Sing and make music
I love music. I
am one of those people who would happily have 3 different radios playing in the
house so that I am surrounded by music. I also Love the way God speaks to me
through music, all different types of music. Psalm 100 talks about how we can
use music in order to praise God.
"Shout for joy to the Lord, all the earth.
Worship the Lord with gladness;
come
before him with
joyful songs.
Know that the Lord is God.
It is he
who made us, and we
are his;
we are
his people, the sheep
of his pasture.
Enter his
gates with thanksgiving
and his
courts with praise;
give
thanks to him and praise his name.
For the Lord is good and his love endures forever;
his
faithfulness continues
through all generations."
The message version says ‘Sing yourselves into his presence’ I
love that phrase! There has been times when things have been difficult and I have used a good worship time to ‘sing myself into his presence’ and receive help
and healing.
Having been brought up in the Salvation Army, a church passionate
about music and one that has a heritage in brass bands, and having spent some
of my years in other churches, I have seen a wide range of music and how
different churches engage in worship. Paul, my husband, was brought up in a charismatic
free church and the past few years have certainly been an education for him in
terms of music and worship styles, and we have had some fantastic debates!
Over the years I have seen many different churches and corps
debating the merits of brass bands and other styles of worship. I have seen
some corps blending different worship styles and using different forms of
worship music. I have also played trombone in a Salvation army brass band, as
well as singing in a ‘modern’ worship
band in an Anglican church
For me
personally, I will say, I do love a brass band and God has spoken to me very
clearly through the message of the Salvation Army band. I had a beautiful piece of
music; ‘Procession to covenant’ played when I walked down the aisle at our wedding and
‘Guardian of my soul’ a stunning, reasonably recent, band piece, has helped me
through some really dark times in my life. I believe that the Salvation army
band is still relevant today and that worship can still be vibrant and
appealing. After all the Word of the Lord attracts, not the music.
On the other
hand, I also absolutely love a worship band with guitars and drums and other
more contemporary instruments. There have been times in leading worship, and in
engaging in worship when I have felt God’s presence close to me and have not wanted
it to end! Sometimes, in this style of worship there is more of a freedom and ability
to move with the spirit and I think this should be encouraged.
For me I
believe there is certainly a place for both. By that I don’t mean a ‘traditional’
service and a ‘Contemporary’ service. I think that they both can go hand in
hand in one service, because although they
both have their fabulous strengths, they also have their weaknesses. The
brass band does not have the mass appeal it once had, and to be honest some of
the more contemporary tunes sound awful played by the cornet! I also have some
real issues with the theology behind some of the more modern tunes. A lot of
the hymns found in the Salvation Army song book (Both old and new!) are a
treasure trove of biblical truth and theological principles, whereas some of
the more popular, modern songs, are ropey at best in the words that are used!
The bible makes
is clear that we are to praise God. It doesn’t say only cornets, or drums or
singing but Psalm 150 puts it this way:
"Hallelujah!
Praise God in his holy house
of worship,
praise him under the open skies;
Praise him for his acts of
power,
praise him for his magnificent greatness;
Praise with a blast on the
trumpet,
praise by strumming soft strings;
Praise him with castanets and
dance,
praise him with banjo and flute;
Praise him with cymbals and a
big bass drum,
praise him with fiddles and mandolin.
Let every living, breathing
creature praise God!
Hallelujah!"
So however you like to do it, Praise God today!
Alice, your article is excellent and needs to be shared with a wide audience! If you have no objections I'd like to share it verbatim giving full credit in my fellowship's blog; www.fsaof.blogspot.com. With more than 1,250,00 visitors your thoughts will be read worldwide by an audience of which 30% have never had direct exposure to SA theology or thoughts. Thank you for contributing to the sharing of the gospel in this very constructive way!
ReplyDeleteBlessings to you and Paul -