Our Church Doesn’t Sing New Music to Appeal to Nonbelievers
Karl Vaters
Oh, the worship wars.
Just when you think they’re gone for good, they pop up again.
The debate is no longer raging, but it’s not over. Probably never will be.
· Old music v new
· Hymns v choruses
· Choirs v worship teams
· Organs and pianos v guitars and drums
The subject came up again in a conversation where I wasn’t expecting it.
Because I’m a supporter and encourager of small churches, the assembled group assumed what many do — that I must be on the old-hymns-are-better, new-songs-are-shallow side of the argument.
Not wanting to run over this thoroughly-plowed ground again, I sat off to the side of the conversation.
Then one of them said something I hear a lot — that churches are singing newer songs to appeal to nonbelievers. This was followed by “we’re letting the world dictate worship styles for the church,” and then the dreaded head-turn to me. “Why do you think they do that, Karl?” I felt like Michael Corleone in Godfather III. “Just when I thought I was out, they pull me back in!”
I took a deep breath, assured them that I sympathized with their concerns and love the old hymns, too. But I disagreed with almost all of their premises.
The world is not dictating our worship styles when we sing new music.
Old songs aren’t better than new songs, churches don’t sing new songs to bring new people in, the world is not dictating our worship styles when we sing new music, and (the big shocker!) in my small church, we sing new songs almost exclusively.
Sing What Honors the Lord and Blesses You
I’m sure some churches play newer music in an attempt to bring the unchurched in. But I don’t know of any. At least, I don’t know of any who do so as their primary reason for new music.
In fact, I have yet to talk to a new music pastor or worship minister who will do anything less than shake their heads at the idea that unchurched people are sitting at home thinking “I would go to church if only I could find one with music that sounds like my Spotify playlists.”
Our church uses a lot of different tools to reach unchurched people, from personal invitations to community service events and more. But our church’s song list is not an evangelism tool. It’s meant to glorify God and involve the saints in worship.
So, if you and your church like singing the great old hymns of the church, go for it! Prefer new songs? Sing them with all your heart. But there’s no reason to keep knocking those who sing a different set of songs than your church does.
Why My Church Sings New Songs
So, if we’re not singing new songs for the unchurched, why are we?
Here are a few reasons my church (and many others) sing mostly new songs:
• The church constantly needs an infusion of new songs of praise
• It’s the music that most of the people who attend my church prefer — not just the youth
• It’s the music our musicians know how to play
• It supports what God is laying on the hearts of today’s worshippers and songwriters
• It touches the hearts of today’s believers just like older music touched the hearts of yesterday’s believers
• New songs give a voice to how people express worship today
• There is no such thing as “church music” outside of the lyrical content
• New music often builds on the foundation laid by older songs
• New music involves more musicians because it uses the instruments more people play today
• It tells aspiring songwriters that they can use their gifts to bless the church
• I preach new sermons using eternal truths, why can’t musicians do the same?
Every Old Song Used to Be a New Song
Every time musical styles change, a lot of church people get upset about it. And they scramble to find a theological justification for what is little more than a musical preference.
The main complaint? Today’s songs are musically inferior and theologically shallow.
Is there a lot of shallow music today? Sure. I cringe over the singing-about-Jesus-like-he’s-my- boyfriend songs, too.
Shallow songs have been written in every generation. The only reason we think yesterday’s songs are deeper than today’s is because only the great ones from yesterday have survived.
So we keep them, sing them, and build on the foundation they laid for us as we write and sing new songs.
The poorly written and theologically shallow songs will fade away, while the better ones will stick around for a while.
That will happen with today’s songs for future generations. The poorly written and theologically shallow songs will fade away, while the better ones will stick around for a while.
So no, not every new song is on a par with Amazing Grace. But, when you think about it, only one old song was Amazing Grace. There were some other great songs from that era that stuck around for us to sing today, but there were a lot that didn’t. Either they weren’t that good, or they were right for that era, but not for today.
Today’s Amazing Grace may be out there right now. And I don’t want to miss it. So we’re opening our arms, hearts, voices and churches to sing new songs.
The above article, “Our Church Doesn’t Sing New Music to Appeal to Nonbelievers” was written by Karl Vaters. The article was excerpted from www.christianitytoday.com web site. October 2016.
The material is copyrighted and should not be reprinted under any other name or author. However, this material may be freely used for personal study or research purposes.
This article may not be written by an Apostolic author, but it contains many excellent principles and concepts that can be adapted to most churches. As the old saying goes, “Eat the meat. Throw away the bones.”