Teaching Our
Own to Minister Musically—part 6
Verse 5 of I Chronicles 25 states
that Heman was the Kings seer in the words (dabar
1697) of God. The Hebrew word dabar was
used in the Old Testament with some latitude.
Its meaning included: words, matters, advise, business, language,
promise, and message. So we may conclude
that Heman was a seer of the message of God through music. We know that a seer was a beholder of visions
of God. Heman, the chief musician, was
therefore a spiritual musical messenger.
He came with a distinct message from God for the people. In II Chronicles 35:15, Jeduthun was
mentioned as a seer (2734) and in II Chronicles 29:30, Asaph was said to be a
seer. All three of these Chief Musicians
who were the teachers of the young Levite musicians understood that they were
to present God’s musical message to the congregation. They were seers or beholders of the vision of
God in music.
The Chief Musicians
taught their sons and brethren, the young Levite music students, the importance
of being aware of God’s message and presenting this message to the
congregation. The music of the Temple
was not merely performance, but performance with an ethical and moral force
behind it. Temple music was prophetic
performance. What is the significance of
all this talk about prophetic music performance? I believe that the importance of this
Scripture passage is that Church Music
really Matters. It mattered in ancient Israel and it matters
today. Form and style or genre (a
category of artistic and musical composition characterized by a particular
style, form or content) matter, but they are not the paramount purpose of
church music. The artistic musical
aspect of church music matters, but it is not the zenith (high point) of church
music. The idioms (the language peculiar
to a people or community) we use do matter, but they are not what’s most
important about church music. The moods
and atmosphere that music sets are important, but they are not what matters
most about church music. What matters MOST is the ethical and moral meaning
that underpins all spiritual musical performance in church. This moral and ethical foundation should
create a conservative conscience on the part of the Spirit-filled musician.
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