Philosophical Outcomes—part 2
Any musician who believes the end of all human
endeavors is the gratification of self will ultimately come to different
philosophical conclusions than a musician whose life is sold out to Christ. For the committed Christian, music begins and
ends with God. To the humanist, music
begins and ends with self. The musician
who has submitted his or her music to the Lordship of Christ believes that all
church music is sung and played to glorify God since God owns music. Conversely, the secular humanists (and the
religious humanist) believe that music belongs to man’s true humanness since
all music is about self-actualization.
This type of thinker owns his or her music.
We cannot trust
public education to produce Christ-centered musicians who have a Christocentric
music philosophy. Christians never
should have trusted the world to formulate music philosophy for Christian young
people. It has always been the
responsibility of Christians to train their own. Although many Christian
parents have ignored it, the world has never been a friend of grace. Could you imagine the ancient Hebrews calling
in the Philistines to train their Levite sons?
The 20th century church did just that--they called in the worldly
musicians who outwardly profaned the name of Christ to train church
musicians. The result was generation
after generation of Christian musicians filled with Philistine philosophy.
Thought for the Day
Musicians are, of course, human but their humanness is not
the most important aspect of their musicing.
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