Who
Can You Trust philosophically?--part 1
As has
been said earlier, Christian musicians often question the necessity of
developing a personal system of beliefs concerning the nature and value of the
whole of music. Furthermore, they often
seem to believe that those values set forth by major public colleges and
universities are adequate for Christian musicians. After all, aren’t the elements of music the
same for Christians and non-Christians?
Shouldn't philosophers who have studied it all their adult lives be
better at philosophical pursuit than Christian musicians? The philosophy of a
musician who does not bring his entire musical endeavor under the Lordship of
Christ should never be trusted. The
reason is that the purpose of non-Christian music philosophical basis is
different. Nothing that a Christian
musician does musically is driven by the purpose of glorifying self or
consuming music's understanding on one's own self-aggrandizement.
You can
trust an unregenerate musician to be worldly in his or her philosophical
basis. Remember, direction determines
destiny philosophically! Any musician
who believes that the end of all human endeavors is the gratification and
actualization of self will ultimately come to different philosophical
conclusions than a musician who believes that music begins and ends with God.
To the music humanist et. al.,
musicing begins and ends with self since it is about his or her true humanness.
To the musician who has submitted his or her musicing to the Lordship of Christ,
all church music is sung and played to glorify God since God owns music. The
Christian musician (if he or she has developed a Christocentric music
philosophy) believes that even when preforming so called "absolute
music" it is not, in the truest sense, "absolute". So, he or she
will not perform any style of music that is not congruent with a Christocentric
whole-life philosophy.
Thought
for the day
We can trust Satan to act like Satan and the world to act
like the world. So, why can't we trust all Christian musicians to music like
Christians?
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