1. make sure what you sing matches with Bible doctrine (Matthew 4:4)
2. if you wish to make a record, do NOT sign to a "Christian" label. To not be a hypocrite, better sign to a small independent label. Your objection may be "but how am I gonna sell a lot?" My response - do not look at how much you give away. Your main audience is God. And with that we are come to the next point, namely...
3. do not ask for money. You should work with your own hands according to Paul. He never asked for money for his ministry. Leonard Ravenhill adviced Keith Green to stop asking money for his albums and concerts. You should have a job at the same time. Maybe a tentmaker, maybe build instruments, but music alone, art alone is not an occupation.
4. do not give your songs titles that look 'overly righteous' (Ecclesiastes 7:16). So many 'gospel/worship' artists do give those titles to songs, yet the content is not matching up. This is not to say a title named "Oh Lord You're Beautiful" is per se bad, but it IS dangerous. You are putting yourself on a high standard. With a more neutral title like "The Way", "Questions", "The Hypocrite" etc., the danger is not non existant, but certainly less.
5. make sure you live righteous. Your singing, your playing etc. is not the worship - it can only reflect it! You too can worship without singing. That is not to say that singing is bad if you feel that calling to be a NT David, but then also match that standard. Paul had it, yet he did not sing - at least there is no record that he did.
6. do not go 'touring'. Going on tours will easily make you a slave. You certainly can give concerts, even record them, maybe pick areas that are totally random. But you too can sing to God in a studio and record it instead to have to show it to an audience. Be an artist, not a performer!
7. do not do away with God's word. Music of itself is not to be limited to 'entertainment'. Roger Scruton claimed that once music was part of life and not a distraction from it. Whether that is true is disputable, however, indeed, music is not to be limited to entertainment, but telling a message. Which shows the bad side of #6 also, the recorded thing. It has become a necessity to have something to listen to, and from my humble opinion that is bad.
8. at the same time, do not become a pharisee. Meaning, do not pray in public, see Matthew 6. While praying for others is a good thing, you do not do good doing so in their presence. Also telling others 'I shall for you' is a dangerous thing. They'll see you as a hypocrite and think 'why doesn't he help me'?
2. if you wish to make a record, do NOT sign to a "Christian" label. To not be a hypocrite, better sign to a small independent label. Your objection may be "but how am I gonna sell a lot?" My response - do not look at how much you give away. Your main audience is God. And with that we are come to the next point, namely...
3. do not ask for money. You should work with your own hands according to Paul. He never asked for money for his ministry. Leonard Ravenhill adviced Keith Green to stop asking money for his albums and concerts. You should have a job at the same time. Maybe a tentmaker, maybe build instruments, but music alone, art alone is not an occupation.
4. do not give your songs titles that look 'overly righteous' (Ecclesiastes 7:16). So many 'gospel/worship' artists do give those titles to songs, yet the content is not matching up. This is not to say a title named "Oh Lord You're Beautiful" is per se bad, but it IS dangerous. You are putting yourself on a high standard. With a more neutral title like "The Way", "Questions", "The Hypocrite" etc., the danger is not non existant, but certainly less.
5. make sure you live righteous. Your singing, your playing etc. is not the worship - it can only reflect it! You too can worship without singing. That is not to say that singing is bad if you feel that calling to be a NT David, but then also match that standard. Paul had it, yet he did not sing - at least there is no record that he did.
6. do not go 'touring'. Going on tours will easily make you a slave. You certainly can give concerts, even record them, maybe pick areas that are totally random. But you too can sing to God in a studio and record it instead to have to show it to an audience. Be an artist, not a performer!
7. do not do away with God's word. Music of itself is not to be limited to 'entertainment'. Roger Scruton claimed that once music was part of life and not a distraction from it. Whether that is true is disputable, however, indeed, music is not to be limited to entertainment, but telling a message. Which shows the bad side of #6 also, the recorded thing. It has become a necessity to have something to listen to, and from my humble opinion that is bad.
8. at the same time, do not become a pharisee. Meaning, do not pray in public, see Matthew 6. While praying for others is a good thing, you do not do good doing so in their presence. Also telling others 'I shall for you' is a dangerous thing. They'll see you as a hypocrite and think 'why doesn't he help me'?
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