It's one of the greatest cinematic opening sequences. The camera swoops down over the mountains and zooms in on a woman running across a meadow; the orchestra swells and as we focus in on her she begins to sing “The hills are alive with the sound of music”. I don't know if the beginning of Broughton Primary School's production of the Sound of Music will be quite as dramatic but I'm sure that the whole of the show will be brilliant as usual.
That
uplifting opening song uses the image of the natural world being
alive with the sound of music and of humanity joining in with that
music. But this isn't just a poetic image of how the noises in the
world could be heard as musical, rather it is actually a description,
perhaps unknowingly, of a deep biblical truth. Isaiah 49:13 says
“Shout for joy, you heavens; rejoice, you earth;
burst into song, you mountains!”, and 1 Chronicles 16:32-33 says
“Let the sea resound, and all that is in it; let the fields be
jubilant, and everything in them! Let the trees of the forest sing,
let them sing for joy before the Lord”. Many other places in the
Bible talk of creation singing and making music and the book of
Psalms, Israel's hymn book, ends with this verse “Let everything
that has breath praise the Lord.” (Psalm 150:6).
The Bible affirms that
all creation has this musical quality, but unlike the song in the
musical, this is not just a way of describing a joyous 'life force'
that connects every part of the natural world. The musicality of
creation, including humanity, has a purpose, and that purpose is to
praise God. Revelation 4, echoing Isaiah 6, describes some of what
goes on in heaven speaking about the angels constantly saying “Holy,
holy, holy is the Lord God
Almighty.” (Traditionally the speech of angels is said to be the
same as human song). So the constant music of creation joins in with
the constant song of heaven to praise God.
We praise God for who he is, but we also praise him for what he does.
1 Chronicles 16 gives two of God's wonderful acts that particularly
deserve praise. Verse 23 says “Sing to the Lord, all the earth;
proclaim his salvation day after day” and in verse 33 creation
sings because he comes to judge the earth. So creation praises God
because of his judgement and his salvation.
It may seem odd to praise God for his judgement, but deep down it's
what we all crave. We see a world where to much is wrong and we long
for it to be put right; we see evil seemingly unpunished in this word
and long for there to be justice. However, the problem is that
justice demands that all wrongdoing is punished. Jesus commands us
to “Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect”
(Matthew 5:48) but Romans 3:23 reminds us that “all have sinned and
fall short of the glory of God” and Psalm 130:3 asks “If you,
Lord, kept a record of sins, Lord, who could stand?” Only what is
holy can enter the presence of the Holy God and we are all far from
holy.
Therefore, we also rejoice in God's salvation. Romans 3 goes on to
say “all are justified freely by his grace through the redemption
that came by Christ Jesus. God presented Christ as a sacrifice of
atonement, through the shedding of his blood – to be received by
faith.” Jesus died to take the punishment we deserve so that
through repentance and faith in him we can be forgiven. And as we
turn to the Lord “the mountains and hills will burst into song
before you, and all the trees of the field will clap their hands”
(Isaiah 55:12).
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