Contemporary worship music

Modern genre of music sung in many churches From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Contemporary worship music

Contemporary worship music (CWM), also known as praise and worship music,[1] is a defined genre of Christian music used in contemporary worship. It has developed over the past 60 years and is stylistically similar to pop music. The songs are frequently referred to as "praise songs" or "worship songs" and are typically led by a "worship band" or "praise team", with either a guitarist or pianist leading. It has become a common genre of music sung in many churches, particularly in charismatic or non-denominational Protestant churches with some Catholic congregations incorporating it into the Mass as well.

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Contemporary Christian worship in Rockharbor Church, Costa Mesa, California, February 2012

History and development

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Contemporary Christian worship in Lifehouse International Church, Tokyo, August 2013

In the early 1950s, the Taizé Community in France started to attract youths from several religious denominations with worship hymns based on modern melodies.[citation needed]

In the mid-20th century, Christian unions in university environments[where?] hosted evangelistic talks and the Universalists and Unitarians, the two youth groups took final steps toward a merger at a convention and in 1953 the two youth groups formed the Liberal Religious Youth.[where?][2] Amateur musicians from the groups began playing Christian music in a popular idiom. Some Christians felt that the church needed to break from its stereotype as being structured, formal, and dull to appeal to the younger generation.[example needed] By borrowing the conventions of popular music, the antithesis of this stereotype,[clarification needed] the church restated the claims of the Bible through Christian lyrics thus sending the message that Christianity was not outdated or irrelevant. In 1964 U.K. gospel pop group The Joystrings were one of the first Christian pop groups to appear on television, in Salvation Army uniform, playing Christian beat music.[3]

Churches began to adopt some of these songs and the styles for corporate worship. The early songs for communal singing were characteristically simple. Youth Praise, published in 1966, was one of the first and most famous collections of these songs. It was compiled and edited by Michael Baughen and published by the Jubilate Group.[citation needed]

As of the early 1990s, songs such as "Lord, I Lift Your Name on High", "Shine, Jesus, Shine" and "Shout to the Lord" had been accepted in many churches. Integrity Media, Maranatha! Music, and Vineyard were already publishing newer styles of music. Supporters of traditional worship hoped the newer styles were a fad, while younger people cited Psalms 96:1, "Sing to the Lord a new song". Prior to the late 1990s, many felt that Sunday morning was a time for hymns, and young people could have their music on the other six days. A "modern worship renaissance" helped make it clear any musical style was acceptable if true believers were using it to praise God. The changes resulted from the Cutting Edge recordings by the band Delirious?, the Passion Conferences and their music, the Exodus project of Michael W. Smith, and the band Sonicflood. Contemporary worship music became an integral part of contemporary Christian music.[4]

Theology and lyrics

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As CWM is closely related to the charismatic movement, the lyrics and even some musical features reflect its theology. In particular the charismatic movement is characterised by its emphasis on the Holy Spirit, through a personal encounter and relationship with God, that can be summed up in agape love.[citation needed]

Lyrically, the informal and sometimes intimate, language of relationship is employed. The terms 'You' and 'I' are used rather than 'God' and 'we', and lyrics such as, 'I, I'm desperate for You',[5] and 'Hungry I come to You, for I know You satisfy, I am empty but I know Your love does not run dry'[6] both exemplify the similarity of the lyrics of some CWM to popular love songs. Slang is used on occasion (for example 'We wanna see Jesus lifted high'[7]) and imperatives ('Open the eyes of my heart, Lord, I want to see You'[8]), demonstrating the friendly, informal terms charismatic theology encourages for relating to God personally. Often a physical response is included in the lyrics ('So we raise up holy hands';[9] 'I will dance, I will sing, to be mad for my king'[10]).

The modern hymn movement

Beginning in the 2010s, contemporary worship music with a distinctly theological lyric focus blending hymns and worship songs with contemporary rhythms & instrumentation, began to emerge, primarily in the Baptist, Reformed, and more traditional non-denominational branches of Protestant Christianity.[11][12] Artists in the modern hymn movement include well-known groups such as Keith & Kristyn Getty[13] and Sovereign Grace Music,[14] as well as solo artists like Matt Papa, Enfield (Hymn Sessions) and Aaron Keyes. By the late 2010s, the movement had gained sizable traction in many churches,[15] streaming services and other areas in culture.[16]

Performance

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A contemporary worship team leads a congregation using lyrics projected on a motion background in addition to coordinated lighting. Harvest Community Church in Goshen, Indiana east of South Bend, January 2016

The role of technology

Technological advances have played a significant role in the development of CWM. In particular the use of projectors means that the song repertoire of a church is not restricted to those in a song book.[clarification needed] Songs and styles go in trends. The internet has increased accessibility, enabling anyone to see lyrics and guitar chords for many worship songs, and download MP3 tracks. This has also played a part in the globalisation of much CWM. Some churches including Hillsong, Bethel, and Vineyard, have their own publishing companies, and there is a thriving Christian music business which parallels that of the secular world, with recording studios, music books, CDs, MP3 downloads and other merchandise. The consumer culture surrounding CWM has prompted both criticism and praise, and as Pete Ward deals with in his book "Selling Worship", no advance is without both positive and negative repercussions.[17]

Criticisms

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Criticisms include Gary Parrett's concern that the volume of this music drowns out congregational participation, and therefore makes it a performance.[18] He quotes Ephesians 5:19, in which Paul the Apostle tells the church in Ephesus to be 'speaking to one another with psalms, hymns and songs from the Spirit'; Parrett questions whether the worship band, now so often amplified and playing like a rock band, replace rather than enable a congregation's praise.[18] Seventh-day Adventist author Samuele Bacchiocchi expressed concerns over the use of the "rock" idiom, as he argues that music communicates on a subconscious level, and the often anarchistic, nihilistic ethos of rock stands against Christian culture. Using the physical response induced by drums in a worship context as evidence that rock takes peoples' minds away from contemplating on the lyrics and God, he suggests that rock is actively dangerous for the Church.[19]

The theological content too has raised questions for some, including Martyn Percy, who argues there is too great an emphasis on a very intimate relationship with God, using terms such as 'I' and 'you' instead of 'we' and 'God', and very passionate, physical language, and argues that this bias needs urgent correction. He explains how the emphasis on emotion can encourage hype and a need to create an atmosphere which evokes a sense of encounter with God, rather than allowing God to do so.[17]

Despite the Biblical basis employed to underpin CWM like Ephesians 5:19, its surrounding culture tends to exclude systematic use of the psalms in weekly worship, sidelining lament from regular worship practice.[20] The emphasis on praise, and on an interpretation of 'worship' that is overwhelmingly positive, can lead to avoidance of the psalms of lament. Michael Vasey writes: "Scripture is, of course, full of lament–and devotes its finest literary creation to warning the godly against quick and easy answers. The power of many of the psalms we are embarrassed to use lies precisely here. Of all this there is little echo in our contemporary reading."[21] Whereas denominational churches generally use a weekly lectionary which gives a broad range of scriptural themes, including selected psalms on those themes, CWM churches tend not to have an agreed lectionary and the consequent agreement on using a broad range of material.[citation needed]

Pope John Paul II, concerning the role of music in regard to worship, wrote, "today, as yesterday, musicians, composers, liturgical chapel cantors, church organists and instrumentalists must feel the necessity of serious and rigorous professional training. They should be especially conscious of the fact that each of their creations or interpretations cannot escape the requirement of being a work that is inspired, appropriate and attentive to aesthetic dignity, transformed into a prayer of worship when, in the course of the liturgy, it expresses the mystery of faith in sound."[22]

Some have said that contemporary worship songs often reflect the social climate of individualism as the lyrics emphasize personal relationship with God, even within a group context.[citation needed] Interviewed in Christianity Today in 2011, Grove City College professor T. David Gordon said contemporary music was not easier to sing or better than traditional music, but familiar. If this style of music was all people listened to, then that would make them happy. He also said praise bands had a hard time finding good music, but played the contemporary music because the church wanted it, with the only criteria being how contemporary the music sounded. Gordon said churches were adding hymns to contemporary services, but that in the past the main concern had never been how new the music sounded.[23]

Gordon said in 2014 that contemporary music could not be as good because one generation could not compete with 50 generations of hymns, and even the contemporary songs were in some cases just the old hymns with an updated sound. Writers of new songs had a hard time with "theologically sound, but significant, profound, appropriate, memorable, and edifying".[24] After his 2011 interview, Gordon said Mark Moring of Christianity Today had observed that contemporary music in churches was on the decline. Gordon said the people who first wanted it are older, and contemporary music had become so common that it was no longer a marketing tool, and no longer new when people wanted what was new. Praise teams, Gordon said, were like performers, but that they were in conflict with what the Bible said. And the congregation needed to participate.[24]

Popularity

Some songs now appear in more traditional hymnals. Evangelical Lutheran Worship (published in 2006 by the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America) includes "Lord, I Lift Your Name on High" by Rick Founds[25] and "Shout to the Lord" by Darlene Zschech.[26] The United Methodist Hymnal (1989) includes "Thy Word Is a Lamp" by Amy Grant[27] and "Take Our Bread" by Joe Wise.[28]

Songs by contemporary Christian worship groups such as Hillsong United, rank in the top ten on Billboard and other national charts and are publicized in pop culture publications.[29][30][31][32] In 2019, the U.S. radio network Air1 (which was previously devoted to Christian hits) changed its format to focus primarily on worship music.[33][34]

See also

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References

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