foo-oswald
There goes my hero...just a patsy...
iamtheproblem said:I'm not saying emotions are bad or that you can't sing with emotion when worshipping, I'm only saying that singing songs that require a specific emotion might not be suitable for a worship experience. This is an issue that cannot be contained by one simple answer, at least as far as I can see.
Yes, the psalms are passionate. I guess I also have a beef that the only ones we choose to sing are the "happy" ones and songs along that line. There must be a time for the others. I have yet to come to an understanding about the role of such songs in worship. Like I said, these questions cannot be contained by a simple answer.
I have yet to truly come to an understanding of song in worship at all, but something tells me that alot of what I'm experiencing is not what song was meant for.
After catching up on all the posts I missed this weekend, I've had this thought spring up within me:
The reason churches don't like to sing songs that are anything less than "joyful-smiley-faced-clap-clappy-happy" pie-in-the-sky stuff is because the agenda of most churches is to grow attendence, thereby growing the budget. Making everyone feel all warm and fuzzy is the only way to keep them all coming back Sunday after Sunday.
I'm not saying this is incontrovertable fact; I'm just stating that this is a possibility based on my experiences growing up in churches I used to go to...

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