@The Liturgist @PloverWing
But, I know, I know, you just want to sit in a church and be holy, so I guess I understand.
God Bless.
Firstly, according to St. Silouan the Athonite, if anyone thinks he is holy, this is an extremely dangerous delusion, on a par with thinking we are beyond hope of God’s salvation. Rather I regard myself as the worst of sinners, and put all my hope on the mercy of God.
Secondly, aesthetic taste and preferences when it comes to the style of music literally has nothing to do with it. If you had read the articles I had linked to, you would understand the very strong theological rationale for the rejection of praise and worship music and Christian Rock music, specifically in terms of how it is emotionally manipulative, and derived from secular forms of music which are intended to appeal to the sinful passions.
I myself find it impossible to concentrate on prayer when such music is praying. I evaluate church music based on how easy it is to pray to. During my year in the Episcopal Church, which
@PloverWing is familiar with, what he might not know is that while my frined Fr. Dean was one of the last conservatives in the Diocese of Los Angeles, his director of music was, in my opinion, heterodox, if not outright heretical, in that he believed that the Eucharist was, in his words “ritual magic,” which is an idea that I find shockingly offensive (the idea that a sacrament ordained by Christ our True God could be called magic, and thus associated with sorcery, the tricks and demonic practices of deviants throughout the ages), and he was also very much an enthusiast of praise and worship music, and tried to blend it with more traditional music from the 1980 Hymnal (a very good hymnal, by the way), usually with disastrous results, so because of this I made a point of always attending the 8 AM said service.
For I can pray in silence, such as at a Roman Catholic low mass, or at a said service in the Anglican tradition, or when prayerful traditional music is used, but I cannot pray when people are jamming on an electric guitar and the drums et cetera.
Indeed further to the point
@Neogaia777 that this is not an issue of aesthetics - there are several genres of music that I personally enjoy that I could not pray to. For example, I love jazz music, especially swing music of the 1930s and 40s, of the sort performed by Benny Goodman, Glenn MIller, Artie Shaw and Duke Ellington, but there is no way I could pray to it (some can, and John Coltrane is venerated, perhaps justifiably, as a saint by some African Americans). Likewise I could not pray to much of the Romantic music of the 19th century, and some masses composed by Romantic composers are a problem for me. Even Schubert, whose first two masses and his Deutsche Messe are very easy for me to pray to, I think got a bit carried away with masses 3 through 6, although I could still tolerate these. Likewise, I very much enjoy Barbershop Quartet and Ragtime music, and I also could not pray to that. I enjoy the musical scores of several Hollywood films, such as Lawrence of Arabia, Khartoum, and the original Star Wars and Star Trek films, but I could not pray to those. For that matter I am an enthusiastic collector of military music, particularly military music of the former Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, and needless to say, it would be very hard to pray to that. Although I would say with all of the above I can still continue the Jesus Prayer.
However, with pop music, country music and some forms of electronic dance music, and also praise and worship music and Christian Rock, I personally find this music is so stimulating of the passions that even the Jesus Prayer, which is the essential prayer for those who desire to pray without ceasing, (the prayer is “Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, Have Mercy on Me, a Sinner, or a permutation thereof, which can be as simple as “Lord have mercy”), this can interfere with the Jesus Prayer, and this is why I believe it should be avoided, and not used in the liturgy of any church.