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Musical choice reveals congregation’s theological position Print E-mail
By Terry Lee Goodrich   
Thursday, August 13, 2009

ImageWACO, Texas (ABP) -- Terry York is willing to bet that if he goes into a Baptist church, sits down and listens, he can tell -- long before the preacher speaks -- whether the congregation is theologically conservative or moderate.

The tip-off is in the tunes, said York, associate professor of Christian ministry and church music at Baylor University’s George W. Truett Theological Seminary.

“It’s a little insider family secret -- a signal, although it’s not foolproof,” York said. “The hymnal serves as a statement of faith. It matters, even if they don’t use it.”

Throughout their history, Baptists have resisted having a written creed or book of common prayer, said York, who has written hymns for Baptist hymnals and was project coordinator of the 1991 Baptist Hymnal published by the Southern Baptist Convention.

“When Baptists get crosswise, they either have to admit they’re singing from the same statement of faith or go to different books,” York said. “You know they all want to sing ‘Amazing Grace,’ but it gets hairy after that.”

So, it’s significant an alternative songbook to the Baptist Hymnal -- the first in several years -- will be published in 2010, York said. The songbook -- Celebrating Grace -- will be heavier on hymns than on praise choruses that have become popular in churches in the past several years.

Centrist and right-leaning Baptists in the 15-million-member denomination likely will use the Baptist Hymnal, put out by LifeWay Christian Resources in Nashville; center and left will probably use Celebrating Grace, produced by Mercer University in Atlanta, York predicted.

That’s because churches that are more conservative theologically generally are more liberal musically, with services heavy on praise choruses. Meanwhile, traditional hymns typically are staples in moderate congregations, York said.

“It doesn’t compute, but the conservatives tend to be more populist, painting with a broader brush, wanting you to feel a certain thing,” said David Music, professor of church music and graduate program director of Baylor’s School of Music. “More moderate churches want you to leave thinking a certain way.

“Of course, you also can have very conservative congregations that, come heck or high water, are only going to use the good old hymns, the old gospels.”

Traditionally, hymns consist of stanzas in which the words vary but the music stays the same. They are sometimes punctuated by repetitive choruses in which words and music remain consistent.

Praise choruses, often projected on a screen rather than in a hymnal’s musical score, tend to be simpler and more repetitive.

Then there are modern worship songs, often including a solo. Because of the greater musical range and intricacy, they can be tough for worshipers, York said.

Despite the two hymnals’ varying emphases on musical styles, “they’ll have more in common than different,” he said. “‘Blessed Assurance’ and ‘Just As I Am’ show they are indeed still Baptists. The differences are over interpretation of doctrine, although some of the split is purely musical preference.”

Some hot-button theological debates -- such as whether Scripture is inerrant and whether women should be ordained -- will not be obviously present in the hymnals.

“I don’t think you’ll find any that are pro or con inerrancy,” Music said. “And I can’t think of a single hymn that speaks of the ordination of women. You want to avoid partisanship, even if you’re aiming at a niche.”

What’s telling is how a song holds up over time. William May, dean of Baylor’s School of Music, said that throughout history, “when you engaged with God, it was an offering of your very best -- best clothes, best attitude and even, in the Old Testament, the best animal you sacrificed.

“Today, the philosophical notion is that made it elitist,” he said. “Now we want everyone to be comfortable, visit with friends, get a cup of coffee.... But if I don’t know the tunes and I have to sit through five repetitions to learn, that’s just as elitist as people who said Bach in church was elitist.

“If the music in the church is only the slide on the wall that says, ‘God is awesome’ and ‘Jesus is cool,’ then some may be prepared to worship, but others, like me, may not be so moved.”

York said that hymns “keep on trucking. There have been challengers, like the praise choruses of the 1970s and 1980s, often played by younger generations who want to make current worship songs.

“Challengers usually fail,” York said. “But the best of those stick and get the name ‘hymn.’”

Examples include “Since Jesus Came into My Heart,” initially scorned for being too much like “dance music,” and “I Love You, Lord,” criticized for having too few words, too few chords and too much repetition.

Whatever Baptists believe church music should be, compiling a hymnal is a huge task.

Revisions of the Baptist Hymnal, with more than 600 songs, are done about every 15 years after massive surveys of church leaders and members about hymns they sing, hymns they do not and hymns they want to add.

Equally difficult was the task for Celebrating Grace. Those who selected hymns included pastors, theologians, music ministers, laity and professors of church music, said Music, one of five editors.

“We want it to be a practical book that people will actually use, but also challenging so people can grow into it, not out of it,” he said.

“I think hymns are more effective than almost any means of teaching Scripture. We’re more likely to remember words and concepts when they’re set to music. There’s a blend of emotion and passion, rhyme and meter with repetition.

“If a preacher preaches the same sermon repeatedly, the preacher is going to be looking for a new job. But people don’t mind singing a hymn again and again.

-30-

Terry Lee Goodrich is assistant director of media communications at Baylor University.

 

Read more:

Faith that sings: Hymns make theology portable

 

 





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Comments (5)Add Comment
Strange combination of tastes
written by Xenophon, August 13, 2009
This is an excellent article. I have noticed that not only more liberal Christians prefer traditional hymns, but not necessarily religious liberal folks appreciate traditional Christian music. If you listen to Garrison Keillor's *Prarie Home Companion,* he sings and has musical guests who sing traditional hymns almost weekly. He even leads sing-alongs with the audience singing traditional hymns. All the while, Evangelicals are ignoring at an increasing rate this great storehouse of music to draw from that has touched people's hearts (and subtly their minds) for centuries in some cases.

I have also noticed that Evangelical Christians more generally have forsaken cultivating a sense of the transcendent in how they decorate and conduct themselves in church. As the article notes, they seem more interested in making people feel welcome and comfortable. The way people dress is alarmingly casual. To me, this attitude among Evangelicals borders on the sacrilegious. I have frequently noticed people talking, looking bored, and carelessly handling the elements during communion in Evangelical churches. Many even skip the service if they know communion is going to be observed. Now that is sacrilege.

This trend is even more obvious in church architecture. For some reason that eludes me, Evangelical Christians have some sort of building fetish. They are continually tearing down or marginalizing historical and more ornate buildings only to replace them with the ugly, impersonal Bauhaus boxes. I do not get it.

I am sorry to say that the liberals/moderates are on the right track and we Evangelicals are moving further away from where we want to be in our own corporate worship as well as preserving our community's heritage. It is hard to imagine why so-called conservatives veer off course on what is a vital part of worship. These seeming intangibles have a tremendous effect on people.
...
written by ABP Reader, August 14, 2009
Fascinating article. Thanks.
comments to Xen
written by Slick, August 14, 2009
Your comments here as well as the extended debate (and argument by one poster) are interested ad well taken. You are wrong, of course! (I’M KIDDING)

Seriously, our definitions of what is conservative and liberal or traditional vs. contemporary does create a good bit of communication difficulty at times. With regard to church music, what is contemporary to one is not necessarily so to another. To many, it means a stage band (can’t bring myself to call them a praise team because so many strike me as a group of divas) while to others it’s newer music that has about half the note sung on the off beat.

For too many pastors today, in my opinion, congregational music is primarily a means to attract and keep people, particularly the under 35 crowd in church. Frankly, as a worshiper in the pew (which I am now) or as a minister of music (which I was prior to a recent job relocation) I don’t see much value in 7-11 songs that have to be repeated ad infinitum. Same for quirky melodies. I admit that quirky melodies can be rightly used to describe songs we just don’t know.
As for music reflecting the theology of a congregation, I think that often it may just reflect the theology/taste of the preacher. Or the MoM.

I consider myself pretty much theologically conservative but not an extremist. I prefer music in the hymnals as opposed to singing off the wall, but I find great value in some of the more contemporary-style music—value in the words. My preference comes from familiarity with the music more so than the style of the words. If I can hold the words and read the music, I like things a lot better. So am I a liberal because I prefer hymns? Doubt it. I may hold a conservative but more liberal position on a particular doctrine than my neighbor on the pew, but I don’t think that make me liberal.

A main problem I have with the ultra-radical right wingers is that if a person has a slightly more to-the-left view on a particular doctrine than the right-wing mantra, that one is smeared as a total, godless heretic by the ultra-conservatives.
An interesting article.
One more thought
written by Slick, August 14, 2009
A few years ago someone on an email list for MoMs asked if so-called contemporary worship formats were leading to a more lackadaisical attitude toward worship. The writer’s observation was that those who attended contemporary worship were not a punctual—often 10 or more minutes late—and also were dressed very casually.

Your comments about a nonchalant approach to worship should make any of us who want to take worship seriously and focused on connecting with God stop and think about worship practices. Should corporate worship be a pep rally or a more reverent event?

Yes, I know where man looks and where God looks but I wonder what example about the significance and seriousness of corporate some are setting for future generations by practicing casual worship.
...
written by Oro Lee, August 15, 2009
At one time I was pretty down on traditional hymns -- most seemed to be bulwarks never ending. Some were kinda bloody. The favorites had a simple and catchy tune. "Amazing Grae?" You bet. "Marvelous Grace?" Once in a while. "And Can It Be?" Only the choir.

I became a big proponent of praise music, until I heard several testimonies of how words of a traditional hymn would stay with unbelievers until they sought out more about Jesus.

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