Post
by BForm » Tue Jul 18, 2006 3:09 pm
Man, I wish I had been a part of this one from the beginning. Now I have too much catching up to do. I could talk all day about the state of the American church and what needs to be done. Let me just say briefly that I have a lot of trouble with the philosophy that says we need "new" methods to reach a "new" audience. I used to believe that but just don't anymore. Scripture tells us what we need to "do" to reach the world around us and it doesn't change from generation to generation. The problem is that the church isn't holy, loving, compassionate, united, etc. In other words we're not reflecting the Glory of God. For that reason, the world does not believe that the "Father sent the Son" (John 17).
I wanted to include a quote that directly relates to Brent's last post. If we want to see how God writes worship music, read the Psalms:
What Miserable Christian�s Sing
From: The Wages of Spin
By: Carl Truelove
The Psalms: �Only in the Psalms do you have the full range of human emotion that allows you, however desperate you feel, to go in and offer words of praise to God.�
On why Psalm singing has disappeared from the modern church:
"I�m not certain about why this should be but I have an instinctive feel that it has more than a little to with the fact that a high proportion of Psalms are taken up with lamentation with feeling sad, unhappy, tormented and broken. In modern Western culture these are simply not emotions which have much credibility. Sure people still feel these things, but to admit that they are a normal part of one�s everyday life is tantamount to admitting that one has failed in today�s health, wealth and happiness society. But in the Psalms, God has given the church a language which allows it to express even the deepest agonies of the human soul in the context of worship. By excluding cries of loneliness, dispossession and desolation from its worship, the church has effectively silenced and excluded the voices of those who are themselves lonely, dispossessed and desolate, both inside and outside the church. It has implicitly endorsed the banal aspirations of consumerism, and generated an insipid, trivial and unrealistically triumphalist Christianity.
In the last year I have asked three very different evangelical audiences what miserable Christians can sing in church. On each occasion my question has elicited uproarious laughter, as if the idea of a broken hearted, lonely, or despairing Christian was so absurd as to be comical. And yet I posed the question in all seriousness."
Ouch!!! This quote makes me look at "worship" music in an entirely different light.
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God is most glorified in us when we are most satisfied in Him. - John Piper