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How does a church resolve a conflict between those who want a traditional style of music and liturgy and those who want a contemporary, modern one?



Topics:Conflict, Division, Focus, Vision, Worship style
Filters:Elder, Pastor, Worship, Worship leader
Date Added:February 24, 2009

Total Reader Responses: 7 (see below)
Add your own comment

As with most conflicts in church between groups of people—as opposed to interpersonal issues involving individuals—the question of worship style is merely the surface issue. Of course, a pastor can resolve the obvious conflict by: (1) having two services, each with its distinct style of music; (2) offering a blend of songs in every service that are neither too stodgy nor too hip, creating a balance of sound recognizable by both groups; or (3) fading drums into the organ mainstream, since drums are usually the main instrument of contention.

The true issue, however, is about ministry philosophy and the purpose for a church service. It takes much longer for a pastor to resolve this conflict, but by doing so, the leader sets up an intentional future. Both groups want music they can recognize as contributing to the church's purpose. Those who see church services primarily as places of liturgical continuity and refuge for the saints prefer songs and sounds from the past; those who view the role of church as reaching the world around it tend to prefer songs and sounds from today.

Thus, the real question isn't one of music, but of focus. Pastors who believe their church has been positioned and called by God primarily to provide comfort for the saints ought to stick mostly with traditional music and not fight an unnecessary war. But pastors who want to reach their surrounding culture must change more than the music. Problems like this one—choosing between music preferences—give pastors a perfect opportunity to clarify their primary values.

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Paul Clark   (Guest) Posted: February 26, 2009
Thank you for pointing church leaders to the underlying issue(s) that become masked by "worship style." I am convinced that conflicting value systems are usually baptized to sound more holy than the justification for those who disagree. Often the values cherished are a preference for "musical excellence" vs "music that will fill the pews." Both of those sets of values seem to me to be anthropocentric. While musical excellence is baptized by "God deserves our best," and packing pews with music is justified as "becoming all things to all people," biblical worship makes the True and Living God the subject and object of our worship. It occurs on His terms and in a way only He can provide. Jesus is our "worship leader." Holding unrelentingly to a standard that music will serve this focus and be biblically sound will help the church find unity of intention, heart, and spirit in our worship.



Bill Ellenberger   (Guest) Posted: February 26, 2009
In the last seven years in working with churches lay-leadership, the church body, and pastor(s) on this issue, at Faithful Path, we have seen a decrease in this type of church conflict. Daniel, your comments on this subject are right on point. Lead on!



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