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OverviewMusic has changed the way we think--and worship. Our pop-music culture has made worship a conflict area rather than a source of unity. Gordon uncovers the issues and points to solutions. Full Product DetailsAuthor: T. David Gordon , T David GordonPublisher: P & R Publishing Co (Presbyterian & Reformed) Imprint: P & R Publishing Co (Presbyterian & Reformed) Dimensions: Width: 14.40cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 22.00cm Weight: 0.204kg ISBN: 9781596381957ISBN 10: 1596381957 Pages: 192 Publication Date: 27 May 2010 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsT. David Gordon's writing is refreshingly candid and insightful. In this very readable volume he helpfully contextualizes the ways pop music has impoverished our culture and worship in so many churches while calling us to embrace again the enduring values of hymnody and psalmody. (If there is space, add: I encourage anyone concerned about biblical worship to read this book.)--Paul S. Jones, Music Director, Tenth Presbyterian Church, Philadelphia, PA Worship forms, tunes, and practices are neutral. We are may worship God in any way that is not forbidden. T. David Gordon criticizes these widely held assumptions in light of the biblical doctrine of worship. He makes a vigorous case for traditional forms of worship. Those who have never considered the tradition will benefit from this critique and even those of us who may think that Gordon's proposal is not radical enough, will find this essay stimulating.--R. Scott Clark, Professor of Church History and Historical Theology, Westminster Seminary California Dr. Gordon is at it again--bringing reformed theology and media ecology to bear on one of the thorniest issues in the church today--worship song. Witty, persuasive, and gracious, he challenges the conventional wisdom in the midst of the so-called 'worship wars, ' asking for a serious inquiry into the nature of worship song and the media appropriate to it. He convinces us that if we are to worship with reverence and awe we must not unthinkingly accept the message of popular music. --Gregory E. Reynolds, pastor Amoskeag Presbyterian Church, Ordained Servant: A Journal for Church Officers, editor, author of The Word Is Worth a Thousand Pictures: Preaching in the Electronic Age, and editor of Ordained Servant: A Journal for Church Officers. Dr. Gordon is at it again--bringing reformed theology and media ecology to bear on one of the thorniest issues in the church today--worship song. Witty, persuasive, and gracious, he challenges the conventional wisdom in the midst of the so-called 'worship wars, ' asking for a serious inquiry into the nature of worship song and the media appropriate to it. He convinces us that if we are to worship with reverence and awe we must not unthinkingly accept the message of popular music. --Gregory E. Reynolds, pastor Amoskeag Presbyterian Church, Ordained Servant: A Journal for Church Officers, editor, author of The Word Is Worth a Thousand Pictures: Preaching in the Electronic Age, and editor of Ordained Servant: A Journal for Church Officers. T. David Gordon's writing is refreshingly candid and insightful. In this very readable volume he helpfully contextualizes the ways pop music has impoverished our culture and worship in so many churches while calling us to embrace again the enduring values of hymnody and psalmody. (If there is space, add: I encourage anyone concerned about biblical worship to read this book. )--Paul S. Jones, Music Director, Tenth Presbyterian Church, Philadelphia, PA Worship forms, tunes, and practices are neutral. We are may worship God in any way that is not forbidden. T. David Gordon criticizes these widely held assumptions in light of the biblical doctrine of worship. He makes a vigorous case for traditional forms of worship. Those who have never considered the tradition will benefit from this critique and even those of us who may think that Gordon's proposal is not radical enough, will find this essay stimulating.--R. Scott Clark, Professor of Church History and Historical Theology, Westminster Seminary California T. David Gordon's writing is refreshingly candid and insightful. In this very readable volume he helpfully contextualizes the ways pop music has impoverished our culture and worship in so many churches while calling us to embrace again the enduring values of hymnody and psalmody. (If there is space, add: I encourage anyone concerned about biblical worship to read this book. )--Paul S. Jones, Music Director, Tenth Presbyterian Church, Philadelphia, PA Worship forms, tunes, and practices are neutral. We are may worship God in any way that is not forbidden. T. David Gordon criticizes these widely held assumptions in light of the biblical doctrine of worship. He makes a vigorous case for traditional forms of worship. Those who have never considered the tradition will benefit from this critique and even those of us who may think that Gordon's proposal is not radical enough, will find this essay stimulating.--R. Scott Clark, Professor of Church History and Historical Theology, Westminster Seminary California Dr. Gordon is at it again--bringing reformed theology and media ecology to bear on one of the thorniest issues in the church today--worship song. Witty, persuasive, and gracious, he challenges the conventional wisdom in the midst of the so-called 'worship wars, ' asking for a serious inquiry into the nature of worship song and the media appropriate to it. He convinces us that if we are to worship with reverence and awe we must not unthinkingly accept the message of popular music. --Gregory E. Reynolds, pastor Amoskeag Presbyterian Church, Ordained Servant: A Journal for Church Officers, editor, author of The Word Is Worth a Thousand Pictures: Preaching in the Electronic Age, and editor of Ordained Servant: A Journal for Church Officers. Author InformationT. David Gordon was professor of religion and Greek at Grove City College for more than twenty years. Previously, he was an associate professor of New Testament at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary and, for nearly a decade, pastor of Christ Presbyterian Church in Nashua, New Hampshire. He is the author of several books and numerous theological articles. 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