Quote:
Originally Posted by Norman
I would consider a hymn to be old if it was written over 40 years ago...
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Son, you must be pretty young to be saying these things.
One thing I know, when I was 16 my dad didn't know anything. By the time I got to 30, he knew quite a bit. But when I hit 40 I found out he knew pert near everything.
As to the topic... we sing 'the old hymns' quite a bit. We even sing stuff from the 1500s (Scottish Metrical Psalter, where the Psalms have been placed into rhyming (!) Common Meter). Some of the old hymns from the 1800s are beautiful and unbelievably rich. Sadly, a lot of the melodies from that era leave quite a bit to be desired. So some of the old hymn tunes we have modified, or even come up with entirely different melodies for singing them.
I have been thinking about adapting some of the older hymns' lyrics as well. Quite a few use phraseology and vocabulary that simply doesn't work nowadays, but the concepts and many of the visuals created by the lyrics are awesome and astounding, it's a shame they are largely being forgotten by today's generation of believers. The only ones keeping them alive are churches that cater to the 50-something crowd using the world's goofiest tunes packed with as much musical cheese as possible. It's a shame.
The church needs to keep the old hymns as well as write new hymns. And I mean actually write new hymns and songs, not just pay licensing fees for pop star music that didn't make it in Hollywood so they took it to Branson or Nashville or whatever and gave it a Christian veneer. The church needs to safeguard it's musical heritage for future generations.