£( VINDICATION REVISE1> I^ITURGY, HISTORICAL AND THEOLOGICAL, r REV. ,T. W. NEVIN, 1). J). JA,". W. KOiHtKRS. rillLADELrJtl A ;k. 52 * 1 s r, 7 3X 9573 .N5 1867 - ^ fcibrarjp of Che t:heolog(caI ^eminarjp PRINCETON . NEW JERSEY 'Hi V»t PRESENTED BY Dr. Henry S. Gehman BX 9573 .N5 1867 Nevin, John Williamson, 1803 -1886. Vindication of the revised liturgy historical and VINDICATION REVISED EITURGY. HISTORICAL AND THEOLOGICAL REY. J. W. feviN, D. PHILADELPHIA; JA8. B. ROIKIERS, PRINTER, 62 A 64 NORTH SIXTH STREET. 1867, ELDERS' REQUEST. Dayton, December 1, 1866. Rev. J. W. Nevin, D.D. Rev. 'AND Dear Bro.: — We, tho undersigned, Elders of the General Synod, being impressed with the con- viction, that the exhibition of the history, doctrines, and ruling spirit of the Revised Liturgy, presented in a tract entitled, "A History and Criticism of the Ritualistic Movement in the German Reformed Church, by Rev. J. H. A. Bombergcr, D.D.," must be one-sided and unfair, and, therefore, calculated to do much harm in the Church; and desiring to have an expression of the views held by the other members of the Committee who prepared the Liturgy, would unite in earnestly requesting you to furnish us with a history of its preparation and a critical review of its merits, for publication. Very respectfully yours, A. B. Wingerd, Mercersburg Classis. D. S. Diefifenbacher, St. Paul's " J, Troxel, Westmoreland " John Zollinger, Illinois " Wm. A. Wilt, Zion's " T. J. Craig, Westmoreland " Geo. P. Wiestling, Lancaster " W. G. King, Clarion ' " N. D. Hauer, Maryland " D. C. Hammond, Maryland " Daniel Cort, Iowa " Jacob Bausman, Lancaster " D. B. Martin, Mercersburg " John Bowman, Mercersburg " Geo. Hill, East Susquehannah " Michael Brown, West Susquehanna " R. E. Addams, Lebanon " Samuel Zacharias, Zion's D. Lupfer, Zion's John W. Bachman, East Pennsylvania " John Meily, Lebanon '' INTRODUCTION. The Request prefixed to this pamphlet sufficiently explains its occasion and object; while it is of a character also not onlj to justify, but even to demand and require its appearance. It is most true, that Dr. Bomberger's tract is "one-sided and un- fair, and therefore calculated to do much harm in the Church." It was brought out hastily, just before the meeting of the late General Synod at Dayton, to serve a party purpose, and as part of a plan to pre-occupy the members of that body (particularly in the West), with a prejudice against the Revised Liturgy, which, it was hoped, might be sufficient to overwhelm and crush it before it could have a chance of coming before the people. It was, in this respect, like a political campaign document, let off on the eve of an election for effect ; and it is characterized throughout by the spirit of reckless misrepresentation we usually meet with, and expect to meet with, in publications of this sort. Its criticisms on the Liturgy itself do not amount to much. They are vague, indefinite, and loose; turning, for the most part, on the use of invidious terms of reproach, and appeals to popu- lar prejudice. But this is only a small part of its offence. By far the greater part of the tract is devoted to another object altogether- Under the pretence of giving a history of the Lit- urgy, it seeks to make capital against it by trying to show that it is a grand fraud, which has been practised upon the Church by the Committee intrusted with the work of its preparation. 6 INTRODUCTION, In this view, it is an atrocious libel throughout upon the charac- ter of the Committee, as well as an insult to the Church at large, in whose service they have been working for so many years. All this was brought out clearly enough in the Synod at Dayton ; and the political bomb-shell went off there without much execu- tion. But the matter deserves unquestionably a still more pub- lic exposure. The voice of so large a portion of our Eastern lay delegation in attendance at Dayton deserves to be heard. I proceed, therefore, to the task of vindicating the Liturgy from the wrong that is done to it in this tract, both historically and theologically. The personalities which this must involve, to a certain extent, I should have preferred having nothing to do with; but I do not see how they are to be avoided. As just intimated, what I have to say will fall naturally into two general parts ; a defence of the Liturgy, or say rather of the movement leading to it, historically considered ; secondly, a defence of the Liturgy, considered in its actual theological cha- racter. For the second part, I will take the liberty of using an article I have written on this subject for the resuscitated Mer- cersburg Review. PART I HISTORICAL VINDICATION OF THE NEW LITURGY. Worship, in the use of prescribed forms, is not a new thing in the Reformed Church. Liturgies, of some sort, have had place within it from the beginning. They belonged to its church life in Europe, and they came over with the same church life to this country. At the same time, they were held to be a fair subject all along for change and improvement. No Liturgy was considered to be of perpetual force, even for the particular coun- try or province in which it was used ; much less for other coun- tries. The liberty of primitive times here was practically asserted, as the proper liberty of the Protestant Church. The old Swiss Liturgies in this way changed. The old Liturgy of the Palatinate became antiquated, even in the Palatinate itself. There was a movement all along, in other words, towards the realization of something in worship, which it was felt had not been fully reached in existing forms. The grossly unliturgical tendencies of later times (Rationalistic in Germany, Methodistic in this country), belonged themselves to this movement. But they had no power to bring it to rest. They only served to urge it onward in its course, by deepening the sense of a want which they had no power to satisfy, and by causing it to be felt, that the true satis- faction for this want must be sought in some other way. Hence, among the "pious desires" of the Reformed Church in America, we find at work all along, very sensibly felt, the wish for a satis- factory Liturgy. The old Palatinate service was not satisfac- 8 HISTORICAL VINDICATION torj; and none of the services brought over from Europe, during the last century, were satisfactory. At the same time, the deeper consciousness of the Church refused to settle into contentment with the modern innovation of totally free prayer. Such wor- ship had, indeed, forced itself into use on all sides; but the true genius of the Church, at bottom, resented it as something foreign and strange; and its voice was still heard, though in more or less smothered accents, calling out for a Liturgy that might be worthy of the name. It was in response to this call, that the Mayer Liturgy^ as it is called, made its appearance in 1837; the respectable work of a truly respectable man. But, as all know, it failed to satisfy the Church. Full opportunity Avas given for the trial of it. No- body thought of opposing any bar to its use. No popular pre- judice lay in its way; no outside jealousy stood ready to shout Ritualism in its face. But still it found almost no favor. Minis- ters and people consented in allowing it to fall well-nigh dead from the press. Why? "Because," says Dr. Bomberger, "it was unhappily not constructed after the pattern of our older Liturgies," and was "too much of an accommodation to the spirit of the times." That is, it did not please the times, be- cause it went too much with the times, and refused to go full against them, as was done soon after, Dr. B. tells us, by the re- actionary movement which was led oif by the publication of the Anxious Bench in 1842. What the Doctor says, moreover, of its unhappy variation from our older Liturgies, is mere moon- shine. No following of that pattern would have helped the matter a particle. There the older Liturgies were; it was an easy thing to bring any of them into use, if the wants of the Church could have been satisfied in that way. But they were not satisfactory; the Church was all the time feeling and reach- ing after something better ; and the Mayer Liturgy proved a flat failure, just because it was not something better, but the same thing in fact — the continuation of a mode or manner of worship, which it was felt the life of the Church had outgrown, so as to need now a different style of worship altogether. I well remember how Dr. Ranch used to speak of this Liturgy. OF THE NEW LITURGY. 9 He had no patience "with its external, mechanical character; especially after the various tinkerings it had to undergo before its final adoption. A Liturgy, he used to say, in his earnest, genial way, should be of one cast, a single creation, ruled through- out by the presence of one central idea; in this respect, like a poem, or other true work of art. But what had we here ? Dead forms only, bound together in a dead way ; from which it was vain to expect, therefore, that the breath of life should be kin- dled in the devotions of the sanctuary. Such a Liturgy, he thought, could do the Church harm only, and not good. Some years passed after this, before any serious movement was made toward getting out a better Liturgy. In the view of many, the matter was not held to be of any very great account. They were willing to abide by the system of free prayer, as it * had place in the Presbyterian Church, That, I may say, was prevailingly my own position. I was not liturgical in those days, though not opposed to forms of prayer. But there was in the German Reformed Church somehow the power of a different spirit, that would not be kept down, but still cried, " Give us a Liturgy, whereby Ave may be able to worship God, like our fa- thers, with one mouth, as well as with one heart." Thus the Classis of East Pennsylvania urged the subject upon the atten- tion of the Synod, which met at Lancaster in 1847 ; stating its dissatisfaction with the Mayer Liturgy, and asking that either the Old Palatinate Liturgy, or some other, should be adopted, and made of general use in its place. The whole subject was hereupon referred to the several Classes for their consideration. They reported favorably to the object the following year; and the Synod of Hagerstown accordingly (1848), after a long and earnest discussion, placed the matter in the hands of a special Committee (Dr. J. H. A. Bomberger, Chairman), with instruc- tions to report at the next annual meeting of Synod. This re- port was presented to the Synod of Norristown in 1849, vindi- cating at large the use of liturgical forms, and recommending the appointment of a Committee to present at the next meeting of Synod a plan or schedule for a Liturgy, such as the wishes of the Church were supposed to require. The report was 10 HISTORICAL VINDICATION adopted ; and a Liturgical Committee, as it came to be called after ^Yards, was constituted, for the purpose of carrying its re- commendation into effect. The Committee consisted of the following persons : Ministers^ J. W. Nevin, Philip Schaff, Ellas Heiner, B. 0. Wolff, J. H. A. Bomberger, H. Harbaugh, J. F. Berg; Elders, William Heyser, J. C. Bucher, Dr. C. Schaeffer, and G. C. Welker. Here properly starts, at the Synod of Norristown in 1849, the particular Liturgical Moveijient, which, running through a series of seventeen years, has issued finally in the Revised Lit- urgy as it now stands, and the history of which Dr. Bomberger has contrived so strangely to fabricate into a wholesale slander, of the vilest sort, against the Committee by whom it has been produced. Let no one imagine, however, that I propose to follow him in ^he details of his pretended historical argument, with the view of showing them untenable and false. That would be, indeed, both time and labor thrown away. He abounds in special plead- ing, and wastes page after page on points, that are, when all is done, of no account for the main issue in hand. He lays him- self out largely to show that the Synod from time to time clearly and plainly had one object in view, while the Committee was just as clearly and plainly bent on carrying out another object; and it is wonderful what an amount of petty, quibbling inter- pretation he employs to make the case appear in this false light. There is a great parade of trying to bring out in this small way the sense of particular documents and facts, as though this must necessarily sliow historical veracity and candor. But who does not know, how easy it is to make this sort of exactness in par. ticulars the medium of wholesale misrepresentation in regard to what is general ? This is just what Dr. Bomberger has done ; and what is required, therefore, is not a rectification of his histori- cal positions and points in detail, but a broad exposition rather of the universal falsehood that runs through his tract. This can be done, happily, v.'ith-out much trouble. A simple statement of the theory, on which the Doctor con- structs what he calls his History of the Ritualistic Movement OF THE NEW LITURGY. 11 in the German Reformed Church, is enough to overthrow, for any reflecting mind, the credit of the whole thing. It is too monstrously absurd for any sober belief. It bears the stamp of wholesale falsification on its very face. The theory runs as follows : — The Synod of the German Re- formed Church proposed to have a new Liturgy, and appointed a Committee of suppf^sed reliable men (Dr. Bomberger and Dr. Berg among them), to bring out the work. The Synod had, at the same time, a very clear conception of what it wanted and wished in this movement, and took pains, from year to year, to make the Com- mittee understand exactly the character of the service they were expected to perform. Strangely enough, however, this Com- mittee seemed to be possessed, from the beginning, with a deter- mination not to do the very thing they were charged to do in this solemn Avay. Nay, worse than this; it soon became only too evident, that the Committee had deliberately made up their mind (Drs. Berg and Bomberger still among them), to do the very opposite of the thing they were thus charged to do; that they had, in other words, conceived the plan of another order of worship, a liturgical service altogether different from what the Synod was thinking and resolving about, and now set them- selves systematically to the task of bringing the Synod to ac- cept their scheme, instead of its own. It was a bold purpose, assuredly; but the men also were bold, who had it in hand; their position in the Church gave them mighty advantage; and the event has shown that their policy was at once far reaching and profound. They knew it was in vain to think of carrying their point with the Synod openly and directly. So they went to work stealthily, and with circuitous management and stratagem, to accomplish their object; content to wait through years, if only they might be sure of reaching it in the end. With this view, it became necessary, first of all, to stave off action in regard to the Liturgy; in order that time might be gained in this way for working the mind of the Church round, by skilful manipu- lation, to a new way of looking at the subject, and so room be made for palming off upon it at last what the Committee wished to give it, in place of what the Church itself wanted to have. 12 ■ HISTORICAL VINDICATION Such was the situation of things from the very bei^inning of this Liturgical Movement; and here it is we have the key, Avhich, properly applied, is sufficient to unlock the secret sense of all its historical intricacies, as regards both the Committee and the Syno:L The history of the movement is simply the progress of a curious game between these two bodies — all simplicity on the one side, and all duplicity (diabolically astutft) on the other — in which the Committee succeeds in out-witting and out-generalling the Synod through seventeen weary, mortal years; so as to bring things to the melancholy pass they have now reached in the Revised Liturgy. Whether the Committee acted, or refused to act, it all meant the same thing. Their one grand object throughout, was to baffle and defeat the wishes of the Synod; and this they did with a vengeance. Never, surely, was Govern- ment, political or religious, so impudently bamboozled before* The Synod had the power all in its own hands; might have had things at any time its own way: could have said whenever it pleased: "Gentlemen of the Liturgical Committee, you have been appointed to do the work we want, in the way we want, and not in any other way; and if you do not choose to do it in this way, go about your business ; we will appoint another Com- mittee to do the work in your place." This the Synod could have said and done at any time; but just this the Synod never did say, and never would do. On the contrary, it persisted all alon