The Worthlessness of Mere Sounds, Apart from Their Meaning
1 Corinthians 14:8-9
For if the trumpet give an uncertain sound, who shall prepare himself to the battle?…


The apostle speaks of the lute, the harp, the trumpet. Concerning this last instrument it was most of all important that the meaning of its tones should be understood. For now, just as the trumpet had its special function in pealing forth distinct, definite sounds, so all things in the economy of nature, of human life, and of Christian life, have their precise and exact function, on the right discharge of which vast results — results often comparable to those of a gigantic war — are depending.

I. THE PRINCIPLE HERE INDICATED. It is not far to seek —

1. In what we may term our a priori argument, concerning a Divinely ordered universe. Since all events are related to each other in the mighty chain of cause and effect, we should expect that the failure of any link would involve disastrous results. There are many voices in nature — every law is a voice — and none of them is without signification. Uncertainty in the sound of any of them would be scarcely less evil than silence. So, too, with every atom and every event, as well as every law.

2. In the history of human affairs. On every hand, in our march along the great highways of time, or our research in its quieter by-ways, we confront instances of the momentousness of a right fulfilment by the man, or the institution, or the nation, of the precise mission devolving on such man, or institution, or nation. An uncertain sound at some given epoch, and the course of all succeeding history, would have been changed.

II. SOME PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS OF THIS PRINCIPLE. It is true in regard —

1. To the discharge of Christian activities. There are multiform methods of philanthropic activity; never so many as to-day. Each one of us has his special adaptation for the use of such methods, just as each method has its peculiar adaptation to some need. If those who are qualified to teach, do not instruct; to console, do not comfort; to contrive, do not organise, who shall? Some tone on the trumpet of truth depends on you. If you refrain, or hesitate, or yield uncertain sounds, who shall prepare for the day of battle?

2. To Christian giving. The gold, the silver, the copper has to be given, each metal, as it were, making its own music. Withhold just what, by claim and capacity, you ought to have given, and there is an uncertain sound, and that uncertain sound means beggary here, discouragement yonder, and hopeless inanition elsewhere. Nay, the very spirit of the giving may make all the difference, for is not the sounding brass and tinkling cymbal — which is gift without love — an uncertain sound?

3. To prayers. Who can tell the mischief of uncertain sounds here in a region where Moses and Elijah were so mighty?

4. Of every life. Each life is trumpet-tongued with the message of truth or error, good or ill. Silence is impossible. Uncertainty is failure, for it misleads and bewilders. Minister, parent, teacher, if your life gives an uncertain sound who shall prepare your people, your family, your class for battle? — the battle for which music prepares, and which will be succeeded by yet nobler and sweeter music. As Bishop Webb says, "You are yourself; none of you are like your fellows. And you are what you are by God's arrangement, because you have a certain part to play in God's providence, in the history of the world, and the development of the body of Christ. God the Holy Ghost is brooding over you as the great musician. He can bring out the music that is wanted. He can enable you to furnish some strain that would be lacking in the ears of God if you did not bring it, if you did not strike your string, nor touch your key."

(U. R. Thomas.)



Parallel Verses
KJV: For if the trumpet give an uncertain sound, who shall prepare himself to the battle?

WEB: For if the trumpet gave an uncertain sound, who would prepare himself for war?




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