Leaders, Worship Planning, WTTU Special Public Post

“Worship Music Is Not…” (Show #143) | 11-7-17

#WorshipMusicIsNot…

2 min read | 30m Show

What Is Worship Music? 

As a #worshipleader to get a clear picture of what worship is, it is important to identify what it is not.

Learn five things that worship isn’t and how that affects your leading and planning.



11-7-17 WATCH SHOW #143




#1 – It Isn’t Music Theory

The purpose of our worship isn’t to teach musicianship or make great music.

Learning to sing parts, follow a melodic line and internalize rhythms are all skills that can enhance our worship. But those skills are a means to the end, not the end.

The theoretical study of the elements of music including sound, pitch, rhythm, melody, harmony, time and notation can enrich our worship. But understanding those elements isn’t necessary for worship to occur.

So worship service music that focuses on theory alone without moving to the application may be great music, but not worship.

#2 – It Isn’t Necessary

The sole emphasis on music as our only worship offering may have actually hindered our worship understanding and exacerbated our worship conflicts.

Music and worship aren’t exclusively synonymous. One is mandatory, the other isn’t. Music is an artistic expression given to us so that we might offer it as a gift to God. But it isn’t the expression.

So considering additional artistic options could alleviate the pressure on music to serve as the primary driver of worship renewal and consequently diminish its solitary blame for worship conflict.

[ctt template=”6″ link=”7Pl1I” via=”no” ]Worship the LORD in the splendor of his holiness; tremble before him, all the earth. (Psa 96:9 NIV)[/ctt]
 

#3 – It Isn’t A Substitute

Kairos or God moments might occur in our song selections but they’ve already occurred in Scripture, Prayer and the Table. So why are we reading, petitioning and gathering at the Table less in order to sing more?

Biblical text must be the foundation from which our songs spring forth. Prayer is not just a song connector; it is a divine conversation that gives us a reason to sing in the first place.

And two relationships we try to create with our song sets are available at the Table: The vertical communion with Christ and the horizontal communion with each other.

So music is an addition to, not a substitute for these Kairos moments.

#4 – It Isn’t An Inviter

He has called us out of darkness into His marvelous light that we may declare His praises (1 Peter 2:9). If God is calling and we are declaring, then the invitation to show up is from Him not us.

Our music can acknowledge His presence but it can’t generate it. It can respond to His presence but it can’t initiate it. It can celebrate His presence but it can’t create it.

[ctt template=”6″ link=”7Pl1I” via=”no” ]But you are a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, God’s special possession, that you may declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his wonderful light. (1Peter 2:9 NIV)[/ctt]

#5 – It Isn’t A Starter Or Stopper

If our worship starts when we sing the first song and stops when we sing the last one, then what are we doing the other 167 hours of the week?

Loving God with heart, soul, mind and strength and also loving our neighbors as we love ourselves means worship must be continuous. Worship can’t be contained in a song set, single location, context, culture, style, artistic expression or vehicle of communication.

So it doesn’t matter how good our worship is when we gather, it is incomplete until it continues when we scatter.


Worship Music Is…

So worship music is not many things. But, worship music is a wonderful tool that the Lord has given us to use as we worship Him. Let’s not place too much importance on the musical portion of our services, but let’s also not ignore the power of music to be a vehicle of praise. 



Dr. David W. Manner serves as the Associate Executive Director for Kansas-Nebraska Convention of Southern Baptists with responsibilities in the areas of Worship, Leadership and Administration. Before joining the convention staff in 2000, David served for twenty years in music/worship ministry with congregations in Kansas, Arkansas, Texas, and Oklahoma. He holds a Bachelor of Music degree from Oklahoma Baptist University; a Master of Church Music degree from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary; and a Doctor of Worship Studies from the Robert E. Webber Institute for Worship Studies.



@dwmanner@BranonDempsey @worshiptt @WorshipTTU


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