Praise and Worship Songs

Praise and Worship Songs as Christian Voodoo: American Awakenings such as Cane Ridge fell under the spell of secular, revivalistic music.

Afro-America

West Africans reconstructed their native drums in the New World, preponderantly as cult instruments. Small sets of two or, more often, three drums of graded sizes form an integral part of Afro-American rituals and, in the Caribbean, also of voodoo dances.

Only the skins of sacrificial animals may be used for membranes among Afro-Bahians in Brazil, who baptize their new drums, preferably with "holy" water obtained from a Roman Catholic church.

Drums in Haiti are sacred objects and may even represent the deity itself: as such they receive libations. One type of bongo drum--there exist at least four of these--has been adopted by Western rhythm bands, as has the conga.

Racial, ethnic, and language distinctions also can operate to create and maintain exclusive communities.

The Negro churches of the United States, though open to members who are not Negroes, have become, in many sections of the United States, exclusive communities, largely through the exclusion of Negroes from white churches.

The worship of Negro communities has incorporated elements from African religions and has focussed upon forms of worship appropriate to a people oppressed by the larger society and excluded from many of its benefits. The service generally is "freer" than that of the white churches, including a more significant place for congregational singing and responses and more active participation by the congregation than has become customary in most white churches. (See black American.) To cite this page:

"worship" Encyclopædia Britannica Online.

Click to see the way it works out at Lipscomb University.

Jesus said that worship is in THE NEW PLACE of the human SPIRIT which is the human MIND. Worship happens IN TRUTH according to Paul when we Teach that which has been taught or give heed to the inspired Word.

ALL external worship is PAGAN and Perverted. See the charismatic connection

A Cappella Worship Leader
Aquinas, Thomas Praise Singing.

Praise Songs as Christian Voodoo

Ancient Pagan Praise Leader
Music as Brainwashing
Latter Rain, praise teams, praise singing, charismatic Praise Teams Ephesians 1
Praise Worship Ploughs the Ground Hosea 10:ll
Rubel Shelly Praise and Thanksgiving
Rubel Shelly Psalm 106
See how CHARISMATIC music was born of sodomy preferably in the form of Pederasty.
See that ZOE is Eos or Helios or Aphrodite or Lucifer: the singing and harp-playing prostitute.
See how it works out when the "children and effeminate rule over you."
See more notes on a cappella.
See Edward Fudge on A Cappella

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CLICK HERE FOR THE FREE, TRUE GOSPEL MADE AVAILABLE TO ALL NATIONS WITH SUNLIGHT--FOR A WITNESS Scripture says that those rejecting baptism are treacherous: they call Jesus Christ a liar.

Here is the meaning of the New Style Worship: It is the end-time Babylon Harlot blend of false religion, rejecting the Word, perverting the Word commerce and feminine or effeminists sister singers making music to enrapture your or bring on self-abandonment to sell you something.

See the Charismatic--Perversion connection in the ancient world of music.

Are self-composed hymns idols? In some kind of charismatic frenzy, those who never used instruments and will never use instruments are called IDOLATERS!

ZOE in Phoenix: The Gold is not in the superstition hills but He is the God Who made the Hills. Zoe takes a question and turns it into a direct command: "Shall I look to the hills? No. I will look to the God who made the hills." Restoration of the most ancient pagan belief about God. 

When self-composed hymns were introduced to replace the Biblical text, the natural question was whether these SELF-DIRECTED hymns were idols. In fact, they are.

Then along comes the Camp Meeting: 

"The great 'Kentucky revival', or 'Revival of the West' (1797-1805), which began amongst the Presbyterians and then spread to the Baptists, Methodists, and others, was the origin of the camp meeting.  The musical influence of the camp meeting movement has yet to be investigated; probably it will be found that in addition

to popularizing a debased type of 'Gospel Hymn'
it had a further bad effect upon musical life by discouraging the practice of secular music.
J. Truslow Adams, in The Epic of America (1931), takes the Camp Meeting seriously as a national influence - 'The camp meeting is a key to much that we shall find even in present-day life, in a nation even yet
emotionally starving'

But the opposition of piety to art originated earlier than the camp meeting movement.  The precise moment when it began to darken American life must be left to some American inquirer." [Scholes, 359, citing Sir Richard Terry (author of "The Music of the Roman Rite" speaking at The Musical Association (London), printed in "Proceedings," 1929-30, p. 85).]

Britannica Online Members: Gospel music is a form of black American music derived from church worship services and from spiritual (q.v.) and blues singing. Gospel music spread through song publishing, concerts, recordings, and radio and television broadcasts of religious services from the Great Depression days of the 1930s.

The immediate impetus for gospel music seems to have been the rise of Pentecostal churches at the end of the 19th century. Pentecostal shouting is related to speaking in tongues and to circle dances of African origin. Recordings of Pentecostal preachers' sermons were immensely popular among American blacks in the 1920s, and recordings of them along with their choral and instrumental accompaniment and congregational participation persisted, so that ultimately gospel reached the white audience as well. The voice of the black gospel preacher was affected by black secular performers, and vice versa. Taking the scriptural direction "Let everything that breathes praise the Lord" (Psalms, 150), Pentecostal churches welcomed timbrels, pianos, organs, banjos, guitars, other stringed instruments, and some brass into their services. Choirs often featured the extremes of female vocal range in antiphonal counterpoint with the preacher's sermon. Improvised recitative passages, melismatic singing, and extravagant expressivity also characterize gospel music.

Other forms of gospel music have included the singing and acoustic guitar playing of itinerant street preachers; individual secular performers, sometimes accompanied by bands; and harmonizing male quartets, usually singing a cappella, whose acts included dance routines and stylized costumes.
SEE HOW THE SHOUTING METHODISTS BECAME AN ACT OF WORSHIP IN EARLY DISCIPLES/ CHRISTIAN CHURCHES.
Next Phase After after Sowing Discord and Creating Dissociation or Post Modern's Schizophrenia is a NEW VISION FOR THE CHURCH. This is the Catholic-methodist RE-IMAGING or RE-VISIONING The Church. The New Vision is through NEW GLASSES and includes the elders as Shepherds over the True Leaders and Ministers. Some background to the April Re-Imaging Conference in Nashville.. The Goddess is Sophia or ZOE. Click Here
The Beginning Time Pagan Blend of "Religion" and Sex:

It all began in Babylonia. For instance, in ancient Near Eastern Clay Tablets, Ea was the "patron god of music." Ea is a name for Lamech who was the father of Jubal, Jabal, Tubal-Cain and Naamah.

Ea held the "rules of the game" or supernatural powers called the ME. Inanna (call her Ishtar, Zoe, etc) got him drunk and stole the powers. Among these she became:

The holy priestess of heaven!
..........The setting up of lamentations!
..........The rejoicing of the heart!

He gave me the princess priestess.
He gave me the divine
queen priestess.
He gave me the
incantation priest.

He gave me truth.
He gave me
decent into the underworld.
He gave me
ascent from the underworls.
He gave me the
kurgurra.
.......... The kurgarru, the assinu, and the kulu'u performed plays,
.......... music, dances, and games during rituals

He gave me the loosening of hair.
He gave me the
binding of hair.
He gave me the
standard.
He gave me the
quiver.
He gave me the art of
lovemaking.
.......... He gave me the art of kissing the phallus.
.......... He gave me the art of prostitution.

He gave me the holy shrine.
He gave me the
holy priestess of heaven.
.......... He gave me the resounding musical instrument.
.......... He gave me the art of song.
.......... He gave me the art of the elder.

Now, Flash-Forward To Your End-Time Blend of Religion and Sex

See Speaking in tongues Index.

Speaking in Dialects. People stopped off in Corinth and wanted to dialog or sing in tongues. This was their home DIALECT.

IF YOU PEOPLE QUIT OUTING YOUR GENDER BENT I WILL QUIT WARNING OTHERS. Maybe, you guys are so out of it with music-induced madness that you don't know WHICH spirit you invited in.

"After she (Carol Wimber) had a dream in 1976 of standing preaching to a large crowd a seven-point sermon on the gifts of the Spirit, at the final point,  'a sensation like hot electricity' hit her head, travelled down her body, then up and out of her mouth. She awakened speaking in tongues. The sensation of heat and electricity is typical of that experienced in the current revival.  She said 'Soon God stopped showing me what he had wanted to do in the past and began to show me what he was going to do in the future. I had a strong sense of God's desire for his bride, for the whole Church - Protestant, Catholic, Orthodox.' (Riding the Third Wave - 1987)

In the article "Worship: Intimacy With God the philosophy behind the 'praise and worship' found in the Vineyard churches it is explained that there is a 'well-thought out philosophy' guiding how God is worshipped through music and movement in order to achieve the goal through "Worship: Intimacy With God" .

"To understand how we worship God, it is helpful to learn about our fellowship's history, which goes back to 1977. At that time my wife, Carol, was leading a small group of people in a home meeting that evolved into the Anaheim Vineyard. I'll let her describe what happened during that time.

"After we started to meet in our home gathering, I noticed times during the meeting -- usually when we sang -- in which I experienced God deeply... occasionally we sang a song personally and intimately to Jesus, with lyrics like 'Jesus, I love you.'

Those types of songs both stirred and fed the hunger for God within me... Thus we began to see a difference between songs ABOUT Jesus and songs TO Jesus. "About that time we realised our worship blessed God, that it was for God alone and not just a vehicle of preparation for the pastor's sermon. This was an exciting revelation. After learning about the central place of worship in our meetings, there were many instances in which all we did was worship God for an hour or two.

"At this time we also discovered that singing was not the only way to worship God. Because the word worship means literally to bow down, it is important that our bodies are involved in what our spirits are saying. In scripture this is accomplished through bowing heads, lifting hands, kneeling, and even lying prostrate before God. ... we are blessed as we worship him.

He visits his people with manifestations of the Holy Spirit. "Thus worship has a two-fold aspect: communication with God through the basic means of singing and praying, and communication from God though teaching and preaching the word, prophecy, exhortation, etc.
       
We lift him up and exalt him, and as a result are drawn into his presence where he speaks to us."

"In the Vineyard we see five basic phases of worship, phases through which leaders attempt to lead the congregation.... as we pass through these phases we are headed toward one goal:
 
        intimacy with God."....

The fourth phase is described as "God Visits His People when "Expression then moves to a zenith, a climactic point, not unlike physical lovemaking... We have expressed what is in our hearts and minds and bodies, and now it is time to wait for God to respond.
       
Stop talking and wait for Him to speak, to move. I call this, the fourth phase, visitation:"

The fifth phase is called "Generosity "The fifth phase of worship is the giving of substance. The church knows so little about giving, yet the Bible exhorts us to give to God. it is pathetic to see people preparing for ministry who don't know how to give. That is like an athlete entering a race, yet he doesn't know how to run. If we haven't learned to give money, we haven't learned anything... " From Source

False teachers use Lucian of Samosata to PROVE that God approved of instrumental music even if it SOWED DISCORD. However, like all of the PSALLO or PLUCKERS he speaks of prostitutes or Sodomites.

Furthermore, Lucian's use of instrumental music was in connection with the continuing pagan fertility rituals where wine, women and song with instruments "strummed up" the dead "gods" to come to them in an intimate way in charismatic ecstasy. "In Lucian of Samosata's Dialogues of a Courtesan we hear almost exclusively of women musicians and singers." The king of Tyre as the agent of the female or bisexual Lucifer gained his/her customers through literal music:

At that time Tyre will be forgotten for seventy years, the span of a king's life. But at the end of these seventy years, it will happen to Tyre as in the song of the prostitute: Is.23:15

"Take up a harp, walk through the city, O prostitute forgotten; play the harp well, sing many a song, so that you will be remembered." Is.23:16

At the end of seventy years, the LORD will deal with Tyre. She will return to her hire as a prostitute and will ply her trade with all the kingdoms on the face of the earth. Is.23:17

And That Brings us to Voodoo

"Where there is no music, the spirit will not come." This West African proverb daily greets the divinity students in the Introduction to Preaching course taught by Brad R. Braxton, Assistant Professor of Homiletics and Biblical Studies at Wake Forest University. Explained Braxton,

"fundamentally, in African American worship, music serves the role of conjuring God's spirit...

When Black folks get together, they don't necessarily assume that God is there or that the conditions are ripe for God's presence to be manifest.

But rather, the conditions have to be made ready through fervent prayer and soul-stirring music. So, music creates the conditions for a meaningful encounter with God." Trevón D. Gross, Vice President for Programs and Partnerships of the American Bible Society (New York), says it another way,

"it is through music that we ascend and God descends."
"Agreeing with the sentiment expressed by Gross, Cunningham asserts that churches exclusively using a hymnal can have a rousing worship experience

facilitated by traditional gospel music. "You can take Because He Lives from the hymnal and make a person shed a lot of tears." How true. Lisa R. Foeman

Paul warned about this in 1 Corinthians 10 speaking of "rising up to play" in Egyptian musical idolatry. In Romans 10:

But the righteousness which is of faith speaketh on this wise, Say not in thine heart, Who shall ascend into heaven? (that is, to bring Christ down from above:) Romans 10:6
Or, Who shall descend into the deep
? (that is, to bring up Christ again from the dead.) Romans 10:7

But what saith it? The word is nigh thee, even in thy mouth, and in thy heart: that is, the word of faith, which we preach; Romans 10:8

Christ moves in the human heart in the falsely-called "singing" passages only when we "speak that which is written" (Romans 15), the Spirit (Eph 5) or the Word of Christ (Col. 3)

That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved. Romans 10:9

For with the heart man believeth unto righteousness; and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation. Romans 10:10

If we are singing "praise songs" we are confessing the composer but we are not confessing Christ with the Mouth. When we speak that which we have heard as the SON spoke only what He heard from the FATHER then we will be safe.

Singing erotic praise songs and hand-clapping music is the tyrants method of "getting more work" out of the slaves. Showing that "praise singing" is derived in part from Voodoo which replaced West Africal devil worship:

"The transfer of these West African tribal traditions to the slave fields, railways, and rivers of the southern U.S.
was of advantage to oppressed and oppressor alike,

the slave obviously taking solace in the cultural memory of his own collective past,
the
slaveowner encouraging work songs in the

same spirit as an infantry general might approve of military bands-for the stimulus they gave to work rate.

Many of the early examples of primitive vocal jazz relate closely to the labours being performed, and the content of the lyrics is a reminder that not only the cotton plantations but also the levees and railroads of the Deep South were created and maintained by slave labour. Click for More.

This is the meaning of the instrumentalists under the law. They were not "musicians" but sounders primarily for the HARD LABOR during offering of thousands of animals and more especially during the burning:

David, together with the commanders of the army, set apart some of the sons of Asaph, Heman and Jeduthun for the ministry of prophesying, accompanied by harps, lyres and cymbals. Here is the list of the men who performed this service: 1 Chron 25:1NIV

The service was not MUSICAL WORSHIP but:

Abodah (h5656) ab-o-daw'; or abowdah ab-o-daw'; from 5647; work of any kind: - act, bondage, / bondservant, effect, labour, ministering (-try), office, service (-ile, -itude), tillage, use, work, * wrought

Abad (h5647) aw-bad'; a prim. root; to work (in any sense); by impl. to serve, till, (caus.) enslave, etc.: - * be, keep in bondage, be bondmen, bond-service, compel, do, dress, ear, execute, / husbandman, keep, labour (-ing man), bring to pass, (cause to, make to) serve (-ing, self), (be, become) servant (-s), do (use) service, till (-er), transgress [from margin], (set a) work, be wrought, worshipper.

Abad (h6) aw-bad'; a prim. root; prop. to wander away, i. e. lose oneself; by impl. to perish (caus. destroy): - break, destroy (- uction), / not escape, fail, lose, (cause to, make) perish, spend, * and surely, take, be undone, * utterly, be void of, have no way to flee.

Abaddown (h11) ab-ad-done'; intens. from 6; abstr. a perishing; concr. Hades: - destruction.

Hell is naked before him, and destruction hath no covering. Jb.26:6

Dionysus worship, aka new wineskins, Rubel Shelly speaking for a revival of such worship wants a Musical Worship Facilitator (manipulator) to:

Work with the worship planning committee, the preaching minister and worship presentation groups (music, drama and technical) to facilitate group worship experiences which will help

bring worshipers into the presence of God.

"And Euripides does likewise, in his Bacchae, citing the Lydian usages at the same time with those of Phrygia, because of their similarity:

But ye who left Mt. Tmolus (Sardis was on this mt.), fortress of Lydia,
revel-band of mine
, women whom I brought from the land of barbarians as my assistants and travelling companions,

There are, it may be, so many kinds of voices in the world, and none of them is without signification. 1 Corinthians 14:10

Therefore if I know not the meaning of the voice, I shall be unto him that speaketh a barbarian, and he that speaketh shall be a barbarian unto me. 1 Corinthians 14:11

uplift the tambourines native to Phrygian cities, inventions of mine and mother Rhea.

And again, happy he who, blest man, initiated in the mystic rites, is pure in his life, . . . who, preserving the righteous orgies of the great mother Cybele, and brandishing the thyrsus on high, and wreathed with ivy, doth worship Dionysus.

Come, ye Bacchae, come, ye Bacchae, bringing down (double entendre) Bromius, (boisterous one) god the child of god, out of the Phrygian mountains into the broad highways of Greece.

"Come Holy Spirit, come, make us truly new creatures in Christ"

ACU: See Ken Cukrowski, Mark Hamilton, and James Thompson endorsed by Royce Money trying to make GOD'S HOLY FIRE come.

The Zoe Group also looks to the hills to worship the MOUNTAIN GODS and are INVITING the CONSUMING FIRE. Look to the Hills: A CONSUMING FIRE an experience in worship.

Now will I rise, saith the Lord; now will I be exalted; now will I lift up myself. Psa 33:10

Ye shall conceive chaff, ye shall bring forth stubble: your breath, as fire, shall devour you. Psa 33:11

Meaning: "You GET PREGNANT on chaff and GIVE BIRTH to stubble." Therefore, YOUR words will devour.

Contrary to this, in the Christian system, Paul insists that God isn't far from any of us. One who has the Spirit of Christ has God dwelling in the human heart.

The new wineskin or Voodoo system works only because some kind of spirit works in the flesh. And the imagry is always sexual as the new praise songs are erotic:

"Where there is no music, the spirit will not come."

After all, Rock and Roll which some seeker or vineyard-influenced church is one of those "F" words induced into pseudo-Christian vocabulary right out of Voodoo.

"For decades African Americans had used the term rock and roll as a euphemism for sex, and Presley's music oozed sexuality. Presley was hardly the only artist who embodied this attitude, but he was clearly a catalyst in the merger of black and white culture into something far bigger and more complex than both.

The Britannica

The history of rock and roll is a history of infamy, a parade of perversion--illicit sex, drugs, rebellion against authority, and violence--in both the purveyors and consumers of it.

"The Praise Team leads the congregation into the presence of the Lord with exciting praise and worship. The Word says that God inhabits the praises of His people and we are a people desiring to be inhabited!

Praise plows the ground for the seed to be planted when the Word is taught (Hosea 10:11). The team unites together as the Levites did in the Old Testament to bring praise and glory to God."

What this person does not know, cannot know, is that the musical idolatry at Mount Sinai cursed Israel with the Levites. They stood as flaming cherubim to kill any of the non-priestly Jews if they tried to enter into God's symbolic presence. The people were excluded from this ritual of music when Israel's elders fired God and demanded a king like the nations so that they could worship like the nations.

Furthermore, this music was related only to animal sacrifices. Consistent with this, the Jewish clergy mocked Jesus with music as they were sacrificing Him on the cross.

Praise and Worship plows the ground to make it ready for planting. A good worship team does the plowing and the pastor (and others) plant the seed. Without the plowing, the seed might fall on the stony ground and not take root!

Yes, the Holy Spirit still is welcome and still comes whether you are participating or not.

Yes, the theme is "Women and children rule over you."

"Women and girls from the different ranks of society were proud to enter the service of the gods as singers and musicians. The understanding of this service was universal: these singers constituted the 'harem of the gods'." (End of Quasten Click to see Music and the Feminine connection)

"Music was understood to drive away hostile chthonic demons who loved tranquility and quiet. this concept of music's magical power is found in the formula of a love spell published by S. Eitrem:

"X.X. is bound with the tendons of the holy phoenix so that you will love N.N. with your whole heart and no barking dog or braying ass,
cock or conjurer, the clash of cymbals or the noise of flutes or anything else under the heavens will ever set you free."

"The harmful screaming of those who were to be killed in sacrifices was particularly attractived to the wicked demons,
........ with whom the pagans believed the air (1 Corinthians 14:9) was filled.

You must be aware that the Israelites ROSE UP TO PLAY at Mount Sinai. This was the Musical Worship of Egypt. Stephen in Acts 7 and others show that God TURNED THEM OVER to worship the starry host. This included Chiun (Saturn = Chaldee 666) and/or Molech. Later, the elders essentially FIRED God and demanded a king be set over them. God understood this to be so that they could worship like the nations. The Monarchy was a curse because they had to try to have assurance by the sacrifice of tens of thousands of animals. They were sacrificing GOD and a form of Jesus Christ. Therefore, the "music" was identical to a pagan temple's EXORCISM:

"Consequently, music was found to be especially appropriate at the time of sacrifice as a means of driving away the evil spirits who would destroy its efficacy. From this it can also be seen why music had to be uninterrupted during the actio. It was not necessary, then, that music drown out cries of pain but rather that it simply drive away the demons who had been attracted by those cries." (Quasten, Johannes, Music and Worship in Pagan and Christian Antiquity, pgs 16-17)

This was the BURNT OFFERING just before Rick Atchley and all of the musical discorders proof text where they relaxed and burned Goats while the Jacob-Cursed Levites made a great sound under the KING and COMMANDERS of the army: Christ said that God had not commanded sacrifices OR burnt offerings.



Of the musical idolatry at Mount Sinai, Paul warned the Corinthians of their own charismatic, pagan worship which made their "assembly do more harm than good."

No, but the sacrifices of pagans are offered to demons (who distribute fortunes or gifts of spirits), not to God, and I do not want you to be participants with demons. 1 Corinthians10:20

So it is with you. Unless you speak intelligible words with your tongue, how will anyone know what you are saying? You will just be speaking into the air. 1 Corinthians 14:9

"In Greek ritual the sacrifice was accompanied by the invocatory cries of women.

Their purpose was to call the good gods so that they cound enjoy the sacrifice.
Music had the same character of epiclesis.
It was understood to "call down" the good gods.

"Menander attests to the attribution of this significance to music.

According to Plutarch, the inhabiants of Argos blew trumpets on the feast of Dionysos
so as to
call the god up from the depths of the river Lerne for the sacrifice.

"Because song and music increased the efficacy of the epiclesis the words of epiclesis were nearly always sung to instrumental accompaniment.

Thus the Dionysian fellowship used the ritual of women in order to obtain the appearance of their god.

"Arnobius alludes to such songs of the pagans performed to flute accompaniment, and he mockingly asks whether the sleeping deities will be awakened by them." (Quasten, Johannes, Music and Worship in Pagan and Christian Antiquity, p. 17)

Arnobius also attributes most "worship" musical performance to women and homosexuals.


Unattributed quotes in black from: Gospel Hymns Sandra S. Sizer p. 186 - 187 Eerdman's Handbook To Christianity in America.

As slaves were forbidden to drum in their new "christian" worship, a style of singing developed to fool the masters. This had a huge impact on praise and worship songs even today:

"By 1810 the slave trade to the United States had officially ended and the slave population began to increase naturally, making way for the preservation and transmission of religious practices that were, by this time, truly "African-American."

This transition coincided with the period of intense religious revivalism known as "awakenings." In the southern states, where the institution of slavery still prevailed,

increasing numbers of slaves converted to evangelical religions such as the Methodist and Baptist faiths. Their praise and worship songs merged African and American styles.

Many clergy within these denominations actively promoted the idea that all Christians were equal in the sight of God, a message that provided hope and sustenance to the slaves.

They also encouraged worship in ways that many Africans found to be similar, or at least adaptable, to African worship patterns, with enthusiastic singing, clapping, dancing, and even spirit-possession.

In the slave quarters, however, African Americans organized their own "invisible institution." Through signals, passwords, and messages not discernible to whites, they called believers to "hush harbors" where they freely mixed African rhythms, singing, and beliefs with evangelical Christianity.

Their praise and worship songs had the drum beat of hand clap to enforce the dark meaning of Voodoo.
It was here that the spirituals, with their double meanings of religious salvation and freedom from slavery, developed and flourished; and here, too,

that black preachers, those who believed that God had called them to speak his Word, polished their "chanted sermons,"

or rhythmic intoned style of extemporaneous preaching.

Part church, part psychological refuge, and part organizing point for occasional acts of outright rebellion

(Nat Turner, whose armed insurrection in Virginia in 1831 resulted in the deaths of scores of white men, women, and children, was a self-styled Baptist preacher), these meetings provided one of the few ways for enslaved African Americans to express and enact their hopes for a better future.

Click Here For Article.

Albert Barnes, commenting on Colossians 3:16, explained why those who make the hymns have control of the church. They are, in fact, the overseers of the church in its only Scriptural role:

"It is true in a more important sense that he who is permitted to make the hymns of a church,

need care little who preaches, or who makes the creed.
He will more effectually mould the sentiments of a church than they who preach or make creeds and confessions.

Hence, it is indispensable, in order to the preservation of the truth, that the sacred songs of a church should be imbued with sound evangelical sentiment."

However, modern praise and worship songs tokenize the Bible and most often teach error.

At Passover Jesus gave us an approved example and defined the meaning of "hymn."

And when they had sung an hymn, they went out into the mount of Olives. Matthew 26:30

Humneo (g5214) hoom-neh'-o; from 5215; to hymn, i.e. sing a religious ode; by impl. to celebrate (God) in song: - sing an hymn (praise unto).

Humnos (g5215) hoom'-nos; (to celebrate; prob. akin to 103; comp. ); a "hymn" or religious ode (one of the Psalms): - hymn

This also defines the meaning of "singing praises." When Paul and Silas were in prison their praises were hymns:

About midnight Paul and Silas were praying and singing hymns (praises) to God, and the other prisoners were listening to them. Acts 16:25

There is no word for singing plus hymning and praising: the ideas is that they were "hymning praises."

We know for certain that the hymns sung at Passover would be from the Great Hallel or Psalms 111-118. When the "fifth cup" was sung, Psalm 137 was sung.

The Septuagint includes the three Greek expressions Paul, "psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs". All three classes are included under the Greek word "Psalms." Psalms, hymns and spiritual songs are defined by Paul as "the Word of Christ" or "Spirit." Each is a type of the inspired Word of God.

Saying, I will declare thy name unto my brethren, in the midst of the church will I sing praise (hymns) unto thee. Hebrews 2:12

Declare is:

Apagello (g518) ap-ang-el'-lo; from 575 and the base of 32; to announce: - bring word (again), declare, report, shew (again), tell.

Sing is:

Apalgeo (g524) ap-alg-eh'-o; from 575 (to smart); to grieve out, i.e. become apathetic: - be past feeling

The singing of James is not congregational but the advice is that all singing should consist of singing the Psalms. This word would include Psalms, Hymns and Spiritual songs:

Is any among you afflicted? let him pray. Is any merry? let him sing psalms. James 5:13

James does not include the three forms because they are all included under the term "Psalm" or praises and they are all inspired and from God.

Jesus and the Disciples SPOKE a hymn and went out.. See Matthew 26.

Matthew 26.30  et hymno dicto exierunt in montem Oliveti

Hymnus , i, m., = humnos, I. a song of praise, a hymn: “hymnus cantus est cum laude Dei,Aug. Enarr. in Psa. 148, 17; Ambros. Expos. Psa. 118, prol. § 3; Lucil. ap. Non. 330, 9; Prud. Cath. 37 praef.; 4, 75: “divinorum scriptor hymnorum,  Vulg. Psa. 60 tit.; id. Matt. 26, 30.

One of the earliest church splits was over using human compositions to replace "that which is written for our learning."

Psalm 60 A teaching poem by David, when he fought with Aram Naharaim and with Aram Zobah, and Joab returned, and killed twelve thousand of Edom in the Valley of Salt.

There is no SINGING TUNEFULLY involved in hymning:

Dīcoto say, tell, mention, relate, affirm, declare, state; to mean, intend (for syn. cf.: for, loquor stands for the Gr. eipein pros tina,
Ontōs , Adv. part. of eimi A. (sum), really, actually, verily, with Verb
Alēth-ēs a^, Dor. ala_thēs , es, (lēthō,
I. Hom., Opposite. pseudēs, in phrases alēthea muthēsasthai, eipein, agoreuein, alēthes enispein
Opposite 3. of oracles, true, unerring, “alathea mantiōn thōkonPi. P.11.6, cf. S.Ph.993, E.Ion1537; of dreams, A.Th.710. “alēthei logō khrasthaiHdt. 1.14
Opposite Epos
1. song or lay accompanied by music, 8.91,17.519. b. generally, poetry, even lyrics
        5. celebrate, of poets, “Aiantos bian

When Dico is translated SING it never speaks of tunefulness:

Dīco, 4. To describe, relate, sing, celebrate in writing (mostly poet.): “tibi dicere laudes,Tib. 1, 3, 31; so, “laudes Phoebi [Apollo, Abaddon, Apollyon] et Dianae,Hor. C. S. 76: “Dianam,

Laudo, I. to praise, laud, commend, extol, eulogize, approve
1. To pronounce a funeral oration over a person:
3. To praise, compliment, i. e. dismiss with a compliment, leave,
        to adduce, name, quote, cite a person as any thing: sermo
Sermo , ōnis, m. 2. sero, qs. serta, conserta oratio, Of prose as opposed to poetry
b. of verses in a conversational style, To Inculcate
II. Transf., a manner of speaking, mode of expression, language, style, diction, etc. (cf. lingua):

Humn-eō , Ep. humneiō Hes.Op.2; Ep.3pl.
II. tell over and over again, harp upon, repeat, recite,
        ton nomon humnein recite [erō say] the form of the law, Id.Lg.871a:
2.  in pass. sense, phēmai . . humnēsousi peri ta ōta will ring in their ears Pl.R.463d

Phēmē  I. utterance prompted by the gods, significant or prophetic saying, II. any voice or words, speech, saying, logōn ph. poet. periphr. for logoi, S.Ph.846 (lyr.
Logos, verbal noun of lego
        Opposite kata pathos
        Opposite music, poetry or rhetoric
        Opposite human reasoning
        Opposite Epagoge bringint in to one's aid, introduction
                Alurement, enticement, incantation, spell

Opposite Pathos  A. that which happens to a person or thing, incident, accident,  where this incident took place, unfortunate accident,
2. what one has experienced, good or bad, experience
II. of the soul, emotion, passion (“legō de pathē . . holōs hois hepetai hēdonē ē lupēArist.EN1105b21), “sophiē psukhēn pathōn aphaireitai

SophiaA. cleverness or skill in handicraft and art, as in carpentry
in music and singing, tekhnē kai s. h.Merc.483, cf. 511; in poetry in divination, S.OT 502

Dēmēgorikos from dēmēgoros of or for public speaking, qualified for it, Xen.: - (sc. tekhnē), = dēmēgoria,


Hymns Sandra S. Sizer

"One of the remarkable developments in middle and late nineteenth-century evangelicalism was the emergence of a popular American hymnody.

Puritans before the Great Awakening had chanted psalms from the Bible but disapproved of the use of hymns in church services.

After the revivals of Edwards and Whitefield, New Light Presbyterians and Baptists used some hymns, mostly those of the British hymnist isaac Watts. Methodists coming to America brought Wesleyan hymns with them.

Click to see how the First Great American Awakening produced wholesale division.
And the SHOUTING METHODISTS where shouting in early Christian Church became an act of worship.

The Cane Ridge revival was a later version with similar divisive results.

But at the turn of the nineteenth century most evangelicals were still singing either psalms or hymns by British composers.

The Britannica notes of the Spiritual songs that "A second source was the singing of hymns (as opposed to psalms only), reintroduced by such 18th-century religious dissenters as John and Charles Wesley, the founders of Methodism.

Hymn verses were composed and set to borrowed melodies, often secular folk tunes. Many of these evangelical hymrs even passed into oral tradition.

Plato noted that when people change the music you should fear that they are also changing the laws. Therefore, modern praise and worship songs clearly flow from a changed view of God's laws.

"In the late 18th century and up to the mid-19th, there were several waves of religious revivalism. The resulting camp meetings and revivals were marked by spontaneous mass singing. It is not completely known how the camp-meeting songs and revival spirituals were sung;

but it is thought that they were sung unharmonized, the tune typically begun by the high male voices, the women and basses joining in an octave (or other comfortable interval) above or below. A call-and-response pattern (as in lining out) may have at times been used. Melodies were apparently ornamented.

"A 19th-century offshoot of the spiritual was the gospel song. Influenced by "correct" European music,

it had composed melodies and texts, was sung with instrumental accompaniment, and (unlike the folk hymns) was written to be harmonized.

The Britannica also notes that: "Racial, ethnic, and language distinctions also can operate to create and maintain exclusive communities.

"The Negro churches of the United States, though open to members who are not Negroes,

have become, in many sections of the United States, exclusive communities, largely through the exclusion of Negroes from white churches.

The worship of Negro communities has incorporated elements from African religions and has focussed upon forms of worship appropriate to a people oppressed by the larger society and excluded from many of its benefits. The service generally is "freer" than that of the white churches, including a more significant place for congregational singing and responses and more active participation by the congregation than has become customary in most white churches. (See black American.)

We will see later that women and preachers were also somewhat excluded and were largely responsible for the charismatic outbreaks: the preachers often for control purposes and the women needing to approve and be approved.

Musically, it is believed that a complex intermingling of African and white folk-music elements occurred and that complementary traits of African music and white U.S. folksong reinforced each other. For example, the call-and-response pattern occurs in both, as do certain scales and the variable intonation of certain notes.

Most authorities see clear African influence in vocal style and in the complex polyrhythmic clapped accompaniments.

African tradition also included polyphonic and choral singing. The ring shout (a religious dance usually accompanied by the singing of spirituals and clapped rhythms) is of African ancestry.

After the Civil War the black spirituals were "discovered" by Northerners and either developed toward harmonized versions, often sung by trained choirs, or, conversely, preserved the older traditional style, especially in rural areas and certain sects. Like the white gospel song, the modern black gospel song is a descendant of the spiritual and is instrumentally accompanied. Black gospel music is closely related to secular black music (as is the spiritual to the work song and blues) and often

includes jazz rhythms and instruments alongside traditional clapped accompaniment and often dance. Though gospel songs are usually composed, the melodies are taken for improvisational bases in church services, as popular tunes are improvised upon in jazz.

In "Recollections of John Rogers" he notes that:

Thomas Dooley I remember as one of the sweetest singers of Israel I ever heard. He had a clear, soft, sweet and most melodious voice. I shall never forget, while memory lives, the deep impression his singing made upon me; there was so much of heaven and complacency in his eye and beaming forth from his countenance. He threw his whole soul into his song. While I write of him, he stands before me in imagination, as he did in reality some forty-two years ago, the embodiment of Christian meekness, gentleness, patience, hope and love. I seem to be looking upon that beautiful, peculiarly soft, placid, heavenly- beaming countenance, as it shone upon me while he sang - as only he could sing - that most beautiful lyric of Dr. Watts', entitled, "Happy Frailty." I remember the tune yet, and many of the words. The first verse runs thus:

How meanly dwells the immortal mind,
How vile these bodies are!
Why was a clod of earth designed
To inclose a heavenly star?
Weak cottage where our souls reside,
Earth but a tottering wall!
With fearful breaches gaping wide,
The building bends to fall."

The whole song is in Dr. Watts' best style, full of pathos, of the most soul-stirring thoughts. And although it is more than forty years since I heard it sung, yet sung then to the beautiful tune in the inimitable style of Bro. Thomas Dooley,

"The camp-meeting revivals on the western frontiers sparked the composition or adoption of more popular tunes and easily learned words. Some elements came from English sources. while others--especially the pattern of verse-and-refrain--were borrowed from black folk music.

"Still, however, "the more conservative church leaders, especially among Presbyterians and Congregationalists, tried to keep such songs out of regular services, reserving them only for seasons of revival.

"Not until after the Finney revival era, 1825-1835, did the proscriptions on popular religious song fall away.
........ During the same period, the teaching and learning of music,
........ ........ especially singing in choruses, was becoming a popular pastime.

The music teacher became a familiar figure in the West and the music institute in the East, bringing songbooks and the skills of reading musical notation to the populace at large.
........ These developments opened the way for the genre of popular religious song called the "gospel hymn."

Consistent with this praise and worship songs are billed as "worship entertainment."

The replacement of the psalms with human compositions was a product of the "high church" movement which gave protestants the same authority as the Catholic church to "change with the times." However:

"The first three centuries of the church witnessed many controversies; some of them concerned themselves directly with music. The most important of these issues were:

(a) organized versus spontaneous praying and singing;
(b) scriptural versus
extrascriptural poems;
(c) fusion with
Hellenistic music;
(d) vocal versus
instrumental music;
(e) the rise of
monasticism and its influence upon ecclesiastical chant." (Interpreter's Dict of the Bible, Music, p. 467). 

The first problem occurred when the doxologies of the Bible which were like Psalms were replaced by "a great number of spontaneous and highly individualized doxologies."
........ However, the non-Biblical responses were ratified and codified at the second synod of Vaison in 529.
........ This writing of their own "song book" virtually destroyed spontaneous or Biblical worship.

However, sectarian introduction of any thing not Biblical is almost always based on commercial interest (more attendees, etc.)

"The large displacement of the Psalter by other matter of praise in the Protestant Churches during the last one hundred years has been due, no so much to the lack of appreciation of the Psalms,
........  as to the commercial enterprise of music publishers." (Int Std Bible Ency., Psalms, p. 2494B).

The Result of Violating Paul's Direct Command About Women

From the most ancient times, women promoted charismatic religion as a way to "rule over men" who could not be controlled but who could be seduced.

Johannes Quasten. In Music and Worship in Pagan and Christian Antiquity, beginning on page 41:

"Philodemus considered it paradoxical that music should be regarded as veneration of the gods while musicians were paid for performing this so-called veneration. Again, Philodemus held as self deceptive the view that music mediated religious ecstasy.
He saw the entire condition
induced by the noise of cymbals and tambourines as a disturbance of the spirit.

He found it significant that, on the whole, only women and effeminate men fell into this folly.

Accordingly, nothing of value could be attributed to music; it was no more than a slave of the sensation of pleasure, which satisfied much in the same way that food and drink did.

"Leading the hearts and minds of whole congregations to the throne of God is a serious responsibility which deserves much thought and prayer... Think what a blessing would come to our worship if we produced people who wrote modern Psalms to voice our deepest needs and concerns." (Rubel Shelly and Randy Harris, Second Incarnation, p. 137)


"The gospel hymn, with a simple melody and chorus, and Iyrics proclaiming the love of Jesus, was soon to become a prominent feature of the American evangelical scene.

Ordinary clergy and laypeople,
including
large numbers of women,
wrote the Iyrics themselves, modeling their poetry on
Wesleyan-style verses
........ such as "Jesus, Lover of My Soul."
(I.e. Erotic)

It is an absolute certainty from Scripture and all of the ancient stories birthed at the Tower of Babel, that when music, drama and dance are promoted it is catering to secular females or the effeminate principle in the male, charismatic leaders. Parkes notes that all ancient priests and "prophesiers" were honored because of their fully-expressed or thinly-veiled bent-gender.


The man of sin is apoleia or Apollyon or Abbadon: See His Seeker Center and the music connection. He uses music and his preside-over "preachers with a tune" are women or the effeminate:

Who opposeth and exalteth himself above all that is called God, or that is worshipped; so that he as God sitteth (dwells) in the temple (naos) of God, shewing himself that he is God. 2 Thess 2:4

The "liturgy area" is the holy place in cathedral architecture:musical worship teams are standing in the holy place claiming to be mediators or that their "awsome" power comes from GOD: the idolatry of talent.

Showing is: Apodeiknumi (g584) ap-od-ike'-noo-mee; from 575 and 1166; to show off, i.e. exhibit: fig. to demonstrate, i.e. accredit:- (ap) prove, set forth, shew.

The two basic Greek religious cults--one devoted to Apollo, the other to Dionysus--became the prototypes for the two aesthetic poles, classical and romantic, that have contended throughout Western cultural history.

The Apollonians were characterized by objectivity of expression, simplicity, and clarity, and their favoured instrument was the kithara, a type of lyre.
The
Dionysians, on the other hand, preferred the reed-blown aulos and were identified by subjectivity, emotional abandon, and sensuality. (See Greek music, Apollo, Dionysus.)

As Dionysus apparently represented the sap, juice, or lifeblood element in nature, lavish festal orgia (rites) in his honour were widely instituted. These Dionysia (Bacchanalia,) quickly won converts among the women in the post-Mycenaean world. The men, however, met it with hostility.

In Romans 15 Paul defined the synagogue as excluding PLEASURING self. The only way to glorify God was to speak with ONE MIND and ONE VOICE using "that which is written."


It is an absolute certainty from Scripture and all of the ancient stories birthed at the Tower of Babel, that when music, drama and dance are promoted it is catering to secular females or the effeminate principle in the male, charismatic leaders. Parkes notes that all ancient priests and "prophesiers" were honored because of their fully-expressed or thinly-veiled bent-gender. Goldschmidt notes that:

"It is no accident that a high proportion of those who suddenly show symptoms of being bewitched (such as fainting or going into a semi-trance) at 'squaw dances' or other large gatherings are women or men who are somewhat neglected or who occupy low social status.

In most of these cases it is probably not a matter of consciously capitalizing on the credence of their fellows in order to get the center of the stage for themselves.

It is unlikely that Navahos often deliberately complain of the symptoms of witchcraft as a device for getting attention. The process normally takes place at an altogether unconscious level:

those whose uneasiness goes beyond certain point have to do with something; and if they are believed to be at the mercy of witches they are likely to get help." (Goldschmidt, Walter, Exploring the Ways of Mankind, p. 518, Holt, Rinehart and Winston)

The familiar spirit of the witch of instrument was an empty wineskin. It has the same meaning as the harp or nebel and of the instruments condemned by Paul in First Corinthians chapter 13.

Most musical forms were always a form of witchcraft or sorcery.

"By the time of the 1857-1858 prayer-meeting revival, songbooks were in great demand. Hymns like "Just As I Am" and "What a Friend We Have in Jesus" were favorites.
........ Over the next few decades devotional poetry that had appeared in religious magazines
........ ........ and Iyrics from Sunday-school songs
........ ........ were collected together with the writings of professional hymnists.

"Fanny Crosby, the famous blind hymnist, became known across the country for the thousands of hymns she wrote ("Rescue the Perishing," "Pass Me Not, O Gentle Saviour" l. P. P Bliss, whose career was cut short by his death in a train accident in 1876, was one of the most prolific. writing both words and music to such songs as "Let the Lower Lights Be Burning" and "Hold the Fort."

"Affer Bliss's death Ira D. Sankey, the partner of Dwight L. Moody, became the best-known of revival singers and musicians. Together with other musical evangelicals, he compiled a series, Gospel Hymns, which was the most popular set of hymnals in the late nineteenth century. This movement transformed the appearance of urban revivalism.

"By the time of Moody the singers were as popular as the preachers; and for decades to come no great revivalist would be without his companion,
........ a professional singing evangelist to provide a counter-point to prayer and sermon.
"The popularity of the gospel hymn is closely tied to
........ the emerging forms of nineteenth-century white urban revivalism and to the social conditions of the period.

Middleclass Protestants in postindustrial America were increasingly literate producing and devouring newspapers magazines, histories, novels, and poetry in enormous quantities.

At the same time, male and female roles were being redefined, and many men spent their energies in the business and politics of an expanding society.
Those were arenas from which both women and ministers, by custom and/or law, were excluded.

Religion itself was becoming a separate sphere, no longer directly linked to government and public affairs,

and ministers had lost the prestige their forefathers had as scholars and advisers to magistrates.

Together with their most faithful followers, middleclass women,
        they created a realm of intense religious experience,
        separate from the larger society,
        and gave it expression in poetry and hymnody.

Strabo Geography 7.3.4 Notes:

"Further, it is not reasonable to suppose that the same people regard as wretched a life without many women, and yet at the same time regard as pious and just a life that is wholly bereft of women. And of course to regard as "both god-fearing and capnobatae"

"capnobatae," or "smoke-treaders" (see Herodotus 1. 202 and 4.75) to the custom of generating an intoxicating vapor by throwing hemp-seed upon red-hot stones. Berkel and Wakefield would emend, respectively to "capnopatae" and "capnobotae" ("smoke-eaters," i.e., people who live on food of no value).

those who are without women is very much opposed to the common notions on that subject;
        for all agree in regarding the women as the chief founders of religion,
        and it is the women who provoke the men to the more attentive worship of the gods,
        to festivals, and to supplications,
                and it is a rare thing for a man who lives by himself to be found addicted to these things.

"Decline of woman in Israel was always due to the invasion of heathen influences. Morality lapsed as idolatrous customs were countenanced.

The prominence of women in idolatry and in the abominations of foreign religions is indicated in the writings of the prophets (Jeremiah 7:18; Ezekiel 8:14, See Exodus 22:18).

The sordid effect of idolatrous women ruined the religious life of Judah and Israel and contributed to their downfall." (Lockyear, The Women of the Bible, p. 14).

The prevelance of women in idolatry and false prophetesses in Judaism flowed from the worship of femail goddesses. This is the theme of the Sophia-Zoe movement in ancient and modern paganism.

The children gather wood, and the fathers kindle the fire, and the women knead their dough, to make cakes to the queen of heaven, and to pour out drink offerings unto other gods, that they may provoke me to anger. Jeremiah 7:18

Do they provoke me to anger? saith the Lord: do they not provoke themselves to the confusion of their own faces? Jeremiah 7:19

Thus saith the Lord of hosts, the God of Israel; Put your burnt offerings unto your sacrifices, and eat flesh. Jeremiah 7:21

For I spake not unto your fathers, nor commanded them in the day that I brought them out of the land of Egypt, concerning burnt offerings or sacrifices: Jeremiah 7:22

But this thing commanded I them, saying, Obey my voice, and I will be your God, and ye shall be my people: and walk ye in all the ways that I have commanded you, that it may be well unto you. Jeremiah 7:23

Then he brought me to the door of the gate of the Lords house which was toward the north; and, behold, there sat women weeping for Tammuz. Ezekiel 8:14

When Paul speaks of women being silent and sedentary in the assemblies there is no way to get around his clear statement. Women in Corinth were the key players in the oracles such as that just up the road at Delphi and lesser Seeker-Centers. This Apollo Seeker-Center is the meaning of Apollyon or Abbadon.

The other part of "women and children ruling over you" flows from the worship of Hermes or Mercury a Dionysus figure the Jewish clergy tried to force Jesus into. He is the figure of Jubal or Genun in the Book of Enoch and other apocalyptic writings which all give credit for Satan for seducing the youth into "triumphing over" the more spiritual with mixed-sex choirs and instruments.

The masculine influence was always the synagogue which had no praise service. The feminine forms of worship in every culture centered on rituals of sight and sound, music and dance. Because Paul had already implicated the warfare instruments used as enchanting instruments and equated them to the feminine-dominant speaking in tongues, Paul understood that if foreign influences were to be kept out of the Christian assembly it would simply not be possible to exercise authority which was "sexual authority."

Let your women keep silence in the churches: for it is not permitted unto them to speak; but they are commanded to be under obedience, as also saith the law. 1 Cor 14:34

And if they will learn any thing, let them ask their husbands at home: for it is a shame for women to speak in the church. 1 Cor 14: 35

Women were usually the spokesperson for the oracles. They used wine or drugs or music to fall into ecstasy after which their gibberish was sold to customers after being put into song or poetry form and theninterpreted by a priest and put into whatever message he thought appropriate.

Therefore, Paul asked:

What came the word of God out from you? or came it unto you only? 1 Cor 14: 36

This Corinthian "unity in diversity" fuels the identical forms of Apollyon Seeker Centers where the chief agent of the gods believe that music can actually "lead the worshipers into the presence of God." The song writers, usually women giving the erotic twist to "Christian Music," actually believe that they are inspired.

"Revivals in urban America were no longer occasions for the church to renew itself as a community, but meetings of individuals who did not know one another to share their religious feelings.
..        The revivals created a community of feeling among people who had no other communal bonds.
..        Further, as the minister and his sermon declined,
..        personal prayer and testimony came to the fore. Correlatively,
..        ..        the hymn Iyrics usually either bore witness to a generalized personal experience,
..        ..        as in "I Love to Tell the Story," or made personal pleas: "I Need Thee Every Hour."

With personal experience as the ultimate authority, they could disregard the ordinary world--so the hymns portrayed the world as a stormy sea, full of turmoil and strife, and looked forward to personal transformation and the hope of heaven after death.

[In contrast to the hope of the word of God, this is the southern black contribution of hoplesness]

While the seekers claim that they are open, innovative and tolerant, the musical urge is usually propelled by the clergy's sense of loss of influence. This is especially true in the time of better TV sermons and all of the free Bible Study material one can tolerate--free of charge. In fact, as attendance dwindles rather than restore the preacher to evangelism, the manipulative schemes of the world are adopted in order to defend themselves against the challenge of pluralism.

"The gospel hymns thus became an important medium of expression for the emotions and yearnings of Protestants--
        "first, the clergy and women who ruled the religious sphere, and later evangelicals generally,
                as the churches attempted to defend themselves against the challenges of American religious pluralism.

As the clergy lost its faith in the Bible and the Biblical demand that it is the already-preached sermons and already-composed songs, the audience follows along like those in Amos and hunger and thirst for the Word of God and cannot find it. The natural response is just to invent a new Word along with a new song.

"The hymns represented a burst of creativity from the people themselves, a rich, intensely devotional experience by which one could rise above the ordinary world.

"The danger, however, was that the inward-turning quality of the hymns and their sentimental melodies "would reinforce the retreat from social issues which by 1875 was visible throughout Protestant evangelicalism.

"The power of poetry and music, sweeping revival crowds along on "billows and tides of heavenly emotion," as a nineteenth-century writer put it,
..        could become a mere mass movement,
..        without the discipline of intellect and organized action
..        that Protestantism needed to meet the challenges of the era.


In the Feminine and voodoo connection we note that: "Many writers observe that the study of Scripture is meaty and manly while sentimental singing is feminine or effeminate worship. Thus church music as we know it has no true link to the Biblical text -- the songsters and versifiers just "scratch a bit of paint off the Bible'" as they hurriedly pass by.

Defining Israel condemned by God through Amos, Smith also defines today's effeminate clergy:

"Hebrew music... was used in the luxurious times of the later monarchy the effeminate gallants of israel, reeking with perfumes, and stretched upon their couches of ivory, were wont at their banquets to accompany the song with the tinkling of the psaltery or guitar (Am. v1. 4-6), and amused themselves with devising musical instruments while their nation was perishing... music was the legitimate expression of mirth and gladness, and the indication of peace and prosperity." (Smith's, Music, p. 590).

"An artificial, effeminate music which should relax the soul, frittering the melody, and displacing the power and majesty of divine harmony by tricks of art, and giddy, thoughtless, heartless, souless versifying would be meet company." (Barnes, Albert, Amos, p. 303).

However, it was always known that music is the most popular "sign" or "mark" of a changing and often perishing society:

"Jingling, banging, and rattling accompanied heathen cults, and the frenzying shawms of a dozen ecstatic cries intoxicated the masses. Amid this euphoric farewell feast of a dying civilization, the voices of nonconformists were emerging from places of Jewish and early Christian worship; Philo of Alexandria had already emphasized the ethical qualities of music,
..        spurning the 'effeminate' art of his Gentile surroundings.
..        Similarly, early synagogue song intentionally foregoes artistic perfection,
..        renounces the playing of instruments,
..        ..        and attaches itself entirely to 'the word'--the TEXT of the Bible"
..        ..        (Encyclopaedia Judaica, 1971 ed., s.v. "Music")

Most Contemporary Christian Music (an oxymoron) breakes the law defined by Paul to the Corinthian women. The music which gets everyone so "high" is acutally erotic music and the exercise of authentia: sexual and murderous authority.

For instance Janelle Foster-Joyce, University of Virginia observes in quotes:

"White gospel hymns written between 1860 and 1910 constitute musical worship in many Southern Baptist churches. Since the mid-twentieth century these hymns have been denigrated by musicologists; Nell Woods Black, Floyd Patterson, and Henry Wilder Foote label these hymns "sentimental" on the basis of their texts, music, and style. A pervasive textual theme is one's relationship to Christ, whether a brotherly relationship

or a passionate, erotic relationship.
Scholars have derided this theme because they perceive it to be at a lower level
..         than hymns that portray the Divine as an all-powerful being.

The harmonic and rhythmic patterns of the hymns are repetitious, as is the use of a refrain, and scholars have labeled this a defect.
..        The style of the hymns arises from two intersecting extant styles:
..        the camp meeting tradition and the popular song; this too has been considered a lack of integrity.

Because of these perceived deficiencies, there has been little scholarly interest in these hymns.
..        There also seems to be a discomfort with music in general and hymns in particular
..        that cause a person to react emotionally.

Beneath the dismissal of the hymns based on their sentimental aspects runs an undercurrent of disdain related to perceptions of gender in the hymns.

In general, the perception of sentimentality and of reacting emotionally has strong associations with femininity (Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Barbara Epstein, and Gail Bederman);
..        hus the rejection of these hymns by scholars has important anti-feminist implications.

But ideas of the masculine and feminine in the historical contexts of these hymns were quite different from our late-twentieth-century ideas of gender.

The hymns' texts and music show masculinity to have been bound up with feelings of brotherhood, gentleness, and submission to Divine leadership.

The texts also suggest how ideas of femininity were associated with child-like qualities and an erotic submission to the Divine.

The pervasiveness of these ideals can be seen in a wide range of writings from the time (for instance, the political writings of Benjamin Disraeli and Elizabeth Cady Staton).

Philo "developed a doctrine of ecstasy or ek-stasis, which means sstanding outside oneself.' This is the highest form of piety which lies beyond faith. This mysticism unites prophetic ecstasy with 'enthusiasm', a word which comes from en-theos-mania, meaning to possess the divine. From this there comes finally the fully developed mystical system of the Neo-Platonists, for example, of Dionysus the Areopagite.

In this mystical system the ecstasy of the individual person leads to a union with the One, with the Absolute, with God." (Tillich, Paul, A History of Christian Thought, Touchstone, p. 13)

Interestingly, Philo defines a form of responsive music where male and female monastic sectarian Jews studied all day and played all night. The effect of women was evident on the form of music which is often confused as Christian responsive singing.

"The survival of these ideals in a particular late-twentieth-century Southern Baptist culture suggests a complex picture of gender and acceptable ways of being manly or womanly, masculine or feminine.

This complexity of gender relations and the old-fashionedness of the hymns within this cultural community has been ignored,
..        and perhaps even deliberately concealed, by an official culture
..        that dismisses all sentimental hymnody as vaguely effeminate.

"The notion of music as a tool or technology with a clearly defined purpose is very prevalent in the East. In the West that view is held by some,
..        but others believe that music is entertainment or art and nothing more.

Both in Hebrew and Greek, one word is used to define both a musical instrument and a weapon. Paul uses the parallel terms: "Lifeless instrument" and "Carnal Weapon."

"the watchmen, who patrolled the streets for the repression of common crime, were charged with the additional duty of exorcizing the dreaded powers of the air and of darkness, which went about like roaring lions seeking what they might devour.

To accomplish this object the night watchman wielded spiritual weapons of two different sorts but of equal power; he range a bell, and he chanted a blessing." (Frazer, James George, Folk-Lore in the Old Testament, Macmillian, p. 423, 1923)

Those who take the latter view tend to believe that music is the product of a individual, while those who take the the former usually believe that music is the product of a group of people, or of the gods, acting through people.

"In many religious contexts, music is less an expressive 'art' than a technology applied to produce practical results,

from the storage and retrieval of information contained in religious narratives and teachings memorized in song to the attraction of animals in hunting, increase of harvests, curing of diseases, communication with the divine, supplication, and control of the various levels of psychocosmic experience. While aesthetic beauty may or may not be integral to such technologies, individual self-expression plays little part in them and may be detrimental to their intended results (Ellingson 164).

This is why Karen Armstrong in A History of God and others identify the Feast of Tabernacles at the time of Christ as a fertility ritual.

Many other jazz musicians also note similarites between preachers and performers:

A good deal of such ecstasy--reminiscent of a shamanic seance with its rhythmic kinesis, music, words, and audience participation--carried over into jazz. And in some ways the jazzman was like a preacher. Guitarist Danny Barker noted, in connection with Bessie Smith,

"If you had any church background, like people who came from the South, as I did, you would recognize a similarity between what she was doing and what those preachers and evangelists from there did, and how they moved people.

Bessie did that same thing on stage...
she could bring about mass hypnotism."
Charles Mingus liked to think of the bandstand as something like a
pulpit.
"You're up there...trying to express yourself. It's like being a preacher in a sense" (Leonard 48).

"In the evolution of primitive religion the adoption of rituals based on imitative magic seems normally to have preceded the elaboration of corresponding mythologies. But once the ritual had become established,

it was likely to be interpreted by means of a tale about the gods, which then came to be regarded as the raison d'etre, the original magical purpose being gradually forgotten." (H. Bamford Parkes, p. 44)

"In Morocco groups of women may sing to the accompaniment of a frame drum supplied with jingles, a spike fiddle (one in which the handle traverses the body and emerges at the lower end to form a spike), small cymbals, and a pair of kettledrums, each playing her own instrument.

"Although voodooists profess belief in a rather distant supreme God, the effective divinities are a large number of spirits called the loa, which can be variously identified as local or African gods, deified ancestors, or Catholic saints. The loa are believed to demand ritual service, which thereby attaches them to individuals or families. In voodoo ritual services, a number of devotees congregate at a temple, usually a humble meeting place,

where a priest or priestess leads them in ceremonies involving song, drumming, dance, prayer, food preparation, and the ritual sacrifice of animals.
 
The voodoo priest, or houngan, and the priestess, or mambo, also act as counselors, healers, and expert protectors against sorcery or witchcraft.

"The loa are thought by voodoo devotees to act as helpers, protectors, and guides to people. The loa communicate with an individual during the cult services by possessing him during a trance state

in which the devotee may eat and drink,
perform stylized dances, give supernaturally inspired advice to people,
perform medical cures, or display special physical feats;
 
these acts exhibit the incarnate presence of the loa within the entranced devotee. Many urban Haitians believe in two sharply contrasting sets of loas, a set of wise and benevolent ones called Rada loas, and a harsher, more malevolent group of spirits called Petro loas. Petro spirits are called up by more agitated or violent rituals than Rada spirits are evoked by. "voodoo" Encyclopædia Britannica Online.
 
Or Click Here. 
"West Africans reconstructed their native drums in the New World, preponderantly as cult instruments. Small sets of two or, more often, three drums of graded sizes form an integral part of Afro-American rituals and, in the Caribbean, also of voodoo dances.

Only the skins of sacrificial animals may be used for membranes among Afro-Bahians in Brazil, who baptize their new drums, preferably with "holy" water obtained from a Roman Catholic church.

Drums in Haiti are sacred objects and may even represent the deity itself: as such they receive libations. One type of bongo drum--there exist at least four of these--has been adopted by Western rhythm bands, as has the conga.

David Tame, in his 1984 book, The Secret Power of Music wrote:

"Were we to scour the globe in search of the most aggressively malevolent and unmistakably evil music is existence, it is more than likely that nothing would be found anywhere to surpass voodoo in these attributes ... as the rhythmic accompaniment to satanic rituals and orgies, voodoo is the quintessence of tonal evil. ...

Its multiple rhythms [score ], rather than uniting into an integrated whole,
are performed in a
certain kind of conflict with one another.
What is certain is that to hear this music is to become instantly encompassed
by the sound of its
raw, livid power. ...

Musicologists and historians are in no doubt that the drum rhythms of Africa were carried to America and were transmitted and translated into the style of music which became known as jazz. Since jazz and the blues were the parents of rock and roll, this also means that there exists a direct line of descent from the voodoo ceremonies of Africa, through jazz, to rock and roll and all the other forms of rock music today" (pp. 189-190).

David Cloud Notes that:

"It is irrefutable that rock and roll music owes some of its roots to the tribes of Africa. Every analysis written on the subject acknowledges that its roots are deep in 'jazz' and 'rhythm and blues.' Because of the relationship between American Negro music and the African, they have coined a term that is used considerably today, 'Aframerican music' (Literature and Music, p. 102). Joseph Machlis says in his voluminous work, The Enjoyment of Music, 'Jazz, by a rough definition-of-thumb is an improvisational, Afro-American musical idiom.

It makes use of elements of rhythm, melody and harmony from Africa, and of melody and harmony from the European musical tradition. The influence of jazz, and of closely associated Afro-American idioms has been so pervasive,

that by now most of our popular music is in an Afro-American idiom, and elements of jazz have permeated a good deal of our concert music as well' (Joseph Machlis, The Enjoyment of Music, New York: W. W. Norton, 1963, p. 597).

"What is far more important is the historical revelation that demonic activity has been observed in connection with rituals where drums and rhythmic beats have been the catalyst.

That this possibility exists should prove a warning to the church that Satan can and will use anything in his power to turn humanity from the worship of a Holy God to himself in order that he might ultimately fulfill his evil purposes and receive the glory" (Leonard J. Seidel, Face the Music: Contemporary Church Music on Trial, 1988, p. 34-42).

The British rock session drummer, Rocki (Kwasi Dzidzornu)

"He [Hendrix] had gotten a chance to see Rocki and some other African musicians on the London scene. He found it a pleasure to play rhythms against their polyrhythms. They would totally get outside, into another kind of space that he had seldom been in before. ... Rocki's father was a voodoo priest and the chief drummer of a village in Ghana, West Africa. Rocki's real name was Kwasi Dzidzornu. One of the first things Rocki asked Jimi was where he got that voodoo rhythm from. When Jimi demurred, Rocki went on to explain in his halting English that many of the signature rhythms Jimi played on guitar were very often the same rhythms that his father played in voodoo ceremonies. The way Jimi danced to the rhythms of his playing reminded Rocki of the ceremonial dances to the rhythms his father played to Oxun, the god of thunder and lightning. The ceremony is called voodooshi. As a child in the village, Rocki would carve wooden representatives of the gods. They also represented his ancestors. These were the gods they worshiped. They would jam a lot in Jimi's house. One time they were jamming and Jimi stopped and asked Rocki point-blank, 'You communicate with God, do you?' Rocki said, 'Yes, I communicate with God'" (David Henderson, 'Scuse Me While I Kiss the Sky, pp. 250,251).

Little Richard, one of the fathers of rock music, has also testified of this connection:

"My true belief about Rock 'n' Roll--and there have been a lot of phrases attributed to me over the years--is this: I believe this kind of music is demonic. ... A lot of the beats in music today are taken from voodoo, from the voodoo drums. If you study music in rhythms, like I have, you'll see that is true ... I believe that kind of music is driving people from Christ. It is contagious" (Little Richard, quoted by Charles White, The Life and Times of Little Richard, p. 197).

"Ye cannot drink the cup of the Lord, and the cup of devils: ye cannot be partakers of the Lord's table, and of the table of devils. Do we provoke the Lord to jealousy? are we stronger http://www.mozdev.org/than he?" (1 Corinthians 10:21-22).  


Francess Trollope: Religious Revivalism
Francess Trollope: Women At Camp Meetings
Harriet Martineau: Women and Preachers

Some Other Pagan Connections to Instrumental Music

First Musical Heresy Musical Worship Teams
Musical Heresy 2: Hippolytus on Music and Soothsaying
Hippolytus Book V

Orphic Music
Orphic Connection to Romans 14
Rhea-Saturn-Zoe Connection

Classical Index
Musical Worship Index
Church Fathers
Home Page

 

The Books:

Eerdman: Eerdman's Handbook to Christianity in America

Dowley, Tim, Editor: EERDMAN'S HANDBOOK TO THE HISTORY OF CHRISTIANITY

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