An Open Letter to Praise Bands
Dear Praise Band,
I so appreciate your willingness and desire to offer up your gifts to God in worship. I appreciate your devotion and celebrate your faithfulness--schlepping to church early, Sunday after Sunday, making time for practice mid-week, learning and writing new songs, and so much more. Like those skilled artists and artisans that God used to create the tabernacle (Exodus 36), you are willing to put your artistic gifts in service to the Triune God.
So please receive this little missive in the spirit it is meant: as an encouragement to reflect on the practice of "leading worship." It seems to me that you are often simply co-opted into a practice without being encouraged to reflect on its rationale, its "reason why." In other words, it seems to me that you are often recruited to "lead worship" without much opportunity to pause and reflect on the nature of "worship" and what it would mean to "lead."
In particular, my concern is that we, the church, have unwittingly encouraged you to simply import musical practices into Christian worship that--while they might be appropriate elsewhere--are detrimental to congregational worship. More pointedly, using language I first employed in Desiring the Kingdom, I sometimes worry that we've unwittingly encouraged you to import certain forms of performance that are, in effect, "secular liturgies" and not just neutral "methods." Without us realizing it, the dominant practices of performance train us to relate to music (and musicians) in a certain way: as something for our pleasure, as entertainment, as a largely passive experience. The function and goal of music in these "secular liturgies" is quite different from the function and goal of music in Christian worship.
So let me offer just a few brief axioms with the hope of encouraging new reflection on the practice of "leading worship":
1. If we, the congregation, can't hear ourselves, it's not worship. Christian worship is not a concert. In a concert (a particular "form of performance"), we often expect to be overwhelmed by sound, particularly in certain styles of music. In a concert, we come to expect that weird sort of sensory deprivation that happens from sensory overload, when the pounding of the bass on our chest and the wash of music over the crowd leaves us with the rush of a certain aural vertigo. And there's nothing wrong with concerts! It's just that Christian worship is not a concert. Christian worship is a collective, communal, congregational practice--and the gathered sound and harmony of a congregation singing as one is integral to the practice of worship. It is a way of "performing" the reality that, in Christ, we are one body. But that requires that we actually be able to hear ourselves, and hear our sisters and brothers singing alongside us. When the amped sound of the praise band overwhelms congregational voices, we can't hear ourselves sing--so we lose that communal aspect of the congregation and are encouraged to effectively become "private," passive worshipers.
2. If we, the congregation, can't sing along, it's not worship. In other forms of musical performance, musicians and bands will want to improvise and "be creative," offering new renditions and exhibiting their virtuosity with all sorts of different trills and pauses and improvisations on the received tune. Again, that can be a delightful aspect of a concert, but in Christian worship it just means that we, the congregation, can't sing along. And so your virtuosity gives rise to our passivity; your creativity simply encourages our silence. And while you may be worshiping with your creativity, the same creativity actually shuts down congregational song.
3. If you, the praise band, are the center of attention, it's not worship. I know it's generally not your fault that we've put you at the front of the church. And I know you want to model worship for us to imitate. But because we've encouraged you to basically import forms of performance from the concert venue into the sanctuary, we might not realize that we've also unwittingly encouraged a sense that you are the center of attention. And when your performance becomes a display of your virtuosity--even with the best of intentions--it's difficult to counter the temptation to make the praise band the focus of our attention. When the praise band goes into long riffs that you might intend as "offerings to God," we the congregation become utterly passive, and because we've adopted habits of relating to music from the Grammys and the concert venue, we unwittingly make you the center of attention. I wonder if there might be some intentional reflection on placement (to the side? leading from behind?) and performance that might help us counter these habits we bring with us to worship.
Please consider these points carefully and recognize what I am not saying. This isn't just some plea for "traditional" worship and a critique of "contemporary" worship. Don't mistake this as a defense of pipe organs and a critique of guitars and drums (or banjos and mandolins). My concern isn't with style, but with form: What are we trying to do when we "lead worship?" If we are intentional about worship as a communal, congregational practice that brings us into a dialogical encounter with the living God--that worship is not merely expressive but also formative--then we can do that with cellos or steel guitars, pipe organs or African drums.
Much, much more could be said. But let me stop here, and please receive this as the encouragement it's meant to be. I would love to see you continue to offer your artistic gifts in worship to the Triune God who is teaching us a new song.
Most sincerely,
Jamie
Music is such a powerful thing. It can move us to emotion. It can make us think. It can stir up memories. It can inspire. If it's any good, if it's any more than just noise, it should do at least one of these. Music is also so subjective. The music that calls me inside the church isn't what calls my neighbor into the church. I don't need hand clapping and foot stomping to be drawn inside like the scene in "Sister Act." But it can make me smile. I've been to many services that utilize only traditional style, and services that utilize only contemporary. In the traditional setting, I can walk in to the service 15 minutes late and grab a seat in the second pew. In the contemporary service, I walk in 15 minutes late and I have the option of one chair way in the back. In the traditional setting, I look around and a see a whole lot of white. In the contemporary setting, I look around and see a whole lot of color.
ReplyDeleteI imagine every church at some point has to make the conscious choice of considering their audience when it comes to the music selection. Barry Manilow has never been asked to tour with The Rolling Stones. One is too cool for the other. One is too sophisticated for the other. But is one better than the other? They've both been around for 40+ years, toured the world, made dozens of records, won awards and contributed to modern music and American culture.
I can sing along to "Wild Horses" right I after "I Write the Songs", and I bet Mick and Barry don't mind, as long as I am singing one of their songs.
Pastor Carl, it's like you were in the same auditorium I was this last Sunday. ..no kidding. The pastor's bible study was absolutley right-on and did its job I believe to build up the saints. However, leather drums pounding to an African war beat, piercing vocals and instrument tones, a level of loudness that had me wishing I had ear plugs, and what seemed to be an unending ending, all contributed to a really painful "worship" experience. I have to believe I wasn't the only one that felt that way.
ReplyDeleteYours truly,
I tend to agree with Ann-Renee.
ReplyDeleteWhile I think my preferences and tendencies are somewhere between traditional and contemporary, I think it's too subjective a thing to pass judgment upon, as I feel the original author does here. I personally do not enjoy and do not feel worshipful in a service where the music is all unfamiliar songs with full bands playing loudly but people are so diverse in their preferences, culture, history, and in how they worship that it is not difficult for me to imagine people who worship better this way; I have actually spoken with plenty of people who feel that way.
Clearly “show-boating” should be guarded against by members of the worship/praise team because, like any gift, one can begin to get prideful if they are not on guard. I once sat in the congregation and judged people who were on stage “pretending” (as I judged) to be so into the music and they annoyed me. These people annoyed me because of my own perception though, not because they were not truly worshiping. Only God knows the heart of another man and since I became a regular part of “praise teams,” I have acquired a whole new perspective on what it means to worship. I still may not be the most demonstrative member of any given praise team but I have found myself getting caught up in worship and acting in ways I would have judged as “false” years before.
In summary, what makes "Christian Music," Christian? I believe it is the intent of the heart. Each church should determine collectively what encourages worship most for them. It's not a subject that is completely cut and dry.
Great reflections on an important topic!
ReplyDeleteThis past year, as we were visiting a number of churches, I came to realize the huge effects the music had on my ability to sincerely worship.
One large "successful"church we went to had a "worshipful sound", but as my family and I joined in on the unfamiliar song, I heard my self singing all about "me". The words, "I" and "me" were in every line - not much about God. And we found ourselves singing promises to God that I wasn't sure I could stand behind. In fact, I was singing things to an Almighty God that I really didn't agree with at all! At that point we rounded up the kids & walked out. I just wonder how many are hypnotized by the music, never to realize what they are actually singing - a dangerous position to be in. We should worship "alert" and not "asleep".
Each kind of music has a way of eliciting a certain response. A crowd can easily be manipulated emotionally by the music. We have seen this unmistakably at teen dances. It doesn't matter the rules of the dance, romantic music will stir up passionate feelings, rap stirs up a rebellious spirit, an elaborate guitar solo stirs up pride/ idolatry/self absorption. Even when the words may be worshipful, there is a emotion that the music stirs up within us. We were in a church once that got the congregation worked up in such a frenzy after prolonged charismatic worship music, that when the music finally stopped, and the pastor began preaching on the wings of their emotions, he could preach anything and they would say "amen" . And he did. And they did. And it certainly wasn't the gospel he was preaching to them. Their "gatekeepers" were hypnotized by the music and he was able to feed them all kinds of lies. - Must stay alert!
I also agree that the musicians can be a distraction to my worship. If I don't close my eyes during music worship, I find myself focusing on the people in front of my instead of worship. ( Much easier when I know the words to the songs!) This is very distracting to me personally, esp. if the musician is not careful to dress modestly, humbly, or are not aware of how to sit with a skirt on ( ladies, we don't want to cause anyone to stumble do we?! There are teenage boys out there who are trying their best to keep their mind on worship!) I love it when the musicians are off to the side and the choir is behind us. Even when children are singing up front, I believe they should be to the side. (What are we teaching our children by putting them up front, anyway? Ask them how they like that.)
Another service we went to had a full band ( a very loud one!) with piercings, tattoos, full throttle solos in every song with all the passionate theatrical emotions to go with it. Ummm... humility? They may have a booming ministry to those with tattoos & piercings, but what about "do not offend..."? We were definitely put off and probably wrongly judged them to be lacking in sincerity.
I believe the words should be about God ( and not me) and biblically trustworthy. I believe the mood of the music should be respectfully considerate. I believe the musicians should assist worship. I tell my kids to ask themselves, "Consider what you know about God's character & ask yourself if this is a song you think God would join in on?" Can you imagine Christ singing a rebellious rap beat?