
Show them the beauty and importance of theological expression in music.
Hymns aren't always fonts of eloquent truth, nor are more contemporary praise forms unable to say rich things about God. But Grant obviously believes that the average hymn (still surviving) will be more meaningful than the average praise chorus hot off the press. If you're already thinking about crossing over, you probably agree with him, and you have to think about how you want to talk to your congregation about that. He suggests discussing how "learning hymns is a way to participate in the church universal and the communion of the saints."
Introduce one hymn each month. You can't spend all your worship time learning new music, and you need to give people time to get comfortable with new melodies and words, especially when they might have a different feel from the music you've always done.
Plot out a strategic long-term schedule. In tandem with the previous suggestion, you could line up new hymns with significant times in the church calendar. For instance, as we're now four weeks away from Good Friday, you could start to introduce "O Sacred Head Now Wounded."
This can obviously be a divisive topic, so even if the leadership in your church is in agreement about using more hymns, some of your members probably aren't. Has anyone's congregation worked through a transition like this? What did or didn't work?
Tags used in this post:
TrackBack
TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://blog.christianitytoday.com/mt/mt-tb.cgi/2297







Comments
Thanks for posting a link to my post Tim!
Posted by: James Grant | March 15, 2009 2:40 PM
Wow! I feel like I'm in the Twilight Zone. I recall not too many years ago the critical issue was how to introduce new praise music without causing a riot. Dust off the hymns!?!
Some of us never gave up on them.
Posted by: JR Maz | March 18, 2009 9:47 AM
For a senior citizen, musician, and theologian, one of the sorriest results of the past 30 years in evangelical churches has been the dumbing down of worship with the replacing of hymns with a pop style and usually puerile text of 'praise' music.
Posted by: duane dunham | March 23, 2009 1:33 PM