Freethought & Rationalism ArchiveThe archives are read only. |
08-24-2002, 03:46 AM | #31 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Dec 2000
Location: Detroit, MI
Posts: 1,107
|
Quote:
|
|
08-24-2002, 07:18 AM | #32 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: Lancaster, OH
Posts: 1,792
|
Quote:
1)not all people are religious, 2)these lyrics may be about a fictional character 3) the church was (and is) rich and therefore the composers were writing for their sponsors 4) this is not a christian country. A recent instrumental concert at my son's HS included work by a composer who was inspired when he was on a ship in a storm. The music director spoke to the audience beforehand and went on and on about how the composer had a deep faith in god. At my elementary school, the music teacher always has religious songs at the Xmas program, about half usually. Before he practices "Little town of Bethlehem" he asks the kids if they know where Jesus was born. Similar things happen at almost every practice and these are first graders thru 3rd graders. And our local HS choir has sung at churches and even the local christian TV station, the same one that carries Robertson, Falwell, Hinn,et al. IMO, it is too easy to cross that line especially when the vast majority of teachers are christians. Perhaps a school district could prepare a written statement about separation of church and state and have it written in the program for public school concerts. |
|
08-24-2002, 08:45 AM | #33 | |||||
Regular Member
Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: Missouri
Posts: 112
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
|||||
08-24-2002, 09:46 AM | #34 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: Lancaster, OH
Posts: 1,792
|
Quote:
Richard-- That is a good idea. As to whether the choir singing at churches could be legally challenged, I don't think so. I wrote to Americans United about the issue. A lawyer told me that legal precedence would not favor a prohibition of this type, at least in Ohio. She stated that as long as it was not billed as a worship service it would be OK. The interesting thing about the last concert, the church's website DID call it a worship service, and I think any rational being there that night would have agreed. |
|
08-24-2002, 01:47 PM | #35 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: Tower of Ecthelion...by the Starbuck's
Posts: 1,815
|
Quote:
'Specially since, given who liked to play dress-up in my family, Mom was far more likely than Dad to be Santa Claus! |
|
08-24-2002, 04:12 PM | #36 | |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Quote:
I think the Messaiah is a wonderful work and it is an intense aesthetic experience to sing in it. I no more care about the mythology behind it than I do about the Graeco-Roman mythology behind so much Renaissance painting and sculpture. I do, however, strongly agree that the connections between beliefs/mythology and art need to be explained and explored as part of a decent education. The various meanings of "culture" are interconnected. Art is always produced as part of a culture and knowledge of that culture helps in its interpretation. I am saddened by the lack of historical perspective displayed nowadays by so many children and adults. Do, say, Southern Baptists understand that their faith evolved from mediaeval catholicism, without which their faith would not even exist now? I feel that it is not enough to criticise schools for including religious material; they should also be questioned on how they attempt to give children a wider perspective than just a snapshot of the US in the first few years of the 21st century. |
|
08-24-2002, 06:18 PM | #37 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Dec 2000
Location: Detroit, MI
Posts: 1,107
|
Quote:
|
|
08-25-2002, 06:50 AM | #38 |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Wichita, KS, USA
Posts: 2,514
|
For the most part, I agree with Richard Morey and captainpabst (nice to know there is an agnostic choir director out there). I think, however, that school choirs do occupy a grey area when it comes to religion in schools, by teachers and students both. I think the reason for this is that there is a selection pressure. Many people learn to sing in choirs in church, and those who sing in choirs tend to be active in church. I have seen several choir directors edge towards using their choirs for the advancement of religious purposes.
In my own experience, I didn't sing, but I was the drummer for our "pops" choir (in a sad commentary on our school, being a musician for our pops choir had higher status than being in the jazz band). The choir director was very conservative religiously, and his wife even more so. What I found stunning, however, was how much conservative Christianity was pervasive in the choir. Our second performance was at a county fair, and consisted of a gospel melody (our only religious song, to be sure, but the one that was performed the most by the choir) being performed for a church group. The bass player and I, the two non-religious members, felt like we'd been conned. When at the state fair we stayed at a church, and the price was to perform at a church. Since the director knew that the bass player and I were likely to refuse to perform, we were excused from the concert (I attended one performance our of four out of politeness to the host, the bass player refused to attend at all, I think his was the correct response). Towards the end of the school year, the pops choir performances fell off. By that time, I had all my credits for High School, and was going to the university mid day. The director told me to "go home" when I showed up back at the high school for pops choir class, because he was using the time as an extra hour for his chamber choir practice (they had a gig in Mexico for the summer). Of course, they performed more music of a religious nature, but that was appropriate for a chamber choir. What was not appropriate was what I heard later about what had happened while they were down in Mexico. The choir director's minister, and father of two of the members of the choir, performed an evangelical service on top of one of the Mayan pyramids for the choir. A number of the people who were in that choir (or the pops choir, and pretty much everyone who sang in one sang in the other) who were not overtly religious in High School ended up being heavily involved in very evangelical groups in college. It was sad really. While there were a large number of students in the choirs who were quite religious, there were also a number who were not, and who ended up in campus christian groups (the most benign of which was Campus Crusade for Christ, which is saying a lot). It actually became something of a scandal, particularly when one set of parents had their daughter kidnapped by "deprogrammers" to get her out of a campus group that was commonly identified as a cult. The choir director resigned at the same time. He was prone to fits of temper, and he had gotten into some hot water over his treatment of some students. In sum, and in my experience based opinion, this choir director was willing to push the envelope on religion, but had the good sense to back off when people challanged him (on the other hand, the two people who did were instrumental musicians, not singers-I wonder what his response would have been to a singer opting out. One of them did kind of comment on the gospel melody, and the church based performances which focused on it, in a skeptical sense. On the other hand, when I saw this same student in college all he talked about was his Bible Study group, and about how the service in Mexico was "awesome" (which was a word he threw around during that conversation). All this was twenty three, twenty four years ago now. Well, that turned out to be a ramble. [ August 27, 2002: Message edited by: ksagnostic ] [ August 27, 2002: Message edited by: ksagnostic ]</p> |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
|