Interesting article Billy.  It makes sense to me, and perhaps a reason I don’t 
gravitate to large auditorium-style contemporary churches.

Chris

 

From: BILROJ via Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
[mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Thursday, January 5, 2017 10:13 AM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: [RC] The virute of preaching to the choir

 


WWRN


Finding Our Voice: Why the Decline of Congregational Singing Matters–and How to 
Fix It


Bob Smietana ("Facts & Trends," December 30, 2016)

Too many songs. Not enough singers. That’s the problem facing many 
congregations these days, says Tony Payne, veteran worship leader and associate 
professor of music at Wheaton College.

Whether a church plays hymns or the latest worship songs, fewer people want to 
sing along, he says. “There are a lot of people standing there mute during 
worship.”

Congregational singing has long been a staple of Protestant churches, ever 
since the Reformation, when “A Mighty Fortress is Our God” was the latest hit 
worship song. And today churches have more songs to choose from than ever 
before.

LifeWay Worship, for example, has a catalog of 4,000 worship songs, while 
Christian Copyright Licensing International (CCLI) has 300,000—all available at 
the click of a button.

Yet Payne and other veteran worship leaders worry congregational singing is on 
the decline.

That’s bad news, says Rick Eubanks, pastor of worship and students at Oak Grove 
Baptist Church in Burleson, Texas. Congregational singing is an essential part 
of Christian worship, he says. When churches don’t sing together, something 
vital is missing.

“Gathering for worship is not about watching other people perform,” he says. 
“And it’s not about the music; it’s about allowing people to connect with God.”


How did we get here?


Mike Harland, director of LifeWay Worship, says a number of factors have 
contributed to the decline in congregational singing. Among them: the fact that 
there are fewer places for congregation members to sing in church, in large 
part due to the decline of choirs.

In 1998, 54 percent of American churches had a choir, according to the National 
Congregations Study. By 2012, fewer than half had a choir (45 percent).

Larger evangelical churches, in particular, have steered away from choirs—in 
part due to finances and in part because they’ve embraced contemporary styles 
of music. More than two-thirds (69 percent) had choirs in 1998. By 2012, just 
over a third (36 percent) had choirs.

That’s troubling, say the authors of the National Congregations Study, as it 
means fewer lay people have a role to play in worship.

“The decline of choirs is worth examining in its own right because singing in 
the choir is one of the most common ways, along with Bible studies, for people 
to become more deeply involved in a congregation, and it is the single most 
common way for lay people to participate actively in gathered worship,” 
according to the study’s author.

Losing a choir can hurt congregational singing, says Eubanks.

“A choir can be a permission-giving organization,” he says. “They give people 
permission to sing along.”

Another factor could be the consumerist mindset prevalent in many churches 
today.

“We’ve been taught in our churches and in the Christian marketing subculture 
around us to treat music as another product to consume—just as we have the rest 
of our faith,” writes worship pastor Mike Cosper in his book Rhythms of Grace.

“If something doesn’t meet our preferences, we’ve learned to discard it, join 
another church, and buy a different CD. We’ve learned to be spectators on 
Sundays—listening, enjoying, and critiquing—but the Bible unapologetically 
calls us to be participants.”

If church members don’t come to church with an attitude of worship, they aren’t 
likely to engage.

A 2008 LifeWay Research study found many churchgoers feel disconnected during 
worship. Almost half (47 percent) of the 2,5000 Protestant churchgoers in the 
survey said they were often “going through the motions” during the singing and 
prayer portions of worship services.

Harland wonders whether churches unintentionally discourage singing during 
services.

About half of white evangelicals attend a church that uses multimedia screens 
during services, according to the Public Religion Research Institute. Turning 
down the lights makes the screens easier to read. But Harland says it can send 
an unintended message.

“When you turn the lights off and you have theatrical lighting on stage, you’re 
suggesting to the congregation they are here to watch something rather than 
participate,” he says.

Another factor: singing isn’t always seen as a discipleship strategy.

Harland says pastors and music ministers aren’t always on the same page. The 
music ministry does its own thing at times, rather than being integrated into 
the mission of the church. And pastors in turn don’t always value the 
contributions of music ministries. Instead, music is sometimes seen as a 
warm-up to the sermon.

“I think some pastors stopped seeing music ministry as a disciple-making 
enterprise,” Harland says.


Too many songs, too fast


Then there’s the overwhelming number of worship songs available to churches.

In the past, churches had a limited number of songs they could sing. A hymnal 
might have about 700 songs, and maybe half of those would be used on a regular 
basis, says Harland. Now worship leaders can choose from an almost unlimited 
number of songs, and the most popular worship songs don’t last long.

“Musicians like that because they tend to get bored playing the same songs,” 
says Harland. “They like to play new music, and congregations get lost in the 
wake of a constant song shuffle.”

>From 1995-1999, the most popular CCLI songs remained fairly stable. In that 
>period, three of the top five songs stayed in the top five, as did seven of 
>the top 10, and 20 of the top 25.

By contrast, from 2011 to 2014 (the last year data is available), none of the 
top five songs remained the same, and only three of the top 10 songs and 13 of 
the top 25 remained.

Payne worries about the pace of modern worship music. Learning new songs takes 
time and repetition, he says. He wonders if worship leaders try to rush the 
process and end up giving up too soon.

“We’re constantly learning songs that have a limited shelf life,” says Payne. 
“In a few months they’ll be gone forever and we’re on to something else.”


No one wants to sound bad


There’s also the reality that most people don’t often sing in public. Church 
attendance has become less frequent, so people have fewer chances to sing in a 
group during a month. And corporate singing of any kind has steadily declined 
in American culture the last half century.

It’s not surprising people don’t sing when they’re in church, says Keith Pipes, 
a veteran worship pastor in Nashville. Singing in a group can feel awkward 
these days, he says.

“There are people who have never sung in an organized group before,” he says. 
“Then they show up to church and they are asked to sing with a couple hundred 
people. They may feel that is really odd.”

If people don’t feel comfortable with a hymn or worship song, they’re unlikely 
to sing, says Rita Ruby, a voice teacher and worship leader from Chicago.

Singing in public is hard enough, she says. Singing a song you don’t know well 
in public is worse.

“No one wants to sound horrible—especially with someone sitting right in front 
of you,” she says.

Moving an unengaged audience to full engagement is not an easy task. It may 
take some time, patience, and intentional training. There’s no magic formula or 
even one style of worship that will convince people to sing.

Fortunately, say Harland and other worship pastors, there are some steps church 
leaders can take to help congregations enjoy singing and participate.


Don’t sing a worship song like it’s on the CD


Finding the right key is essential, says Eubanks. Most worship leaders, he 
says, sing in a key that fits them, so they can lead out as strongly as 
possible. Unfortunately, people can’t always follow them in that key. Instead, 
he says, pick a key that has the widest appeal.

“A song will be in the key of B flat on the CD, but most people can’t sing that 
high,” he says. “If we can bring it down to the key of G, that will be OK for 
most vocal ranges.”


Take more time to teach a new song


Few people can hear a song or hymn once and be ready to sing along. So break 
down a song into smaller pieces, says Pipes. Take a few minutes to sing the 
chorus a couple of times until people become familiar with it. Then add the 
verses.

Repetition is also crucial. Don’t be afraid to sing a new song two or three 
weeks in a row until people learn it, Pipes says.


Tell church members what they will be singing ahead of time


Let church members know in advance what songs will be sung on Sunday and 
provide links to the music in a church newsletter, email, or post on the 
church’s website. Churchgoers can listen ahead of time and be ready to sing.


Let the congregation win


Harland tries to include a favorite hymn or worship song in every service. It’s 
usually a song the congregation knows well, one that is set in a comfortable 
key, and one the congregation loves to sing.

With enough wins, the congregation’s confidence will grow. Plus, people will 
learn to trust the worship leaders—and will be willing to follow them.

And don’t forget the power of a familiar hymn—one that’s lodged in the 
collective memory of a church. Those songs can help a congregation sing without 
having to worry about remembering the words or how the tune goes.


Engage the congregation


Want people to sing? Turn on the lights. Having the room even somewhat 
illuminated can help the congregation engage in worship.

Frank Byers, media director at the Bridge Church in Spring Hill, Tennessee, 
says church leaders can learn from secular musicians who intentionally take 
steps to connect with their audience.

One of those ways is to make eye contact with audience members. By contrast, he 
says, many worship leaders close their eyes during the service. That can shut 
them off from the congregation.

“If I don’t look at them, how can I welcome the congregation into worship?” he 
says.

He sees the role of worship leader as a facilitator—helping the congregation as 
a whole connect with God through singing and worship.

“As facilitator, my job is to keep the conversation going,” he says. “My job is 
to facilitate this conversation between God and His people.”

Body language also matters when leading music, says Payne. Worship leaders 
should guide the congregation through a song—giving them cues and encouraging 
them to sing.

“Something as simple as a smile on your face can give the congregation 
permission to sing,” he says.

“Good pastoral leadership will include wise decisions about songs and dynamics, 
ensuring that services create space for the congregation to hear themselves, to 
hear one another, and to join their voices in song,” writes Cosper.


Remember why you sing in the first place


Pastors, worship leaders, and congregations have to believe singing matters, or 
they won’t ever want to sing, says Harland. Churches sing, he says, because 
Scripture expects them to.

They also sing because it’s a powerful form of discipleship that marries truth 
and melody and imbeds that truth in people’s souls.

“Melody helps people to remember,” Harland says. “Singing is a powerful tool 
for developing followers of Christ.”

Pipes says singing also strengthens the community of believers.

“In Ephesians 5, Paul writes that we should speak to one another with psalms, 
hymns, and spiritual songs,” says Pipes.

“When we gather in corporate worship, we’re not only singing to God—we’re 
singing about God to one another. Through song, we can encourage and instruct 
our fellow brothers and sisters in Christ. Our worship through song also serves 
as a witness to non-Christians sitting in our pews.”

There’s a joy that comes from singing in church, says Payne. “It builds 
community and helps churches learn spiritual truths and live them out.”

Harland agrees: “The gathering of the body of Christ is a body that ought to be 
singing.”

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