Is
Musical Style Involved in Communicating Meaning? Part 1
All traditional thesis thinking
Christians who are conservative in their music philosophy are concerned about
making sure that the musical styles that they use in musicing unto God are
suitable vehicles. Although it is not
popular or politically correct to use the terms “good” and “bad’ in conjunction
with religious musicing, I believe that the terms are appropriate. When I consider appropriate vehicles, I am
talking about the music part of the music and not merely the texts of religious
songs. There is a continuum along which
music genres move that places them somewhere between excellence in quality and
appropriateness and ineffectiveness, to the point of being ineffective music
vehicles for representing God’s perfect moral character and being communicators
of spiritual values.
Richard S. Taylor put it this way, “The
difference in good and bad church music is the emotion generated. On the one hand there is that which is self-ward
and man-ward; on the other that which is Godward, upward, and decisive. This is why in all the various possible
forms, sooner or later a line is reached beyond which the music ceases to be a
good conductor of spiritual edification, and instead becomes a conductor of
fleshly stimulation.” A Return to Christian Culture by Richard
S. Taylor, p. 89. As I have often
told college students, I am not as
concerned about exactly where a Christian musician draws the line that Dr.
Taylor was referring to musically as I am about the fact that Christian
musicians are, in many cases, no longer drawing any philosophical lines at
all. The fact that the musical “light
bulb” of style is not suddenly on or off makes it much more difficult to
discern when a musical style is too worldly or sensual to be a proper vehicle
for sacred musicing.
Praise
chorus for the Day
Praise Chorus for the Day I Love you Lord by Laurie Klein
Thought
for the Day
It is amazing to me that a Christian
musician would want to come into the presence of, or come before the face of
YHVH, with loud, raucous, noise-based music.
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