There's also truth that organ music of any age is a genre within many genres, and at any point in history, you can find more developed, complex genres of music living alongside very simple, pedestrian ones. When Franck was composing, there was certainly much simpler, different music happening right outside on the streets of Paris at exactly the same time. That was true in Bach's time as well, and it's true today.
Today, there are some incredibly challenging modern popular forms of music being written in the progressive rock vein, and there's also a whole lot of banal, disposable commercial garbage. There are amazingly poetic writers in the folk/americana genre, and there's pedestrian pop/country. There are some incredible musicians and some real hacks.
I think the thing that raises some hackles here is that currently, the simpler forms of contemporary music are in vogue in the church. This has the potential upside of connecting and involving the current youth generation (at least it does in my church), and the potential downside of creating disposable theology and disposable music just like the culture.
What's interesting is that in Biblical history and church history, this whole issue is like a pendulum that keeps swinging. In Pre-Temple OT Israel, it seems that the musical culture was very much oriented to the masses. Once King David came on the scene, a higher form of music that involved a lot of specialists, training and complexity was born. In the first and second-century church, music was much simpler. By the Middle Ages, it was once again very complex (although very simple theologically!). In the early Reformation, it became simple, but with rich theology. In 18th Century Protestantism, it had become more complex. In the 19th Century revivals, gospel song with emotional sentiments to rival the most sappy praise choruses abounded. In the 1950's, the golden age of traditional American church music was at its height. In the 1970's, the Jesus People introduced very simple songs and lyrics at the beginning of the praise and worship movement. And by the 2000's, praise and worship was floating out of the range of easy, singable, playable songs back into the realm of the specialists, and requiring a high level of technology to interpret correctly.
So the Bible and church history give us precious little guidance regarding form or style, but a lot regarding the heart behind it. Every swing of the pendulum throughout history has had its supporters and vocal detractors.
I'm sure it will swing back at some point. We've been here before several times. I'm just not sure the next swing will involve the organ, and if we keep kicking the unwashed masses off the bench, I'm sure it won't.
Today, there are some incredibly challenging modern popular forms of music being written in the progressive rock vein, and there's also a whole lot of banal, disposable commercial garbage. There are amazingly poetic writers in the folk/americana genre, and there's pedestrian pop/country. There are some incredible musicians and some real hacks.
I think the thing that raises some hackles here is that currently, the simpler forms of contemporary music are in vogue in the church. This has the potential upside of connecting and involving the current youth generation (at least it does in my church), and the potential downside of creating disposable theology and disposable music just like the culture.
What's interesting is that in Biblical history and church history, this whole issue is like a pendulum that keeps swinging. In Pre-Temple OT Israel, it seems that the musical culture was very much oriented to the masses. Once King David came on the scene, a higher form of music that involved a lot of specialists, training and complexity was born. In the first and second-century church, music was much simpler. By the Middle Ages, it was once again very complex (although very simple theologically!). In the early Reformation, it became simple, but with rich theology. In 18th Century Protestantism, it had become more complex. In the 19th Century revivals, gospel song with emotional sentiments to rival the most sappy praise choruses abounded. In the 1950's, the golden age of traditional American church music was at its height. In the 1970's, the Jesus People introduced very simple songs and lyrics at the beginning of the praise and worship movement. And by the 2000's, praise and worship was floating out of the range of easy, singable, playable songs back into the realm of the specialists, and requiring a high level of technology to interpret correctly.
So the Bible and church history give us precious little guidance regarding form or style, but a lot regarding the heart behind it. Every swing of the pendulum throughout history has had its supporters and vocal detractors.
I'm sure it will swing back at some point. We've been here before several times. I'm just not sure the next swing will involve the organ, and if we keep kicking the unwashed masses off the bench, I'm sure it won't.
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