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Can any instrument be used in Corporate Worship?

Discussion in 'Music Ministry' started by 12strings, Dec 12, 2011.

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  1. They are all acceptable, given they are used wisely

    40 vote(s)
    93.0%
  2. No drums should be used

    1 vote(s)
    2.3%
  3. orchestral percussion is ok, but no drum set.

    0 vote(s)
    0.0%
  4. Acoustic guitars are ok, but no electic guitars

    0 vote(s)
    0.0%
  5. No guitars should be used

    0 vote(s)
    0.0%
  6. Piano and organ only should be used

    0 vote(s)
    0.0%
  7. Organs should not be used

    0 vote(s)
    0.0%
  8. No instruments should be used.

    2 vote(s)
    4.7%
Multiple votes are allowed.
  1. annsni

    annsni Well-Known Member
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    LOL - You definitely need new drummers. ;) We've had good and bad and we've trained some bad into good. It helps to have a very good drummer work with the others.
     
  2. 12strings

    12strings Active Member

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    Just a few weeks ago one of "matriarch's" of our church, who must be in her mid-eightees, said to me, "Adam (our drum set player) is the only drummer that I've appreciated."

    It just warms my heart to hear a 5-foot, 100lb, old lady say that... :thumbs:

    ...Especially since I'm the music minister...
     
  3. Jerome

    Jerome Well-Known Member
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  4. glfredrick

    glfredrick New Member

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    If only... Remember, it is the attitude of the heart and the lyrics, not the instrument. :laugh:
     
  5. Don

    Don Well-Known Member
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    Timbrels, flutes, and harps are some of the oldest instruments known to man; and their use is documented in scripture.

    These instruments were easy to carry with those who have nomadic tendencies--such as the Israelites during the time of Genesis and Exodus.

    Each has evolved into larger, less portable versions: Harps became guitars and pianos; flutes became larger wind instruments, such as trumpets and trombones; timbrels became drums.

    Pianos didn't come into existence until the 1500's; the timbrel (now mostly referred to as a tambourine) hasn't really changed since the time of Moses. Yet the piano is more "scriptural" than a tambourine. Go figure.
     
  6. David Lamb

    David Lamb Well-Known Member

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    I am 99% sure you were being facetious, and if so, you and I are agreed that a piano cannot be more "scriptural", in the sense that no one played the piano in bible times, because it wasn't even invented until - not the 1500s - but the very late 1600s.

    I would say that a keyboard instrument like a piano or organ is more suitable for accompanying hymns of our culture, simply because our tunes are mostly written in 4-part harmony - you can't play even a melody, let alone harmony, on an unpitched percussion istrument such as a timbrel.

    One matter that we must bear in mind when we see names of musical instruments in the bible is that those names seldom refer to the same instruments that have those names in more recent times. "Sackbut" in the bible refers to a triangle-shaped stringed instrument, not the forerunner of the trombone, which is what we mean by the word. We use the word "dulcimer" to mean a stringed instrument, but in thew bible, at least in the AV/KJV, it refers to a wind instrument, possibly like a set of panpipes, or like bagpipes.
     
  7. marke

    marke New Member

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    I really like good Christian music. It does something for me. I believe the saying, "music calms the savage beast" must have been gotten from the Biblical account of David playing for King Saul and I must be something like King Saul in that I find Christian music soothing (and, no I don't find King Saul admirable in that situation, but maybe somewhat typical of fleshly charistics of humans.) I do believe music can appeal to the flesh as well as be edifying to the soul. David danced before the Lord and he played skillfully on instruments and I admire him for that, and think it was of the Lord, although I generally don't favor dancing in church.

    I don't like rock music or music that is not harmonious or melodious. I think the same instruments can be used to create great music as well as lousy music. I tend to favor old hymns with good words, but there are many more modern hymns with good words that are excellent as well. I've been to many churches and I don't ever complain about their music if I don't like it, but I have complimented many in churches for music I really like. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, I suppose.
     
  8. glfredrick

    glfredrick New Member

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    Here you go!

    http://www.sojournmusic.com/2009/02/over-the-grave-the-hymns-of-isaac-watts-volume-one/

    Review of the same:

    http://www.theworshipcommunity.com/review-sojourn-over-the-grave-the-isaac-watts-project-volume-one/

    http://thegospelcoalition.org/blogs/justintaylor/2009/06/16/new-cd-from-sojourn-music-over-grave/
     
    #28 glfredrick, Dec 21, 2011
    Last edited by a moderator: Dec 21, 2011
  9. glfredrick

    glfredrick New Member

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    Listen for free...
     
  10. mandym

    mandym New Member

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    You don't know that. The Organ is seen as antiquated and the younger generations do not care for it. The perception is it is boring.
     
  11. annsni

    annsni Well-Known Member
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    Or there are less and less people actually skilled enough to play it well.

    Having a very VERY poor organ player was actually the straw that broke the camel's back for us leaving our old church. We were very close to leaving anyway but when they hired a woman on as the music director who couldn't play the organ to save her life - but she played with gusto anyway, we had to leave. Hubby said that we weren't getting fed (the preaching had gone really downhill and there was no substance to it at all), it was mostly older folks who wanted NO change - even where it was desperately needed, and the youth ministry left a lot to be desired (my kids weren't that age yet but they were heading there and we didn't want our kids to grow up in a church with a youth ministry where the kids didn't want to hear about Jesus). All of these were reasons we were ready to leave but we felt we needed to stay and keep trying. But then they hired this woman who had dinner dishes on her feet and couldn't keep a rhythm at all. My husband, as a musician, found himself really struggling to even worship so that was the last straw.

    But then in our new church, we were given an old built in 1855 Baptist church in another town and it has a large pipe organ. GORGEOUS!!!!! I love going there and wish we could go there for Christmas morning!! I'd LOVE to hear the Christmas carols played on that instrument!!!!
     
  12. Scarlett O.

    Scarlett O. Moderator
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    Ann is right. The organ isn't a common instrument that children learn to play anymore. And finding a competent organist is almost impossible.

    My own choir director searched for at least two years. He contacted universities, put ads in Christian periodicals, and contacted other choir directors. No one could have made a better search than he did.

    The competent ones didn't want to attend Sunday School or become "involved" in the church. It was just a weekend job. The ones who were devoted Christians and would have made our church their home could not play competently enough.

    So .... we gave the organ away to a church who lost their sanctuary to Katrina and were rebuilding.

    We bought a really nice keyboard and placed it by the piano. I alternate playing the piano and strings depending on the song we are singing. We also have drums, bass guitar, acoustic guitar, and lead guitar.

    And I do occasionally play the organ on the keyboard. We alternate playing traditional hymns and moderately contemporary Christian music.
     
  13. Jim1999

    Jim1999 <img src =/Jim1999.jpg>

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    What about a pitch pipe or tuning fork? In the early Welsh Methodist and Baptist Churches, people sat in the pews according to their voice. There were no instruments in the church other than the pitch pipe.

    Cheers,

    Jim
     
  14. mandym

    mandym New Member

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    What did that means when you had to sit in the back. :laugh:
     
  15. Don

    Don Well-Known Member
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    Yes, I was mostly being facetious; I had a particular group in mind as I wrote the comments, but didn't identify that group.

    BTW: Agreed, you don't use an un-pitched instrument towards melody in any way; you use it to accompany melody, which can be the voice.

    It would be more correct to say the piano didn't come along until the 1600's; but I tend to lump harpsichords in the same group as pianos, and thus, my comment about the 1500's (although there is much evidence that indicates the harpsichord was around in the 1300's)...I haven't taken into account the organ, which preceeded both the harpsichord and the piano....

    Anyway, my point being, as you correctly surmised, the exclusion of certain instruments in the church.
     
  16. preachinjesus

    preachinjesus Well-Known Member
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    Yes, any can.
     
  17. Jason Garrett

    Jason Garrett New Member

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    The organ was, at one time, the trendy musical instrument of the day and the tunes to which hymns were written were often drinking songs of the day as well. So, the contention that modern praise and worship music mirroring current societal music automatically disqualifies it from use in a corporate setting is hypocritical at best, and just downright silly (in my opinion). Some of you see it a different way, and that's fine. It's a non-salvitical issue, and because of that, one which I believe we should all take the "to each their own" approach to it. We as Christians spend way too much time arguing and bickering over issues that don't amount to a hill of beans when in context of whether a human being spends an eternity in hell or not.
     
  18. glfredrick

    glfredrick New Member

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    Well said...

    Everything was new once, and when it was new it had just as many problems as our "new" music of today played with instruments in vogue now.

    Why one particular culture and period in time is more sacred than another is beyond me, but that is often the way many in the church see it. So much so that many early missionaries to Africa packed European and American clothing and pump organs into the jungles where they all rotted away and made no significant difference for the gospel. But because those things were SO equated with the gospel, culture became THE expression of the gospel. Wonder what God thinks?
     
  19. Jerome

    Jerome Well-Known Member
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    "we need to escape from these horrid ruts, and wretched conventionalisms, which are rather hindrances than helps. Some very stereotyped brethren judge it to be a crime for an evangelist to sing the gospel; and as to that American organ,—dreadful! One of these days another set of conservative souls will hardly endure a service without such things" —Charles Spurgeon, "Beware of Unbelief"
     
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