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Musical Sounds: Moral or Amoral?

Discussion in 'Fundamental Baptist Forum' started by Luke2427, Jul 31, 2010.

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  1. Luke2427

    Luke2427 Active Member

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    Psalm 150 has nothing to do with condemning any style of music.
     
  2. Don

    Don Well-Known Member
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    That's correct; your question was, does the Bible have anything to say about music being godly or ungodly? Psalm 150 indicates that music is commanded. Make your own inferences from there.
     
  3. Pastor Larry

    Pastor Larry <b>Moderator</b>
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    Seriously, Don, in your analogy, you used gun and music inconsistently. You’re analogy, as it stands, does not logically work. You are comparing two different types of entities. To ask if there is any kind of gun that is more sinful than others is not the same as asking if there is any kind of music that is more sinful than others because guns and music are two different types of entities.
    Your questions should be “Is there any use of a gun that is sinful?” and “Is there any use of music that is sinful?” You are speaking of “types of guns” and “uses of music.” “Type” does not apply to gun in the same way that it applies to music.

    I realize that this is more of a logical argument that doesn’t really address the issue at hand, but shows that your analogy is flawed and therefore of very limited use.
    Exactly.
    Because of the way you are interacting with his argument. You lifted a single (still unlinked) line from him that none of us can trace to see what he is talking about. You don’t seem to understand what he is talking about because you seem to think that Crosby/Booth/etc disprove his point when he would argue that they actually prove his point.
    No I understand what he means, and I understand what you meant. And you are correct in this assessment, but here’s the rub: People want to use “modern” or “contemporary” in terms of time, saying things like “Watts was contemporary music” or “Luther used contemporary music.” I am not sure if you have said that, but many have. But that’s not true. Contemporary is a genre. So if you are using “modern” or “contemporary” as a genre rather than a time marker, you are using it differently than most people arguing your position use it, and you are using it correctly. I assumed you were using it incorrectly as most people who make your argument do.

    Hey, Don, I appreciate the exchange. I am spending a lot of time here that I need to focus on some other more profitable things. So I will try to cut my participation back here.
     
  4. Pastor Larry

    Pastor Larry <b>Moderator</b>
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    What good would that have done? Those types of music don't exist today. And if they did, you would claim that the Bible doesn't address your type so you are fine. So rather than doing that, God gives us principles of communication that are good at all times.

    We all believe that. That doesn't really help. What you are actually arguing for is what some have called nuda scriptura. Sola Scriptura has never historically meant that only the explicit commands of Scripture guide our life. It is actually a far different principle.

    Again, see my comments to Swaimj on the Sermon on the Mount about Jesus use of the OT commands.
     
  5. Pastor Larry

    Pastor Larry <b>Moderator</b>
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    Yes, I tend to think so, but that is a hard one. That's not the crux of my position.
     
  6. gb93433

    gb93433 Active Member
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    Does your church send them out two by two?
     
  7. Luke2427

    Luke2427 Active Member

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    What makes it sinful and what verse to you bring to bear to support this position?
     
  8. Luke2427

    Luke2427 Active Member

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    What principle of communication are you appealing to from the Word of God?
     
  9. Luke2427

    Luke2427 Active Member

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    ????? What does that have to do with the Great Commission from whence we are commanded to make disciples???
     
  10. Pastor Larry

    Pastor Larry <b>Moderator</b>
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    I think it is semantics to some degree. But I am saying there are basically two groups with one subdivided: Good music (appropriate at some times and inappropriate at others) and Bad Music (always inappropriate).

    Now whether that bad is inherent or simply related to time and culture I am not sure. I think there are some serious questions about the music of the counterculture movement. I am not sure we are far enough separated from it to know if it is inherent or merely associational.

    I think we have to live in the world we live in and view it through biblical eyes. The fact that something is accepted does not make it a good thing. I might have a weak conscience on some of this. I don't know. But I think there are some very significant arguments that are being made that have nothing to do with plants and trichotomy and all that.

    Yes, it was pretty raw at some places.

    But can you say it doesn't authoritatively? It just seems more than coincidental that that music was the voice of the counterculture.

    It's not easy for sure, IMO. And I think some are taking it way too easy. Culture and Christianity is a difficult thing. We have to wrestle with it a bit more than I see some doing.
     
  11. Pastor Larry

    Pastor Larry <b>Moderator</b>
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    I think it communicates a mindset and way of thinking about life that is contrary to the way God tells us to think about life. And the verse that could be brought to bear on this are numerous. We are called to live differently and think differently. Music teaches us how to think and creates patterns of thinking in us.

    About grace, honesty, kindness, peace, etc. Again, just loads of them.

    So tell me how you understand Christ's comments on adultery given your position. Don't you have to say that Christ did the very thing that you say we should not do?
     
  12. Luke2427

    Luke2427 Active Member

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  13. Don

    Don Well-Known Member
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    Again, PL, you're splitting hairs where you don't need to be. The use of the gun is analogous to the use of music. You seem to be the only one who wishes to argue that.

    All analogies are flawed. There is no analogy that 100% correlates to the original premise being analogized.
    His point is that certain styles of contemporary music -- hip hop, rap, etc. -- have their roots in sinful activities. Which is what Crosby and Booth are both guilty of, based on this argument.
    Contemporary is used to identify a genre that is based on a time period. Watts was "contemporary," to those around him that that wished to hold onto the music from the previous decades/century.
     
  14. GBC Pastor

    GBC Pastor New Member

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    Well I just read all ten pages of this post. That's twenty minutes of my life I'll never get back!

    ABC: You made most of the points that I would have made so I'll simply say "good posts!"

    Music like many other things is not in and of itself sinful. It is the intent with which it is used that can make it sin. This is what I think.

    Pastor Larry: I know I used the expression "I think." However since I have counted about a dozen uses of the phrase by you please let it slide.
     
  15. swaimj

    swaimj <img src=/swaimj.gif>

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    Now go back and read everything in reverse. You won't get any time back but I think a secret message revealing the truth about this subject is backmasked in the thread.
     
  16. GBC Pastor

    GBC Pastor New Member

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    Tried that with a Led Zeppelin album once, but didn't get anything out of it!:laugh:
     
  17. Luke2427

    Luke2427 Active Member

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    That's hilarious!:laugh::laugh: And applicable.:applause:
     
  18. Winman

    Winman Active Member

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    Years ago we had an evangelist come to our church and explain that music is composed of melody, harmony, and beat (rhythm), and that each one applies to our three part nature, spirit, soul, and body.

    Traditional Christian music emphasizes melody, which appeals to the spirit. Modern music emphasizes beat which appeals to the body. It is fleshly, carnal.

    This is well known among music teachers. Here is part of an article by a Christian music teacher:

    I have been playing guitar for 40 years, so I think I have a little to say on this subject, and I agree with this teaching. Christian music should emphasize the melody and harmony, not the beat. Unfortunately, much modern music greatly emphasizes the beat.
     
  19. gb93433

    gb93433 Active Member
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    Isn't that much the same thing folks said years ago about contemporary music then? From what I can tell the music in church at any given point in time came out of the world in which the generation came. I do not see piano and organ in the Bible. Yet there were folks claimed it as a church instrument. I had a friend in high school that played the organ fast in a secular band he was a part of at the time. It definitely sounded different.
     
  20. sag38

    sag38 Active Member

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    Years ago we had an evangelist come to our church and explain that music is composed of melody, harmony, and beat (rhythm), and that each one applies to our three part nature, spirit, soul, and body.

    And you bought into it hook, line, and sinker. Where's the Biblical support for this teaching? The man gave his opinion rather than proclaiming the gospel as he should have been doing if indeed he was an evangelist.
     
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