[This was found at: http://www.christkirk.com/greyfriars/ where I saw no notices or ways to contact the author. It is a paper, it appears, that was required for a ministerial course of study at a church in Idaho. It will make you think.]
The Music Stinks!
Pastoral Position Paper - Dave Hatcher
It is time to quit fooling ourselves. Contemporary worship
songs, taken as a whole, are really bad, both musically, and poetically. That is
not to say that there are not sincere, God-fearing men and women who are truly
trying to write and perform music before God that would honor Him. The problem
is that for so long our culture has lived without objective standards to measure
whether or not a piece of art is good or not.
At the time of the Reformation, the church was the centerpiece for the cultural
norms of Truth, Beauty and Goodness. The world followed our lead, and though
imperfect, there were wonderful results in the areas of art, music, and
literature, as well as in science, medicine, and a host of other fields.
However, early in the nineteenth century, the church began to lose its
confidence in the face of unbelieving scientism, and abdicated its leadership.
Filling that leadership void in the world of music were men like Schoenburg,
Wagner, Cage, and others, who applied the laws of modernity and scientism to
music and made it a mechanical monstrosity. In the seventies and eighties, after
over 150 years with no sense of what 'high art' ought to look like, and a
growing consumer mentality within the church, we caved into the demand for
pop-worship styles, along with our sermonettes and skits, for game-show like
worship services.
Are there any objective standards we are required to use to measure the quality
and propriety of music for the worship service? There must be, for we are
required to "worship the Lord in the beauty of holiness" (1 Chron 16:29), and
Jesus is referred to as Beauty (Zech 11). When it comes to evaluating aesthetics
of all kinds we must meditate upon "…whatever things are true, what ever things
are noble, whatever things are just, whatever things are pure, whatever things
are lovely, whatever things are of good report, if there is any virtue and if
there is anything praiseworthy…" (Phil 4:8). God has something in mind when He
says beautiful, lovely, and good.
In order to answer the question in the details, however, with regard to music,
requires wisdom and propriety. One cannot turn to a passage in scripture in
order to determine whether a particular song is appropriate or not. But such
determinations are commanded. Relativism in music, and the arts in general, has
made this a difficult challenge. Aesthetics is that branch of philosophy that
deals with the theory of the beautiful and of the fine arts. But aesthetics, as
with all branches of philosophy and learning, must submit to the queen of
sciences, theology. Music, considered autonomously from the Lord of music, is
leading the music of the church into bankruptcy and ruin.
The problem is that contemporary worship takes itself too seriously and yet not
seriously enough. On the one hand, the leaders of the contemporary worship scene
proclaim that we are on the wave of a new awakening in church-music. They teach
that we are seeing the beginning of a revival of deep and moving Holy
Spirit-inspired music and liturgy. Actually, we are seeing the logical outcome
of several generations of abdicating our role as guardian of the culture and the
arts. The testimonies of Christian music writers are often that 'God is doing
something special in the music of today'. That is true, but not in the way they
are thinking. Rather, He is giving us over to the garbage that we want. What
will the historians say of the music of the twentieth century ten centuries from
now? Not much I would wager. And what will the church say of the music of the
twentieth century that was used in the worship of God in 'modern' churches? I
would guess that it will simply be a quick illustration of how the twentieth
century church, lacking any moral or aesthetic leadership, followed after the
unbelieving world, desperately seeking its attention and acceptance, like the
unattractive woman she had become.
On the other hand, the contemporary worship scene does not take itself seriously
enough. Song after song of trite lyrics, hip-hop music styles, meaningless
repetition and an overemphasis of the emotions, have taken us to all new lows in
propriety within the worship service. Our motto has become: If it sells (or if
it brings them in) it must be good, it must be annointed, it must be pleasing to
our Father. Pietism is alive and well in the modern church. This view permeates
the landscape of contemporary Christian music. If it moves the believer to
thoughts of piety, then it is good worship music. If it does not affect the
believer, the problem is in the music, not the believer. This is because, in
general throughout churches in America, we have bought into the business axiom:
The customer is always right. In addition, as worship services become more and
more man-centered, focused on 'bringing them in', we serve music that suits the
tastes of the God-hating unbeliever. If music were the beverage used to proclaim
a toast to the King of kings, we have substituted Bud-Lite for fine champagne,
simply because Bubba and his boys never acquired a taste for the latter. All for
the sake of 'earning the right to be heard', we no longer have anything to say.
But the trite has come at a terrible price, only emphasizing the lack of
literacy and deep-thinking so prevalent in our age. Worship music has been led
by the pragmatist into the arena of feeling instead of thinking, because feeling
gets quick results, while thinking requires too much patience. The result is a
dumbing-down of phrases and poetry, a reductionist view of word content,
constantly lowering the bar of what is acceptable musically, lyrically, and
theologically, as long as an affect is produced. In contemporary music, we see
this so obviously in songs that have become so vague in meaning as they sing of
their love for the Father that one could simply insert 'Lolita' for 'Jesus' and
not change any other words in the song! Praise and glory and honor and majesty
is sung to God, but the biblical characteristics of God are rarely defined
anymore, and almost any cult or fringe religious group would feel as comfortable
as us at using the songs. There is no more theological 'edge' to what we are
singing about.
Illiteracy shows up not only in the words, but in the music, where three-chord
wonders rule the day. The hard work of creating complex and yet profound and
simple pieces of art is beyond the reach of most musicians, and less and less
congregations can read music. In addition, almost all praise songs are driven no
longer by a melody that can stand by itself in beauty and simplicity. Instead,
they demand rock 'n' roll's savior for all of its songs - the backbeat. No, the
devil is not in the syncopation. But the constant musical tension created by the
incessant backbeat is what gives the energy to all of the melodies - because the
sickly melodies lack anything profound or interesting in themselves.
Solutions.
If we are thinking covenantally, then we must understand that 'we' are the
problem, not 'they'. We must begin by repenting ourselves. Rather than building
on the work of great church-musicians like J.S. Bach, we have gone down a long
road of compromises, theologically, lyrically, and musically. These decisions
have been made in the orthodox church for the most part, paralleling our
compromises in the areas of science and rationalism, the integrity of the
Scriptures and translations, and relativism in every area of art and the
aesthetics.
In addition, we must repent of the way we are known for singing those 'dead, old
hymns'. They are known as dry and dusty dirges because that is the way many
churches sing them. We are not simply to sing, we are to sing, making melody in
our hearts, as the Scriptures require. This requires true regeneration and the
indwelling work of the Holy Spirit. Dead churches can't sing hymns as though
they were alive.
At the same time, we would do well to remember the antithesis, and remain
constantly suspicious of styles and forms that come out of God-hating
worldviews. We must be careful to remember that, while we may plunder the
Egyptians of their gold, we must have never covet their golden calves. Classical
music styles were created in the church and in a world dominated by a Christian
worldview. Pop and rock'n'roll have been cultivated and embraced in a culture of
rebellion and death. We must diligently seek wisdom to discern what the Lord
considers to be lovely and of good repute.
A return to the hymns of the previous centuries, particularly the 16th, 17th and
18th centuries when the reformation was making all kinds of wonderful
applications in the arts, is certainly the place to start. But we are not to
return as though that were the end-all for music. As God grants us repentance
and a fresh reformation, we must watch for well-skilled musicians to again lead
us down those old paths, but from there into fresh pastures of music that will
be rich and well fitted for the task. In addition, we should return to the
tradition of the psalter. When Paul writes of singing psalms, hymns and
spiritual songs, he is probably referring to the age-old practice of singing the
psalter. Many congregations have been rediscovering the richness and beauty of
singing these truly inspired texts, finding themselves singing about things they
never sang before.
O for the day to return when the church triumphant leads the world in the
development of music. When that happens, I do not doubt that there will be
complaints from the world (and even some stodgy types in the church) that the
music is 'getting a little out of hand'. But that will be coming amidst the awe
and splendor of glorious music, performed by skillful musicians on an assortment
of instruments, leading the congregations of Christ's Bride in music sung from
the heart. Then, the world will not laugh, they will come in and exclaim "Surely
God is among you." Then the church will be placed in its rightful place as the
leader in all areas of beauty, as we worship in the beauty of holiness.