Ok fair enough. It does sound like (at least what I'm reading), is that you're more ranting on the "style" of music, i.e. beats, rhythms, compositions, than you are the lyrical points of music. There are a number of great Christian artists who write and produce music that is very steeped in scripture, but many automatically resist them because of the style of music that is presented with the lyrics.
I guess I'm a tweener in that respect. I grew up singing, playing, loving the hymns, and I still do, and the church I serve as minister of music at we sing and play hymns in every service. However, in the past twenty or so years I have also enjoyed singing, playing, and learning what many would call "the new stuff", music that is recent and has (IMO) as much scriptural basis as the hymns...not all, but a good portion of it. I've learned to examine the music lyrically prior to adding it to our churches list of songs that we play/sing, ensuring that it is glorifying to God and is based in scripture.
Music style has been a hot bed of conversation for decades, and I'm sure will continue to be as long as music is played and sung. For our local church, there are certain songs that (IMO) are not appropriate for a Sunday morning worship service, but are very appropriate for a youth gathering or a service that is aimed at targeting the un-churched population in our communities.
One thing I have told our choir and our musicians in the last few months, that I have stopped labeling music as hymns or praise choruses or modern or older music. What our church plays and sings is worship music, period. We are blessed to have the talent in our church that we can play a classic hymn as How Great Thou Art with the traditional piano/organ ensemble, or we can play it with a little different rhythm and include our guitars, drums, woodwinds and brass instruments, either using a small vocal team or the entire choir. There are a number of great hymns lyrically that can be arranged a little differently musically and still keep the same worshipful content and reach ears that might not "like" the traditional style.
With all that said, I do have one type of music that just bugs me to no end (must be the songwriter in me). The songs, choruses mainly, that have one verse, one chorus, and you're expected to repeat those over and over and over. I'm not a big fan of that at all. I think if you're going to take the time to write one verse of a song, make the effort to write at least two or three.