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29 pages, 9956 KiB  
Article
Improving the Acoustics of the Church of Saints Marcellino and Pietro in Cremona (Italy) for Musical Performances
by Sofia Parrinelli, Riccardo Giampiccolo, Angelo Giuseppe Landi and Fabio Antonacci
Acoustics 2025, 7(3), 42; https://doi.org/10.3390/acoustics7030042 - 8 Jul 2025
Viewed by 462
Abstract
Churches are spaces designed with a unique acoustic identity, which is intimately connected to the oratory and musical needs of the historical period in which they were built. For instance, their typically long reverberation time is appropriate to specific uses, such as liturgical [...] Read more.
Churches are spaces designed with a unique acoustic identity, which is intimately connected to the oratory and musical needs of the historical period in which they were built. For instance, their typically long reverberation time is appropriate to specific uses, such as liturgical functions and choral music performances, but it may impair the repurposing of the space for other functions. Indeed, an acoustic environment suitable for choral or sacred music may not be compatible with other musical genres such as chamber music, solo performances, or small instrumental ensembles, which require greater clarity and frequency-balanced acoustic properties. In such cases, careful analysis of the environment and specific acoustic conditioning become essential steps to enable the space to be used for novel purposes, without compromising its artistic and historical integrity. In this work, we analyze and improve the acoustics of the church of Saints Marcellino and Pietro through space-time acoustic measurements and simulations. After developing and validating our model, we propose various solutions to optimize the church acoustics, transforming it into a functional concert hall while preserving its original identity and artistic grandeur. Full article
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13 pages, 388 KiB  
Article
Hillsong’s Swansong? On the Decline of Hillsong Within the Contemporary Congregational Song Genre
by Daniel Thornton
Religions 2025, 16(4), 427; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16040427 - 27 Mar 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2234
Abstract
Contemporary Congregational Songs (CCS) are used for gathered musical worship in churches of diverse traditions and denominations all over the world. Christian Copyright Licensing International (CCLI) has measured the use of CCS in licensed churches in various global regions for over 30 years. [...] Read more.
Contemporary Congregational Songs (CCS) are used for gathered musical worship in churches of diverse traditions and denominations all over the world. Christian Copyright Licensing International (CCLI) has measured the use of CCS in licensed churches in various global regions for over 30 years. This article examines the trajectory of songs as they enter and exit the biannual CCLI top songs lists over a 10 year period from 2014–2023. Hillsong has been one of the most prominent producers of CCS, with dominant appearances in the CCLI top song lists for the last three decades. However, they have not released any new CCS since 2021. This article explores what has happened over the past few years to the void left by such a dominant producer of CCS, and what that might mean for the genre and its future. Full article
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15 pages, 218 KiB  
Article
To Be Seen and Heard: Toward a Child Liberation Theology Framework for Contemporary Praise and Worship Practice
by Kelsey Kramer McGinnis
Religions 2025, 16(2), 261; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16020261 - 19 Feb 2025
Viewed by 1741
Abstract
“If there is no space in our faith communities where children can participate in theological work, how can children create a theology that will liberate them?” R.L. Stollar asks in his book, The Kingdom of Children: A Liberation Theology (2023). Popular Christian parenting [...] Read more.
“If there is no space in our faith communities where children can participate in theological work, how can children create a theology that will liberate them?” R.L. Stollar asks in his book, The Kingdom of Children: A Liberation Theology (2023). Popular Christian parenting literature since the 1970s has encouraged adults to view children as undisciplined trainees with little of value to offer their families and churches other than their obedience. Exploration of the recent history of Christian parenting literature and its intersections with politics and other Christian media reveals that there is substantial overlap between the communities most impacted by these books and those that utilize contemporary praise and worship music (CPWM). Using a child liberation theology framework, I examine the ways that prevailing ideas in parenting books have enabled a “parent-centered” model of musical worship in many evangelical churches. By observing the ways children are invited into or implicitly discouraged from participation in corporate musical worship, we can better understand the ways that CPWM practice might be reshaped in a more liberatory direction—one that will benefit children and adults, and foster a more radically unified church. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Contemporary Worship Music and Intergenerational Formation)
16 pages, 502 KiB  
Article
Habitus Formation Through Contemporary Worship Music in Two Church Cases: Implications for Intergenerational Worship
by Laura Benjamins
Religions 2025, 16(2), 237; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16020237 - 14 Feb 2025
Viewed by 1054
Abstract
This article draws upon doctoral case study data from two Protestant Christian churches to examine how contemporary worship music-making practices can reinforce and solidify the musical tastes, dispositions, and tendencies of particular demographics. Drawing upon sociologist Pierre Bourdieu’s concept of the habitus, this [...] Read more.
This article draws upon doctoral case study data from two Protestant Christian churches to examine how contemporary worship music-making practices can reinforce and solidify the musical tastes, dispositions, and tendencies of particular demographics. Drawing upon sociologist Pierre Bourdieu’s concept of the habitus, this article examines the religious musical habitus of musicians in relation to contemporary music repertoire. For some churches, contemporary worship music-making practices may “disrupt” the habitus of a particular subset of a demographic due to their musical preferences and positioning, while contemporary repertoire may affirm the habitus of other, often “young” worshippers due to their musical preferences. Further, the research analyzes each church’s positioning within the overarching musical and theological fields in place. Case study data affirm the notion that Contemporary Worship Music is generationally based in the way it engages with the habitus, which provides implications for worship leaders and those making musical decisions within Christian church contexts. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Contemporary Worship Music and Intergenerational Formation)
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16 pages, 2722 KiB  
Article
Identification of Greek Orthodox Church Chants Using Fuzzy Entropy
by Lazaros Moysis, Konstantinos Karasavvidis, Dimitris Kampelopoulos, Achilles D. Boursianis, Sotirios Sotiroudis, Spiridon Nikolaidis, Christos Volos, Panagiotis Sarigiannidis, Mohammad Abdul Matin and Sotirios K. Goudos
Computers 2025, 14(2), 39; https://doi.org/10.3390/computers14020039 - 27 Jan 2025
Viewed by 788
Abstract
In this work, a comparison of Greek Orthodox religious chants is performed using fuzzy entropy. Using a dataset of chant performances, each recitation is segmented into overlapping time windows, and the fuzzy entropy of each window in the frequency domain is computed. We [...] Read more.
In this work, a comparison of Greek Orthodox religious chants is performed using fuzzy entropy. Using a dataset of chant performances, each recitation is segmented into overlapping time windows, and the fuzzy entropy of each window in the frequency domain is computed. We introduce a novel audio fingerprinting framework by comparing the variations in the resulting fuzzy entropy vector for the dataset. For this purpose, we use the correlation coefficient as a measure and dynamic time warping. Thus, it is possible to match the performances of the same chant with high probability. The proposed methodology provides a foundation for building an audio fingerprinting method based on fuzzy entropy. Full article
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18 pages, 613 KiB  
Article
Multilingual Singing in Nigeria: Examining Roles, Meaning, and Function in Wazobia Gospel Music
by Adekunle Oyeniyi
Religions 2025, 16(1), 4; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16010004 - 24 Dec 2024
Viewed by 1790
Abstract
This article presents an introductory historical, sociolinguistic, and ethnographic study of “Wazobia gospel music”, a twenty-first-century Nigerian congregational musical genre. The term ‘Wazobia’ signifies a fusion of the three regionally recognized local languages in Nigeria: Wa (Yorùbá), Zo (Hausa), and Bia (Igbo)—words that [...] Read more.
This article presents an introductory historical, sociolinguistic, and ethnographic study of “Wazobia gospel music”, a twenty-first-century Nigerian congregational musical genre. The term ‘Wazobia’ signifies a fusion of the three regionally recognized local languages in Nigeria: Wa (Yorùbá), Zo (Hausa), and Bia (Igbo)—words that mean ‘come’ in the respective languages. In the Nigerian context, the Wazobia concept could also symbolize the inclusion of more than one ethnicity or language. By dissecting three multilingual Nigerian congregational songs, I unveil the diverse perceptions of Wazobia gospel music and the associations of the musical genre in line with the influencing agencies, text, and performance practices. Furthermore, I provide a detailed description and analysis of the textual and sonic contents of Wazobia gospel music, emphasizing its roles, meanings, and functions in the Lagos congregations context. I argue that Wazobia gospel music—multilingual singing in Nigerian churches—embodies multilayered roles in negotiating identity and creating hospitality. The complexity of studying congregational singing in cosmopolitan cities (like Lagos, Nigeria) due to multiple ethnolinguistic and musical expressions within local and transnational links is also addressed. To tackle this complexity, this article adopts an interdisciplinary approach, combining historical research, oral history, and hybrid ethnography. This approach ensures a thorough and in-depth understanding of Wazobia gospel music, a topic of significant importance in the study of Nigerian music, linguistics, and cultural studies. By employing frameworks of musical localization and signification, I incorporate the results of my ethnographic studies of three Protestant churches in Lagos, Nigeria, to illustrate Wazobia gospel music’s continued importance. The article conceptualizes multilingual singing and offers fresh perspectives on studying Nigerian Christian congregational music in the twenty-first century. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Multilingualism in Religious Musical Practice)
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14 pages, 199 KiB  
Article
Liturgical Gift or Theological Burden? Teenagers and Ecumenical Liturgical Exchange Events
by Nelson Robert Cowan and Emily Snider Andrews
Religions 2024, 15(12), 1478; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15121478 - 5 Dec 2024
Viewed by 2039
Abstract
Assumptions about the preferences of teenagers in corporate worship regarding format, style, musical selections, and other experiences abound. Recognizing that teenagers are far from homogenous, we sought to listen deeply to how they process and define their experiences of worship, particularly through the [...] Read more.
Assumptions about the preferences of teenagers in corporate worship regarding format, style, musical selections, and other experiences abound. Recognizing that teenagers are far from homogenous, we sought to listen deeply to how they process and define their experiences of worship, particularly through the lens of encountering liturgical difference. Our research team spent one week with approximately 35 highly religious, majority-Evangelical teenagers at Animate 2023 in Birmingham, Alabama—a summer camp with an emphasis in worship and the arts. Based on data from individual interviews and focus groups, this paper articulates some of our findings—namely that these highly devoted teenage worshipers demonstrate liturgical curiosity, delight in their own agency, and often desire to adopt practices that are foreign to them, even when some of those elements are deemed “weird”. The lived experiences of young people are often missing from conversations about their liturgical practices in both the Church and academy. While this study is not generalizable, it offers a micro glimpse into one worship arts camp, aiming to provide tangible data points to address this lacuna. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Contemporary Worship Music and Intergenerational Formation)
22 pages, 4612 KiB  
Article
Acoustics in Baroque Catholic Church Spaces
by Enedina Alberdi, Miguel Galindo, Angel L. León-Rodríguez and Jesús León
Acoustics 2024, 6(4), 911-932; https://doi.org/10.3390/acoustics6040051 - 30 Oct 2024
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 2306
Abstract
After the Council of Trent (1545–1563), the Catholic Church undertook a profound renovation, which affected the spatial configuration of the churches to adjust to the spirit of the Counter-Reformation. The acoustic cultural heritage in these spaces have been studied by different researchers, proposing [...] Read more.
After the Council of Trent (1545–1563), the Catholic Church undertook a profound renovation, which affected the spatial configuration of the churches to adjust to the spirit of the Counter-Reformation. The acoustic cultural heritage in these spaces have been studied by different researchers, proposing the joint analysis of 66 Catholic churches from the Baroque period. This study delves into the global characterisation of the sample and establishes correlations between geometric and acoustic parameters. From the acoustic analysis, it is clear that the central floor typology, as opposed to Latin cross churches, presents better average values of musical clarity in relation to their volume. The analysis of the relationship between acoustic and geometric parameters, when the sample of churches is discriminated by typology, allows for the establishment of appropriate correlations for Latin cross floor plans, single naves and basilicas, but not when the analysis is carried out for the entire sample. These correlations are a tool that allows us to evaluate acoustic parameters not measured in situ in Catholic churches of the Baroque period in a predictive way as a function of other measured acoustic or geometric parameters. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Building Materials and Acoustics (2nd Edition))
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11 pages, 279 KiB  
Article
Multilingual Complexities in the Origins and Development of the Harrist Movement and Its Worship Patterns in Ivory Coast
by James R. Krabill
Religions 2024, 15(9), 1128; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15091128 - 19 Sep 2024
Viewed by 1213
Abstract
The Harrist Church in Ivory Coast, West Africa, emerged from the ministry of Liberian William Wadé Harris who baptized between 100,000 and 200,000 people during his eighteen-month evangelistic tour, 1913–1915. This story is full of linguistic complexities and anomalies. Harris himself spoke only [...] Read more.
The Harrist Church in Ivory Coast, West Africa, emerged from the ministry of Liberian William Wadé Harris who baptized between 100,000 and 200,000 people during his eighteen-month evangelistic tour, 1913–1915. This story is full of linguistic complexities and anomalies. Harris himself spoke only English and his own local Liberian Glebo language. He was therefore compelled to work through expatriate English-speaking merchants, knowledgeable of and conversant in local languages, as interpreters and translators in addressing the twelve ethnic groups who heard and accepted his message. Harris encouraged new converts to compose hymns in their own indigenous languages by transforming musical genres embedded in their local musical traditions. Additionally fascinating is that during this early colonial period, the twelve ethnic groups impacted by Harris’s ministry lived in almost total isolation from each other and developed their own hymn traditions for thirty-five years (1914–1949), unaware of the existence of churches and worship patterns in neighboring ethnic districts. Only in 1949 did they suddenly become acquainted with the broader, multi-musical, multilingual reality of the Harrist movement. Since then, individual musicians and choirs from local congregations have gradually begun to sing a few of each other’s songs, though the challenge of becoming a truly multicultural, multiethnic church remains a work in progress. Documentation of these developments include written colonial and early Protestant and Catholic missionary sources and a large number of eye-witness interviews. Primary research methods employed here come from four intersecting disciplines and theoretical frameworks: orality studies, with particular focus on oral sources in constructing historical narrative; religious phenomenology; mission history; and ethnodoxological research. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Multilingualism in Religious Musical Practice)
19 pages, 292 KiB  
Article
Cultural Expression and Liturgical Theology in the Worship Songs Sung by British-Born Chinese
by James Yat-Man Tang and Jeremy Perigo
Religions 2024, 15(9), 1054; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15091054 - 29 Aug 2024
Viewed by 2246
Abstract
Multilingual and multicultural worship can take on many models and expressions. Initially, Chinese immigration to the UK in the 1950s and 1960s led to an increased population of churches. Many Chinese church services were conducted in Cantonese, catering to the needs of first-generation [...] Read more.
Multilingual and multicultural worship can take on many models and expressions. Initially, Chinese immigration to the UK in the 1950s and 1960s led to an increased population of churches. Many Chinese church services were conducted in Cantonese, catering to the needs of first-generation immigrants, mainly from Hong Kong. Yet, the children of these older generations grew up with a bicultural hybridized identity expressed first in small English-speaking youth groups that led to English-speaking worship services within Chinese churches. Contributing to the field of worship studies through music repertoire studies over four weeks in June and July 2017 at Birmingham Chinese Evangelical Church, we raised the following questions: (1) what do the chosen worship songs represent with regards to the liturgical theology and cultural expressions of this community and (2) how is self-perception and perception of the divine expressed in the lyrical themes of these songs? Our study revealed that singing English songs from the West dominated the corporate liturgical identity of these services. Yet, through a British-born Chinese evangelical cultural reading, some lyrical themes were particularly resonant within Chinese culture, such as honor, shame, reverence, and bowing. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Multilingualism in Religious Musical Practice)
14 pages, 732 KiB  
Article
Love and Emotions in Pietist Hymnography—From the Past to Us: Musical Examples
by Alberto Annarilli
Religions 2024, 15(8), 954; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080954 - 6 Aug 2024
Viewed by 1342
Abstract
This study aims to analyze, through religious hymns in the German-speaking area from the early 18th century, the influence that the Pietist theological movement, starting from Philipp Jacob Spener’s Pia Desideria, had on the centralization of the self in the Protestant religious [...] Read more.
This study aims to analyze, through religious hymns in the German-speaking area from the early 18th century, the influence that the Pietist theological movement, starting from Philipp Jacob Spener’s Pia Desideria, had on the centralization of the self in the Protestant religious world, through the introduction of personal feelings of love towards God. On the one hand, the origins of Pietism can already be traced back to the late 16th century in areas affected by the radical reforms of the Anabaptists. On the other hand, it is from the late 17th century and throughout the 18th century that this theological and spiritual movement destabilized orthodox Lutheranism in some symbolic cities of Protestant Germany, such as Frankfurt am Main, Halle, and the Duchy of Westphalia, up to Moravia. The extensive publication of hymnals and musical compendia for the use of individuals, lay groups (collegia pietatis), faith communities, and churches denotes a fervor and a desire to preach their way of “practicing” spirituality, which greatly contrasts with both orthodox Lutheranism and the prevailing rationalism in the religious and philosophical sphere in Germany of the mid-18th century. For the first time since the Reformation, Lutheranism saw the use, in the theology of the preached and sung Word, of personal feelings and emotions that connect the individual with God, who is made an object of individual as well as collective worship. This was one of the most significant accusations that came from the University of Wittenberg against Pietism, namely the shift of theological and spiritual focus from the centrality of God to the centrality of the self, which manifests its faith through the most intimate emotions and feelings. Through the analysis of some examples taken from hymnographic and theological production, centered on the individual feelings of the believer, this article focuses on how this influenced the religious revival movements that would pervade England and the United States of America for more than two centuries (from the First Great Awakening in the late 18th century to the Pentecostal movements of the 20th century), with a spotlight on Italian hymnody during the Risorgimento. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Musicology of Religion: Selected Papers on Religion and Music)
20 pages, 369 KiB  
Article
The Brazilian Hymnological Melting Pot: Investigating Ethnoracial Discourses in the Compilation of the Lutheran Hymnal Livro de Canto (2017)
by Fernando Berwig Silva
Religions 2024, 15(5), 620; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15050620 - 17 May 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1747
Abstract
In 1926, a New York Times article described the cultural and ethnic flows in south Brazil as a “Melting Pot”. The report predicted that German Brazilians, tied to their ethnoracial origin, would soon be Brazilianized. The study of congregational song practices offers [...] Read more.
In 1926, a New York Times article described the cultural and ethnic flows in south Brazil as a “Melting Pot”. The report predicted that German Brazilians, tied to their ethnoracial origin, would soon be Brazilianized. The study of congregational song practices offers insight into the relationship between migration, race, culture, and ethnicity. Moreover, investigating Brazilian Lutheran singing practices helps us understand how the New York Times’ prediction unfolded on the ground. This paper examines the Brazilian Lutheran hymnal Livro de Canto, published in 2017, and displays how Brazil’s ethnoracial diversity is manifested and negotiated in the Lutheran context, both musically and theologically. By interviewing members of the hymnal committee and investigating how they dealt with Brazil’s ethnoraciality in the context of the hymnal compilation, this paper demonstrates ways denominations and churchgoers negotiate theological, cultural, musical, and ethnoracial identities through congregational singing. More importantly, it showcases how Brazilian Lutheran church music practices inform broader social conversations around racism, nationalism, Blackness, and Brazilianness. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Race, Religion, and Nationalism in the 21st Century)
15 pages, 293 KiB  
Article
Sounds, Emotions, and the Body in Pentecostal Romani Communities in Slovakia
by Jana Belišová
Religions 2024, 15(5), 532; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15050532 - 25 Apr 2024
Viewed by 1664
Abstract
In the past, the Romani in Slovakia identified with the prevailing religion, mainly with the Roman Catholic Church. However, the missionary activities of various Christian denominations after 1990 resulted in the conversion of the Romani to Pentecostal Christian communities. This launched a long, [...] Read more.
In the past, the Romani in Slovakia identified with the prevailing religion, mainly with the Roman Catholic Church. However, the missionary activities of various Christian denominations after 1990 resulted in the conversion of the Romani to Pentecostal Christian communities. This launched a long, creative process of the formation of Pentecostal Romani music. Romani believers consider music and the ability to play and sing to be a gift from God and view these as a form of prayer that should serve for the praise of God. That is why many have given up their worldly music making and now play only praise songs. They gradually modified the hymns they borrowed and replaced them with their own creations. The soundscape of religion does not lie only in religious singing and music, as the emotional sermons and prayers, glossolalia and sounds during the healing and blessing rituals can also be considered religious sounds. During the worship services, this mixture of various sounds leads to the gradual spiritual and emotional unification of the community. The music and the rituals create feelings of intense sensory and emotional character that reflect in bodily expressions. Movements, dance, and the positions of the hands can help glorify God and experience the worship service more intensely. However, under certain circumstances, they might become sources of temptation and sin. This is related to the concepts of “purity” and “impurity”. The premises, whether sacral or profane, interior or exterior ones, also play a significant role in creating the sound. In writing this paper, I have also drawn on my own research on Romani Christian songs, which I carried out in (2012–2013 in Eastern Slovakia). Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Soundscapes of Religion)
15 pages, 665 KiB  
Article
Flourishing through Prayer by Singing in a Liturgical Choir
by Agnieszka Marek and Tomasz Lisiecki
Religions 2024, 15(3), 335; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15030335 - 11 Mar 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2356
Abstract
Prayer in human life enables directing attention to God and a transcendent goal beyond Earthly life. Singing has been present in the life of Israel since the oldest times, which is proved on the pages of the Holy Scriptures, in the Books of [...] Read more.
Prayer in human life enables directing attention to God and a transcendent goal beyond Earthly life. Singing has been present in the life of Israel since the oldest times, which is proved on the pages of the Holy Scriptures, in the Books of Exodus and Psalms. In the New Testament, there is a lot of encouragement to sing the glory of God in psalms and songs, as well as praising God Most High in Revelation. The Catholic Church is concerned with the quality of liturgical music through a number of recommendations and requirements defining the pieces that may become a part of the liturgy. Liturgical choir singing is a special form of common prayer. The aim of the present paper is to examine the effect of prayer by choral singing on human flourishing. The aim was achieved by analyzing recommendations of the Church on liturgical music, presenting the assumptions of the theoretical model investigating the effect of art on human flourishing, and then conducting empirical studies. Sixteen in-depth interviews were carried out with members of fourteen choirs. There were four groups of respondents according to their gender and family status. All obtained codes were organized into five main themes with four subcategories. They confirmed the assumptions of the model presented in the theoretical part and made it possible to identify the effect of choral singing on the performers’ health and the improvement of their skills. In addition, they showed a direct relation between prayer and spiritual well-being when singing in a choir, a coherence of activities with values as well as the striving for happiness. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Christian Prayer: Social Sciences Perspective)
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14 pages, 760 KiB  
Article
The Music of the Silent Exodus: Nunchi Bwa-ing and Christian Musicking in a Second-Generation Asian American Church
by Kathryn Minyoung Cooke
Religions 2024, 15(2), 244; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15020244 - 18 Feb 2024
Viewed by 2541
Abstract
In 1996, Helen Lee dubbed the departure of second-generation Asian Americans from the non-English-speaking immigrant churches that they were raised in as the “silent exodus”. This nationwide phenomenon was taking place largely because first-generation churches failed to provide the second generation with culturally [...] Read more.
In 1996, Helen Lee dubbed the departure of second-generation Asian Americans from the non-English-speaking immigrant churches that they were raised in as the “silent exodus”. This nationwide phenomenon was taking place largely because first-generation churches failed to provide the second generation with culturally relevant care that would enrich their ethnic, national, and spiritual identities. Glory, the church of focus in this study, was founded by and is home to many silent exiles. In hopes of being an enriching church for second-generation Asian Americans, pastoral staff and leaders have created spaces within Glory for racial identity and faith to be in conversation with one another. However, in regard to the music of the church, they were stumped on what could be done to make it uniquely and proudly Asian American. This conundrum inspired a key question in this study: What is distinct about the way that Asian Americans worship God through music? This study argues that the worship music at Glory Church is distinctly Asian American not by what is sonically perceived, but rather by what is physically performed and collectively experienced. The Korean-English, or Konglish, term nunchi bwa-ing (눈치 봐-ing) is utilized as a keyword to describes Christian musicking in a multilingual setting and foregrounds the Korean/Asian American worshiping body. This study concludes by looking forward and arguing that Asian Americans ought to amplify their worship music to the larger Contemporary Worship Music scene as it has the potential to be a powerful site of intergenerational healing. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Multilingualism in Religious Musical Practice)
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