A Prescriptive approach to Church Music Part 6
Public music worship should not be a platform for the pastor’s or the
minister of music’s personal tastes in music.
The assembly of believers does not gather to receive a music lesson on
J.S. Bach or accapella choral techniques or to revisit the oratorios of Handel,
Mendelssohn and Gounod. Neither is the
purpose of congregational singing to keep the hymns of Watts, Wesley and Fanny
Crosby alive. Special singing is not an opportunity to fan the minister of
music’s latent desire to sing bass in a famous southern gospel quartet or a
country gospel band. Richard S. Taylor
sums up the matter quite well, “The fact that some people may like this or that
is not sufficient reason for the church to use it. The church should lead the way in such
standards, not abjectly follow every fad and custom which happens to be “in” at
the moment. The Church has no business
adopting the philosophy, “If you can’t lick ‘em, join ‘em.” We should be governed by basic and eternal
principles. There are music forms,
whether secular or sacred, which create moods of pensiveness, or idealism, or
awareness of beauty, of aspiration, and of holy joyousness. There are forms of music which create moods
of recklessness and sensual excitement.
Surely it doesn’t take much judgement to know which forms are most
appropriate for religious function.”1
So, church music
selections should line up to Bible principles of music in worship. Choices should not be made solely on personal
preference but rather what this style of music will do to the whole life of the
individuals who worship with it. From
the time of Plato and Aristotle philosophers have believed, more or less, that
good music would cause one to tend toward the moral virtues and that bad music
would cause one to tend toward moral decadence. 1 A Return to
Christian Culture, p.87 Richard S.
Taylor
Quote for the
day-prescriptive Part 6
Rebels always miss the most exquisite
pleasures of the senses. By defying the
law, they settle for junk, and junk doesn't give the same satisfaction as
quality--at least to a normal mind."
A Return to Christian culture, Richard S. Taylor, p. 39.
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