Does Your Song Set Preach?
Preaching is the act of publicly proclaiming, teaching, or making something known. It exhorts, exposits, affirms, corrects, advocates, instructs, responds, and applies. The act of preaching communicates to us, for us, and through us.
A sermon is preached to address and expound on the biblical, theological, doctrinal, and moral issues that impact every generation of every congregation each and every day. And this connectional discourse is intended to challenge those congregants not only to embrace these truths individually but also corporately.
So if the worship songs we select aren’t complementing, resonating, and emulating these same characteristics, we probably need to select different songs. In other words, our songs must also preach.
The Preaching Characteristics of Our Songs
Our Songs must reflect and respond to biblical text.
Scripture must organically yield our songs instead of just fertilizing our own contrived language. We must constantly ask if our song text is theologically sound and if it affirms Scripture as central. Songs that do not provoke a response don’t preach.
Our Songs must connect the Word of God to the people of God.
The dialogue of worship through our songs is formed when God’s Word is revealed. This revelation causes the people of God to respond through the prompting of the Holy Spirit. The result is a vertical conversation with God and horizontal communion with others. Our songs are the accessible words of God.
Our Songs must speak the Gospel.
Every song we sing must invite the congregation and guests to be a part of God’s story through Jesus Christ. Our songs must help us understand what God is up to in and through our lives because of Jesus. Those songs must sing of the ongoing and enduring work of God through Jesus Christ. And they must constantly remind that Christ has died, Christ is risen, and Christ will come again.
Our Songs must be easy to follow and understand.
If congregants can't follow our songs, then they can't appreciate those songs and consequently can’t be influenced and moved to respond to them and through them. Archaic or colloquial text should be filtered and melodies should be evaluated. Songs that are difficult to follow and sing contribute to ineffectual sermons.
Our Songs must be sung with integrity.
Songs that preach communicate biblically, theologically, and doctrinally. Our songs must be sung with the integrity of adequate external preparation that springs forth from internal conviction. It must be evident that our songs reflect what we believe and practice. Lives must reflect the songs we sing even when we aren’t singing them. Songs sung well engage and express biblical text with inspiration, relevance, and excellence.
Our Songs must engage more than emotions.
Scripture encourages us to love the Lord our God with all our heart, soul, mind, and strength. Songs that just stir the emotions are incomplete; Songs that do not begin from the depth of our soul are shallow; Songs that don’t require us to think are thoughtless; and Songs that don’t ask us to use our bodies as a living sacrifice in acts of service are selfish. So our songs must be sung from our entire person.
Our Songs must encourage action.
Our songs must not only inspire us through our hearing but also challenge us in our doing. They must not only inform the congregation but also engage them. Singing those songs should cause us to ask ourselves what is going to change as a result of singing them. Singing our songs in here is not enough until they also impact who we are out there. So the songs we sing in our worship service must lead us to acts of service as worship.
“Let the word of Christ dwell richly among you, in all wisdom teaching and admonishing one another through psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs, singing to God with gratitude in your hearts.” Colossians 3:16