brakelite
Member
- Joined
- Jul 28, 2011
- Messages
- 873
Well said, and would like to add but one thing.Do we consider who the worship music is for? Do we write worship music based upon what we like or how the feel of the music appeals to our flesh? Who is the worship music supposed to appeal to? The worshiper or the one being worshiped?
Yes, the music and style of it matters. Consider the use of music in the entertainment industry. It is used in such a way to give the viewer a richer experience while viewing. Music used in movies is made to accentuate the film and bring out a fullness to it. So then what about our worship music? It is for God right? How are we choosing to give God a richer experience of our worship? Does the music we play to him match that which we are saying with the words we sing?
On the other hand, there is what is called worship music out there that is explicitly for the pleasure of the listener and not God. It isn't listened to so that God can be glorified. It is listened to solely for pleasure. Taking your sinful music styles you once listened to for pleasure in your ignorance and putting godly words to them so that you can still enjoy the pleasure of the music with some sort of proper theme is not glorifying to God. Bringing it into the church and calling it worship music is a slap in the face to the God you claim to love.
Always remember to ask, is this about me or about God? For my pleasure or his?
1 Cor 14:7, Eph 5:19,
I have heard what passes for "Christian" music these days. My employer constantly played it on the radio while we were working, and I found no difference in it from the music I listened to when unsaved. Aggressive, in your face hard core heavy metal. I hated it. It was about as Godly as the stuff I was walking on. Seriously. Can any of you imagine playing that music before the eternal throne of glory? You honestly think that there are angels in heaven in the "mosh pit" banging their heads on the edge of the sea of glass in time to the beat of hard rock? Please, God have mercy!