American Idol and “Shout to the Lord”

I’ve read a few blogs this morning about how great it was to have the American Idol contestants sing “Shout to the Lord” on Idol Gives Back last night. Trust me people, this was not a good thing. In fact, it may be the culmination of praise and worship’s absorption into mainstream culture. I particularly thought the substitution of shepherd for Jesus in the first line of the song was quite telling. If you thought the use of that song was great or if you had a gnawing feeling in your stomach that something about it was terribly wrong, you need to read this. Why was everybody happy to sing along? Because no one can tell the difference anymore. We have officially arrived at the death of praise and worship.

Update: Since this post has received hundreds of hits in the last week, but not as many people visiting the above links, I have posted “The Death of Praise and Worship” below…

I have witnessed the death of praise and worship twice now. Once in the 80s and more recently around four years ago. The first time around, there was an explosion of authentic “scripture songs” in the 70s that were central to the rise of the charismatic movement. Since this was the first contemporary praise music, no one had taught courses on “how” to create a worship song. Most of the songs were taken straight from the scriptures. In the late 70s/early 80s, contemporary Christian music (CCM) came along as well. At first it seemed a match made in heaven. Not only did you have juggernauts like Keith Green tearing it up - inside every Petra, Evie, Amy Grant, Allies, and Russ Taff album there were scriptures listed to “support” each song’s message.

But then in the mid-80s, things began to dry up. Many of the same companies that were releasing praise and worship were also into CCM. Somehow, as the charismatic movement grew and worship music spread to the masses, it became thin in its message and power. I don’t know how to describe that to you, really. Integrity Music put out a new album…simply because it was what they did. The two groups became indistinguishable, and so there was at least a partial dry spell for worship music. 

Things drudged along until around 1995. Hillsongs released “Shout the Lord,” Darrell Evans released “Let the River Flow,” and the Vineyard movement released the “Touching the Father’s Heart” series. Delirious hit the scene. BOOM! Worship music returned - inspired, authentic, and powerful. Worship music, supported by the charismatic “third wave” movement, became pure again - worship for worship’s sake.

Luckily, something else really important for praise and worship happened: lyrical ambiguity in the secular grunge music scene. What? Just stick with me. ) No longer was it fashionable to have transparent lyrics - obscured content was the new thing. No one knew what Kurt Cobain or Eddie Vedder was saying…and, just like the Kingsmen in the 60s, it became all the rage. CCM hopped on the bandwagon as soon as it encountered the success of Jars of Clay on mainstream radio. Secular radio became a “mission” once again similar to Amy Grant’s attempt in 1985 and Stryper in 1986. Only this time, rather than busting down the front doors with strong lyrics, CCM attempted sneak in the back door with ambiguous ones. We still see this today: bands on the Tooth and Nail label still can’t tell us for sure if they’re Christians. Because of this, CCM and praise and worship parted ways for about a decade.

Recently, CCM and praise and worship have merged again. Now, CCM groups are putting out worship albums and include at least one possible worship track on each release. Press releases tout these as the “new” worship song for churches, like Leeland or Michael W. Smith.  The problem is that Leeland is not praise and worship…he’s merely returning CCM to the poignant, straightforward genre it was 30 years ago. Tragically, CCM has strayed so far from its origins that it doesn’t recognize its own sound. So now that they’ve stumbled across it again, they mistakenly call it “praise and worship.”

Churches pick these CCM worship songs up and incorporate them into their services. K-Love and other radio stations play Casting Crowns and David Crowder back to back…but you can’t tell the difference. There have been some bright spots along the way like Passion or Chris Tomlin, but even now those have recently become parodies of themselves. Just for the record, I still stand by Paul Baloche though.

In general, church worship is suffering, forcing worship leaders to write their own stuff or seek out the “Jason Uptons” of the underground worship world from which to draw new material. That makes worship leading difficult to say the least. Furthermore, amateur musicians have to attempt to compete with session musicians that congregations hear on the radio. Understandably, people have trouble “entering in” when it doesn’t sound like the radio.

So, what’s next? For now, the CCM music industry still sees worship music as “fiscally sound.” But over the next few years, CCM will get tired of hearing themselves sing songs that worship leaders have written and they’ll go back to writing something else. At that point, they’ll separate again and worship music will regain its intimacy and depth. All we have to do is wait, say…another 5 years. Until then, we’ll have to endure such gems as “WOW Worship 57.” )

Explore posts in the same categories: Christianity, God, religion, spirituality

Tags: , , ,

You can comment below, or link to this permanent URL from your own site.

25 Comments on “American Idol and “Shout to the Lord””

  1. brewster Says:

    My good friend, the death or the discovery? Praise and Worship has lived in the church. “Christian Music” is a subculture. If you believe that worship music can take you someplace, lets try to measure if new people are exposed to the sounds that lead people to the Cross. Only those who have lived with the song will recognize the Jesus to Shepherd adjustment. Its All About Worship.

  2. Kaybee Says:

    Sorry — I disagree. There were Christians (true, born-again believers) on stage singing it, and you can bet there were Christians in the audience singing it as unto the Lord. We can/must sing praises to Him in the midst of the heathen. Jesus said; if His people won’t/can’t praise Him, even the rocks will cry out (Luke 19:40). That’s the problem with the Body of Christ today — they are stuck inside their own churches; their own little country clubs, waiting for Jesus to return, and the world is going to hell. Instead of complaining and criticizing, how much better to pray that in among that ‘heathen’ audience there would be many who would hear the words and be moved to find out who this Comforter, Shelter, Tower of Refuge is — the Holy Spirit can bring a revelation of Jesus to hearts anywhere and through any means — even through American Idol! He is never limited — He was revealed to fishermen, tax collectors, thiefs, Roman soldiers, in the most unlikely places. People who were in the audience of AI may never have been to church, but they heard about God last night. May the Holy spirit now draw them to Jesus!

  3. Sam Says:

    Brewster and Kaybee -

    Though you both seem like a conscientious Christians, your approach to worship is totally different than mine. Worship means to “kiss the hand” - it’s a sign of intimacy and adoration. It’s not for evangelism. It’s for building the relationship of those who have already said “yes” to Jesus. Worship music is not a subculture - although there are plenty of well-meaning postmodern authors saying that kind of stuff. Actually, it has little to do with music - worship is a movement of the heart and music is often the “vehicle” for that deepening of intimacy. Therefore, it belongs solely to those who desire deep relationship with God, not for those who are weighing the “merits” of Christianity.

    You’ve put your finger on the problem inadvertently. Praise and worship is not a musical genre - it’s a aggressive and intense response to the reality of God’s love for us. God uses people, not music. You don’t come to know that love through WOW Worship CDs - worship music flows as a result of the intmacy of the heart. If anything the juxtaosition of Ben Stiller’s F-bomb rant SHOULD have jarred you out of your warm and fuzzy feelings. Any feelings I had that were similar to yours dissipated at that moment.

    As such, the flippancy with which Shout to the Lord was used last night is a tragedy, not a triumph. Any possibility of deep intmacy available with the words in that song was compromised simply because it was removed from the context of relationship with the Father. It merely became another song, devoid of any understanding of “kissing the hand.”

    “That’s the problem with the Body of Christ today — they are stuck inside their own churches; their own little country clubs, waiting for Jesus to return, and the world is going to hell.”

    Kaybee - you’re talking about the bride of Christ - the romantic interest of God. Luckily for you and me, he doesn’t see the church that way. And it’s the church’s privilege, not American Idol’s, to bring the reality of Jesus to the world through our actions and spirit-filled living. That’s part of the problem, there are plenty in the church willing to allow American Idol to “witness” for them. I’m not okay with that. That’s my honor to spread the good news - not theirs. But letting them do it sure is convenient isn’t it? It’s easy to feel good that the gospel was advanced and all we had to do was click a remote.

  4. mudpuppy Says:

    All of life is worship.

    AI most likely made the move to help with ratings and to cuddle up to the christian coalition, but regardless they exposed more people to a great worship song than has ever been done. The only show that rates higher than AI would be the super bowl.

    More dialogue can be found over here.

    ps. Shepherd is another name for Jesus, and the iTunes store has the name Jesus in the song.

  5. Sam Says:

    mudpuppy -

    Did you even read the link I posted?

    Life certainly can be worship. But everything is not spiritual…and there is a big difference. When people say stuff like that it makes me want to become a fundamentalist for a second. :)

    Unless you have a vested interest in worship music and Christian ministry, what I am saying may be lost on folks. And that’s fine. I have found that people rarely realize the cultural trends and shifts in mentality that occur as they are living through them. Maybe we can check back in 10 years and see if I was onto something.

    The dialogue on your site seems to be rather one dimensional. Maybe no one else sees what I saw last night. Hopefully someone will comment along those lines.

    Thanks for the reminder that Jesus called himself the good shepherd. Geez Louise…

  6. mudpuppy Says:

    Everything Is Spiritual!!

    Watch this DVD by the same title. It’s a wonderful way to spent 77 minutes.

  7. Sam Says:

    Yeah, good ol’ Rob Bell. We watch his Nooma videos in Sunday school too. That whole emergent movement (which you identify with based on your blog) has headed in the direction of Krause’s panentheism (not pantheism). Which is fine - I like the immanence panentheism brings to theo-dialogue and ecumenicity, particularly as someone who believes that Christianity needs to be experienced. However, I think they are moving too far with the everything is spiritual idea. Of course, you’re welcome to your opinion although you may want to check out the philosophical roots that undergird the antifoundationalist movement that you adhere to. I know I’m contradicting a really super cool pastor in saying that, but hey, not everyone can be that popular. :)

    Once again, I may not be right about worship music. I hope I’m not. Over time, we’ll see.

    God bless you on your journey.

    Sam

  8. AMERICAN IDOL « RECOVERING NARCISSIST Says:

    [...] stiller, idol, idol gives back, shout to the lord, stand A lot of Christian people are bound to blog on the “Shout To The Lord” song sang at the Idol Gives Back event last night on FOX tv. [...]

  9. Nathan Stitt Says:

    I’ve quite watching TV, but I find myself agreeing with you completely Sam (particularly with your link). The concept of “Praise & Worship” just doesn’t do anything for me other than foster the comparison of my church’s “Song Service” with those on the TV, radio, or a previous church. I have seen people too numerous to count hop from church to church trying to find the right kind of worship experience, myself included. I haven’t figured out what the answer is, but the way things are right now seem broken to me.

    I’m not sure that I agree with you by labeling Rob Bell as emergent. He’s been pretty influential on me, as well as a book I read on the emerging churches movement. I do agree with you that many of these communities are going too far, but I’m optimistic that many of them will stabilize.

  10. mudpuppy Says:

    Throwing around 15-syllable words | “super cool pastor” | “God bless you in your journey”

    I’m fine with you believing one thing, and me believing another—and an honest discussion about both. I’m just not fine with Christian snobbery. But again, it’s your blog.

  11. Sam Says:

    Hey Nathan -

    Thanks for the comments on worship - things aren’t black and white where worship’s concerned but I think we can tell when things aren’t quite right. That’s all I’m saying - worship goes in cycles are I think we’re on the downside. Showcasing “Shout to the Lord” on AI, to me, is evidence of this.

    Yeah, Rob’s more mainstream than most. And no I’m not a big fan. I like the premise - I just don’t like the particular interpretation that is finding its way into mainstream Christianity. But that’s part of going mainstream I suppose. He sure does have a lot of followers and I like some of his stuff for sure. Just not all of it. I tend to think (and may be wrong) that Bell, McManus, Claiborne and the like are the popular versions of academic postliberalism (Lindbeck, Hunsinger, Hauerwas, etc.). So my concerns over that theology flow into my opinion of Bell and the others. Though McManus intrigues me. That’s probably a little unfair to Bell. Keep me in check, dude. :)

  12. Sam Says:

    mudpuppy (I think your name is quite funny) -

    Sorry to offend you. I was joking (hence the smiley face?). But I was serious about God blessing you in your journey. It is a journey and I haven’t arrived. I hope you can say the same blessing over me.

    Sam

  13. dustyvinci Says:

    Hello, Sam!
    I just wanted to let you know that I’m really enjoying your blog. I’m deeply in love with Jesus too but only wish that more people could love Him too. I love spreading God’s word and look forward to going to church every week.
    Anyways, I just wanted to let you know that I’m reading and love it :)

    Best Wishes,
    DustyVinci

  14. thestuffinsidemybrain Says:

    I too was slightly disturbed to hear “shepherd” instead of “Jesus” but you know, I am greatfull that they at least sang a praise and worship song. Praise the Lord! :D

  15. Sam Says:

    Hi Dusty -

    Thanks for the encouragement. You never know who comes across your blog and may be reading it. I appreciate you letting me know! Feel free to comment - hope to hear more from you in the future…

    Sam

  16. Sam Says:

    stuffinsidemybrain -

    Yeah that bothered me too, thought I think the substitution was just a symptom of the larger issue I was discussing on the other link. Thanks for the comment. He sure deserves our praise, doesn’t he? :)

    Sam

  17. Jamie Says:

    Hey Sam,
    Way to stir it up! I’m with ya on this one. Singing the song “shout the lord” is not worship. Songs in themselves aren’t worship, they are just vehicles that can take us there. If I sing shout to the lord while committing adultery, was I worshiping? Of course not! Worship songs only qualify as such when our hearts match the words we sing. Singing shout to the lord in itself doesn’t make anyone a worshiper anymore than singing JayZ makes them a pimp. The lyrics to a worship song are only words until ignited with faith and confirmed thru actions.

  18. Jonathan Says:

    “Singing shout to the lord in itself doesn’t make anyone a worshiper anymore than singing JayZ makes them a pimp.”

    :)

  19. Sam Says:

    Thanks Jamie - good thoughts. Love the Jay Z thing. There’s nothing like a little perspective….

    Sam

  20. Kizzy Says:

    You know I am disappointed. When I was a pagan the thing that started to warm my heart to Jesus was the music leaking through to me. When I was saved it was music and the power of music and words that spoke to me and drew me closer. I have always LOVED music and to me music and singing God’s praises is as natural as breathing. When I heard Shout to the Lord I was filled with glee that the stronghold of TV and American Idol were seeing breakthrough. More of the songs have had a worshipful element this season than on anyo ther mainstream tv show before. Dolly Parton sang of Jesus and Gravity and to be fair, when the singers returned for the results show they sang the song again using Jesus by name. i think the substitution of Shepherd was lovely. Jesus IS our shepherd and many people would ahve jolted at the change, even people who are not Christians as they may have heard the original. Especially if they heard BOTH versions each night.

    I think that when we quickly condemn everything we are open to criticism. Instead of looking at the splinter in the eye of American Idol for “daring to praise on their show” we should remove the log sticking out of our own eyes with regards to spreading the word and the truth. We should see every opportunity to glorify God and his Truth as a God-opportunity. It seems to me that to some Christians people are damned if they do and damend if they don’t…..

  21. Nathan Stitt Says:

    I think the AI Gives Back was just pointing at a larger issue for some. Namely the status of “worship” in the church today. My own struggle is to overcome my perceptions and experience so that I can worship God in spite of the way things are done every week. There is some legitimacy to the critiques Sam raises, though you are also correct in that Jesus was still being praised on national TV. Such a complicated issue.

  22. etfendgi Says:

    Bottom line - Jesus’ name is being lifted up. He’s up to more than what we think about “what it means.” It’s about him, not our opinion. Oh so cool.

  23. Sam Says:

    etfendgi -

    You’re right - Jesus name is being lifted up…but how? Maybe that’s what you would consider an arbitrary opinon. But for me, as a former worship leader, it holds deep significance.

    Thanks for commenting,

    Sam

  24. Sam Says:

    Nathan -

    Right on - a very complicated issue…I’m not sure my blog will solve it. :) But at least, like you said, it points to a larger issue - one that needs Christian dialogue.

    Sam

  25. Weird Worship « Eclexia Says:

    [...] (I’m not going to try to guess where to divide that name up) has an interesting post and particularly a comment, which gets pretty close to my own concerns about the whole matter. Here’s one part of the [...]

Comment: