Have hymnals become dinosaurs?

In an essay adapted from the Yale Institute of Sacred Music’s Kavanagh Lecture on October 24 2013, entitled “Have Hymnals Become Dinosaurs?: The Costs of Extinction,” Karen B. Westerfield Tucker explores the costs and promises of printed hymnals:

Three scenarios — all of them real — can set the stage to address the question of the “extinction” of hymnals:

A congregation oversubscribes the cost of buying new denominational

songbooks that contain a mixture of old hymns and recently-composed

songs. The congregation’s minister approaches a pastoral colleague

assigned to a smaller, struggling congregation, and offers her the

surplus money for a similar purchase. “No, thank you,” she says. “We

no longer use books since the lyrics are projected on the screen along

with the other texts for worship. Although we are small, this is a

forward-looking community. We are not interested in print books that

are a relic of the past. Besides, we don’t want to be encumbered with

books to hold because we prefer to be free to lift our hands or clap

as we sing.”

In speaking about resources for worship, the pastor acknowledges that

he never uses the denomination’s hymnbook. “I like having the freedom

to choose music from any source. Of course, we have our CCLI

[Christian Copyright Licensing International] and onelicense.net

licenses. I find songs that best fit the theme of the day and that can

get the congregation really ‘in’ to their worship. Hymnals are far too

restrictive.”

A student in my introductory worship course, upon learning that the

day’s session will focus on music in worship, comments in class: “I

hope you aren’t going to talk about hymns and hymnals. They really are

irrelevant to today’s worship. The music is old fashioned and the

words are often boring. I’d like for us to talk about ‘contemporary’

music and music that is produced individually or collaboratively by

people in an emerging-style congregation. That really would be more

helpful for us as future pastors.” Although the Masters of Sacred

Music students in the room cringe at that remark, they are a minority

compared to the heads nodding in affirmation of the student’s request.

The full article from the Yale Institute for Sacred Music Review is available here.

Past Posts
Categories