Forum Home Forum Home > Topics not related to music > General discussions
  New Posts New Posts RSS Feed - Christian prog vs secular prog
  FAQ FAQ  Forum Search   Events   Register Register  Login Login

Topic ClosedChristian prog vs secular prog

 Post Reply Post Reply Page  <1 1011121314 17>
Author
Message
artguyken View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: November 05 2006
Location: USA
Status: Offline
Points: 187
Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2008 at 12:37
Originally posted by Utah Man Utah Man wrote:

Originally posted by profanatio profanatio wrote:

I happen to be a christian

What "flavor" of ?
Originally posted by profanatio profanatio wrote:

I despise mainstream christian music.

So do I... Angry
it all sounds the same.  "Contemporary Christian Music" artists have no creative skills -

Oddly enough the very first verse in the bible teaches the doctrine of creativity (if one could call it that ). 

Most CCM artists just copy / paste all the sounds of secular pop songs then add anemic religious lyrics.  + Most are poor musicians to begin with.

Originally posted by profanatio profanatio wrote:


there are actually christian prog bands.

Personal opinion...They aren't authentic Christians...and it's not authentic prog.
Originally posted by profanatio profanatio wrote:


but I do know that no matter how much they glorify God lyrically, if I dont like the music I wont listen to it.

Again...if all they're doing is mimicking secular material then dumping in thoughtless "Christian lyrics"...then it is NOT any honor to God at all.

How does shallowness, "copy-catting", and poor musicianship bring any honor whatsoever to God (assuming that one is attempting to do so in the first place )?
.


Man, harsh words.

I would have to disagree with your blanket generalizations and seemingly prejudicial remarks. Just as there are mediocre musicians in the secular market, there are mediocre musicians in the Christian market. I don't disagree with you there. However, there are also musicians of excellence to be found in both places.

As to your accusation of "thoughtless Christian lyrics" being dumped into copy-catted music, you've obviously not spent time with the better artists, though certainly this accusation of copycatism could be thrown at any musical genre.

How many bands are truly original? Even within the world of prog the innovators are few, the implementers are many. Does this mean they are all copycats? If so, you'd better throw out about 90% of your music collection.



Back to Top
Ivan_Melgar_M View Drop Down
Special Collaborator
Special Collaborator

Honorary Collaborator

Joined: April 27 2004
Location: Peru
Status: Offline
Points: 19535
Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2008 at 13:31
Originally posted by King Crimson776 King Crimson776 wrote:

The concepts for those albums are religious but there is more to them than that, and it's nothing weird like SS, so I can just listen to the music and the lyrics are actually pretty good too. No brainwashing going on, you stooges. People hum lyrics because they are catchy, they hum complete nonsense all the time. Neal's lyrics are catchy, regardless of what they're about, so why does it have to be brainwash because he's talking about Christianity?
 
That's exactly how brainwaqshing works, you install a concept in the lyrics, people repeat it probably without even caring what they say, but the sub conscious revceives and process the medssage.
 
That's how commercials work, a catchy song with lyrics praising their product, people repeat the jingle and t the end of the day some of them will buy the product.
 
Quote After the Korean War the term "brainwashing" came to apply to other methods of coercive persuasion and even to the effective use of ordinary propaganda and indoctrination. Formal discourses of the Chinese Communist Party came to prefer the more clinical-sounding term sī xǐang gǎi zŕo 思想改造 ("thought reform"). Metaphorical uses of "brainwashing" extended as far as the memes of fashion-following
 
So yes, including religious messages into popular music is a form of brainwashing, even worst when you attack other religions.
 
If this wasn't truth..Why do fundamentalist Christians burned Iron Maiden albums and went to their concerts carrying 8 feet crosses?
 
Why do Christian legislators want to ban Satanic music if it's such a nonsense?
 
Sp they accept it's a form of brainwashing and they mention the term repeatedly.....But it's ok if they use it to attack another religion?
 
Iván
            
Back to Top
Utah Man View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: November 14 2007
Location: Utah
Status: Offline
Points: 1014
Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2008 at 13:48
Originally posted by artguyken artguyken wrote:

Originally posted by Utah Man Utah Man wrote:

Originally posted by profanatio profanatio wrote:

I happen to be a christian

What "flavor" of ?
Originally posted by profanatio profanatio wrote:

I despise mainstream christian music.

So do I... Angry
it all sounds the same.  "Contemporary Christian Music" artists have no creative skills -

Oddly enough the very first verse in the bible teaches the doctrine of creativity (if one could call it that ). 

Most CCM artists just copy / paste all the sounds of secular pop songs then add anemic religious lyrics.  + Most are poor musicians to begin with.

Originally posted by profanatio profanatio wrote:


there are actually christian prog bands.

Personal opinion...They aren't authentic Christians...and it's not authentic prog.
Originally posted by profanatio profanatio wrote:


but I do know that no matter how much they glorify God lyrically, if I dont like the music I wont listen to it.

Again...if all they're doing is mimicking secular material then dumping in thoughtless "Christian lyrics"...then it is NOT any honor to God at all.

How does shallowness, "copy-catting", and poor musicianship bring any honor whatsoever to God (assuming that one is attempting to do so in the first place )?
.


Man, harsh words.


Sě, assolutamente Exclamation

.
Back to Top
kiwi View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: January 05 2008
Location: New Zealand
Status: Offline
Points: 127
Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2008 at 13:50
Does any one remember the comic who said that if you play one of Black Sabbath's songs backwards the lyrics say "Pray with your family. Go to church on Sundays. Smile 

We, verily, have made music as a ladder for your souls, a means whereby they may be lifted up unto the realm on high.. (Baha'u'llah)


music
Back to Top
artguyken View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: November 05 2006
Location: USA
Status: Offline
Points: 187
Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2008 at 14:40
Originally posted by kiwi kiwi wrote:

Does any one remember the comic who said that if you play one of Black Sabbath's songs backwards the lyrics say "Pray with your family. Go to church on Sundays. Smile 


I don't, but that's funny. I remember spinning ELO's "Fire on High" LP backwards to hear what subversive thing they said at the beginning of that piece. They said: "The music is reversible, but time is not. Turn back! Turn back! Turn back!"
Back to Top
artguyken View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: November 05 2006
Location: USA
Status: Offline
Points: 187
Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2008 at 14:42
Originally posted by kiwi kiwi wrote:

Does any one remember the comic who said that if you play one of Black Sabbath's songs backwards the lyrics say "Pray with your family. Go to church on Sundays. Smile 


I don't, but that's funny. I remember spinning ELO's "Fire on High" LP backwards to hear what subversive thing they said at the beginning of that piece. They said: "The music is reversible, but time is not. Turn back! Turn back! Turn back!"
Back to Top
kiwi View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: January 05 2008
Location: New Zealand
Status: Offline
Points: 127
Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2008 at 14:56
After following the Cristian vs Secular thread my enduring thought is that there is no philosophical vacuum. An athiest has faith that there is no God. I haven't been able to express it clearly. Ivan talks about brainwashing, but look at how our society privileges consumerism. Its not just the marketing industry - and lets face it most of the new rich - like Google are essentially advertisers. Much of popular culture deifies a Godless  materialism. Look at the pressure there is on children to become mindless consumers. "The corrosion of ungodliness is eating into the vitals of human society".

Aristotle talks about the three elements of persuasion, logos, pathos and ethos (logic, emotion and ethic (mana)). Much of our communication is persuasion and I see it as a positive. I can watch a Gillette 3M add that suggests that if I use their product I will be like a test pilot or whatever. More fool me if I get sucked in.

A lot of TV drama puts out a message that you have to be young and beautiful and self-absorbed.

I am not a Christians but most Christians I know are very nice people and are concerned about their fellow man. If they want to take action on this and attempt to persuade - good on them. It their communication is congruent and if they can present their message with logic, emotion and ethic and help people to get closer to their Creator that's great. On the other hand if they get involved in internal Christian politics or seek to discredit others their credibility will be rapidly eroded.

We, verily, have made music as a ladder for your souls, a means whereby they may be lifted up unto the realm on high.. (Baha'u'llah)


music
Back to Top
kiwi View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: January 05 2008
Location: New Zealand
Status: Offline
Points: 127
Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2008 at 15:06
Originally posted by artguyken artguyken wrote:

Originally posted by kiwi kiwi wrote:

Does any one remember the comic who said that if you play one of Black Sabbath's songs backwards the lyrics say "Pray with your family. Go to church on Sundays. Smile 


I don't, but that's funny. I remember spinning ELO's "Fire on High" LP backwards to hear what subversive thing they said at the beginning of that piece. They said: "The music is reversible, but time is not. Turn back! Turn back! Turn back!"


I have never played music backwards - couldn''t figure out how to. Its probably harder with a CD Smile. A message is probably more influential if you can understand it?

We, verily, have made music as a ladder for your souls, a means whereby they may be lifted up unto the realm on high.. (Baha'u'llah)


music
Back to Top
Garion81 View Drop Down
Special Collaborator
Special Collaborator

Honorary Collaborator

Joined: May 22 2004
Location: So Cal, USA
Status: Offline
Points: 4338
Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2008 at 15:26
Originally posted by artguyken artguyken wrote:

Originally posted by kiwi kiwi wrote:

Does any one remember the comic who said that if you play one of Black Sabbath's songs backwards the lyrics say "Pray with your family. Go to church on Sundays. Smile 


I don't, but that's funny. I remember spinning Elmo's "Fire on High" LP backwards to hear what subversive thing they said at the beginning of that piece. They said: "The music is reversible, but time is not. Turn back! Turn back! Turn back!"
 
Actually I think this one was a joke by ELO. I remember some guy who was really into this "back masking" talking about this song saying that this proves bands do this on purpose.  I always thought it meant  Why are you wasting your time doing this. Get over it and get on with your life.  LOL 


"What are you going to do when that damn thing rusts?"
Back to Top
artguyken View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: November 05 2006
Location: USA
Status: Offline
Points: 187
Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2008 at 16:53
Originally posted by Garion81 Garion81 wrote:

Originally posted by artguyken artguyken wrote:

Originally posted by kiwi kiwi wrote:

Does any one remember the comic who said that if you play one of Black Sabbath's songs backwards the lyrics say "Pray with your family. Go to church on Sundays. Smile 


I don't, but that's funny. I remember spinning Elmo's "Fire on High" LP backwards to hear what subversive thing they said at the beginning of that piece. They said: "The music is reversible, but time is not. Turn back! Turn back! Turn back!"
 
Actually I think this one was a joke by ELO. I remember some guy who was really into this "back masking" talking about this song saying that this proves bands do this on purpose.  I always thought it meant  Why are you wasting your time doing this. Get over it and get on with your life.  LOL 


Well, many people were brainwashed by this method and started talking backwards!
Back to Top
Trademark View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: November 21 2006
Location: oHIo
Status: Offline
Points: 1009
Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2008 at 17:18
"this is what Mormons believe...if you're not a member of the LDS church, you're not going to the highest heaven. (Actually they believe in three levels of heaven, non-Mormons will end up in one of the lower spiritual Echelons)"

The Mormons are a Pseudo-Christian cult (not unlike the Branch Davidians and the followers at Jonestown) and have no standing whatever in any discussion about Christianity.

Now then, as to Christian Prog/ Rock/ or any other type of Christian music's right to exist:
The Great Commission( Matthew 28:16-20) states:  Then the eleven disciples went to Galilee, to the mountain where Jesus had told them to go. When they saw him, they worshiped him; but some doubted. Then Jesus came to them and said, "All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age."

This is not just a suggestion from a nice guy.  It is a command from the Lord Jesus Christ to his disciples and by proxy to all of his followers forever.  What he does not tell us is exactly HOW we should go about it; but nowhere in scripture does it say "Do not use music".  So it follows that if you are both a musician and a believer in Christ that all your musical efforts should then serve the purpose of The Great Commission (Bach is a prime example); and this is what I see in Neal's recent work.  Every thing he does is geared (as Scripture commands it to be) towards evangelism, but then you seem to feel that evangelism and brainwashing are synonyms.  Strange position for a practicing Christian to take.

Anyone who has felt the touch of the Holy Spirit can't help but want everyone else to know the good news.  It's not brainwashing its' sharing in the hope that others will "taste and see".  Not really unlike sharing a great recipe with a friend.  If I sent you my favorite recipe for Ceviche, or worse yet, wrote about it in a song, I doubt you'd be coming at me with the brainwashing accusation, even if I said other versions of Ceviche were prepared incorrectly.

The way I see your issues here Ivan, is that you don't like being told what is right and what is wrong.  You want to research and reason things out and come to your own conclusions (correct me if this is wrong) . This I see from  nearly two years of reading your posts and, on occasion, debating them passionately with you). This seems funny coming from someone who has placed himself under the authority of a Pope (in effect leaving the thinking to someone else).  But if I remember correctly from other threads you do not actually agree with the Pope on some issues (abortion, if I remember right), and actually advocated strongly for an "anti-Catholic"  position on the issue. 

In doing this do you not defy the Pope?  Are you not contesting his infallibility by disagreeing with him?  I don't know Catholic doctrine well enough to understand how this might work.  For that matter how do you justify change in Papal doctrine over time?  If, to make an extreme example, the next Pope removes the ban on Birth control or abortion, how can both he and the previous Popes who upheld those policies ALL be infallible.  Do we just wink and say God changed his mind?

Please understand that I am not trying to make a personal attack on you Ivan.  It just seems to me that there are inconsistencies in your logic where some of these issues are concerned and I would like to understand where you are coming from as someone whom I respect.  Your vehemence towards Sola Scriptura seems really odd to me.  Yes,  John Paul II asked forgiveness for those sins of the past and, as a Christian, I certainly grant that forgiveness.  The Protestant Churches have made many similar statements of past wrong-doing over the years (being fragmented as we are, there is no one blanket statement to cover all churches at all times).  Do you see all Protestant denominations as being engaged in an ongoing attack on the Catholic Church?  Is that what you see Neal Morse doing?  I don't.

Luther never wanted to be "Lutheran".  He never wanted to leave the Catholic Church, but he could not accept certain practices that the Church was sanctioning.  His excommunication was probably a terrifying experience for him.  He likely believed that he was absolutely, positively Hell-bound as a result, and still he stood for what he believed and faced those dire consequences.  His denounciation of the specific doctrines in the 95 Theses (anti- semitism was not one of them, it was a point upon which he and the Church agreed at the time)  and his subsequent persecution by the Church is what Sola Scriptura is all about.  The fact that the Church has admitted to wrong-doing in some of these areas should not mean that they cannot be talked about anymore.  Is that what you are saying; that because forgiveness was asked for and given  350 years after the fact that the story should never again be told?  If that is the case we disagree.

Again, this is not meant as an attack on you personally or on Catholics in general, and I am absolutely not trying to offend you.  These are questions that may address what  seems to be flawed logic and an unusual position for a Christian man.


Edited by Trademark - February 14 2008 at 17:21
Back to Top
Utah Man View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: November 14 2007
Location: Utah
Status: Offline
Points: 1014
Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2008 at 18:12
Originally posted by Trademark Trademark wrote:

The Mormons are a Pseudo-Christian cult (not unlike the Branch Davidians and the followers at Jonestown) and have no standing whatever in any discussion about Christianity.

Right... Thumbs%20Up
but so-called Evangelical believers here in Utah are downplaying this fact in order to establish "dialog" with the LDS.

Originally posted by Trademark Trademark wrote:


The Great Commission...What he does not tell us is exactly HOW we should go about it;

Wrong...Thumbs%20Down
Yes He DOES. Book of Acts thru Book of Revelation.

Originally posted by Trademark Trademark wrote:


The Great Commission...
So it follows that if you are both a musician and a believer in Christ that all your musical efforts should then serve the purpose of The Great Commission (Bach is a prime example); and this is what I see in Neal's recent work.  Every thing he does is geared (as Scripture commands it to be) towards evangelism, but then


Wrong...Thumbs%20Down
1. The "Great Commission" is NOT a Christian's prime directive.  Most contemporary Evangelicals think it is (like you).  Yes...It is a directive...but not the first & most important directive.

2. It IS possible -
and perfectly legitimate -  for a Christian to simply CREATE music as an ART FORM, as Bach did.  In fact he did not turn every piece of music he wrote into an evangelistic crusade. 

On a personal note: This took many, many years for me to realize. I once thought as you did, that everything we do MUST CATEGORICALLY be to "fulfill the Great Commission."  Wrong...
Once you get a hold of what I'm attempting to say here...it will be liberating & re-freshing to your soul AND those around you...AND the great commission will be fulfilled as well...

However...I get the feeling that these words might possibly fall on a deaf keyboard...
Depends on how teachable you are...Wink



.







Edited by Utah Man - February 14 2008 at 18:52
Back to Top
Jorvik View Drop Down
Forum Groupie
Forum Groupie


Joined: December 21 2007
Location: The Danelaw
Status: Offline
Points: 81
Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2008 at 18:40
Originally posted by kiwi kiwi wrote:

An athiest has faith that there is no God.

Angry I wish people would stop regurgitating this falsehood: atheism is not a belief that there is no god or gods. It is a lack of belief due to there being no evidence.

As the quote goes, "to say that atheism is a belief is like calling bald a hair colour".

I'm also getting increasingly fed up of the constant attacks on capitalism and materialism -- this isn't directed at PA in particular, it seems to be going on in all media of late Angry. ETA: If there was no capitalism or materialism we probably wouldn't have the music technology that we have today (especially the information and distribution of underground music thanks to the internet), nor the music that he have (and love), either.


Edited by Jorvik - February 14 2008 at 18:47
I ljuset frĺn min lykta
ser jag skuggan utav sorg
drömmar som har slocknat
ifrĺn ett liv som haft sin tid          
Back to Top
EnglishAssassin View Drop Down
Forum Groupie
Forum Groupie
Avatar

Joined: December 24 2007
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 83
Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2008 at 18:59
Originally posted by Jorvik Jorvik wrote:

Originally posted by kiwi kiwi wrote:

An athiest has faith that there is no God.

Angry I wish people would stop regurgitating this falsehood: atheism is not a belief that there is no god or gods. It is a lack of belief due to there being no evidence.

Thank you.  I'm glad someone else had the nerve to make that point, so I didn't have to.


Edited by EnglishAssassin - February 14 2008 at 19:01
Back to Top
kiwi View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: January 05 2008
Location: New Zealand
Status: Offline
Points: 127
Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2008 at 19:17
Originally posted by Jorvik Jorvik wrote:

Originally posted by kiwi kiwi wrote:

An athiest has faith that there is no God.

Angry I wish people would stop regurgitating this falsehood: atheism is not a belief that there is no god or gods. It is a lack of belief due to there being no evidence.

As the quote goes, "to say that atheism is a belief is like calling bald a hair colour".

I'm also getting increasingly fed up of the constant attacks on capitalism and materialism -- this isn't directed at PA in particular, it seems to be going on in all media of late Angry. ETA: If there was no capitalism or materialism we probably wouldn't have the music technology that we have today (especially the information and distribution of underground music thanks to the internet), nor the music that he have (and love), either.


I am sorry to have offended you. I checked out Wikipedia which offers this definition.
"Atheism
, as a philosophical view, is the position that either affirms the nonexistence of gods[1] or rejects theism.[2] When defined more broadly, atheism is the absence of belief in deities,[3] alternatively called nontheism.[4]"

I guess that makes atheists materialists in that they only accept what is materially evident.

My concern with materialism and consumerism is that it has got out of balance. I enjoy the fruits of technology. For example this interaction is only possible because of the net - I love it. I am also confident that technology and science will ultimately enable us to live in a better balance with the planet in a more sustainable way.

Our civilisations have made great progress when the material and spiritual are in balance. The twentieth century has been called a "failed secular experiment". While we enjoy wealth at levels unimagined by our forebears, the ignorant have used technology to wreak unparalleled havoc on the world.

Science and Religion can be regarded as the two wings of a bird. Science without religion results in materialism and religion without science leaves us with equally bad superstition.

He rides majestic
Past homes of men
Who care not or gaze with joy
To see reflected there
The trees, the sky, the lily fair. (Genesis)



Edited by kiwi - February 14 2008 at 19:41

We, verily, have made music as a ladder for your souls, a means whereby they may be lifted up unto the realm on high.. (Baha'u'llah)


music
Back to Top
EnglishAssassin View Drop Down
Forum Groupie
Forum Groupie
Avatar

Joined: December 24 2007
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 83
Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2008 at 20:03
I'm sorry, but are you actually trying to blame secularism and atheism for the present state of the world? 
Back to Top
King Crimson776 View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: October 12 2007
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 2779
Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2008 at 21:10
^^ haha, owned. seriously kiwi, organized religion is one of the main problems with the world. Just look at those poor delusional f**kers in the Middle East. They think they're going to have 70 or something virgins when they blow themselves up. An individual path to spirituality is the only way to go. It's non-violent and not sheeplike mindless following of something because a bunch of other people believe it. And, there's no offense and no violence because everyone is different. Religion can help the weak minded cope with life, but it's caused way more trouble than it's worth. Either be spiritual, or not (athiest), or just plain open-minded (agnostic, like me), but the mass bullsh*t is a cause for many of the worlds problems. People are going to be materialistic with religion or not.
Back to Top
kiwi View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: January 05 2008
Location: New Zealand
Status: Offline
Points: 127
Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2008 at 21:15
Originally posted by EnglishAssassin EnglishAssassin wrote:

I'm sorry, but are you actually trying to blame secularism and atheism for the present state of the world? 

If you look at the twentieth century as a whole - there was a lot of carnage and environmental degradation. Stalin was arguably the greatest tyrant of the 20th Century. Communist regimes supressed religious expression and still do.  And Hitler was hardly motivated by religious aspirations. I am a liberal capitalist, but the relentless pursuit of profit has done a lot of damage in our world. Millions have been killed in the pursuit of control of resources such as oil. These are the things that have set the scene for the current century.

I support and advocate for socially responsible capitalism. (See my book Better Business for a Better World at Amazon.

I am not defending religion as much evil has been done in the name of religion. But religion and science are similar in that they are potent and can be harnessed to do great good or great evil.

What is important is that respect each other's perspectives and find common ground.



Edited by kiwi - February 14 2008 at 21:45

We, verily, have made music as a ladder for your souls, a means whereby they may be lifted up unto the realm on high.. (Baha'u'llah)


music
Back to Top
Trademark View Drop Down
Forum Senior Member
Forum Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: November 21 2006
Location: oHIo
Status: Offline
Points: 1009
Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2008 at 21:40
"Yes He DOES. Book of Acts thru Book of Revelation."

Quote the entire point or don't quote. The actual point was that the use of music to further the great commission is not "forbidden" and if all the different approaches taken from Acts to Revelation are any indication, we should use any and all means at our disposal, music included. There are as many ways to fulfill the Great Commission as there are people in the world, music is one of them, but yes, everything we do MUST CATEGORICALLY be to "fulfill the Great Commission; each in our own way according to the gifts (spiritual and otherwise) that we are given. You do not know me and I don't know you nearly well enough for you to presume a position as my teacher. Your presumption of knowledge as to the intent of of Christian music and musicians certainly does not lend any weight to your attempt at taking this position of superiority over one who has spent more than 20 years studying it intently.    The first rule of pedagogy is "know thy student". I think those around you could stand a little less of your condescending attitude.

Bach never took a secular music job in his lifetime and wrote very few pieces of music not intended for use in the Church. Of the thee major works he did write outside the church the WTC The Art of Fugue were intended as pedagogical literature and the Brandenburg Concertos were intended to help him secure employment at a church with greater musical resourses than the one he worked in at the time. The Count at the Brandenburg court would have been in a position to recommend him. Every work that Bach composed (including the so-called secular works) was inscribed with the following words: "Soli Gloria Deus" (To the Glory of God Alone). You sir, are wrong as to Bach's intentions and as to mine.



Edited by Trademark - February 14 2008 at 21:51
Back to Top
Ivan_Melgar_M View Drop Down
Special Collaborator
Special Collaborator

Honorary Collaborator

Joined: April 27 2004
Location: Peru
Status: Offline
Points: 19535
Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2008 at 21:57

 

Trademark wrote:
Quote The Mormons are a Pseudo-Christian cult (not unlike the Branch Davidians and the followers at Jonestown) and have no standing whatever in any discussion about Christianity.
 
Hey you criticized us because you believed we condemn other religions to hell, what I proved is wrong, now you criticize another religion and qualify them as a  cult?
 
Now then, as to Christian Prog/ Rock/ or any other type of Christian music's right to exist:
The Great Commission( Matthew 28:16-20) states:  Then the eleven disciples went to Galilee, to the mountain where Jesus had told them to go. When they saw him, they worshiped him; but some doubted. Then Jesus came to them and said, "All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age."
 
Jesus said tell the message, not lie to the people telling them it’s just music when it’s really under covered evangelism.
 
BTW: I don't deny the right of Christian Rock to exist, but as you will see later, some Christian Churches do deny that right. LOL
 
I only want to keep save my right to disagree, not ban it.
 
This is not just a suggestion from a nice guy.  It is a command from the Lord Jesus Christ to his disciples and by proxy to all of his followers forever.  What he does not tell us is exactly HOW we should go about it; but nowhere in scripture does it say "Do not use music".  So it follows that if you are both a musician and a believer in Christ that all your musical efforts should then serve the purpose of The Great Commission (Bach is a prime example); and this is what I see in Neal's recent work.  Every thing he does is geared (as Scripture commands it to be) towards evangelism, but then you seem to feel that evangelism and brainwashing are synonyms.  Strange position for a practicing Christian to take.
 
Well, not even all the Protestant Churches agree with you, some of them believe Christian Rock is Satanic, here is a short list:
 
Quote What is wrong with "Amazing Grace," I ask you?
Is there a problem with "How Great Thou Art?"
Are the words and melody of "How Firm a Foundation" no longer beautiful or true?
Must we set aside the great hymns of the faith and replace them with "Who put the bop in the Bible shee-bop shee-bop?" and "Ram-a-lam-a-ding-dong for Jesus."
Now that we have "Christian" rock , rap, regGAE, and jazz, can "Christian" Budweiser be far behind?
Must "What a Friend We Have in Jesus" be replaced with "The Dude upstairs is so cool, doo whoppa, doo whoppa doo?"
And now that we have "Christian" heavy metal, acid and (get this) Christian New Age, can "Christian" Marlboros wrapped in New Testament parchment be far behind?
 
Oops, so Christian Rock is wrong? Some sectors of the Christian Churches seem to believe so, I wouldn't go so far, I believe their intentions are good, but I believe preaching is pulpits.
 
Quote I believe the spiritual damage from Christian rock can be more dangerous than secular rock. Why? Because Christian rock portrays a "hip-hoppin", "partying" "cool", tolerant Jesus Christ that is NOT the Lord Jesus of the Bible! Because CCM attempts to drag the Lord Jesus Christ into the world of rock music, I believe that it could be much worse spiritually than secular rock music. At least secular rock, with all it's sex and filth, does not attempt to mix the "holy" Lord Jesus Christ with "sinful" rock music.
 
Wow, according to this "Christians" Christian Rock is worse than secular Rock. 
 
Quote
I was honestly questioning if my writings about the music of devils in God's house were just old-fashioned prejudices or simply my distaste for rock music. Was it just so much fuss about nothing? Yet something was not quite right. There was an inner tug at my heart making me ill at ease. I reasoned, "If Satan is camouflaged in this somehow, if there is a leaven of evil - it will be revealed. Satan always reveals himself in one way or another."
Suddenly the singer yelled in the microphone, "Jesus is coming - He is going to crack the skies - get ready!" The song was entitled, "Crack The Skies." Suddenly smoke was billowing out of smoke machines, the pounding beat was turned up to a frenzied pitch, eerie lights began flashing, the musicians stood like phantoms rising from a murky swamp. It was ghostly, weird, strange - and the crowd went wild - they seemed to love it. At the same festival, a wild spiked hair group had entertained - with painted faces, prancing about like homosexual peacocks.
At first, I couldn't believe what I was seeing on stage. I said out loud, "This can't be happening at a Christian festival - they can't do this to my Jesus! These people can't be this blind - the leaders of this youth ministry can't be so undiscerning! Oh God - what has happened to your church that its leaders, its people, can't see the evil of this abomination?"
By Rev. David Wilkerson (Pentecostal), author of The Cross and the Switchblade, a book that I had to read in my Catholic school, because we respect the good work he did with the gangs.
 
So, if you can't even agree within the Protestant community if Christian Rock is positive or Satanic, then how can you force us not to disagree?
 
Again, I believe music itself can't be Satanic, but according to some of this Churches, most surely Neal must be satanic because he plays Rock (something absurd of course).
 
You’d better reach an agreement among yourselves before criticizing other person’s beliefs and to talk about contradictions
 
Anyone who has felt the touch of the Holy Spirit can't help but want everyone else to know the good news.  It's not brainwashing its' sharing in the hope that others will "taste and see".  Not really unlike sharing a great recipe with a friend.  If I sent you my favorite recipe for Ceviche,or worse yet, wrote about it in a song, I doubt you'd be coming at me with the brainwashing accusation, even if I said other versions of Ceviche were prepared incorrectly.
 
Sorry, but comparing  Religion with a fish recipy is absurd, making a good ceviche is not a trascendental issue.
 
Sharing is giving to those willing consciously to receive something, not using subliminal messages in popular lyrics, but believe me, if I found Catholic Prog I would believe the same.

If not, Why is religion banned in most schools of USA?

The way I see your issues here Ivan, is that you don't like being told what is right and what is wrong.  You want to research and reason things out and come to your own conclusions (correct me if this is wrong) . This I see from  nearly two years of reading your posts and, on occasion, debating them passionately with you). This seems funny coming from someone who has placed himself under the authority of a Pope (in effect leaving the thinking to someone else).  But if I remember correctly from other threads you do not actually agree with the Pope on some issues (abortion, if I remember right), and actually advocated strongly for an "anti-Catholic"  position on the issue. 

No, I’m anti abortion in 99% of the cases (except rape and therapeutic abortion which is accepted by the Church), but that means nothing, I don't claim being a perfect Catholic neither the owner of the only truth (as others do), I have some doubts, God gave me a brain to use it, this doesn’t mean the Church position is wrong, only that I don’t completely share it in some small issues.
 
BTW: We don't let others to think for us, the Pope is our religious leader, we believe in him as the representative of God with authority given by Christ, is logical we believe in him, but we have the freedom to accept it or not, the Pope is not going to excommunicate me for having some differences.

In doing this do you not defy the Pope?  Are you not contesting his infallibility by disagreeing with him?  I don't know Catholic doctrine well enough to understand how this might work.  For that matter how do you justify change in Papal doctrine over time?  If, to make an extreme example, the next Pope removes the ban on Birth control or abortion, how can both he and the previous Popes who upheld those policies ALL be infallible.  Do we just wink and say God changed his mind?
 
The Church as any human institution has to change as man evolves, some things that were correct in the Biblical days like slavery or killing the unfaithful wives have changed, why shouldn’t the position of the Church change.
 
The Pope transmits the message according to the times and depending in how the people will receive the message better, but I don't believe the policy on abortion will ever change.
 
If the Pope said that a slave must obey his his master (1 Timothy 6:1-2), you would be the first to accuse him for not changing, but hey, it's in the Bible, even though doesn't apply to our days.

Please understand that I am not trying to make a personal attack on you Ivan.  It just seems to me that there are inconsistencies in your logic where some of these issues are concerned and I would like to understand where you are coming from as someone whom I respect.  Your vehemence towards Sola Scriptura seems really odd to me.  Yes,  John Paul II asked forgiveness for those sins of the past and, as a Christian, I certainly grant that forgiveness.  The Protestant Churches have made many similar statements of past wrong-doing over the years (being fragmented as we are, there is no one blanket statement to cover all churches at all times).  Do you see all Protestant denominations as being engaged in an ongoing attack on the Catholic Church?  Is that what you see Neal Morse doing?  I don't.
 
Ofcourse you are not making a personal attack, but many Protestant Churches attack Catholic Church, you just need to surf the net and find some like:
 
The Roman Catholic "Church" is Not Christian http://www.jesus-is-lord.com/cath.htm
 
With skulls and everything
 
Yes, apostasy.  The Roman Catholic Church is no longer representing true Christianity.
 
Then who represents Christianity? Which of the more than 30,000 so called Christian denominations has the truth? We've already seen you attacking the Mormons, calling them pseudo Christians and comparing them with the Davidians..............Is that tolerance?
 
The papacy still claims that it has a right to slaughter so-called “heretics,” as it did in the Dark Ages.   
Soon the papacy will once again attain enough raw political power to repeat the atrocities of the Dark Ages. Once again the Catholic Church will slaughter true Christians for wanting to worship God according to the Bible. Regardless of how impossible this seems to us today, once again the papacy and its agents will plunge the world into another dark age.
 
Of course this is a terrible lie despite the big font, any pérson with a normal IQ knows that the Catholic Church wants to slaughter nobody.
 
Most of our readers are aware that the Protestant Reformers all regarded the Pope as Antichrist, and that this teaching is reflected in the Westminster Confession of Faith which states: "There is no other head of the Church but the Lord Jesus Christ. Nor can the Pope of Rome, in any sense, be head thereof: but is that Antichrist, that man of sin, and son of perdition, that exalteth himself, in the Church, against Christ and all that is called God" (xxxv,6). Were this Confession and the Reformers right or wrong? http://www.rsglh.org/is_the_pope_antichrist.htm
 
More of the same:
 
We reject the idea that the teaching that the Papacy is the Antichrist rests on a merely human interpretation of history or is an open question. We hold rather that this teaching rests on the revelation of God in Scripture which finds its fulfillment in history. The Holy Spirit reveals this fulfillment to the eyes of faith (cf. The Abiding Word, Vol. 2, p. 764). Since Scripture teaches that the Antichrist would be revealed and gives the marks by which the Antichrist is to be recognized (2 Th 2:6,8), and since this prophecy has been clearly fulfilled in the history and development of the Roman Papacy, it is Scripture which reveals that the Papacy is the Antichrist.
 
Even an official denominational sector of the Lutherans. Don't ask me to followm because there are millions of similar quotes by Presbyterians, sectors of the Lutherans, Episcopals, etc. 
 
While the Pope joins Orthodoxs, a sectopr of Lutherans and Catholic Anglicans trying to reunite the Church or visits Synagogues and Mosques to promote tolerance, most Christian denominations say they have the one and only truth and condemn all the others to hell.
 
I could point thousands of similar sites made by pastors and Protestant denominations,  you will NEVER find an official site of the Catholic Church doing this aberrations.
 
And yes, I believe Sola Scriptura is highly anti-Catholic


Luther never wanted to be "Lutheran".  He never wanted to leave the Catholic Church, but he could not accept certain practices that the Church was sanctioning.  His excommunication was probably a terrifying experience for him.  He likely believed that he was absolutely, positively Hell-bound as a result, and still he stood for what he believed and faced those dire consequences.  His denounciation of the specific doctrines in the 95 Theses (anti- semitism was not one of them, it was a point upon which he and the Church agreed at the time)  and his subsequent persecution by the Church is what Sola Scriptura is all about.  The fact that the Church has admitted to wrong-doing in some of these areas should not mean that they cannot be talked about anymore.  Is that what you are saying; that because forgiveness was asked for and given  350 years after the fact that the story should never again be told?  If that is the case we disagree.
 
Of course you can mention them, but most Protestant attacks are based in past acts, people talks everyday about the Inquisition (Which was wrong), but never talk about the Witch Hunts in USA or the slaughter of Catholics in United Kingdom, but if that is the case, we can also mention the sick anti semitism of Luther for which nobody has asked forgiveness.

Again, this is not meant as an attack on you personally or on Catholics in general, and I am absolutely not trying to offend you.  These are questions that may address what  seems to be flawed logic and an unusual position for a Christian man.
 
I find much more flawed the idea that Hitler could be saved (he was a Christian and may have accepted Christ) but his 6'000,000 victims are burning in hell with Ghandi and people who don't accept Christ because they never knew him.
 
Iván
 


Edited by Ivan_Melgar_M - February 14 2008 at 22:24
            
Back to Top
 Post Reply Post Reply Page  <1 1011121314 17>

Forum Jump Forum Permissions View Drop Down



This page was generated in 0.156 seconds.
Donate monthly and keep PA fast-loading and ad-free forever.