Abstract

It has taken many years for different styles of music to be utilised within Pentecostal churches as acceptable forms of worship. These shifts in musical sensibilities, which draw upon elements of pop, rock and hip hop, have allowed for a contemporisation of music that functions as worship within these settings, and although still debated within and across some denominations, there is a growing acceptance amongst Western churches of these styles. Whilst these developments have taken place over the past few decades, there is an ongoing resistance by Pentecostal churches to embrace Indigenous musical expressions of worship, which are usually treated as token recognitions of minority groups, and at worst, demonised as irredeemable musical forms. This article draws upon interview data with Christian-Māori leaders from New Zealand and focus group participants of a diaspora Māori church in southwest Sydney, Australia, who considered their views as Christian musicians and ministers. These perspectives seek to challenge the relationship between Indigenous and non-Indigenous relations within a church setting and create a more inclusive philosophy and practice towards being ‘one in Christ’ with the role of music as worship acting as a case study throughout. It also considers how Indigenous forms of worship impact cultural identity, where Christian worship drawing upon Māori language and music forms has led to deeper connections to congregants’ cultural backgrounds.

Highlights

  • Since the mid 1950s, there have been a range of influences and societal shifts that have deeply impacted the ways in which Pentecostal worship music has engaged with popular culture

  • Many arguments have been levelled against the merging of contemporary forms of Christian music (hereafter referred to as contemporary congregational songs (CCS2 )), alongside secular musical styles, with some scholars arguing that no style is neutral, and impacts the way the given style can or cannot act to facilitate Christian worship (Dawn 1999; Lucarini 2010; Godwin 1995 in Thornton 2015), especially where the “attitudes, behaviours and thoughts” of the music seep into “the subculture that embraces it” (Defleur and Dennis 1996, cited in Gormly 2003, p. 255)

  • Rather than seeking to emulate top Christian music producers, Indigenous ‘spirit and truth’ worship can draw upon musical styles that have been described as ‘raw’ and something that is instinctively ‘known’ by Indigenous Christians, though with little room to express these ontological realities alongside dominant contemporary congregational song practices

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Summary

Introduction

Since the mid 1950s, there have been a range of influences and societal shifts that have deeply impacted the ways in which Pentecostal worship music has engaged with popular culture. While these developments have led to significant changes within Christian music in the West, they often ignore Indigenous expressions of contemporary Christian-Indigenous identity. This article considers interview perspectives from Christian leaders in Aotearoa/New Zealand and Māori diaspora churchbased participants that were collated as part of my doctoral studies (2012–2015). These groups explored how they perceived their Christianity within their contexts, and what it means to express Christian-Māori identity through music both inside and outside of their congregations. Music producers, but rather seeks to express Christian identity through the eyes of (in this case, Māori) Christians both in Aotearoa/New Zealand and Australia

Unlikely Roots
Data Analysis and Discussion
Unearthing the Sounds of the Nations
Reducing and Expanding Worship
A Case Study
Worship or Tokenism?
Conclusions
Full Text
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