Considering Anti-Music-part-part 6
Lest I be
misunderstood as a worshiper of musical tradition rather than a worshiper of
God, I am not purporting that all musical tradition is worthwhile. That being said, those of us who believe and
practice free worship must constantly guard against what I term traditional
worship “rutual”. Those of us who do not
practice a formal worship ritual are in danger of getting in an unorganized
rut. If we would be the slightest bit
honest we would have to admit that our patterns of weekly use of music in
worship are far from free and worship would probably be much better if our patterns
were organized and purposeful. For
instance, those who often pride themselves in the fact they have eliminated
all, or mostly all, of the traditional hymns and gospel songs in favor of fresh
new choruses, fall into the “rutual” of singing the same chorus sequences
Sunday after Sunday until the worshipers do not need to look at the screen
because they know what will be coming next.
No doubt part of the
reason that millennials are hocking their new strange musical wares on congregations
of worshipers is that they are bored with traditional predictable worship
music. The answer is not the “hock and
awe” of anti-music. Although part of the
answer must be discussed in another blog sequence, a fresh anointing on the
worship leader will add reality, excitement and believability to musical
worship. Fresh new approaches to music
used in public worship are not wrong in and of themselves. The answer is reality and believability in the
music that one uses in the context of public worship.
Scripture Thought for the Day
Psalm 144:9, “I will sing a new song unto
thee, O God: upon a psaltery and an instrument of ten strings will I sing
praises unto thee.”
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