The Relationship of Church Music and Culture

Throughout history, the church has related to the culture in which it exists in very different ways, choosing in some cases to oppose cultural developments and in others to adopt them to a greater or lesser extent. Such variety is certainly evident with regard to the contemporary church’s response to cultural developments in music. Understanding these relationships and the special demands of contemporary culture is essential in developing a thoughtful approach to church music.

To say there is a diversity in church music at the end of the twentieth century is an understatement. One can visit church services and find almost anything: Gregorian chant; a Mozart mass—either for the ordinary of the mass itself or in pieces as anthem material; a cappella singing and singing with every kind of instrumental accompaniment—from organs to percussion to electronic; instrumental and choral music from virtually every period—of the highest quality and the banalest; classic hymn tunes and new hymn tunes—some carefully crafted, some poorly crafted; Broadway hits and popular tunes; hymns meant to appeal to “outsiders,” performed by choirs and electronic media with little congregational participation; high decibels and low decibels; psalm settings in all styles—with and without congregational participation; African-American and Southern white spirituals; and a variety of Asian, African, Native American, and Hispanic materials. Any of this may be executed ably or abysmally, may follow the latest performance practice standards or ignore performance practice issues altogether, may engage congregations or bore them.

When one looks at this massive variety, the first impression is confusion. The tendency is to see no order whatsoever. That tendency is increased when one realizes that denominational boundaries do not necessarily provide help in sorting out musical matters. Two Baptist, Methodist, Presbyterian, Roman Catholic, or Lutheran churches may be as different musically from one another as they are like their sisters and brothers in another denomination. Careful listening and looking can usually reveal roots that differ, but, depending upon the congregation, the musical practice of two parishes in different denominations often can be deceptively similar.

Old alignments may be breaking down. We may be in a period of fundamental shifts, not unlike the time of the reformation. We certainly are fashioning an expanded musical syntax in worship, simply because families, communities, schools, and churches now have numerous ethnic, confessional, and musical memories in their midst—as well as increasingly perplexing personal and social challenges to face. This is very painful: the promise of rebirth is here, but so is the reality of death.

Though old alignments may be breaking down, enduring problems have not changed. Making sense of them is one way to sort out the confusion. H. Richard Niebuhr’s typological framework in Christ and Culture provides a helpful grid for sorting.

The Polar Types

In the United States, groups called evangelicals or fundamentalists—often identified with some Southern Baptist churches, the Assemblies of God, television evangelists, megachurches, and those who choose these as their models—appear to live at the polar extremes of Niebuhr’s types: in both the “Christ of culture” and “Christ against culture” folds. They hold these poles together not in paradox or schizophrenic confusion; they simply apply them to different areas.

In order to appeal to a popular mindset and thereby “bring people to Christ,” they use popular musical styles without hesitation or embarrassment. There is no concern here about whether or not the musical medium is superficial or whether (since “the medium is the message”) it communicates less than the fullness of the faith or something different from the faith. The point is to utilize what the people know and hear in their daily lives—for example, in popular music or in television or radio commercials. This is a Christ of culture position.

At points of moral teaching, however, these same groups tend to argue against any “liberal” drift. They are therefore likely to oppose anything that would appear to accommodate moral ambiguity or a pluralism that might challenge, say, prayer in schools. This is Christ against culture.

Holding these two poles together is no sleight of hand or devious trick. (There is hypocrisy in this camp, of course, as the recent debacle of television evangelists has indicated; but there is hypocrisy everywhere, and its presence or absence does not make or break a position.) It works because these people locate sin only at certain points in the culture. Musical syntax and associations do not fall at those points so long as the music is put into “saving” purposes. That means people in this group can use radio and television and all the modern electronic technical wizardry available, while at the same time attacking the media and even popular music for its godless slant. It means they can use the sounds of popular culture while attacking the immorality of the culture. It means they are not so concerned about an assembled and singing body of Christ as they are about decisions for Christ and the emotive power to propel these decisions—whether that happens in huge throngs carried along in a wash of electronic sound, or through watching such events in living rooms on television screens.

The Mediating Types

The three mediating types—traditionally identified with Roman Catholics as “Christ above culture,” Reformed bodies as “Christ the transformer of culture,” and Lutherans as “Christ and culture in paradox”—live in states of deeper complexity and ambiguity. They and their concerns require people gathered in one place in order to be nourished by Word and sacraments, and in different ways, they all require a gathered body that sings. They cannot, therefore, embrace radio and television the way the more “evangelical” groups can. They are also nervous about sound that submerges the people or substitutes amplified decibels for congregational singing. (It should be noted that similar concerns have been expressed in the past about organs or other instruments, so this is not a new issue. Now, however, the increase in the perception or actuality of loudness, coupled with the artificiality of speakers rather than acoustic instruments, divorces what is heard even farther from the natural human voice.)

1. Christ above culture. The Christ-above-culture folk use sounds from the popular culture in such a way that they lead beyond themselves to something like the purity of Gregorian chant and its polyphonic progeny. Sound itself is not even an end, however. It is a means of entry into the “salvific mystery,” or it points beyond itself to the silence of pure love. The congregation may therefore not sing vigorously (there is a theological reason why Catholics don’t sing), or they may participate in the music by listening to a choir. But they need to assemble to do this, and sound that might submerge them or substitute for them is only a passing cultural accommodation to get to what is of more value.

2. Christ the transformer of culture. Those who take this position may be understood at one level to identify with what is popular in music. Music for Calvin was like a funnel through which words “pierce the heart more strongly.” But Calvin emphasized the necessity of “weight” and “majesty” in church music, and he distinguished it carefully from the music one uses “to entertain” people “in their houses.” Here the issue is not that music leads beyond itself, but that the music transforms (actually the Holy Spirit transforms, by means of the Psalms dressed in the moderated melody). As Francis Williamson recently suggested to me, Psalm singing for Calvin was a sanctifying action. This makes the singing of the people extremely important, and the absence of instruments in Geneva and Reformed practice more generally was no accident. Those who stand in this tradition (though today they may have accepted instruments) still find anything that substitutes for the people’s song to be misguided, and their major concern is clearly the people’s transformation.

3. Christ and culture in paradox. For those who see Christ and culture in paradox, there is no possibility either of a wholesale embrace of the culture or a wholesale rejection of it, because it is fully sin-soaked and yet the object of God’s grace. Like Luther, they know about the possibility of perverting the gift of music with “erotic rantings,” and, also like Luther, they regard music as one of God’s greatest gifts, which is to be used with gratitude from any source—as long as well-crafted and durable creations result. Today, however, they do not have Luther’s luxury. Luther could carve out a setting of Psalm 46 or Psalm 130 from the hardy quarry of German folk song, but to attempt the same thing in our commercial culture from the idiom of a Coca-Cola or Honda jingle or a popular song is quite a different thing.

Additional Matters

1. Faceless public. It is true there is great diversity; any group may sound like any other group: Roman Catholics and Reformed resemble Methodists or Episcopalians, and so on. People in any group also look over their shoulders and seek to imitate the Christ-of-culture type because it seems to be able to appeal to our mass culture. The mediating types are currently under attack, therefore, because they are seen to be ineffective, at least as far as numbers are concerned; and in a capitalistic mass culture, numbers are the means by which we norm ourselves.

The Christ-of-culture appeal is also its liability. One of our current cultural tendencies is to treat people like a faceless public. Shopping malls bring many people together, but we gather there not in dialogue or contact. We gather there as unrelated pieces of jetsam or flotsam with no relation or responsibility to one another; our only value is that we are bearers of money which we may be convinced to part with.

To adopt the culture as a model means appealing to it with music that manipulates the hearer the way commercials manipulate us to part with our money. When the church does this it too treats people like a faceless public. Such a posture poses a serious problem for the mediating types because baptism and the Lord’s Supper imply a different notion of humanity. Baptism immerses us into Christ’s death and resurrection, and the drenching propels us into the world on behalf of others. The bread and wine of the supper are “for you.” These realities mean it is not possible to treat people like a faceless public; people are persons for whom Christ died, not to be manipulated by music or anything else, but to be treated with the utmost value and respect with which Christ treats us. So for the mediating types, the music we use must value the hearer and singer.

2. Violence and the sweet sound. Our society is violent. Each day we hear reports about someone else who has been violated, abused, or killed. My daughter recently told me she learned in her college psychology class that television gives us five acts of violence per hour at prime time, twenty acts of violence per hour during cartoons, and the average young person will see 13,000 television murders during elementary and junior high years. My point here is not to bash television, but to indicate how deep the tentacles of violence reach.

Society often uses sweet and sentimental sounds to insulate us from the violence. The church has in many ways, across the various types but especially where the culture provides the norm, responded similarly with music that is sweet. Sweet sounds, in conjunction with other sounds, certainly have their place. The problem is that too much that is sweet and confectionery insulates us from society’s violence and provides an escape that keeps us from trying to confront the horror. The result is a fairyland that in the final analysis avoids the gospel, its realism, and its ethical fervor. As Joseph Sittler once told me, “It is not hard like the Word of God.”

3. Reductionism. As one listens to discussions about music in worship, arguments are being made for minimalist participation by the people by using music that imitates popular styles. For those who embrace historic liturgical forms, this leads to arguing that the people’s part is essentially brief acclamations. For those who reject historical liturgical forms, this leads to arguing that the people’s part is essentially what George Shorney and others have called “teeny hymns.”

The argument here is buttressed by four presuppositions: the culture is making a shift from the intellectual to the emotive; this is a new thing in American religion; we live in a post-literate age, and popular and rock music are in the ear of the culture—not classical music.

The first three of these propositions are inaccurate. In pre-marital counseling and other contacts, I encounter more and more people who, though they have appreciated worship earlier in their lives, now stay away from it because they find the preaching and the music so shallow and superficial, even vapid. They indicate anything but a turning away from the life of the mind. As to the emotive being new, while American religion has had its thinkers like Jonathan Edwards and Reinhold Niebuhr, much of popular American religion has been essentially emotive, and the dialogue between the intellect and the emotions is hardly new: revivalism and both Great Awakenings generated it again and again. What we have today looks pretty much like a variation of what we have had in the past, varied, of course, by concerns about minority rights and patriarchy, interpretive modes that center in the “I,” and the pluralism of the global village—all of which enlarge the debate, but which do not make the emotive something new. Third, if we live in a post-literate age, where is the memory that marked pre-literate humanity, and why do we have so many books that are supposed to be things of the past? Even more important, is the point of this argument that the church ought to support the absence of literacy? It is surely true that television is a visual medium, that it has generated a visual memory, and that we no longer live in the Reformation’s love affair with moveable type or even Wesley’s world of words. But that is not the same as presuming a literary absence; it simply means the field of play is larger.

4. Popular and rock sounds. The fourth presupposition, that popular and rock sounds are in the ears of the culture, is probably accurate, but it begs the question. It assumes that, in Christ of culture fashion, worship can or should merely imitate the culture. That does not necessarily follow. In part, our worship must use the culture’s sounds because, in order to sing, we have to employ what is in our ear’s memory bank. But the memory bank of the church extends beyond the culture’s current fads. It has in it sounds that is primeval and archaic because the story they carry reaches before our period, back to God the Alpha, before the Creation, even before the morning stars sang together. And it searches out sounds that are perpetually new, pushing beyond our period, because they carry a story that reaches to God the Omega at the end of history.

These observations simply question the accuracy of the analysis that is currently taking place in many churches. In part, they take themes from H. Richard Niebuhr’s mediating types or from his Christ-against-culture type and apply them to music. Taken together, they suggest we are tilted toward neglecting the life of the mind. This is not to say that recent right-brain and left-brain discussions or broader categories like aural-verbal and symbolic-visual are not helpful, or that we should neglect the emotive, intuitive, and psychomotor parts of our being. It is to say that reductionism is dangerous and that a balance, not an imbalance, is necessary.

Concluding Observations

The mediating types have often assumed a stance of maintenance rather than mission. They have also sometimes succumbed to another Christ-of-culture type than the one described above, one which identifies a common spirituality or undefined love and mystery with a Christ principle. The current challenges to the mediating types are therefore healthy.

But that does not mean the enduring problems have gone away. We delude ourselves if we think they have. No matter what our configurations and context may look like at the moment, the issues remain and cannot be avoided. If we avoid them, we will be poorer, and future generations will have to confront the truncated creations we bequeath to them.

Our task as a church, it would seem, is to get some perspective on the whole of the gospel and allow our music to reflect that wholeness and authenticity on behalf of the world. Simply celebrating the diversity we are experiencing or allowing everything to be pulled to a Christ of culture position seems ill-advised.

As we expand our musical syntax, a better approach would be to take our various traditions seriously, not for the sake of tribalism or warfare, or because we want to replicate some past of our futile imagining, but precisely for responsible evangelicity and for the contributions we each have to make to the ecumenical mosaic. This is not to suggest that Methodists suddenly restrict themselves to Charles Wesley, Calvinists to metrical Psalters, Lutherans to chorales and pieces built on chorales, Roman Catholics to Gregorian chant and Palestrina, African-Americans to spirituals, Southern whites to shaped notes, Welsh to William Williams and Welsh tunes, and Episcopalians to Tallis and Tye—though we all would be well-advised to use our traditions and treat them with respect rather than beat up on them. The fundamental point, however, is not only to use them with a muscular humility, but to understand them and embody what lies behind them—for our own sake, for the sake of the whole body of Christ, and for the sake of the world.

Of course, we need to use what is contemporary as well, and we need to expand our own traditions for the sake of the wholeness of the message among the people we serve in specific places. But we need to do that in the context of who we are and what we each have to offer the whole. In spite of the fact that many people live in mixed marriages and have crossed denominational boundaries or that communities are a mix of multiple memories, we still live in churches with confessional histories and loyalties. To collapse everything into a mindless diversity as a norm or thoughtlessly to embrace a fleeting cultural moment is to treat ourselves, the people we serve, and the world beyond with a contempt that flies in the face of Christ’s example. The gospel speaks a different message. So should our music.

The Functions of Music in Worship

Music in worship serves many purposes and manifests itself in a variety of expressions. It is used both to praise God and to proclaim the Word; it both expresses prayer and relates the Gospel story. This article examines the various functions of music in worship and describes their implication for the church musician, who is the leader of the people’s song.

What is the role of the church musician? The question can be answered by looking first at the nature of the church’s song. Five headings suggest themselves.

A Song of Praise

The church’s song, especially for Protestants, is most obviously a song of praise. Many Psalms—like Psalm 98, “O sing to the Lord a new song”; Psalm 100, which calls us to “Come into [God’s] presence with singing”; or Psalm 150, where instruments and “everything that breathes” is all exhorted to praise the Lord—give expression to what is implicit throughout the Bible: God is to be praised, and music is one of the chief vehicles for expressing that praise.

Luther explains how this song of praise comes about. “God has made our hearts and spirits happy through His dear Son, whom He has delivered up that we might be redeemed from sin, death, and the devil. He who believes this sincerely and earnestly cannot help but be happy; he must cheerfully sing … ” (Foreword to the Geistlich Lieder of 1545, quoted in Walter E. Buszin, Luther on Music [St. Paul: North Central Publishing Company, 1958], 6). God acts with loving-kindness toward us, and we respond with a jubilant song of praise. That is an essential part of the church’s song from its most formal to its most informal expression.

Karl Barth, one of the most important twentieth-century Reformed theologians, virtually made the church’s song of praise a mark of the Christian community. He wrote, “The praise of God which constitutes the community and its assemblies seeks to bind and commit and therefore to be expressed, to well up and be sung in concert. The Christian community sings. It is not a choral society. Its singing is not a concert. But from inner, material necessity it sings.…”

What we can and must say quite confidently is that the community which does not sing is not the community. (Church Dogmatics, IV.3., second half, trans. G. W. Bromiley [Edinburgh: T. and T. Clark], 866-867)

A Song of Prayer

The song of the church is also a song of prayer. This perspective finds preeminent expression among Roman Catholics and those with more Catholic liturgical forms. The roots of temple and synagogue worship are a sung tradition, as are Christian liturgies of both the East and the West. Gregorian chant, which accompanied much of the Western liturgical tradition, is seen by some as prayer itself (Dom Joseph Gajard, The Solesmes Method, trans. R. Cecile Gabain [Collegeville: The Liturgical Press, 1960], vii). The Solesmes school of thought even calls Gregorian chant “a way of reaching up to God” and “a means of sanctification” (ibid., 85).

While many who live in the heritage of the sixteenth-century Reformers may wince at the Solesmes perspective because it can easily be seen as works’ righteousness, John Calvin himself considered church song in the section on prayer in his Institutes (ed. John T. McNeill [Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1960], III:X:31–32.) Luther and the Lutheran church retained the singing of collects and indeed the whole liturgy, and a large body of Protestant hymns are in fact prayers. Though the emphasis may differ, almost all traditions treat music as prayer in some way. That should not surprise us any more than using music as praise should surprise us. Human beings both laugh and weep. Laughter is the incipient form of sung praise, as weeping is the incipient form of sung prayer (cf. Joseph Gelineau, Voices and Instruments in Christian Worship [Collegeville, Minn.: The Liturgical Press, 1964], 15-19). The two very often run into one another and cross (see Patrick D. Millar, Jr., Interpreting the Psalms [Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1986], 64-78).

A Song of Proclamation

The church’s song is also a song of proclamation. The author of Ephesians expressed this by saying, “be filled with the Spirit, addressing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs” (Eph. 5:18–19).

Here it is clear that music is a means by which the words and word of the gospel are proclaimed. Luther referred to the parallel verse in Colossians (3:16) and wrote, “St. Paul … in his Epistle to the Colossians … insists that Christians appear before God with psalms and spiritual songs which emanate from the heart, in order that through these the Word of God and Christian doctrine may be preached, taught, and put into practice” (Preface to the Geistliche Gesangbuchlein of 1524, quoted in Buszin, Luther on Music, 10).

There is often an element of praise in thoughts of this sort. One can easily move from music as proclamation to music as praise without realizing it. Such a leap removes the distinction between these two motifs and tends to collapse one into the other. Usually, since praise is so obvious, it takes precedence.

The use of music to proclaim the word, however, needs to be kept separate, even though the connections to praise can be close. This is true not only for theological reasons but to do justice to the church’s musical heritage. Much of that heritage is exegetical or proclamatory: music helps to proclaim, to interpret, to break open the Word of God. That is in part what happens when the congregation sings. That is why, from ancient times, biblical lessons have been sung or chanted. Motets by Schütz and chorale preludes, cantatas, and passions by Bach are more complex examples of the same intent. Without a kerygmatic (proclamatory) understanding of these pieces, they are incomprehensible (see Robin A. Leaver “The Liturgical Place and Homiletic Purpose of Bach’s Cantatas,” Worship 59:3 (May 1985): 194–202 and J. S. Bach as Preacher: His Passions and Music in Worship [St. Louis, Concordia Publishing House, 1984]).

The Story

Praise, prayer, and proclamation probably move, for many, from the most to the least obvious definitions of church music. A still less obvious aspect of the church’s song is, upon reflection, both the most obvious and the most profound: the church’s song is story.

When the people of God recount the history of God’s mighty acts, they invariably sing. The morning stars “sang together” at creation on behalf of the people (Job 38:7). After their deliverance from Egypt, Moses and the people sang a song (Ex. 25:1–8). The reason for the psalmist’s songs of praise is that God “has done marvelous things” (Ps. 98:1). New Testament canticles like the Magnificat (Luke 1:47–55) and the Benedictus (Luke 1:68–79) are songs that recount God’s mighty deeds. The songs of Revelation tell the story of God’s mighty acts in an eschatological frame of reference. From the beginning of the biblical saga to its end, from one end of history to the other, the story is a song to be sung.

The same can be said of the church’s hymnody. If you were to lay out the hymns of almost any mainstream hymnal in a sequential fashion, you would find the entire story of God’s mighty acts there—from creation through Old Testament history and incarnation, to the church in the world “between the times,” to last things. Individual hymns often tell the story by themselves. “Oh, Love, How Deep, How Broad, How High” is a good example. Music is the vehicle by which the community remembers and celebrates what God has done—which leads me to three points about the church’s song as story.

First, it is sequentially and logically easy to lay out the story of the Bible from creation to consummation as I have just done in the last two paragraphs. In fact, the story is more sophisticated than that, and sorting it out is more complicated. Like our own stories and those of the psalmist, it often begins in the midst of things, with personal laments and personal songs of thanksgiving and with people who emerge on the stage of history with their own struggles and visions. For the Christian, the event of Jesus stands at the center of the story and as its key. It radically alters and fulfills all personal laments, thanksgivings, struggles, and visions, and gradually gives meaning to past and present.

Second, music has a peculiar communal and mnemonic character. A group who sings together becomes one and remembers its story, and therefore who it is, in a particularly potent way. Hitler knew this and exploited the demonic potential of that reality. Whenever the church loses its song, a vacuum is created that the Hitlers among us will invariably fill.

Third, music spins itself out through time just like the story which the song recounts, and just like the worship where the song is sung. As the Eastern Orthodox church knows so well, music “is by nature an event. It is dynamic rather than fixed.” Like the story and like worship and “more than any other art … it carries the possibility of change, of transformation” (Archbishop John of Chicago, et al., Sacred Music: Its Nature and Function [Chicago: The Department of Liturgical Music, Orthodox Church in America, 1977], 2). This means it is peculiarly suited not only to tell the story but to accompany worship as well.

A Gift of God

Finally, the church’s song, like music itself, is a gift of God. Music is a joy and delight with which God graces creation. We do not bargain for it. We do not deserve it. It is simply freely given, there for the hearing, a joyous overflow of creation’s goodness.

This gift can be viewed in many ways. One is the way Luther did it. Oskar Söhngen points out that Luther was forever amazed that music, this “unique gift of God’s creation,” comes from “the sphere of miraculous audible things,” just like the word of God (“Fundamental Considerations for a Theology of Music” in The Musical Heritage of the Church, vol. 6 [St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1962], 15.) This perceptive insight points to music as a gift and to the close relationship between music and words: both are audible, words, amazingly, can be sung, and it is all gift.

A more Catholic approach, like Joseph Gelineau’s, is to call music “God’s daughter,” given to humanity to signify the love of Christ (Voices, 27). Viewed this way, music almost takes on the character of a sacramental sign that points beyond itself to pure love. The Eastern Orthodox church often takes a similar view: that music can “reflect the harmony of heaven” and “can provide us with a foretaste of the splendor of the Age to come” (Archbishop John, Sacred Music, p. 2, 3).

These views always bring with them music’s power to uplift, transform, refresh, and recreate the heart and soul. John Calvin asserts this when he calls music a “gift of God deputed” for “recreating man and giving him pleasure” (Charles Garside, Jr. “Calvin’s Preface to the Psalter: A Re-Appraisal,” The Musical Quarterly 37 [October 1951]: 570). While Ulrich Zwingli in the sixteenth century related the refreshment of music to secular play, thereby allowing music no relevance at all to worship (Charles Garside, Jr., Zwingli and the Arts [New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1966]), even liberal Protestantism today may call music “revelatory.” Robert Shaw, for instance, when he was installed as minister of music of the First Unitarian Church of Cleveland, Ohio, quoted J. W. N. Sullivan and argued that “a work of art may indeed be a ‘revelation’ ” (Music and Worship in the Liberal Church, typescript, September 25, 1960, 8). Many Christians would disagree with what Shaw means by revelation and worship, but his use of the term revelation shows how all worshiping traditions grapple with the gift of music and with its power.

The Cantor’s Task

A host of theological issues attend these matters. The intent here is not to explain them in great detail. The point is that defining the church’s song under the headings of praise, prayer, proclamation, story, and gift offers clues to the dimensions of the cantor’s task.

Leading the People’s Praise. The cantor is the leader of the people’s praise. The explosive response to God’s grace, in order to be expressed, needs form and shape. Someone has to take responsibility for that forming and shaping, and this is the cantor’s role. He or she has to sense the capacities and resources of a particular congregation, then write or choose music that expresses the praise of God with those capacities and resources. Once the music is composed and chosen, the cantor must then lead the people in actually singing the song of praise.

The song of praise is preeminently vocal. Words are the means by which our praise is articulated, and music is the means by which the articulation is carried aloft so that song gives wings to the words. But not only humanity sings this song of praise. The whole creation is called to join in. Instruments are therefore called to play their part. That part is not only to accompany the voices but to sound alone where fitting and appropriate. The cantor is called to coordinate this and even to play, as talents warrant so that instrumental music relates to the people’s song of praise. Neither instrumental music nor any other music ought to be an afterthought or an unrelated addendum.

Leading the People’s Prayer. The cantor aids the presiding or assisting minister in leading the people’s prayer. The presiding and assisting ministers bear the primary responsibility for the proper prayers and petitions of a particular service, and the pastor bears the ultimate responsibility for the prayer life of a people. The cantor assists in this responsibility in the following ways:

First, the cantor provides the leadership for the people’s litanic responses, spoken and sung. Corporate responses to a pastor’s bids, even when spoken, are incipiently musical—elated forms of speech. The cantor through his or her direct leadership or through training of the choir shapes this response and thereby helps to shape the prayer life of the people.

Second, since some hymns are themselves prayers, the cantor sometimes leads the people in prayer by leading hymns.

Third, the choir also sings some texts that are prayers. In this case, the cantor leads a group who prays on behalf of the people just as the pastor does. This is obviously not a performance before the people; it is rather an act of intercession on the people’s behalf.

Proclaiming the Word. The cantor aids the readers in the proclamatory work of reading lessons. This may on some occasions involve the use of more or less complex choral or solo settings of lessons in place of readings. That is rare for most of us. It should not be normative, although it deserves more consideration than we normally accord it. Where lessons are sung by a lector, the cantor should obviously aid those who do the singing. For most of us, lessons are read. There too the musician has a role we rarely think about, namely, helping readers read clearly. Musicians understand phrasing and the ebb and flow of a line of words. Choral musicians understand diction and enunciation. These are necessities in good reading, which is close to a lost art in many churches and in the culture at large. Musicians can help repair the breach so that lessons can be understood.

The preacher obviously has the primary proclamatory task of publishing the good news of God’s grace and love among us. By careful application to the biblical word and the daily newspaper, the preacher speaks his or her poor human words in the hope that they will be heard as the word of God itself so that the love of God in Christ will be known among us.

The cantor cannot and should not attempt to preach in the same way as the preacher because, first, the composing of text and music and the preparation of music by musicians preclude the preacher’s relevance to the moment, and, second, the preacher can examine detailed relationships in spoken prose in a way that is not possible for the musician.

On the other hand, a polyphonic piece of music or the simultaneous juxtaposition of two texts gives the musician an opportunity to proclaim relationships in a way that is not open to the preacher, who must communicate in a stream of monologue. And, while the relevance of the moment is not the responsibility of music, which is of necessity more prepared and formal, music also has the capacity for breaking open a text in a way spoken words cannot do. In singing a hymn or hearing a Schütz motet or a Bach cantata, many Christians have shared William Cowper’s experience:

Sometimes a light surprises
The Christian while he sings;
It is the Lord who rises
With healing in his wings.

Telling the Story

The cantor helps the people sing the whole story and thereby tells the story. The preacher also tells the story, of course, as does the teacher. Some understandings of preaching would even argue that it is at heart storytelling. There is a sense in which that is true: proclaiming the good news is telling the story of God’s love. But the preacher is always compelled to apply the story to us at this moment so that the searing edge of God’s love can burn its way into our hearts. This requires the context of the whole story, and preaching can only give that context over time or in an ancillary way. The cantor is responsible for the context and the fullness of the story.

This means that the cantor tells the story by seeing to it that the whole story is sung. The lessons, prayers, and sermons for a given service are likely to have a thematic focus. The hymnody, psalmody, and anthems ought to relate to that focus also, but in addition, they flesh out the rest of the story and remind us of other parts of the plot. Over the course of a year, the whole story should certainly have been sung, from Creation to Last Things. This means that doing the same six or ten hymns over and over does not serve the people well, because it keeps them from singing the whole story and omits much of the context the preacher needs for his or her words.

The Steward of God’s Gift

The cantor is the steward of God’s gracious gift of music. Since this gift is so powerful, the steward receives tremendous power as the deputy. That power can easily be misused for selfish ends of ego gratification and personal power. The cantor is called, therefore, to the paradox of using the power which is granted, but of using it with restraint on behalf of God in Christ from whom all blessings—including this one—flow.

That paradox brings with it another. The cantor knows that the preacher or lector can stumble over a word here or there, and still the message will have its impact. To stumble over a note is much more dangerous; the message’s impact will dissipate much more quickly when there is musical error. So the cantor is constantly constrained to attempt excellence and perfection that are never humanly possible. That drives the church musician to rehearse and practice every detail until it is right, for without practice there is the certainty that the necessary perfection and excellence will never be achieved. The paradox is that even with disciplined rehearsing, there is no guarantee. The musician who is at all sensitive knows that when she or he finally gets it right, that too is a gift for which the only appropriate response is thanksgiving.