Friday, January 26, 2018

What Happened to the Music?

In the 4 1/2 years since we started this blog, I don't think that I've ever shared a post from another blog.  Well, recently I read a blog post from Mike Harland, the Director of Lifeway Worship.  He's a great songwriter, musician, and worship leader.  I've seen him at a couple of conferences and have always enjoyed his insights into worship.  In the post of his that I've shared below, he brings up a very interesting question about the Psalms.  And his response to the question is one that I absolutely agree with and support.  I've highlighted his answer so you don't/can't miss it.  Enjoy!

Worship Big!

Brad

What happened to the music?
In the Psalms, we are fortunate to have a number of superscriptions from the original texts that give us details about some of the psalms. A few describe the setting of the psalm, like Psalm 34 that has a superscription that reads, ”Concerning David, when he pretended to be insane in the presence of Abimelech who drove him out, and he departed.” Now we can read the psalm with a little more understanding of what it was about – like today when a songwriter explains why a song was written. People love “song stories.”
The superscription of Psalm 45 intrigues me and leads me to the question. It reads, “For the choir director: according to ‘The Lilies.’ A Maskil of the Sons of Korah. A Love song.”
 According to “The Lilies?” What does that mean? Well, it seems the original performance of this text was associated with a particular tune called, “The Lilies.”
What in the world did that sound like? We don’t know.
And, now to my question; if the Sovereign God of the universe preserved the text of this psalm as well as the whole Bible – and I certainly believe he did – why didn’t he preserve the tune? Hmmm.
He could have. He could have given us the exact music to be performed. Think of all of the arguments we could have avoided if God had just handed us the proper music setting for worship along with the scriptures.
After thinking about this a decade or so, I’ve come to this belief: God didn’t hand us the tunes so that each generation could join him in creating the music. One of his divine attributes is his creativity – he has allowed us to express our own creative nature as we have written the songs with him down through the ages of the church. And, think about how much the music has changed. Each generation has found it’s own tunes and it’s own way of expressing our faith and worship in song.
The tragedy would be if any particular generation came to believe they were the one that landed on the final melody. God gives every era of believers their own chance to add to the music. What a wonderful gift that is to us. It truly is “The song that never ends.”
Let the children of God from every generation keep right on writing it.

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