Review of Tim Fisher’s The Battle for Christian Music
This book is
an excellent discussion about Cristian music.
Although his work has been wrongly accused by Mitch Nichols of being
biased eisegesis, this accusation was made without scholarly basis. The main argument presented has been that
Fisher considers classical music to be God honoring and that such an argument
is unfounded since such music was completely “completely foreign” to the Old
and New Testament eras.
Although
musicologists are aware that classical music was not yet developed in ancient
Israel, recent deciphering of the te’amim
above and below the Hebrew and Aramaic texts of the entire OT have proven
that the six and seven note diatonic scale did exist. Furthermore, the deciphering of the ancient
Hurrian song found in the ruins of Ugarit has been deciphered by Dr. Anne
Kilmer et.al. has revealed a seven-note diatonic scale with half steps between
3rd an4th and 7th and 8th degrees of the
scale. This music also had a harmony part and a sound quite like what we have
in our hymn books. So, Fisher’s accusers, being evidently unaware of current
scholarship, are incorrect in considering Fischer’s conclusions to be eisegesis.
Every author
writes from some philosophical viewpoint and from personal music perspective
and preference. After all this is Fisher’s work so one should expect his work
to be written from a personal perspective. I suggest that you give Fisher’s The Battle for Christian music a fair
read rather than taking his accuser’s word which was given without scholarly
support. Garen L Wolf
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