Music in the Bible and Music on the Radio:
A Biblical Theology of Music Applied to the Contemporary Music Styles Debate
[an earlier version of this paper was delivered at the 50th annual meeting of the Evangelical Theological Society in Orlando, November 1998]
(Revised January 2000)
Gregg
Strawbridge, Ph.D.
All Saints' Presbyterian Church, Lancaster, PA, Pastor
ABSTRACT
As
an analysis of music style, this paper offers a succinct theological synthesis
of the Biblical information on music. The writer summarizes a mini-theology
of music and addresses a current issue relevant to evangelical worship,
ministry programs, missiology, and cultural impact: contemporary music
styles. The paper argues that an exegetical and Biblical theology of music
and a familiarity with the issues surrounding ethnomusicology are the foundation
for any specific musical-genre critique. Moreover, some reflection on the
larger issue of the relationship between Christ and culture are a necessary
counterpart to this discussion. To accomplish this, the paper is divided
into three sections: (1) a Biblical survey of music, (2) a dialogue with
current critiques of contemporary music styles, and (3) directions and
recommendations for Christian musicians.
A
study of the Psalms alone yield an impressive role for music in the life
of Biblical people. The extolling of Yahweh through music is spoken of
as congregational (149:1), individual (42:8) and for every situation (74:21).
Music is used to praise God joyfully, loudly (47:1), melodically (98:5),
and with a variety of instruments (150:3-5), from chordophones (lyres,
harps, kinnors), to membranophones (timbrels), to aerophones (flutes, shofars,
pipes), to metalophones (cymbals). (2) Such
praise is associated with bodily movement and common expressions of joy
and gladness, such as dancing (30:11, 149:3, 150:4). The psalmists command
praise with skill (47:7, 33:3), to "make His praise glorious" (66:2). They
frequently call the nations to make the sounds of praise (67:4, 22:27,
117:1, 108:3). A fitting close to the Psalter is the call for all that
has breath to hymn the worth of their Maker (150:6).
The
use of music in the worship of the New Testament church has indisputable
Biblical support (Mat 26:30; 1Co 14:19, 14:26; Eph 5:18-20; Col 3:16; Heb
2:12). The primary church music texts in the New Testament (Col 3:16 &
Eph 5:19) are commands, not primarily to sing or make music, but to "teach"
and "speak" with "psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs."
In
the Biblical-times music, (3) there is no
strong dichotomy between speaking and singing. In Scripture language is
generally connected to the life of the person. For example, Isaiah
confesses sinfulness by saying "I am a man of unclean
lips, and
I live among a people of unclean lips" (6:5). Jesus says, "You brood
of vipers, how can you, being evil, speak what is good? For the mouth speaks
out of that which fills the heart" (Mat 12:34). "Not what enters into the
mouth defiles the man, but what proceeds out of the mouth, this defiles
the man. . . But the things that proceed out of the mouth come from the
heart, and those defile the man" (Mat 15:11-18). The concept of the mouth
expressing the heart and the words of a person being taken as the essence
or heart of a person is ubiquitous in Scripture. Likewise, it is the Word
of God which is the instrument of regeneration (1Pe 1:23), the building
block of faith (Rom 10:17), and the standard of sanctification (2Ti 3:16).
Jesus teaches, "It is written, 'Man shall not live on bread alone, but
on every word that proceeds out of the mouth of God'" (Mat 4:4; also Psa
19, 119).
On
the basis of what Scripture teaches about the words of man and the words
of God, it is not surprising that there are no strict separations between
praise and prayer which is spoken, sung, and shouted. All verbal activity
manifests the heart and the Word of God changes the heart. The fruit of
the lips is the result. (4) Therefore, the
"redeemed of the Lord" "say so" in a continuum of verbal expression from
simply speaking, to speaking loudly, to singing, to shouting. In fact in
some cases it is difficult to tell exactly what act the words are referring
to (merely speaking, or singing, chanting, speaking loudly, etc.). Consider
the Biblical parallels:
Psalm 33:3 Sing to Him a new song; Play skillfully with a shout of joy.
Psalm 65:13 The meadows are clothed with flocks, And the valleys are covered with grain; They shout for joy, yes, they sing.
Psalm 95:2 Let us come before His presence with thanksgiving; Let us shout joyfully to Him with psalms.
Psalm 71:23 My lips will shout for joy when I sing praises to Thee; And my soul, which Thou hast redeemed.
Psalm 75:9 But as for me, I will declare it forever; I will sing praises to the God of Jacob.
Psalm 81:1 (For the choir director; on the Gittith) Sing for joy to God our strength; Shout joyfully to the God of Jacob.
Psalm 95:1 O come, let us sing for joy to the Lord ; Let us shout joyfully to the rock of our salvation.
Psalm 96:2 Sing to the Lord, bless His name; Proclaim good tidings of His salvation from day to day.
Psalm 98:4 Shout joyfully to the Lord, all the earth; Break forth and sing for joy and sing praises.
Psalm 105:2 Sing to Him, sing praises to Him; Speak of all His wonders.
The
rigid distinction between singing and other verbal activity in our Western
contemporary use of language was not so distinct to the people of the Bible.
Having
briefly considered the representative Biblical data regarding music. Now
we shall consider the current debate. Is music style neutral? Are musical
compositions and styles inherently good or bad? This issue is addressed
in terms of the "neutrality of music." Popular preacher John Blanchard
(1983) says, "When music is composed, it is not composed into a neutral
nothing, but into a positive something--a form that is definite and meaningful,
with colour and character." (p. 81). Blanchard goes on to cite an impressive
number of thinkers to support the contention that "music has moved man
in a hundred different ways" (p. 83). Leonard Seidel says, "The evidence
is clear from history, music theory and Biblical examples-music is not
neutral. Cynthia Maus has said it so eloquently: 'Music soothes us, stirs
us up; it puts noble feelings into us; it melts us to tears, we know not
how. It is a language by itself just as perfect in its way of speech, as
words; just as divine, just as blessed.'" (p. 27)
It will be important here to define the question more sharply. The status questionis (state of the question) is not whether music, given certain conditions, "moves us" or "soothes us," - rather, the question is whether a particular music style or genre (such as rock, country, rhythm-and-blues) is intrinsically good, bad, or neutral. (5) There is no question that music creates powerful connotations, a reality continually exploited in advertising. The issue I am seeking to address is not one of connotations or associations, but of the ontology of music.
Two
primary types of arguments emerge against contemporary music styles (hereafter,
CM): aesthetic arguments and ethical-metaphysical arguments. Aesthetic
arguments focus on the quality of the music and dismiss it as bad art,
though not necessarily inherently evil. Though I will touch on this, my
main concern is the ethical-metaphysical arguments. Ethical-metaphysical
arguments focus on the inherent qualities of particular music genres. I
am limiting my analysis to the style-genre, not the typical lyric content.
The critical arguments cited have been addressed toward all forms of CM
(including country and jazz genres), but especially popular rock styles.
Bill Gothard (1986), a well-known critic of CM says, "There is no such thing as amoral music." He diagrams an analogy between other disciplines and music. "The following disciplines illustrate how the purity of an item can be corrupted by adding even a small amount of another element" (p. 124).The Natural Law Argument
| CHEMISTRY | LANGUAGE | MATH |
| H2O + CN | Truth + Lie | Solution +1 |
| = Poison | = Untruth | = Incorrect |
[What
follows on the next page is the analogy to art and music.]
| ART | MUSIC |
| Figure + Nudity | Rhythm + Imbalance |
| = Pornography | = Acid Rock |
However
impressive this line up is on first glance, this presentation actually
begs
the question; it assumes what must be proven. Namely, it has not yet
been shown that "acid rock" music style (whatever it is) is, in fact, evil.
The illustrated argument rests on an analogy between different disciplines.
"Accurate evaluation of music is only possible as we integrate it with
the related disciplines of mathematics, science, history, and medicine.
The laws of these disciplines act as an authoritative reference to confirm
that the musical expression is either following or violating established
principles....Just as there is a balance of power in the three branches
of United States government, so the laws of related disciplines provide
checks and balances for music" (p. 123). The perceptive reader will note
that until one can prove that a music style is analogous to poison, falsehood,
mathematical inaccuracy, or pornography, the indicting conclusion is fallacious.
The fallacy is called the fallacy of false analogy.
There
are a number of reasons why such analogies should not be persuasive. (1)
Contrary to what is asserted, unless the analogies are Biblically supported
they cannot be "authoritative" (sola Scriptura). (2) The analogies
themselves do not really have the impact intended upon further analysis.
Poison in large quantities may be medicine in small quantities; the truth
or falsity of a statement must rest on the intention of the author; mathematical
inaccuracies are quantitative not qualitative (as music is); figure plus
mere nudity does not equal pornography, cf. medical text books and some
art (e.g., David, Michelangelo). (3) "Imbalance" in the last of
the series (rhythm + imbalance = acid rock) must be defined. If "imbalance"
essentially means CM, the argument has not advanced beyond circularity.
If imbalance can be defined so as to prove a particular music style is
morally evil, then it must rest on Biblical implication.
A better formulation of this argument in a valid syllogism, keeping the same intention as the authors, would look like this:
(1) All emotions are (in) music.
(2) Some emotions is sinful.
(3) Therefore, some music is sinful.
The
substantial difficulties can be seen more clearly now. How is one to prove
the first premise, all emotion is in music? An even more difficult
problem arises in the second premise, a problem to which the original writer
of the argument (Tame) alludes: "Hate, when directed at sin, is good and
acceptable....Anger is unacceptable except when the one who is angry is
not sinning. An emotion like lust is never right" (p. 3). Defining the
ethical content of an emotion is difficult. How much more difficult when
the emotion is represented in musical expression! The fact is, the Bible
represents the same emotion, described with the same word, as in some situations
good and in others evil. (See the Appendix: Emotions in the Bible)
Apparently,
the same basic emotions can be sinful or acceptable, given the purpose
and motivation. Thus, the syllogism is incomplete until the music critic
can identify the specific content of the emotion in the music. One
is hard pressed to identify the specific content of a CM style (especially
apart from the lyric content of a song) with a specific sinful emotion.
Certainly the emotional argument has not proven that any CM style is inherently
evil.
Some suggest that when the beat becomes the main focus of the music, overwhelming all other components, that is when the trouble begins. The pulsating beat assaults the mind and puts it to sleep, so to speak, opening it to evil invasion while the listener is off guard. That is the assertion. But how is such a statement to be proven? Or disproven? The argument at that point moves from the realm of the concrete to the metaphysical. And metaphysical arguments cannot be settled in the laboratory. (p. 69)
Much
of the behavioral research to which the above Gothard-endorsed authors
refer is based on the behavioral kinesology of Psychiatrist John Diamond.
Diamond says that the anapestic beat ("da da DA") found in some rock music
causes muscle weakening, even up to a reduction of two-thirds (Cannon &
Cannon; Miller, 1993, p. 12ff). An example of this beat is that fine specimen
of popular music, "Southern Nights" by Glenn Campbell. Miller (1993) is
right in questioning these conclusions. As for a refutation, suffice it
to say that at every Golds Gym, Diamond et al is constantly being
refuted. An instant autonomic reduction of strength is de facto
not occurring as iron-pumping people are bench-pressing to anapestic back
beats.
Garlock
and Woetzel (1992) focus on the inherent immoral qualities of rhythm-dominant
music (pp. 79-80). "The emphasis of most of contemporary sacred and secular
music is on the rhythm. Rhythm is that part of music which elicits a physical
response. Therefore, most of today's music, secular and sacred, feeds and
satisfies the self-seeking, self-centered, and self-worshiping part of
man" (cf. p. 67). Here is another example of demonstrably fallacious reasoning.
Either the argument is invalid because of equivocating on terms "physical
response" and "self-seeking, self-centered, and self-worshiping part of
man" - or, the authors are guilty of serious theological error in equating
the physical part of man with the sinful part of man.
Even
if we overlook the fact that many of the Church's greatest theologians
have taught that man is dichotomous (comprised of a body and soul, the
soul including all the non-material part of man), the conclusion does not
follow from the premises, unless the physical part of man is the
sinful part of man. But, the physical part of man cannot be equated with
the sinful nature since, the sinless Son of God was made flesh (1Jo 4:2).
Further, the first man and woman were initially sinless, though incarnate.
And we shall ever be sinfully incarnate after the Resurrection. Passages
which use "flesh" (sarx) to refer to sinfulness (Rom 6-7, Gal 3,
etc.) are not referring to merely the physical body, but the inherent sinfulness
of fallen human nature which permeates every facet of man, body, soul,
spirit, mind, heart, bowels, and spleen. Of the 147 times "flesh" (sarx)
is used in the New Testament, only a small minority of passages have the
sense of "sinful nature" (NIV). "Flesh" (sarx) is used in a number
of ways both positively (Rom 1:3, 2Co 4:11), and negatively (Gal 5:17).
Fatal to the argument above, is the clear teaching that the regenerate
spirit of man is also sinful. "Therefore, having these promises, beloved,
let us cleanse ourselves from all defilement of flesh and spirit, perfecting
holiness in the fear of God" (2Co 7:1). Finally, it is simply metaphysically
false to imply that evil is to be equated with embodiment, since the devils
are not physical but are evil. To connect sinfulness with physicalness
is the
Gnostic heresy and is a flat contradiction to the redemptive
enterprise of the incarnate Jesus.
Let
us suppose that Garlock and Woetzel really mean that rhythm appeals to
the "sinful nature" ("flesh"). By this they would avoid a theological error
of no small proportion; however, if rhythm appeals to the sinful part of
man, it follows necessarily that good music should have no rhythm at
all! But of course, this is not possible, since all music involves
sound in time.
Note
well: what the Bible almost explicitly teaches about rhythm in music is
irreconcilable to the above critics of CM. Scripture does not condemn the
appeal to bodily movement and rhythm in music. This is indicated by the
correlation of dancing with the use of music and especially percussion
instruments such as timbrels and cymbals.
Let
them praise His name with dancing; Let them sing praises to Him with timbrel
and lyre. (Psa 149:3)
Praise Him with timbrel and dancing; Praise Him with stringed instruments and pipe. (Psa 150:4)
It
is irrefutable that rock and roll music owes some of its roots to the tribes
of Africa....To declare that these are the only roots of rock music is
to mislead and to be less than honest. A careful study of rock music reveals
it to be more complex than that; however, to deny that an African connection
to the rock rhythms of our day does not exist, is to be equally misleading
and dishonest. To declare that a certain rhythm or beat is 'evil' cannot
be proved entirely. What is far more important is the historical revelation
that demonic activity has been observed in connection with rituals where
drums and rhythmic beats have been the catalyst. (Leonard J. Seidel, Face
the Music: Contemporary Church Music on Trial, 1988, p. 41)
I
appreciate the understated, but fatal admission, "To declare that a certain
rhythm or beat is 'evil' cannot be proved entirely." In response: (1) The
historical evidence that the "beat" came via demonic Africa is quite dubious.
Steve Lawhead has argued the point strongly. Most were from areas where
the drum (and therefore, "the beat") was not a significant instrument.
After all, "Drums were almost never heard in black American music until
well into the twentieth century." The rock beat actually developed more
from country-western music, "The Saddlemen." "As for the charge that rock's
rhythm is demon inspired, most people overlook the fact that in other places
where New World slaves landed (Jamaica, Haiti, the islands of the West
Indies) nothing close to rock ever evolved" (1981, pp. 57-58).
(2)
Unless someone can first show that the "beat" is evil, a proponent of the
African
Connection is simply committing the genetic fallacy. A bad origin
for something does not necessarily make it bad. The devil can make a cogent
argument. In music, arguing from origins is problematic since "Jubal..was
the father of all those who play the lyre and pipe" (Gen 4:21). And Jubal
was in the ungodly line of Cain. In fact, the reveller, Lamech was Jubal's
father.
(3)
If music origins are translated into ethical norms, even the music of the
Bible cannot clear itself from charges. Old Testament scholar Ronald B.
Allen has rightly noted the Biblical use "the devil's instruments." He
explains, such instruments have "a long history of (mis)use in pagan circles
before it became so dearly associated with the making of music to the Lord
in ancient Israel." (7)
Psalm 93 was "written with a conscious attempt both to glorify God and
to debunk Baal. The manner of singing would be very similar to the manner
of singing in the worship of Baal. But the point of the song was opposed
to all that Baal was supposed to represent."(8)
Garlock and Woetzel, et al (above)
go further though. Their aesthetic turns out to be a metaphysic. They describe
godly music as a hierarchy of melody, harmony, rhythm with a steady pulse
(pp. 64-66). They relate their anachronistic standard, metaphysically,
to a trichotomist anthropology (man is body, soul, spirit). "The part of
music to which the spirit responds is the melody" (p. 57). "The part of
music to which your mind responds is the harmony" (p. 58). "The part of
music to which your body responds is the rhythm" (p. 59). The fact that
the Bible does not teach this musical metaphysic (exegesis will not yield
anything like these claims) in no way impedes the critics from developing
an entire musical ethic. What follows from this? No rock, no jazz, no beat,
no back beat, and I guess dancing is out too.
When a CM critic develops criteria for
"good music," what is its basis? In what sense can it be Biblical? The
description of good music in Garlock and Woetzel, Cannon and Cannon, and
the Gothard ministry generally clearly reads Common Practice Period (1600-1900)
Western art music (hereafter, WCPP) back into the Bible. It is, thus, anachronistic.
This can be illustrated from the often used threefold division of music
(e.g. Garlock and Woetzel, p. 55): "Music is also considered to have three
primary parts: melody, harmony, and rhythm." Perhaps a starting place for
evaluation is to see whether Biblical-times music could even be identified
with the features of WCPP music. Certainly the descriptions of Biblical-times
musical style, given by learned experts, cannot be understood as depicting
"godly music," according to the standard of the authors (see the Appendix:
Ancient Near Eastern Music). Consider what Vida Chenoweth and Darlene
Bee explain,
Christianity has certainly
influenced the course of Western musical development; some of our greatest
music has been inspired by a strong Christian faith. Nevertheless, we cannot
say that our Western musical tradition is the same as the Christian musical
tradition. It is not the musical idiom of the New Testament; the founders
of our faith would have been ill-at-ease in it. There was no musical notation
at the time of Christ so we will never know what melodies were sung by
Jesus and His disciples. What we do know about their musical style is that
it was Near Eastern. Our modern hymns are also different from Hebrew and
Greek music, even though the gospel reached us through the cultural matrix
of these societies. Our Western hymns are a heritage which we rightly cherish,
but they belong to our faith through our culture. (1968, see pp. 211-212)
(9)
The music which emerged in the WCPP,
though grand and beautiful to us, is anachronistic to Biblical-times music.
Even apart from the fact that Biblical-times
music does not correspond to their description of Biblical music, there
are more difficulties. For example, if it is true that the spirit of man
(assuming the trichotomist's view of man) - responds to the melody, what
are we to say for the music of percussion instruments?
(10) Is it metaphysically possible to praise Him with
timbrels, loud cymbals, and resounding cymbals (Psa 150) since those percussion
instruments make no melody (and God is a spirit)? Percussionists are apparently
doomed to the basement of the physical, sub-spiritual? I am only hinting
at the ridiculous nature of these criticisms of CM. It has been said, "A
little clarity goes a long way." And a little knowledge of Biblical-times
music would prevent an ethnocentric standard from being disguised as a
Biblical standard.
The larger issue in the entire discussion
of CM is Christ and culture. How are we to see the basic relationship between
the people of God and cultures in the world? To put it in Biblical terms,
what are the full implications of being "in the world but not of the world"
(Joh 17) and doing all things to the glory of God (1Co 10:31). Moreover,
where do the Biblical principles of accommodation function - "And to the
Jews I became as a Jew . . . I have become all things to all men, that
I may by all means save some." (1Co 9:20-22)?
For my own commitments here,
I believe that Christ will largely transform culture. The Biblical
support for this Calvinistic view may even be drawn in several distinct
categories:
1. Missiologically, we have both the imperative and prophetic forms of world discipleship which implies that Christ will transform culture to some extent (Mat 28:19-20 (11) & Psa 22:27).
2. Eschatologically, Christ's second advent is sequenced by reigning at the right hand of God "until He has put all His enemies under His feet," the last of which is death which is demonstrably overcome at the resurrection (1Co 15:25, 54-55). Hence those of His enemies which have cultural manifestations shall be affected in the present progressive reign of Christ.
3. Culturally, the music of the redeemed shall flow from all ethne, loosely stated, from all cultures. For example, Isaiah speaks the word of the Lord saying, "Sing to the Lord a new song, sing His praise from the end of the earth! (Isa 40:10). "Sing to the Lord a new song; sing to the Lord, all the earth" (Psa 96:1). Notice that "new songs" are being commanded from other nations. The New Testament indicates that worship from other nations is a climactic hope in the drama of redemption. God desires for "the Gentiles to glorify God for His mercy; as it is written, 'Therefore I will give praise to thee among the gentiles, and I will sing to Thy name' and again he says... 'praise the Lord all you gentiles, and let all the peoples praise Him'" (Rom 15:9-11). "And they sang a new song . . .Thou wast slain, and didst purchase for God with Thy blood men from every tribe and tongue and people and nation'" (Rev 5:9-10). Therefore, we are as much as told that the nations will use their music to glorify God.
4. Developmentally, Scripture itself
recognizes change in cultural mediums of communication and allows for cultural
differences and changes within time. Proof of this might be developed from
observing the linguistic references throughout Scripture. "And they read
from the book, from the law of God,
translating to give the sense
so that they understood the reading" (Neh 7:8, see also Mat 1:23, Mar 15:34).
Cultural diversity and change is factually depicted and assumed throughout
the Old Testament and New Testament. Moreover, the revelation of the Messiah
is brought through the medium of the Greco-Roman language and culture with
Judaistic roots rather than the language Abraham, Moses, or David eras
- remembering their were vast differences lingustically/culturally between
even these patriarchs. When this is coupled with the "sing a new song"
prescriptions, linked to ethnic groups (Psa 96:1-2; Isa 42:10-11) and that
redemption is intended for "every tribe and language and people and nation,"
the ethnomusical implications are strong. The cultures of the world will
and do in fact use their languages and musical expressions for praise!
Hallelujah! - this is a universal word of praise.
Adequate reflection on the issues
here will prevent us from adding to Scripture our pseudo-absolutes. We
will not be as quick to condemn the musical mediums of other cultures and
subcultures by imposing an ethnocentric standard. Our North American culture
certainly is not an authoritative standard by which we can judge other
cultures. We have no more right to impose a North American or Western European
style of music on other cultures than we do to make them have their
services in Latin. (And we'd be probably be better off to impose Latin
rather than our current cultural norms.)
As Protestants we all believe "the
holy scriptures are to be translated out of the original into vulgar languages"
(Larger Catechism 156) and prayer is to be "if vocal, in a known
tongue" (Westminster Confession 21:3). But people also need the
"vulgate," of music in their common tongue, do they not? Some level of
intelligibility is required (1Co 14:7-9, observe Paul's very illustration).
The irrelevance and ineffectiveness of the church is often fostered by
an unreflective stance against the new. On all sides our shared concern
should be for the communication of meaning and truth. Our music styles
must comport with this. Calvin Johansson, though no friend of CM, has acknowledged
the need for cultural and subcultural relevance in his stimulating book,
Music and Ministry: A Biblical Counterpoint (1984).
Relevancy in church music is neither
a matter of popularity nor of intrinsic worth, but a matter of identification
with music. That is to say, the music must have something about it which
is recognizable and ordinary, both in the configuration of the various
musical elements and in its total impact...One must also pay attention
to the peculiar musical culture of the congregation. (p. 39)
Music is a manifestation of culture,
like language, which changes. Though we must not fail to distinguish Biblical
absolutes from cultural relatives, this is not ethical relativism. The
one individual who made the term "absolutes" part of the current Christian
vocabulary, Francis Schaeffer (Art and the Bible, 1973) said, "Let
me say firmly that there is no such thing as a godly style or an ungodly
style" (p. 51). "And as a Christian adopts and adapts various contemporary
techniques, he must wrestle with the whole question, looking to the Holy
Spirit for help to know when to invent, when to adopt, when to adapt and
to not use a specific style at all. This is something each artist wrestles
with for a life time, not something he settles once and for all" (p. 55).
Music makers make sounds with the
particular instrument-technology available. Further refinements culturally
and technologically necessitate different musical sounds. Before the technology
to make valves for brass instruments or hinged keys for woodwind instruments
was available, wind instruments had a different sound with limitations
in range and technique. It may surprise people who are fond of the "tyranny
of the organ" to realize that no Biblical-times music in any recognizable
way resembled the sounds they call "sacred." These sorts of technological
changes alone account for vast transformations, much less the profound
philosophical, religious, and linguistic changes affecting musical-stylistical
developments. My twentieth century harmony professor, composer Luigi Zaninelli,
used to take exception to the idea that music has "progressed." He would
say it has simply "evolved" (i.e., no value judgment). Given the Biblical
view of history, though, I would assert that music has progressed in the
sense that it is intertwined with the unfolding plan of redemption and
the advance of Christ's kingdom. Moreover, music has become more complex
and intricate, being the occupation of the intelligence, feeling, ambition,
and purposes of more and more people made in the image of God.
When new sounds are made and development
takes place the result is change in some aspect of that music. Eventually
such changes make the music different enough to warrant the description
that it has become a new style. For a distinctly Christian artist, new
musical styles should be molded for the glory of God. As Schaeffer (1973)
has said, "To demand the art forms of yesterday in either word systems
or art is a bourgeois failure" (p. 49).
Toward
a Truly Christian Aesthetics of Music
The Biblical Foundations. As
has been demonstrated, music in the Bible is both emotive and fluidly connected
to language. Yet Scripture strongly indicates the role of music in life
and ministry, even apart from the function of the propositional word.
(12) The beauty of skillful music itself can remind us of the
beauty of the Lord. Beauty
without utility was ordained by God in
worship (Exo 28ff.). In fact, the first person recorded as being filled
with the Holy Spirit is not filled to give a verbal message in prophecy
or teaching, but to create works of art (Bazelel, Exo 35:30ff.). The Psalmist
reminds us, "Out of Zion, the perfection of beauty, God has shone forth"
(50:2). The beauty we perceive in this fallen world is merely a dim reflection
of the "perfection of beauty, God." The Psalter's term, "Selah," seems
to even indicate times for musical, non-lyrical, expression. Thus, music
as a non-verbal art can minister (1Sa 16:15-23) and can reflect the beauty
of God (Psa 27:4).
The Aesthetic Problem. Throughout
much of the history of music in the church, music has been harnessed to
a mere expression of the spoken word. The watershed in church music history
was when plainchant moved from being
Syllabic
(on note per syllable)
to Melismatic (multiple notes per syllable).
(13) As soon as music is freed from the constraint of directly
corresponding to the spoken word (a non-intrinsic property to music), the
floodgates are open. Music, like the drive of life in the film, "Jurassic
Park," will find a way to transgress such boundaries. Most
of church history (excluding Biblical-times music) illustrates the attempt
to beat music into conformity to the propositional word (lyrics). Certainly
music is a powerful transport for the propositional word and such usage
is clearly sanctioned in Scripture (Col 3:16, Eph 5:19). The power of music
to carry words into our memories is undisputed. But there is no Biblical
reason to confine music to that role. Popular criticisms of CM and even
traditional church music often focus on the semantic correspondence of
music to the meaning of the text. E.g, a hymn is bad when the sense of
the lyric is not (somehow) conveyed in the music. Conversely, Christians
rejoice in the artful delivery of truth in music in which words and their
meaning wedded musically (e.g., insert you favorite hymn here _____________).
The difficulty is not with music's conformity to the propositional word
- but with confining music exclusively to such a role. Evangelicals tend
to relegate music to this closet.
Jeremy Begbie insists we need a "complementation"
model, rather than a "conformance" model. Music, as complimentary, is freed
from being merely the beast of burden for "the words." Music can, as Begbie
says (in technical Cambridge language, no less), "fill in the gaps" and
interact with words. Does this purpose of music have any Biblical support?
Actually, I think that may very well be intended by the musical term, "Selah."
The term is found 74 times in the Old Testament (71 in the Psalms and 3
in Habakkuk). Among other possibilities, it may mean "the lifting up of
instrumental music in an interlude or postlude."
(14) Observing its usage seems to affirm this point.
The Lord shall count when He registers
the peoples, "This one was born there." Selah. Then those who sing as well
as those who play the flutes shall say, "All my springs of joy are in you."
(Psa 87:6-7, see also Psa 3:2, 4, 8)
Music's interaction with the spoken
word need not merely be Syllabic or
Neumatic (more than one
note per word, but not florid movement).
Music need not compete
for the place of words. Nothing about music and words are mutually exclusive.
Music, freed from its confinement to direct word-support, emerges in a
myriad of relations to words - representative, illustrative, parallel,
analogical, contrasting, dialogical, and who knows what else.
The Theological Solution.
Upon theological reflection, Christian musicians must have a paradigm of
equality for both unity and diversity. And it is the unique Christian view
of God as Trinity which provides a philosophical basis for the equal ultimacy
of unity and diversity. It might even be argued that non-Trinitarian world
and life views will be unable to even account for the "one and the many"
in thought, art, and experience. (15) The
application of this truth to aesthetics is transforming, to say the least.
Thinking Christianly about music and its aesthetic dimensions will provide
the foundation of a non-competitive complementation model.
If music abstractly expresses the aesthetic realities which are grounded in the beauty of the Triune Lord, music is thus inherently valuable within a Christian world and life view. In my opinion, evangelicals are in great need of an aesthetic overhaul. It ought not be the case that those who have the truth of the gospel, lack a worldview inclusive of beauty and goodness - or worse, only accommodate art as a tool of shallow propaganda. The observant student will notice a larger role for music in Scripture than mere conformance. The reflective theologian will envision a grander and deeper basis for music's value. And the imaginative musician will certainly demand a greater part for their cherished art. Music, under a sovereign, supremely incomprehensible Lord, Triune and wondrous, is to be an aural prism of truth, beauty, and goodness.
What follows practically for
CM? How would we recreate a 21st Century Johann Sebastian Bach
musically? Remember that Bach had several advantages: (a) He lived at a
time when Protestant worldview Christianity saturated his culture; (b)
all his family before him were diligent musicians ("Bach" was nearly synonymous
with music); (c) the music that surrounded him, from which he gained his
beginning and even advanced skills, required high standards of dexterity,
artistry, and robust in harmonic contrapuntal development (many melody
lines woven for the harmony); (d) he was in a church which breathed Protestant
orthodoxy (both in Lutheran areas and the Calvinist court of Cothen); (e)
and he was personally committed to glorifying God with his musical gifts
as his entire life ambition.
Since this inevitably arises, the
following are a few suggestions for young and aspiring musicians who wish
to be both contemporary and Christian -
1. CM musicians as Christians should make themselves accountable to Biblically sound, spiritually vibrant,s local churches in which the elders of the church can shepherd and oversee the individual spiritual growth of the musicians, ministry activities, the doctrinal content of the songs, and the effectiveness of music ministry.
2. CM musicians as ministers (servants) should develop a Biblical philosophy of ministry under the oversight of the leadership of the local church. This kind of study could yield a purpose statement for a particular CM artist/ministry, if they are to use their talent for such purposes, which would be both theologically challenging and practical in clarifying the direction of the CM musicians.
3. CM musicians as musicians should develop a Biblical theology of music, that is, the comprehensive way all the Scripture's teaching relates to music. As a result, the music, message, and purpose of the CM musician(s) could be brought into conformity to the Biblical teaching; thus, clarifying what is absolute from that which is changeable. As a Biblical study, one should work through the musical implications of the Psalms and historical church music.
4. CM musicians as visible/public representatives of the Christian community should develop a comprehensive and articulated Christian worldview, relating music and its purposes to other areas of life. A fully Christian view of music will be at least as comprehensive as our Elder Brethren in the Old Testament. Then, music's role was much larger than a vehicle for the propagation of religious sentiments.
5. CM musicians
as servants of
God should seek to serve in excellence, always being diligent to perform
as well as possible to the glory of God. The growth of a musician in excellence
is greatly facilitated by an appreciation and study of the great musicians/music
of the past. Christian musicians of the highest caliber should be fluent
in the great musical achievements of Western art music. Irrelevance is
most often the result of historical ignorance.
CONCLUSION
Many criticisms of CM, especially in its "pop music" manifestations, may valid or even purifying. Ferreting the merits of such criticisms have not been the scope of this paper. The musical styles of the modern world are expressions of the modern world. Some kinds of expressions are rough and unsuitable for certain occasions. The Bible, a comprehensive display of human life, reminds us, "There is an appointed time for everything....[even] a time to dance.....He has made everything appropriate in its time" (Ecc 3:1, 4, 11). Christian musicians must be called to a more diligent pursuit of (1) a thorough exegetical and Biblical theology of music, (2) an adequate consideration of the cultural ramifications of music or ethnomusicology, and (3) a well developed view of the larger issues of the relationship between Christ and culture.
Allen,
R. B. (1992). Psalmist (column) in Worship Leader, Vol. 1. Nashville,
TN.
Best,
H. M. & Huttar, D. (1976). Music: Musical instruments. Zondervan
Pictorial Encyclopedia of the Bible, pp. 311-324. In M. C. Tenny (General
Ed.). Grand Rapids: Zondervan.
Blanchard,
J. (with P. Anderson & D. Cleave) (1983). Pop Goes the Gospel.
Hertfordshire, UK: Evangelical Press.
Blanchard,
J. (1987). Ultimate Questions. Durham, UK: Evangelical Press.
Cannon,
R. J. & Cannon, I. Striving for Excellence, How to Evaluate Music:
A Course for Leaders. Oak Brook, IL: Basic Life Principles.
Chenoweth,
V. & Bee, D. (1968). On Ethnic Music. Practical Anthropology 15(5),
205-212.
Friberg,
T. & B. Friberg (1994). Analytical Lexicon to the Greek New Testament
(ANLEX) ( in the Bible Works for Windows, Hermeneutika Bible Research
Software.
Garlock,
F. & Woetzel, K. (1992). Music in the Balance. Greenville, SC:
Majesty Music, Inc.
Gothard,
B. (1986). Advanced Seminar Textbook. Oak Brook, IL: Basic Life
Principles.
Grout,
D. J. (1973). A History of Western Music. New York: W. W. Norton
& Co. Inc.
Idelsohn,
Abraham Z. (1992 [1929]). Jewish Music: Its Historical Development.
New
York: Dover.
Johansson,
C. M. (1984). Music and Ministry: A Biblical Counterpoint. Peabody,
MA: Hendrickson.
Larkin,
W. J. (1988). Culture and Biblical Hermeneutics: Interpreting and Applying
the Authoritative Word in a Relativistic Age. Grand Rapids: Baker.
Larkin,
W. J. (undated, ca 1989) Toward a Biblical Theology of Music with Special
Attention to Standards. Unpublished paper, Columbia Biblical Seminary:
Columbia, SC.
Lawless,
S. (1981). Rock Reconsidered: A Christian Looks at Contemporary Music.
Downers Grove, IL: Intervarsity Press
Miller,
S. (1993). The Contemporary Christian Music Debate: Worldly Compromiseor
Agent of Renewal? Wheaton: Tyndale.
Schaeffer,
F. A. (1968). The God Who is There. Downers Grove, Ill: Inter-Varsity
Press.
Schaeffer,
F. A. (1973). Art and the Bible. Downers Grove, Ill: Inter-Varsity
Press.
Seidel,
L. J. (1988). Face the Music: Contemporary Church Music on Trial.
Springfield, VA: Grace Unlimited.
Tame,
D. (1984). The Secret Power of Music. New York: Destiny Books.
All
Scripture quotations are taken from the New American Standard Bible,
Copyright 1960, 1962, 1963, 1968, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1987, 1988,
The Lockman Foundation. Used by permission.
LUST OR DESIRE
But I say, walk by the Spirit, and you will not carry out the desire (epithumia) of the flesh. (GAL 5:16)
But I am hard-pressed from both directions, having the desire (epithumia) to depart and be with Christ, for that is very much better. (PHI 1:23)
Therefore consider the members of your earthly body as dead to immorality, impurity, passion, evil desire (epithumia), and greed, which amounts to idolatry. (COL 3:5)
But
we, brethren, having been bereft of you for a short while-- in person,
not in spirit-- were all the more eager with great desire (epithumia) to
see your face. (1TH 2:17)
ANGER
Be angry, and yet do not sin; do not let the sun go down on your anger. (EPH 4:26)
[Jesus],
after looking around at them with anger, grieved at their hardness of heart,
He said to the man, "Stretch out your hand." (MAR 3:5)
HATE
Yet this you do have, that you hate the deeds of the Nicolaitans, which I also hate. (REV 2:6)
Hate
evil, love good, And establish justice in the gate! Perhaps the Lord God
of hosts May be gracious to the remnant of Joseph. (AMO 5:15)
GLADNESS
Then Haman went out that day glad and pleased of heart; but when Haman saw Mordecai in the king's gate...Haman was filled with anger against Mordecai. (EST 5:9)
Be glad in the Lord and rejoice, you righteous ones, And shout for joy, all you who are upright in heart. (PSA 32:11)
With
their wickedness they make the king glad, And the princes with their lies.
(HOS 7:3)
HAPPINESS
Where there is no vision, the people are unrestrained, But happy is he who keeps the law. (PRO 29:18)
And I have seen that nothing is better than that man should be happy in his activities, for that is his lot. For who will bring him to see what will occur after him? (ECC 3:22)
So
the Lord God appointed a plant and it grew up over Jonah to be a shade
over his head to deliver him from his discomfort. And Jonah was extremely
happy about the plant. (JON 4:6)
SORROW
Sorrow is better than laughter, For when a face is sad a heart may be happy. (ECC 7:3)
[The drunkard...] Who has woe? Who has sorrow? Who has contentions? Who has complaining? Who has wounds without cause? Who has redness of eyes? (PRO 23:29)
For
the sorrow that is according to the will of God produces a repentance without
regret, leading to salvation; but the sorrow of the world produces death.
For behold what earnestness this very thing, this godly sorrow, has produced
in you: what vindication of yourselves, what indignation, what fear, what
longing, what zeal, what avenging of wrong! In everything you demonstrated
yourselves to be innocent in the matter. (2CO 7:10-11)
SEXUAL DESIRE
But refuse to put younger widows on the list, for when they feel sensual desires in disregard of Christ, they want to get married. (1TI 5:11)
I am my beloved's, And his desire is for me. (SOL 7:10)
My
beloved extended his hand through the opening, And my feelings were aroused
for him. (SOL 5:4)
LOVE
And this commandment we have from Him, that the one who loves God should love (agape) his brother also. (1JO 4:21)
Do not love (agape) the world, nor the things in the world. If anyone loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him. (1JO 2:15)
Woe to you Pharisees! For you love (agape) the front seats in the synagogues, and the respectful greetings in the market places. (LUK 11:43)
And they love (phileo) the place of honor at banquets, and the chief seats in the synagogues. (MAR 23:6)
The sisters therefore sent to Him, saying, "Lord, behold, he whom You love (phileo) is sick." (JOH 11:3)
The
following selections from the Zondervan Pictorial Encyclopedia of the
Bible entry on "music" indicates the features of Biblical-times music
as follows:
1) Modality - A mode comprises a number of motives within a certain scale, each of which has different functions. The resulting composition is an arrangement and combination of these motives.
2) Ornamentation-The modes and their motivic partials are (1), subject to ornamentation and decoration, often very florid and extended.
3) Rhythm. Idelsohn incorrectly uses the term unrhythmical to describe Jewish chant. The characteristic of Semitic music is its lack of regularly recurring meter. Nonetheless it is freely and richly rhythmic; its rhythmic structure is as complex as its ornamentation.
4) Scale. The general nature of melody is diatonic, although this is mixed with a certain feeling for quarter tones, a distinctive which is foreign to most Occidental music.
5) Monophony. Jewish music is unharmonized and depends for its beauty on elaborate ornamentation of the melody alone. Occasionally in group singing intervals of fourths or fifths appear, more out of limitation in vocal range that an inherent harmonic vocabulary. When vocal music was instrumentally accompanied, heterophony (a way of embellishing the basic melodic line; a concurrent decoration) was often employed.
6)
Improvisation.
The performer and composer were the same person. The modal formulae were
elaborated upon as seen in (1) and (2). A combination of long training
and inherent ability were necessary to accomplish this. (pp. 315-316, note
that the text above are relevant selected quotes, emphases mine)
Grout's
(1973) discussion of New Testament and early Christian music:
Although we do not know much about Greek music or its history, we can say that in three fundamental respects it was the same kind of music as that of the early Church. In the first place, it was primarily monophonic, that is, melody without harmony or counterpoint....In the period when large vocal and instrumental ensembles were employed, it frequently happened that certain instruments would embellish the melody simultaneously with its plain performance by others in the ensemble, thus creating heterophony. But neither heterophony nor the inevitable necessity of singing in octaves when both men and boys took part constitutes true polyphony.
In
the second place, as far as we know, musical performances in the most flourishing
period of Greek civilization were improvised.....[The performer] was not
playing or singing something he had memorized or learned from a score,
and consequently no two performances of the "same" piece were exactly alike.
Improvisation, in this or some similar sense, was characteristic of all
ancient peoples. It prevailed also in our Western music up to perhaps the
eighth century A. D., and the practice continued to affect musical styles
for a long time...
Thirdly,
Greek music was almost always associated with words or dancing or both:
its melody and rhythm were most intimately bound up with the melody and
rhythm of poetry, and the music of the religious cults, of the drama, and
of the great public contests was performed by singers who accompanied their
melody with the movements of prescribed dance patterns." (p. 4-5)
1. My presupposition
throughout is that Scripture is unified in all it teaches, including that
which it teaches about music.
2. For more discussion
on Biblical instruments see the classic, Jewish Music: Its Historical
Development, Abraham Z. Idelsohn.
3. "Biblical-times
music" is intended to designate music that is Ancient Near-Eastern, Israelite,
and spanning the (written) OT to NT time period (ca 1500 B.C. to 100 A.D.).
4. I am indebted
to J. Frame's lecture, "Music and Salvation" for many of these concepts.
See also V. Poythress, "Ezra 3, Union with Christ, and Exclusive Psalmody,"
Westminster
Theological Journal, Vol. XXXVII, 1974-75, pp. 74-94-218-235.
5. Granted, one
could define genres more sharply. However, my aim is primarily to address
the popular issue (e.g., "rock music" is of the devil) and the basic issues
will, be applicable to more creative, less popular, genres too.
6. At the Memphis
Pastor's Conference, 3/6/95. I corresponded to Mr. Gothard about this and
other assertions following the conference; for proof of his harsh accusations
he referred me to his publication,
How to Overcome an Addiction to Rock
Music.
9. The authors
are ethnomusicologists associated with Wycliffe Bible Translators.
10. It goes without
saying, of course, that many of the church's greatest theologians have
denied the trichotomist view, preferring for a body/soul, material/spiritual
dichotomy.
11. It is important
to note that the text says that we are to "disciple all nations" ( 12. See the previous
discussion on the validity of musical instruments.
13. For the substance
of this discussion and the categories of "conformance" and "complementation,"
I am indebted to the Rev'd Dr. Jeremy Begbie of Cambridge University's
"Theology Through the Arts" project and his presentation, "Thinking Theologically
About the Arts" at the Calvin Symposium on Worship and the Arts (January
15, 2000), Grand Rapids, MI.
14. 14Zondervan
Pictorial Encyclopedia of the Bible, p. 324.
15. This thought
has been notably articulated in the works of the late Cornelius Van Til
of Westminster Theological Seminary, Philadelphia, PA. For an example of
the development of this thesis see,
The One and the Many: Studies in
the Philosophy of Order and Ultimacy, R. J. Rushdoony (Fairfax, VA:
Thoburn, 1978).