Musing About Music
Reposted, with permission, from Theologically Driven.
WikiAnswers poses the question, “Why does music exist?” then self-replies: “Because it brings happiness to people all over the world.”
We must grant that WikiAnswers is scarcely an authoritative reference source, but it does offer a window on popular culture. It reflects that a common reason (and perhaps the most common reason) for the societal “doing” of music today is to forget the pain, grief, anxiety, dreariness, and simple ennui of life and enter an imaginary world where one can have the emotional experience of his choice—usually a happy one. Ironically, the historically central idea of “music” (fr. the Grk. μοῦσα, to muse, think, remember, or reflect) has been transformed in the last century into its own etymological opposite—an occasion, whether active or passive, for not “musing,” or, supplying the alpha privative, a venue foramusement. This is not to say that music as amusement or as a means of forgetting is always bad (see in principle Prov. 31:7), but it does reflect a total reversal of the Western tradition concerning the central purpose of music.
Of course, history only slightly improves on Wiki in terms of warrant. Still it is interesting to know that the perceived function of music from the classical period to the rise of populism was as an aid to musing and remembering, or perhaps better, as a means to creating the affective distance necessary to fostering reflection.
The theme of music as an abstract idea is rare in Scripture. The Greek term μοῦσα appears only once in the NT (Rev. 22:18). More common NT terms reflect instantiations of music: ᾄδω (oding), ὑμνεω (hymning) and ψάλλω (psalming). Hebrew is slightly more fruitful—the most common Hebrew word group for music, the שׁיר word group, includes in its scope not only “singing,” “playing,” and “songs” but also the more abstract idea of “song.” Most of what we know of the purpose for “song,” though, we learn from the songs: they provided a platform for mutual and reflective praise, joy, thanksgiving, lament, hope, victory, and the recollection of the works of God.
Music had a didactic purpose too (so Col. 3:16). This is interesting, because nearly all agree that propositional and prosaic forms of communication are more efficient and precise than non-propositional and poetic forms of communication—at least in the transmission of denotative meaning. So why music? Quite simply, because music adds a connotative and rhetorical dimension to communication that mere words cannot, or at least not efficiently. Among these,
- Music engages the whole person in spiritual discourse, slowing the flow of information to the mind, facilitating reflection, awakening chaste affections,* and encouraging appropriate motions of the will. In short, it allows the musician to muse.
- Music is also an effective mnemonic device. With its penchant for artistic cadence, repetition, rhyme, poetic devices, etc., music helps us visualize and remember the propositional content that attaches to it.
- Music balances immanence with transcendence. Music causes the individual musician to step back, consider abstractly his place in the universal metanarrative, and then resolve to fulfill his duty/destiny.
- Music creates a requisite sense of community. Music helps us see not only how we fit into transcendent realities, but also how we share experimental solidarity with others (whether fellow-Christians, fellow-countrymen, fellow-soldiers, etc.) in common worship, grief, joy, hope, recollection, affirmation, or action.
Assuming that these are the intended functions of music (and both secular and biblical song prior to the twentieth century seems to bear this out), it follows that we should analyze our songs to discover whether they do these things well. This means more than ascertaining that the denotative propositions that attach to music—the words—are good and true and worthwhile (though we certainly cannot neglect this); it means that we must also consider whether the music that attaches to the words does all that it ought to do. This is an ethical question that we cannot afford to leave unanswered. And so I force myself to answer questions like…
- In my selection of music am I more concerned about musing or about amusing? In other words, does the music cause me to remember/reflect or to forget/release?
- Do I make musical choices based on whether they will awaken my affections or stimulate my emotions?
- Is my music strictly about the here-and-now or, conversely, strictly about the wholly other? Or does it attempt to integrate the immanent with the transcendent?
- Does my music complement the lyrics and cause me to remember—both as I sing and afterwards?
- In my choice of music am I more concerned with personal expression or with expressing public and experimental solidarity with a community?
The fact is, God never tells us why he created music, why he made man a musical being, nor why he demands music of us. It is likely that these reasons mirror the reasons why he created ethics, made us ethical beings, and demands ethics from us—to reflect his image! We all know that we should do ethics well and to that end we submit to an endless stream of books and articles that attempt to untangle the gray areas of ethics from the standpoint of both Scripture and natural law. We know that there is a right and a wrong way to do ethics, even when these prove elusive. We know further that public consensus on ethical matters is not wholly trustworthy, and at times is wholly untrustworthy: when waves of ethical novelty shake society, we scrutinize their underpinnings and offer superior alternatives.
But when it comes to aesthetics, discussion of the gray areas is increasingly thought to be off limits. The only aesthetic standard permitted, it seems, is that of contemporaneity. Popular taste and preference prevail, and public consensus can never be wrong. When waves of aesthetic upheaval shake society, we are expected to submit to them without censure or even reflection. I find this perplexing.
It is impossible to escape the fact that the function of music has changed radically in the last century—in ways that have never before been seen in the history of mankind. And the church is understandably having a hard time adjusting. While reflection and resistance have occurred at times in the Christian community, the Church as a whole seems to have reached an alarming watershed—a consensus decision that (1) there is no profit in philosophizing and theologizing about aesthetics, that (2) the threat of being aesthetically “of the world” does not exist, and that (3) the threat of not being aesthetically “in the world” is by far the greater crisis of the evangelical church.
We must be frank in admitting that some who have attempted to parse the paradox of Christ and culture in the aesthetic sphere have done so poorly. But this does not give us a pass, as ministers of the Word, from being proactive in parsing the paradox and thinking meta-musically. And even when we tire of shrill and uninformed voices on both sides of the debate, we surely must not become angry or dismissive toward those who persist in the exercise. We may not all come to common conclusions (like ethics, music can be quite abstract), but we cannot be so foolish and atheological to imagine that aesthetics have at long last been detached from ethics within the Christian worldview.
Notes
* Gerald McDermott (Seeing God: Jonathan Edwards and Spiritual Discernment p. 40) summarizes the difference between affections and emotions in the following chart. I would like to suggest that the chart extends beyond the affection/emotion dichotomy to include ministry as vocation/avocation and music as musing/amusement:
Affections | Emotions |
Long-lasting | Fleeting |
Deep | Superficial |
Consistent with beliefs | Sometimes overpowering |
Always result in action | Often fail to produce action |
Involve mind, will, feelings | Feelings (often) disconnected from the mind and will |
Mark Snoeberger Bio
Mark Snoeberger is Associate Professor of Systematic Theology at Detroit Baptist Theological Seminary and has served as Director of Library Services since 1997. He received his M.Div. and Th.M. from DBTS and earned a Ph.D. in systematic theology from Baptist Bible Seminary in Clarks Summit, PA. Prior to joining the DBTS staff, he served for three years as an assistant pastor.
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Real deep.
How about you address the “what music to use in worship at church” issue.
[Mark_Smith]Real deep.
How about you address the “what music to use in worship at church” issue.
Is that a joke to you? I’m serious. How is it any different. They both affect emotions.
[Mark_Smith]Real deep.
How about you address the “what music to use in worship at church” issue.
Happy to. Music is an incredibly powerful tool that can be used to edify the church. We are told in Ephesians 5:19, “Speaking to yourselves in psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs, singing and making melody in your heart to the Lord.” There are two aspects of this verse. One is that we are singing and making melody to the Lord….no light thing. The other is that we are speaking to ourselves (or teaching) through the songs. Colossians 3:16 is even more clear about this aspect when it says, “Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom; teaching and admonishing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord.” So the songs are used to teach us and bring glory to God.
The music is incredibly valuable in the teaching aspect in particular. Different instruments used at different times can be incredibly effective at accentuating the words of a song in teaching them to different people. Some of the newer songs utilize the drums and guitars particularly well to build up a song to a verse that they want to stress. I think of How Great is Our God by Chris Tomlin. It starts out with a simple guitar playing in the background and singing softly. It talks about His splendor and majesty in the beginning in a slow manner which stresses His majesty and glory. It then begins to build by adding more instruments and using the drums still in a slow thoughtful manner. You are thinking about God being the Lion and the Lamb, He stands from age to age, and holds time in His hands. By the time you get to the chorus, you want to scream “How Great Is our God!!” The song simply wouldn’t be the same if it were sung on an organ. The instrumentation and varying tempo are used to accentuate the words and teach the church.
However, there are some songs that lend themselves to a simple accompaniment by just a piano. I think in particular of this version by the Getty’s of In Christ Alone. Note how they use the piano in more than just a generic manner (simply playing straight through with no variations in tempo, etc.). When she says “There in the ground His body lay”, it is played slower and more thoughtful to draw your thoughts to the seriousness of His death. But as He bursts forth from the grave, they change the key and up the tempo. They use the instrument to help teach the different aspects of the song.
I’ll be the first to admit though that this just doesn’t work for some people and that is ok. There are many older people that simply can’t worship God in a service if a drum set is on stage….it is too distracting to them. This is why we have different churches utilizing different styles and that is great (though we need to be gracious with those that have other tastes since something different may be more effective at teaching them)! I actually like to have an organ playing in a very serious and bold manner on some older hymns, but this simply doesn’t work for some. Instruments and music are used in the church to bring out the words of the music so that it can teach the church the principles in Scripture, thereby edifying the church. This in turn results in praise to God (the other aspect of Eph. 5:19 and Col. 3:16).
I’m not sure if I answered your question or not. I have a feeling we will still see differently on this, but that is ok.
mmartin, here is what everyone agrees on:
* music affects emotions
* music can be used in both good and both ways to affect emotions
* music can be used inappropriately (in ways that do not match the situation)
That being said, your assertion that because music affects emotions it must be moral is simply indefensible. All you have to do is prove you wrong is bring up examples like colors which are proven to affect emotions too. You can dismiss that all you want but if the ability to affect emotions makes something a moral issue and colors affect emotions, then colors are a moral issue.
I went back to the top of this thread and reread it. A question I thought of is why must a song, even one sung in church, cause me to have deep affections that reinforce theology and cause me to spring to ministerial action (see the chart from Gerald McDermott). Why can’t a song be a simple praise song that causes me to rejoice happily in God, in His love and salvation? No deep thinking, just enjoyment similar to when my children gladly greet me at the door in the evening with a giddy “Daddy” and they hug me.
[Mark_Smith]I went back to the top of this thread and reread it. A question I thought of is why must a song, even one sung in church, cause me to have deep affections that reinforce theology and cause me to spring to ministerial action (see the chart from Gerald McDermott). Why can’t a song be a simple praise song that causes me to rejoice happily in God, in His love and salvation? No deep thinking, just enjoyment similar to when my children gladly greet me at the door in the evening with a giddy “Daddy” and they hug me.
My opinion (whatever that is worth) is that we can and should do this to a certain extent. We certainly see this in the Psalms where it is just simply praising God for who He is and what He has done. However, this is based on recognizing who He is (theology?).
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