We ended up in Nashville this past weekend due to a
cancellation in our schedule. Because of this, we got to do something that we
don’t often get the opportunity to do. We got to go to church and be a part of
the congregation. Finally, we can
just go to worship and to learn from the sermon. It was quite a refreshing
change of pace.
If I were the kind of person who is focused solely on facts,
I might just say that the music was really good. But I’m not, so here’s an
entire blog about it:
The music was really good.
The music was loud enough to fill the room, but not enough
to hurt your ears. The band was visible, but not quite enough to make out what
kind of guitars and such they’re using. The lights set the feeling of the songs
well, but they didn’t try to make it a light show. The musicians were clearly
talented, but they weren’t there to show everyone just how talented. All this
to say, it was very well done.
It made me think a lot about music and worship. I never
loved the music at the church I went to during college. They were talented and
everything, but it never felt very alive. It was loud enough to be heard, they
played electric guitars, but it was very whatever. It was as if the music was
there because it had to be, or because you need music to sing on top of.
At the church in Nashville, they allowed to music to do what
it is supposed to do. They allowed it to collaborate with the song’s intention.
It accommodated the lyrics with intensity, power, mellowness, or by setting up
a soundstage for reflection. I think when it comes to worship, we sometimes set
up a false dichotomy on the balance between showy music and oversimplified
musical setups. As if playing music that requires skill, or having too many
instruments, is too showy, but using no instruments isn’t “good enough”. I
think it’s just about letting the music accommodate the songs and their
message.
Think of a song that starts slow, builds, and explodes
towards the end in a powerful chorus. Songs like this often start (lyrically)
with simple thoughts, and then expand into something big that means a lot. So
the musical ups and downs really accommodate that. The music allows the flow of
the song to be perceived, felt, and understood beyond the words (it’s art after
all). Think about this song done with nothing more than an acoustic guitar
playing the same chords the same way the whole time. That would be a
bastardization of the song.
I don’t want to come across as if to say simpler musical
setups are bad. Simpler setups often have a very intimate feel to them that
bigger setups just can’t accomplish. That’s awesome, but again, it should be
done in a way that allows the intimate nature of the setup to reflect in the
worship. Some of my favorite moments of worship are on Christmas Eve at my
small traditional Lutheran church back home. Organ or piano, with 100 or 200
people singing Silent Night by candlelight. Simple, but everything fits
together.
I think a lot of churches or Christian groups struggle with
how to have “good” worship while keeping the focus on God. I know I don’t have
it all figured out. There are so many intangibles when it comes to music and
where someone’s heart is, but one thing I believe is that we shouldn’t be afraid
to let the music be what it wants to be: a powerful medium of communication.
Final disclaimer. I understand that worship is about where
the worshiper’s heart is. You don’t need good music (or any music) to worship
with your whole self. I believe, though, that we should offer our best to God
in our talents and creativity.
Great thoughts Felix!
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