What I find in the Psalms and accounts of OT Israel is that they were to bring every instrument they could find to worship God.
Are you suggesting that the paradigm of the [OT] church is the across the board model for every generation to follow?
And yet you must suggest that, for you will find no NT example of instrumental worship. In fact, the early church shunned musical instruments until the Roman church brought them in with other shadows of OT ritual.
You haven't read the Psalms or the OT very carefully if your conclusion is that they were to bring every kind of instrument they could grab. There is only one passage that endorses the use of all kinds "musick", and that is Nebuchadnezzar's instructions for worshipping the golden image.
For a devout, scholarly discussion of the issues of the OT method of worship, I would suggest the following articles by Dr. Peter Masters, the pastor of The Metropolitan Tabernacle (Spurgeon's church.)
Click Here.
Pay especial notice to
Brass, Strings and Percussion? - The facts about Bible instruments and the strong rules restricting their use in worship.
What I discover in Paul is a man who employed whatever means possible to preach Christ crucified.
Now this warrants some evidence. I only find Paul preaching. Did he incorporate Gospel quartets, or dramas? What about mine? What instrument did he play?
Since we have very limited access to what the apostles utilized in their presentation...
This is an arbitrary assumption. This assumes that God did not provide for us the tools and examples necessary in His Word for modern evangelism. This, in turn, demands that we must trust your judgment to discern whether or not something is a form that God has chosen. That demands that you receive some kind of revelation from God that is new, and that in turn demands that signs and wonders must follow you to verify your message.
...your point is moot.
You merely proceed on a premise different than mine, that in and of itself does not render my point moot. What it does demand is that we examine each premise and see which one lines up more with what has been revealed to us in the Scriptures.
I would say the use of "signs" went a long ways in advancing the gospel in the First Century. Are you going to maintain that signs were not a validating form that led to the salvation of souls and the establishment of the church?
No, supernatural signs are great--if they're real. [But now that the Gospel is well established I would say they aren't needed as much, hence their apparent cessation.] But what does this have to do with performing arts?
Drama is not a form of preaching...I have yet to find a single individual who can give a strong biblical basis for such restrictions.
1 Corinthians 1:21 For after that in the wisdom of God the world by wisdom knew not God, it pleased God by the foolishness of preaching to save them that believe.
I thought you knew this verse already. And yet it is you that lacks the "strong biblical basis" for
allowing exhibitionistic forms of presentation for the Gospel.
Again, we have no clue what forms of worship and presentation the Early Church employed. What I do find is Paul getting out there amidst the pagans and using their own poets and line of reasoning to confront them with the gospel. What I do find is Paul becoming all things to all men in order to win the few.
It is an incredible leap to suggest that Paul's use of the words of pagan poets or playwrites is an wholesale endorsement of pagan forms of worship! And yet, in each case he did, it was always a use of their
words. Unless I missed the verse that he put on make-up and costumes before he quoted them?
As far as Paul becoming all things...please. Take another look at that passage. I can say that Paul did not become a meat-eater to win the meat-eaters. He says quite the opposite. He yielded his rights to certain foods lest he offended his brothers in Christ.
This brings us to the point of liberty. You are not afforded the liberty to indulge your personal preferences at the expense of another's conscience. What you're calling liberty the Scriptures refer to as wantonness or licentiousness.
BTW I am still waiting for those support texts that forbid the unbiblical "forms" with which you have so many problems.
No, the burden is upon you to provide the "strong Scriptural basis" for the methods which you claim please God.
Well, I'm done trying to answer multiple points, but I'm willing discuss it further
one point at a time if you are. So choose your point, and we'll go to the appropriate forum, but just choose one. Is it rock music? The proper application of a specific verse? The methods appropriated by the apostles? Is drama really the same thing as a microphone? etc.