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If indeed, “sacred” is “set apart”, then for me, the pipe organ would not be a sacred instrument.Really? I would think that the opposite would be true… it certainly is for me. I think of “sacred” as being set apart. I hear electric guitars and drums in rock and pop music, so I don’t think of it as sacred and never did when I went to evangelical churches in college where this kind of music was supposed to be more “relevant” for us. Whereas organs (church organs, not jazz organs) and the accompanying hyms are much more solemn and send a chill down my spine and fill me with a sense of reverence.
The pipe organ and its electronic counterpart are used in secular concerts including baroque, classical, and contemporary music. I receive a magazine from the AGO that advertises the many concert organists who are available for hire to do concerts and workshops.
Yes, most pipe organs are located in church buildings. But the concerts are definitely NOT “sacred” concerts.
Also, keep in mind that as Baptists, we didn’t listen to much “pop” music. Although my Baptist church didn’t burn rock music albums, many churches did, including the church my husband grew up in. (Just last week, he was bemoaning that he burned up his Three Dog Night albums!)
So we couldn’t say, “This music sounds like rock and or roll” because most of us didn’t have the experience of rock and roll or pop in a secular realm. We used these styles in CHURCH, in worship settings.
We considered ourselves to be using the style of music for its TRUE PURPOSE, which was to worship God, and we considered the popular musicians to be the ones who were corrupting perfectly good and acceptable music.
I would be careful with that viewpoint. Evangelical Protestantism is always seeking to widen their big umbrella and include more and more denominations and faith communities. With the recent “alternative” church movement, which reaches back into the roots of Christianity and uses “confession,” “incense,”“lectio divina,” “chant, including Gregorian chant,” “Latin” “silence” “candles,” etc. it’s really difficult to define how Evangelical Protestantism looks, sounds, and smells.Well, this may be true in a way, but I think there is a definite mainstream “evangelical” brand of Christianity that carries with it certain stereotypes and can be pretty easily identified.
For those who are interested, Christianity Today is a really good source of information about Evangelical Protestantism. You can read it online.