For: The Institute Of Contemporary And Emerging Worship Studies, St. Stephen’s University, Essentials Blue Online Worship Theology Course with Dan Wilt.
Now, I have to say I love singing. It’s always been something I’ve enjoyed. Pushing air out through your diaphragm and projecting it far away is a great experience. Some very profound things have happened to me as I’ve focused this on Jesus. So may it just be said that any comment I make in regard to songs, music and worship carries no undertone in rejecting any of that.
But I suppose what I’m trying to work towards is asking the question: how does a community of faith express worship in a wholistic way? Does our style misrepresent what it means to live a life of worship?
If there were an art exhibition you’d imagine someone organising it, curating how the pieces were to flow, taking you on some kind of journey through the gallery. There’d be a thought behind it all (possibly chronological, or phases, or issues the artist had to wrestle with). You’d enter the exhibition, and start to look around taking in the the various pieces as you went. Then (if the curator has understood the artist) you’d probably get to the end and be like:
“Oh! Now I get it. I didn’t realise they…”
“So that’s why they always seemed to…”
Essentially you’d leave that space with a greater understanding of the one who created the work, the one who even made the exhibition possible.
So is it fair to assume a gathered (or curtated) expression of worship could be the same? And are the spaces we design to exhibit this creative work sufficient, or do they restrict the work on display?
What if worship came from a place that wasn’t fixed around a set of songs, but a passionate body that didn’t know what else to do than express the beauty of the one who made them? Imagine what would happen if you channeled creativity in that space.
You’d probably see something quite special.


