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A journey away from contemporary worship
http://www.dancogan.com/my-journey-a...-worship-music
My Journey Away from Contemporary Worship Music I have been what many would call a “worship leader” for close to two decades. When I first became involved in “worship ministry” in an Assemblies of God youth group we sang such songs as The Name of the Lord Is a Strong Tower, As the Deer, Lord I Lift Your Name on High, and others of the era of the 1980s and 90s. Ours was considered a stylistically progressive church since we used almost exclusively contemporary songs. This meant that if I were to visit a “traditional” church, not only would I be unfamiliar with the hymns, I would also likely cringe when they sang them and in my heart ridicule them (the people rather than the songs) as being old-fashioned. It was during these formative years in my experience as a worship leader that I began to introduce even more contemporary songs to our youth group. It was then that I discovered artists like Delirious, Darrel Evans, Matt Redman, and Vineyard Music with their songs Did You Feel the Mountains Tremble, Trading My Sorrows, Heart of Worship, and Hungry. As a young musician who desired to honor Christ, I found these songs to be particularly compelling. I felt different when we sang them. The way Nirvana gave voice to the angst of Generation X, bands like Delirious were giving voice to a generation of young Christians who didn’t feel they could relate to the songs of their parents and grandparents. Over the years when I would occasionally hear a hymn, the language was always strikingly foreign, with Ebenezers and bulwarks, diadems and fetters. Which only served to confirm my bias that hymns were simply out-of-date. They had served their purpose. They had run their course. The problem with my youthful logic only began to dawn on me about seven years ago. I had come to recognize that these ancient hymns accomplished something that the new songs weren’t. While contemporary worship seemed to take the listener on an exciting and emotional rollercoaster, the old hymns engaged the mind with deep and glorious truths that when sincerely pondered caused a regenerated heart to humbly bow before its King. When I accepted my first post as a paid member of a church staff in 2007, I began the practice of singing one hymn each week. There were times where my peers would teasingly ask what an “Ebenezer” was. What I found was that when I gave them a basic definition of these seemingly obsolete words we were singing, their response was usually something akin to, “Oh? Cool. I never knew that!” I think when they asked, they half expected me to say, “I don’t know! Weird word, huh?” Instead they were being challenged to learn, not merely a new word, but how to ponder the things of God deeply when we sing His praises. Nowadays, I still choose songs for our congregation to sing that were written recently, but they are becoming increasingly the minority. And the criteria for selecting them is becoming more and more thorough. Hymns have begun to take precedent in my song selection for two reasons. First, hymns have been sung by the giants of the faith who have gone on before us over the last two millennia. When we sing A Mighty Fortress Is Our God, we join with Martin Luther who wrote it, and with Calvin and Spurgeon and Edwards who invariably sang and cherished it. When we sing It Is Well With My Soul we are encouraged by the faith of Horatio Spafford who wrote the hymn in the wake of the tragic death of his four daughters. And while many contemporary songs have certainly been written by wonderful brothers and sisters in Christ who have surely endured trials, the fact that we can join with generations past and be reminded that the Church is vastly larger than our local congregation, farther reaching than our town or state or country, and much, much older than the oldest saint living today is something we should not take lightly. Indeed, this should birth in us a desire to sing the songs that our Family has sung together for two-thousand years (and beyond when we discuss singing the Psalms). Second, the content of hymns is almost always vastly more theologically rich. When I say rich, I don’t necessarily mean every hymn recounts the Gospel in it’s entirety, or that all hymns clearly teach the Five Points of Calvinism. Rather, the theology in the hymns is typically more sound or healthy than much of contemporary worship music. As I said earlier, contemporary songs engage our emotions more often, where the hymns engage our hearts by way of the mind. By way of example, one of the top ten contemporary songs being sung in American evangelical churches right now is called One Thing Remains. While there is nothing in the song particularly bad (in fact, much of it is pretty good), it seems to me that the purpose of the song is to work the listeners into an emotional state. The chorus is: Quote:
Whereas Augustus Toplady’s hymn Rock of Ages is doctrinally sound, it also is a very moving song of our dependance upon Christ our Rock: Quote:
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Re: A journey away from contemporary worship
If he thinks old hymns are good, he'll think he hit the motherload when he rediscovers psalmsinging.
The worship we offer to God as the church isn't supposed to be "contemporary" ... it is supposed to be eternal. |
Re: A journey away from contemporary worship
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I liked the part about songs that repeat the same shallow phrase over and over. |
Re: A journey away from contemporary worship
He's just burned out on the K LOVE type contemporary songs. I understand that. I have always stuggled with that. TO ME it seems as if EVERY song ALWAYS is something about how terrible we are and yet God always just keeps loving us.
They ALMOST always seem to downplay holiness. Much of it is really shallow. With that said very few of the hymns move me any more than K LOVE does. I can remember the drowsiness that settled over the congregation when I was in the Church Of Christ and the song service began. With writers like Martin Luther I would not expect much and frankly dont get much. Now as Esaias said THE PSALMS have always offered a richness that cant be otherwise found. Why? Because they were inspired by God! Thats what the early Jesus Movement and the early Charismatic Movement songs were. The Biblical Psalms. That style of music is long gone now for the most part. |
Re: A journey away from contemporary worship
I dont know about martin luther, but there are MANY awesome old hymns that both theologically rich and spiritually moving. There are also a metric crudload of old hymns that are as lame as all get out.
As for church of christ music, a lot depends on the worshippers. I have heard I Can Only Imagine at a UPC that brought the house down and turned into a 1 and a half hour prayer meeting during which one of my daughters got the Holy Ghost. I heard the same song performed at an AG church that was L A M E and my kids were asking me "are you sure this is a pentecostal church?" lol Most of the really good hymns are little known. Sanctuary, Jesus Thou Art the Sinners Friend, Help Me To Be Holy, Fill Me Now, Baptised Into The Body, Guide Me O Thou Great Jehovah, I Am Satisfied, When Our Lord Shall Come Again, When I See The Blood, Go To Dark Gethsemane, and many other lesser known and nearly forgotten hymns are treasures the church ought never to lose. But psalms beat them all. :) |
Re: A journey away from contemporary worship
Now about psalms... there is a growing movement across the board to return to the psalms. I believe this is of God and he is calling people to authentic worship and apostolic experience. The problem is (with psalms) people aren't quite sure "how to do it". But God is doing something in this area.
Every culture expresses itself in its own unique way but God is unchanging. His worship will be "universal" but expressed with the unique sound and sight or "feel" of each congregation. Metrical psalms are a start, but we need better tunes/melodies to complement the few truly good melodies available. Straight psalmody (responsoriallyfor example) is usually what we do, with original melodies that are an outgrowth and evolution of our southern, pentecostal, scotch-irish heritage. We even hand clap when "chanting the psalms" in our "southern/appalachian pentecostal" style. |
Re: A journey away from contemporary worship
There are contemporary artists who sort of revive hymns and give them a fresh sound like Chris Tomlin and Hillsong.
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Re: A journey away from contemporary worship
I found a neat site. A guy does "scripture songs" as well as old hymns and adaptations of hymns. Check this out:
http://www.scripturesongs.net/mp3/os...Praise_You.mp3 http://www.scripturesongs.net |
Re: A journey away from contemporary worship
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http://www.scripturesongs.net/mp3/ss...gUntoJesus.mp3 Picture this. A living room full of people singing along with this. People raising their hands in praise some with tears streaming down their faces. Now you know what the 70's and 80's Charismatic meetings were like. |
Re: A journey away from contemporary worship
Speaking of Psalms. This group does Psalms only last I knew.
Sons Of Korah https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oJ00rNoKhDE |
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