To my Faithful Blog Readers
Some
of my faithful readers have for many months read my thoughts on music. As I have said before, it is my
desire that you now have greater insights into the Scriptures concerning music
in the Bible. Church musicians are not
usually language scholars and, on the contrary, they have general tendency to
avoid original language study concerning Bible music.
All
too many musicians' libraries consist of a host of volumes on music history,
theory, literature, a few volumes of hymn stories, and their favorite hypnology
text without a single concordance or lexicon to study the original Bible
languages. I hope that your word study
appetite has been stimulated until you will at least invest in the standard
works that are now keyed to Strong's Exhaustive
Concordance.
As
we are now more than half way through the second decade of this twenty-first
century, every Christian musician needs to not only be prepared spiritually and
musically, but also have a deep understanding of the significance of music in
the Bible. It is important that
musicians be able to understand the music of the Bible in Christian
perspective. I Corinthians 2:12-13
states, "Now ye have received, not of the spirit of the world, but the
spirit which is of God; that ye might know the things that are freely given to
us of God. Which things also we speak,
not in the words which man's wisdom teacheth, but which the Holy Ghost
teacheth; comparing spiritual things with spiritual."
No
music blog will be able to completely guide church musicians in the
twenty-first century. Only an
understanding of what the Book of Books has to say about sacred music will
serve as a guide for Christian musicians of the next century. If my blog has stimulated you to study music
in the Book of Books, the many hours that it has taken to prepare these posts have
been well spent.
G.L.W.
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