Soul music

I think if you had a microscope. A really really (really) big microscope. And were able to look at the very core of our human DNA, I think you might find a clef symbol. Okay, I’m kind of kidding, but the point is, I think music is that deep. It’s basically in our DNA. We were made to breathe, eat, sleep and experience music. So, where’s the evidence? Scientific evidence is sometimes experiential. So, do you know anyone, and I mean anyone, who does not like some form of music? Neither do I. I recall being in India in 1995. One night while sleeping, I could hear outside a drum and some kind of bell, dancing together in rhythm. It could have been worship to one of a million gods in India. It could have been that the person or persons playing, simply liked the sound. It reminded me that even here in India, pretty much another planet from Albion NY, there was still music. Different, but then, not so different. I think it’s part of our DNA. That deep. And I think it’s a human thing. Sure it’s said “music soothes the savage beast”. Maybe there’s evidence of animals reacting to music in some way. But as humans, we need to hear music. When we’re not around the man-made stuff, we listen for it in the wind, or the waves, or the trees. Or we start to hum and then bust out into song. We can’t help it. We can’t escape it, and we don’t want to. It’s part of who we are. We are distinct from animals, in that we are living souls. And so, yup you guessed it, we have soul music. It’s that deep. That connected to our core. And if this is true, what do we do with music as part of our worship to God? From the beginning, the church has used music as a significant method of worship. Why? Because God is worthy of our worship, and our hearts cry out for a means to worship, and so we express our praise with as intimate a form as we know. With song. As it was once said, there is nothing in this world as similar to prayer, as music.  Prayer is personal. So is music. Prayer is expressive communication of thoughts and emotions. So is music. Prayer is connecting to God. Do you feel connected to God when you worship in song? Me too. There is also the negative connection. Prayer can be a simple recitation; impersonal. Music can also be that. Prayer can be over-rehearsed; a show. We have all experienced music that has ceased to be worship in song, and become a concert. Not that there’s anything wrong with concerts. But there is a difference, and we can usually distinguish the two. Because we are experts at music. We all are. And Christians know (why, I don’t know, we just do) when they are at a concert or a worship service. Anyway, if music is part of our DNA, and if music is an important means of expressing our worship to God, than we can truly say…that we were made to worship with song. I really believe that. And it has nothing, absolutely nothing, (nothing) to do with skill or ability. It is to us as breathing. We don’t discuss how someone breathes better than another (okay, don’t get smart with the “what about asthmatics?”). And might I go one step further. We are made in the image of God. We are God-like. So, what is God–like? Of the many things, I think God is a musician. He just uses different instruments. So, music is part of our DNA. It’s in our soul. It’s part of how we were made. It can be as personal as prayer, and it can be just as misused. So if all of this is true, think of the implications when we gather together to worship in song. Connecting at a personal, and at the same time, corporate level. Expressing from our souls. Concurrently with the angels of heaven, letting God have it. This is what I was made for.  I’m trying to do what should come natural. I was wondering; Are you doing what you were made to do?

11 Responses to “Soul music”

  1. If I had to sing for food I would die, but I love doing it anyway. Praise God that my voice has been added to the worship team of humanity (maybe no one will hear it mixed in with all the others). I think I’ll stick to preaching:)

  2. kendegnanmusic Says:

    God could sit and listen to you sing for a thousand years Thomas, and he would love every minute of it

  3. Ken I think you are so right with the thought of music being in our DNA,often when I am sitting here and go into prayer over many different things I reach a point that I simply have to praise our Lord . In that praise the Lord and I commune with music.He hears me and I hear Him,in that he puts words into my soul and they come out offering hope and security in my Salvation,for not only myself but for family and friends and others.
    Be Blessed in Jesus

  4. kendegnanmusic Says:

    Good thoughts Joe. Thanks

  5. Ken

    You are right about God putting music in our DNA. Even if we cant sing on tune( thats me) when I sing a worship song I cant even hear that I am off tune I just feel I am close to God, like the angels in heaven, and He so deserves ALL of my worship. God is good and I love Him so so much! Yes, I am sure He placed a little soul music in each of us. To bring it out and use it to worship our heavenly Father is the ultimate. Thank you for writing about it. Yeah, now I know I have soul music in my DNA watch out!! LOL God bless! MJ

  6. kendegnanmusic Says:

    Great thoughts MJ. Thank you

  7. Some great thought Joe. One of your automatic links referenced some similar thoughts I had on the topic. I think you will find them interesting.

    Mike Bell

  8. I think music does become the sound track to our lives, and a source of comfort when anxiety sets in.
    As far as the worship and concert debate, I think there’s as much responsibility for the worshipper to enter in as there is for the leader to be in the spirit and to put the flesh aside, I think as leaders we’ve all been in places where we had no business leading, and yet something powerful came of it, and on the flip side times where we were so ready and so sure of the presence of the spirit, yet the worship experience fell flat.
    Thanks Ken for this forum, it’s good to be able to share.

  9. kendegnanmusic Says:

    Excellent thoughts Tom. I have always felt there to be a mutual responsibility between the lead worshipper and the congregation. But that also suggests a big positive; that either or both can have a significant impact. You can be at a concert, and still worship. You can be inept in your leading, and still touch the heart of God. But when both the leader and the people come ready…well…….wow. It is something else. There is also a level of influence exerted, both potentially positive and negative, by the congregation to the leader, and visa versa. But I think the onus is on the leader, as the anointed man or woman, to BE the peer pressure, rather than receive it.

  10. I totally agree, I remember the first time I saw people at a secular rock concert raise their hands and close their eyes, I was blown away, I’d never thought of a worshipful response to anything but the true God. I guess people still worship idols.

  11. Worship has been a huge part of my life since I became born again. It didn’t matter what the circumstances were, even in the valleys the Lord has always put a song in my heart. You know how I am. I’m always humming something. It’s like praying without ceasing. From the time I wake until the time I go to bed there’s always a song in my heart. Praise God. He gets all the glory.

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