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Wednesday, June 08, 2022

Are We Performing or Are We Participating?


With due respect to my Reformed Presbyterian friends, I think it’s difficult to make the argument that singing in the local church must not be accompanied by instrumentation. But with due respect to everyone else, I think it’s equally difficult to make the argument that singing in the local church must be accompanied by instrumentation. It seems to me that we have a lot of freedom here—freedom to sing in a way that matches our convictions and freedom to sing in a way we judge appropriate to our setting.

I tend to think the most difficult position to justify from the Bible is the one that seems to be in effect in a great many evangelical churches today—that music is at its best when there is a full band of skilled singers and musicians who play so loudly as to drown out the voices of the congregation. Where instrumentation was traditionally used to enhance the beauty of the music and help direct the singing of the congregation, today it often seems to dominate so that instead of using a band to complement and accompany the congregation, the congregation now merely does their best to sing along to a band.

A friend recently distinguished between two helpful categories: worship services that are performative and worship services that are participatory. A performative worship service is one that could merrily go on even if there was no one there but the people at the front of the room—the pastor(s) and the band. A participatory worship service is one that would have no meaning unless the congregation was present and doing their part. And while the congregation can and should participate in more than the singing (e.g. prayers, ordinances, responsive readings), they should certainly not participate in less than the singing. Yet this is the reality in so many churches today—singing is performative far more than participatory. In fact, the less we can hear the voices of the unskilled singers in the pews, the better the music is judged to be. Singing has gone from being the domain of the many amateurs to the domain of the few professionals. Read More
In my lifetime I have witnessed the transition from participatory worship services to so-called performance worship services. To my mind services in which a praise band does all or most of the singing and those not on the platform are relegated to the role of passive spectators is not a worship service.  I also seen a movement away from involving members of the congregation in various roles in the service--reading Scripture, leading prayer, serving communion, etc., to giving these roles to staff and praise team members. This is far from the kind of corporate worship envisioned in Paul's First letter to the Corinthians in which the various gifts of the whole Body of Christ, not those of just a small part of that Body, are used in the service.

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