It's inevitable. Change will take place. When I was a child, the only
drum that was found in any church was a bass drum in the Salvation Army band. The
instruments in churches were an organ and/or a
piano. Along with hymns, congregations were singing tunes written by Ira Stamphill, Ralph Carmichael, and Bill Gaither.
Back
then, few could have imagined the changes that have taken place. Now,
the smallest church has a full band. From Keith Green, Rich Mullins,
Andrea Crouch to Paul Baloche, Chris Tomlin, and Lincoln Brewster, the
church has been blessed with many incredible writers of worship songs.
And all this within a span of only 40 years.
Some may look at
the changes as negative and others may look at the changes as necessary
improvements. The church has been fragmented by the likes and dislikes
we all have in music. Some churches have even resorted to
dividing services between those who subscribe to hymns of yesteryear only and those who opt for strictly contemporary styles.
Yet,
the style of music is not what worship is about at all. Focusing on
God is. If we succumb to focusing overtly on the band, the writer of a
tune, or the tunes themselves, we may be hurting ourselves.
Is
worship for us? Is it just a concert? Well, actually, a worship
service IS a type of concert, just not for us. We all perform for the
King of Kings. Please bear in mind, I did not say "sing for the King
of Kings". I said "perform". A person may worship without singing.
The important thing is finding a way to connect in integrity with the
congregational expression. If we completely shut down, it is not only sad but it's an insult to a God who is worthy of worship.
Over
the next forty years, change will take place again. Who knows? The
coming generations may return to some past style, or take on forms of
expression that are beyond our imagination today. So, the danger for
those attached to the current genres will be close-mindedness to what
may be ahead. The safe approach is to focus on the eternal truth of
the person of God and hold loosely to rigid methodology.
Remember,
one day we will bow in worship before the very throne of God. Style
will not mean a thing to us. Do we have any inkling of what it will
sound like? No. But two things will be as vital in our worship
expressed then as they have always been. 1) The
direction of the song will be God-ward, and 2) There will be truth in the content of the song.
"Great
and marvelous are your works O Lord God, the Almighty; Righteous and
true are your ways, King of the nations! Who will not fear, O Lord,
and glorify your name? For you alone are holy; for all the nations
will come and worship before you, for your righteous acts have been
revealed." (Revelation 15:4)