 
			the waters of the lower pool" and the "making a reservoir between 
			the two walls for the water of the old pool" are mentioned as 
			precautions taken in view of a probable Assyrian siege. The recent 
			investigations of the Palestine Exploration Fund have led to the 
			discovery of aqueducts, and stoppages, and diversions of 
			watercourses which are said to correspond to the operations 
			mentioned by the chronicler. If this be the case, they show a very 
			accurate knowledge on his part of the topography of Jerusalem in his 
			own day, and also illustrate his care to utilize all existing 
			evidence in order to obtain a clear and accurate interpretation of 
			the statements of his authority. 
			 
			The reign of Hezekiah appears a suitable opportunity to introduce a 
			few remarks on the importance which the chronicler attaches to the 
			music of the Temple services. Though the music is not more prominent 
			with him than with some earlier kings, yet in the case of David, 
			Solomon, and Jehoshaphat other subjects presented themselves for 
			special treatment; and Hezekiah’s reign being the last in which the 
			music of the sanctuary is specially dwelt upon, we are able here to 
			review the various references to this subject. For the most part the 
			chronicler tells his story of the virtuous days of the good kings to 
			a continual accompaniment of Temple music. We hear of the playing 
			and singing when the Ark was brought to the house of Obed-edom; when 
			it was taken into the city of David; at the dedication of the 
			Temple; at the battle between Abijah and Jeroboam; at Asa’s 
			reformation; in connection with the overthrow of the Ammonites, 
			Moabites, and Meunim in the reign of Jehoshaphat; at the coronation 
			of Joash; at Hezekiah’s feasts; and again, though less emphatically, 
			at Josiah’s passover. No doubt the special prominence given to the 
			subject indicates a professional interest on the part of the author. 
			If, however, music occupies an undue proportion of his space, and he 
			has abridged accounts of more important matters to make room for his 
			favorite theme, yet there is no reason to suppose that his actual 
			statements overrate the extent to which music was used in worship or 
			the importance attached to it. The older narratives refer to the 
			music in the case of David and Joash, and assign psalms and songs to 
			David and Solomon. Moreover, Judaism is by no means alone in its 
			fondness for music, but shares this characteristic with almost all 
			religions. 
			 
			We have spoken of the chronicler so far chiefly as a professional 
			musician, but it should be clearly understood that the term must be 
			taken in its best sense. He was by no means so absorbed in the 
			technique of his art as to forget its sacred significance; he was 
			not less a worshipper himself because he was the minister or agent 
			of the common worship. His accounts of the festivals show a hearty 
			appreciation of the entire ritual; and his references to the music 
			do not give us the technical circumstances of its production, but 
			rather emphasize its general effect. The chronicler’s sense of the 
			religious value of music is largely that of a devout worshipper, who 
			is led to set forth for the benefit of others a truth which is the 
			fruit of his own experience. This experience is not confined to 
			trained musicians; indeed, a scientific knowledge of the art may 
			sometimes interfere with its devotional influence. Criticism may 
			take the place of worship; and the hearer, instead of yielding to 
			the sacred suggestions of hymn or anthem, may be distracted by his 
			esthetic judgment as to the merits of the composition and the skill 
			shown by its rendering. In the same way critical appreciation of 
			voice, elocution, literary style, and intellectual power does not 
			always conduce to edification from a sermon. In the truest culture, 
			however, sensitiveness to these secondary qualities has become 
			habitual and automatic, and blends itself imperceptibly with the 
			religious consciousness of spiritual influence. The latter is thus 
			helped by excellence and only slightly hindered by minor defects in 
			the natural means. But the very absence of any great scientific 
			knowledge of music may leave the spirit open to the spell which 
			sacred music is intended to exercise, so that all cheerful and 
			guileless souls may be "moved with concord of sweet sounds," and sad 
			and weary hearts find comfort in subdued strains that breathe 
			sympathy of which words are incapable. 
			 
			Music, as a mode of utterance moving within the restraints of a 
			regular order, naturally attaches itself to ritual. As the earliest 
			literature is poetry, the earliest liturgy is musical. Melody is the 
			simplest and most obvious means by which the utterances of a body of 
			worshippers can be combined into a seemly act of worship. The mere 
			repetition of the same words by a congregation in ordinary speech is 
			apt to he wanting in impressiveness or even in decorum; the use of 
			tune enables a congregation to unite in worship even when many of 
			its members are strangers to each other. 
			 
			Again, music may be regarded as an expansion of language: not new 
			dialect, but a collection of symbols that can express thought, and 
			more especially emotion, for which mere speech has no vocabulary. 
			This new form of language naturally becomes an auxiliary of 
			religion. Words are clumsy instruments for the expression of the 
			heart, and are least efficient when they undertake to set forth 
			moral and spiritual ideas. Music can transcend mere speech in 
			touching the soul to fine issues, suggesting visions of things 
			ineffable and unseen. 
			 
			Browning makes Abt Vogler say of the most enduring and supreme hopes 
			that God has granted to men, "Tis we musicians know"; but the 
			message of music comes home with power to many who have no skill in 
			its art. 
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