Through a brief discussion on Modern Art vs. Postmodern Art, how hymns and contemporary songs fit into those categories, and how this can be good and bad, Christians can be more mindful of what they like to sing and why they like to sing it, and if it is even a good thing to like to sing.
First thing's first... Modern Art. Its hard to describe art with out looking at it... but since I don't want to have to worry about copyright infringement I'm not going to post any images (if you want to see some, google Pablo Picasso). But here's a basic understanding of modern art... let me emphasize that, this is basic, basic, basic stuff. Modern art seeks to portray the ultimate reality or essence of the subject. For example, if you take away things that make a dog a dog one by one, eventually you will get down to the last thing that makes a dog a dog. If you take it away the dog will no longer be a dog. That last thing could be described as "Doginess." So, an artist painting a dog would not just look at a dog and paint exactly what he sees, he would paint what makes the dog a dog. The artist would seek to paint doginess. A difficult task if you ask me. The value in Modern Art comes with the Artist's engagement and treatment of the subject of the art. This is why modern art often seems to be abstract. To be honest, a lot of it looks weird to me. But it makes sense that it would look weird. The artist isn't just painting a dog. He's painting the doginess of a dog. An artist painting doginess might try to convey loyalty, an always present need for approval, doofyness and intelligence (at the same time). A painting with all of those things in it would definitely look weird. The important thing about Modern Art is the emphasis on objective truth. The modern artist seeks to portray Objective Truth through whatever medium he is using.
Postmodern art is a bit different. And it will make more sense to us... after all we live in the postmodern age. A postmodern artist seeks to portray a subject with the intentions of having the audience engage with that subject (google Andy Warhol). So instead of painting doginess like a modern artist, a postmodern artist would paint a dog. The value in the postmodern artists work comes when the audience looks at the dog and thinks about what this dog means to them. Maybe the image reminds them of their childhood dog. Maybe it reminds them of a time they got bit. The painting of the dog is valuable to some people because some people love dogs. However other people might hate it because they are cat people (which is a mystery in itself).
In summary, the main distinction between Modern Art and Postmodern Art is the thinking behind the art. Modern Artists seek to portray an objective truth about the subject. Postmodern Artists seek to portray a subject that will mean different things to different people emphasizing the subjective truth about the subject.
In general, we can apply this understanding to Hymns and Contemporary praise songs as well. Where hymns often seek to articulate some sort of deep theological truth and tend to be written using lines directly taken from scripture, contemporary songs tend be written in a way that can mean different things to different people. Here's a good example:
Modern Worship Song - "Holy Holy Holy"
Verse 1
Holy holy holy
Lord God Almighty
Early in the morning
Our song shall rise to Thee
Holy holy holy
Merciful and mighty
God in three persons
Blessed Trinity
Verse 2
Holy holy holy
All the saints adore Thee
Casting down their golden crowns
Around the glassy sea
Cherubim and seraphim
Falling down before Thee
Which wert and art
And evermore shalt be
Verse 3
Holy holy holy
Though the darkness hide Thee
Though the eye of sinful man
Thy glory may not see
Only Thou art holy
There is none beside Thee
Perfect in power
In love and purity
Verse 4
Holy holy holy
Lord God Almighty
All Thy works shall praise Thy name
In earth and sky and sea
Holy holy holy
Merciful and mighty
God in three persons
Blessed Trinity
Postmodern Worship Song - "Holy is the Lord"
Verse 1
We stand and lift up our hands
For the joy of the Lord is our strength
We bow down and worship Him now
How great how awesome is He
Pre-Chorus
And together we sing
Ev'ryone sing
Chorus 1
Holy is the Lord God Almighty
The earth is filled with His glory
Holy is the Lord God Almighty
The earth is filled with His glory
The earth is filled with His glory
Misc
It is rising up all around
It's the anthem of the Lord's renown
It's rising up all around
It's the anthem of the Lord's renown
These songs are both concentrating on the same theological truth. However, where the first uses language describing God's holiness as well as scenes from scripture, the second speaks of our interaction with God and uses a lot of repeated lines. I don't think that this means that the writer of the second song is lazy and the writer of the first was more elegant and articulate... Rather I think the second writer meant to repeat the lines multiple times to offer the people singing the song time to ponder God's holiness and what it means to them, where as the first writer meant to articulate the objective truth about God's holiness as seen in scripture.
There are good and bad things about both Contemporary songs meant for the congregation to engage with, and Hymns meant to articulate truths. A good thing about Hymns is the fact that they teach us Biblical truths (not to say that contemporary songs don't) and in troubled times in life we are reminded of the promises of God through reciting a hymn we grew up singing. A good thing about Contemporary songs is that we have the opportunity to reflect on our own life and the unique way that God has brought us to Him and praise Him for that. The bad thing about hymns is that some times there is so much information and truth packed into one 3 minute song that we don't have time to engage and understand the truth that the hymn is articulating. A bad thing about contemporary music is the fact that some times it is shallow and lacking in the truth department and depends to much on the music and the way that the congregation engages with it so much that the individuals become the subject in worship rather than God.
So fellow Christians, BE CAREFUL!
If we're not careful, contemporary songs become more about our engagement with them then about our engagement with God. If we're not careful we start to write and sing songs that we think will be meaningful to people because of the experience that we as leaders can create for the participants in worship. Eventually we start to emphasize the experience of worship over the subject of our worship, and we stop focusing on God and we focus on the spiritual high that we felt the last time we sang "that song." The congregation gets this emotional high at certain points in a song, and worship leaders are smart enough to key in on this point and are able to recreate it over and over and over.
Ultimately, worship becomes more about the emotional experience, controlled by the worship leader and band (whether the congregation knows it or not), than the engagement with God.
So, I'd like to suggest that when we gather together to worship we sing truth... But let's not only sing truth, lets engage truth, lets reflect on how it effects our lives, and lets be changed by it! After all, He is the Way, the TRUTH, and the Life.
Really well written, AJ!
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