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A revised major
at Calvin College will equip students to be worship leaders in Christian
churches upon graduation. The new Music in Worship major has at its
core a broad vision for the role of music in the worship life of churches
worldwide.
"The worship
life of the church has become so varied," says John Witvliet (left),
director of the Calvin Institute of Christian Worship and one of the
people who helped frame the new major. "In this new major we want
to model for our students how churches can talk and learn about worship-contemporary
and traditional churches, Asian and African and North American churches.
We don't want this to be a narrow, niche major. We want to give students
the skills to become fluent and engage a broad range of styles and congregations.
We want to give students the skills to go deeper than style."
The new major will
first and foremost teach students to be good musicians. "Church
music must not be second-class music," says Witvliet. "We
want students who come out of this major to be first-class musicians."
Second, the new
major will teach students how to lead church conversations about music
in worship. "Churches are asking," says Witvliet, "how
worship can be both relevant and profound and how the music we use to
worship can be part of that. Churches need theologically trained people
to be part of those conversations. Our students will be those people."
Students who take
the new major will study courses in the music department such as music
history and music theory. They also will specialize in a performance
area, such as organ or piano or guitar or composition, and they will
take new courses, including a religion department offering on worship
and a hands-on musical leadership course."
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