DEVIL MUSIC?
What’s the deal with CrossPoint? On most Sunday mornings the band fires up some ungodly, un-spiritual, secular radio song right before the preaching of God’s Word. Why on earth is that a good idea? Shouldn’t God’s Word be set up with the most sacred, religious, pure and holy music that we can imagine? Isn’t listening to secular music a sin? I mean, I smashed or burned all of my Ted Nugent records at youth retreat in 1982. Don’t you guys know that God’s House is not the place for that kind of nonsense? Does Bob Larson need to play more records backwards for you?
It occurred to me that some people may be asking these kind of questions when they see that we often play songs by all sorts of pagans during our Sunday service. Since I have been the worship leader at CrossPoint we have played songs by Kansas, Eric Clapton, Green Day, Good Charlotte, Coldplay, KISS, Linkin Park, Talking Heads, The Who, Madonna, Rare Earth, Rolling Stones, Peter Gabriel, Sevendust, Beatles, David Matthews, Willie Nelson, Johnny Cash, Lenny Kravitz, Bob Marley, Kool & The Gang, Bruce Springsteen, U2, Tom Waits, Don Henley, Bob Dylan, Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, The Eagles, Blind Faith, Seal, The Cure, and honestly, we’re are likely to play a song by just about anyone. I’m certainly not saying that all of those artists are rank pagans, because I don’t know any of them, but I am saying that their music is not usually thought of as sacred (or church music). We tend to play these songs just before the sermon. It sets the tone, introduces the topic, and gives an emotional and cultural touch-point for what is going to be talked about.
THAT’S NOT RIGHT!
There have certainly been people who are critical of this practice, but I believe their criticism is contrary to biblical teaching. They would say that entertainment has no place in worship, and the music/lyrics of the ungodly should not be used in holy worship. One Christmas I received an Email from a very angry member of the congregation because we played John Lennon’s “Happy Xmas.” She reminded me that John Lennon was an outspoken atheist, so his music was “not at all” fitting for a church service. Imagine that.
WESTERN SOUNDTRACK
In the Western culture there are many works of music that “most of us” are familiar with. We have heard them on the radio, on T.V., at the mall, in the grocery store, during football games, at the park, in movies, etc. The soundtrack of Western Civilization includes many pagan artists that have become part of our cultural make-up. I pull from this lexicon of popular music to find common ground with our audience. If we are teaching on grace, I will search for a song that illustrates grace in either a positive or negative way. Sometimes music can reach deep into us, places that logic can’t touch, places of deep memories and nostalgia. Maybe the song will open our hearts in a way that some other sermon illustration wouldn’t. Maybe it will open the door for a conversation at work during the next week, “You’ll never believe what song they played at my church this week!”
I’M GONNA NEED A VERSE!
St Paul certainly knew the value of using popular artists of his day to teach and preach. He must have been a fan of Greek and Roman pagan poetry and philosophy (the secular rock stars of his day), because he used direct quotes from Hymns to Zeus in his sermons and in his epistles that make up the New Testament. There are three famous quotes of pagan poets in the New Testament by St Paul, first the pagan philosopher/poet/mystic Epimenides in Titus 1: 12 when he says “Even one of their own prophets has said, “Cretans are always liars, evil brutes, lazy gluttons.” The second is when Paul is speaking at the Areopagus (in Acts) and quotes Cleanthes (from The Phoenomena of Aratus) saying that their native poets had said, “For we are also his offspring.” And, the third is in his writing to the Corinthians where he writes, “Evil communications corrupt good manners” or “Evil associations destroy excellent characters” from a tragedy of Euripides. These quotations were from popular hymns to Zeus that would have been as common to a Greek audience as the Beatles would be to us today. These are not the only times in the Bible that the words of pagans were used by God to teach something true. Evil men speaking evil words (untrue words) and then God’s people using those words to say something right and true. God is constantly doing this. He is doing it right now, to a much lessor extent, through me. (ahem)
KEEP IT TO YOURSELF!
You may be wondering why I put the word secular in quotes (up there, in the title). The reason is because I don’t think anything is truly secular. St Paul was pretty fond of quoting another popular poet, too, his name was David, and David said “The earth is the LORD’s, and everything in it, the world, and all who live in it” in Psalm 24:1 (Paul quoted this in 1 Corinthians 10:26). I take this to mean that some things might not be specifically “sacred” but that doesn’t mean that they are evil. There is not a good team (God, the angels and the church) and a bad team (the Devil, his demons, rock stars and politicians) with secular things belonging to the bad team. Next week at CrossPoint we going to be talking about how we must teach our children to honor their bodies and maintain sexual purity as part of a series on Biblical parenting. So my job is to find a song that will remind us of this and set up the tone for the sermon. Do you remember the Georgia Satellites? “No huggie, no kissie, until I get a wedding ring!” (See how this works?)
September 4th, 2008 at 7:52 pm
fans of Bruce Springsteen who want to revel in the observations of fellow followers might not even know about the book “For You”, a limited-run, hardcover volume with hundreds of photos and primary text: E-mail-type recollections about first shows and memorable moments. The Boss himself might like to read it
September 5th, 2008 at 12:02 am
It’s amazing that Rob found a cryptic reference to Bruce within four hours of me posting this article. Wow.
September 5th, 2008 at 8:30 am
Jesus is Lord. He’s Lord over Madonna and Bruce and MercyMe and us. There’s a particular person in my life who thinks that anything “worldly” has no place in church but I’m afraid she also feels that Jesus has little to do with the world outside of church. Nothing escapes the Light. I love that and I love CrossPoint. You go, Frank.
September 10th, 2008 at 5:59 pm
The way I see this is that all creative activity comes from the image of God that we continue to have a remnant of in our soul. Thus Ted Nugent’s creativity comes from God and so his music is God’s it just isnt quite tuned in properly. I heard Stevie Ray Vaughn’s brother describe Stevie’s gift that way. “It was like a radio, you just had to tune it in and the music just flowed out”. I think there is something in this analogy. Music only comes from God we just need to be on the right channel.