Many favorite songs of Sunday worship in the 1960s are not
properly classified hymns. They are gospel songs. These are songs that focus on personal
testimonies of how great it is to be a Christian. “Blessed assurance! Jesus is mine! O, what a foretaste of glory divine!” “What a fellowship! What a joy divine! Leaning
on the everlasting arms.” “What a friend
we have in Jesus, all our sins and griefs to bear.”
The words of the songs are words we give to one
another. We are not addressing God. We are not telling God, “Do thy friends
despise, forsake thee?” The “we” in “We
shall rejoicing, bringing the sheaves” are the people around us.
As might be expected, songs like these were largely written
for revival services. They describe being
saved and living as a Christian. They
are openly sentimental, easy to sing, and emotionally joyful. In singing the lyrics we encourage one
another and, hopefully, move any lost sinners present to turn their lives over
to Christ.
Many contemporary songs used in worship do not focus on
these things. In these songs, God is
either directly addressed or God is the subject being praised. Here’s a 2011 listing, based on CCLI of the
top five songs used in Sunday worship:
- How Great Is Our God
- Mighty To Save
- Our God
- Blessed Be Your Name
- Here I Am To Worship
Songs either to or about God -- not songs about the
Christian life. One fact some may find
surprising is, if we go all the way back to 1900, the top five songs used in
Sunday worship are exactly like that:
- All Hail the Power
- Come Thou Almighty King
- Holy, Holy, Holy
- O For a Thousand Tongues
- Love Divine, All Loves Excelling
Most contemporary worship songs, like most great hymns the
church sang in 1900, focus directly on worship.
God is either directly addressed or is the subject.
And yet, in 1900, many gospel songs had been written and
were widely popular. Based on paper rollers
sold for music boxes by Sears in 1900, songs like Just As I Am, I Love to Tell
the Story, Bringing in the Sheaves, and What a Friend We have in Jesus were being heard and enjoyed in homes throughout America.
And, of course, Christians would certainly have sung songs like these at
revival meetings.
Sunday worship, however, was all about worship. The primary direction of the music was
vertical (to God) rather than horizontal (to the other people present). In that important aspect, contemporary
Christian music can be said to have returned to, not turned away from, the
traditional worship of the church.
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