Saturday, May 16, 2015

Does God Like Metal?

Christian metal is an interesting thing. It sometimes uses harsh and aggressive music to proclaim the Gospel, and sometimes is a vehicle for a particular Christian's viewpoint on life. The term "Christian Metal" can mean metal performed by Christians, or metal with a Christian message. Either way, it's assumed the band members are Christians. But what does a non-Christian see when they look at this:


This is Antidemon's latest album, Apocalypsenow. A metalhead will think it's cool, I think. But the general public will be disgusted. Some will say: "That's Christian?!" And they will not receive the message. Then again, it's not aimed at the Michael Buble crowd, is it?

Heavy metal tends to veer toward the dark side of things. Behemoth and Vader are blatantly anti-Christian, while many other bands are simply twisted in some way. Cattle decapitation comes to mind. Many thrash bands have anti-religious messages. Slayer, anyone? While other bands simply opine about life or politics. But usually there is an occult undertone of some sort, like in the art or lyrics or both. Skulls, pentagrams, violence, these are not holy themes! So should a Christian participate in unholiness?
No. Isn't that the obvious answer? What does Christ have to do with Belial, the Bible asks? Aren't Christians supposed to be pure like their Lord?

Are Christian metal bands just making themselves look like fools?


This is Slechtvalk, a black/Viking Christian metal band from the Netherlands. I will say this: Christian metal bands know how to mix genres and make something interesting. But here lies the point: Is this right? Should we followers of Christ use such insane sounds like black metal for God's glory? Is God glorified by raspy vocals and blistering riffs? Listen to this and tell me what you think:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hnuqgKhPpag


Loud, isn't it? When you think of Christ-like, do you think of that? Or the above album art? Perhaps people who play and people who like Christian metal enjoy the darkness and want to slap Jesus' name on their favorite thing and think it will now be acceptable to God. Syncretism, like when the Israelites mixed Baal worship with the worship of Yahweh. Maybe Satan is laughing at how gullible we are. Nergal seems to think metal and Christianity do not mix. Metal is about rebellion. Ask any metal guy.


That is Batista from Antidemon. They are big in Brazil. Well, big for a Christian death/grindcore metal band. Go ahead and analyze this. Listen to the croaking! Some of you are mortified, some of you love it. No that isn't English. It's Portuguese. But is it godly?
If you haven't noticed, I vacillate on this issue. I like metal. I like Antidemon. And you know what, they really do love Jesus. They travel all over preaching Jesus, and they aren't cheesy posers. The rough youth of South America will listen to them. And maybe that's the point. God will use them whether metal is inherently evil or not.

Some say music is neutral. It's the lyrics that mean something. That's asinine! Music is not neutral. If it makes you feel something, then it isn't neutral. It's influential. If the music sounds evil, then maybe it is. Or maybe Christians are good at masquerading as Satan, much like he masquerades as an angel of light. (Joel Osteen? Sorry, had to throw that in there.) Shoot, take a look at these guys:


Grave Robber, a horror-punk band. Very catchy. Very Christian? That's what the band says. They like horror movies, and thought they could combine that imagery with Biblical imagery of being dead in sin and being born again. Are they two mutually exclusive things? Are these guys trying to eat that famous cake?


"We're all gonna die!" is one of their songs. Lots of subtexts in that. Hidden under the shock is the Gospel, and if the band members are living a righteous life before God, do the masks matter?
I don't know.
Pastor Bob Beeman likes metal. Go watch some Pastor Bob Daily shows on Youtube. Very cool even if you don't like metal. He says metal is a style, like country or rap. But those styles don't sound evil unless the lyrics convey a godless message. Metal is different. Metal is supposed to sound evil! That's why black metal was created. So maybe unblack metal is just plain stupid.


Having said that, these guys put black metal to good use. Extol. Have you heard this? They sound like Antestor meets Yes. no, I'm not kidding. This album is so different I don't know what to say about it. Like I said earlier, Christian metal bands are great at mixing genres. And Extol does it effectively. Listen.
Does God like it though?
Maybe. I didn't ask Him. The Bible does say this, though: "If it's not of faith, it's sin." Meaning if it bothers your conscience don't partake of it! That goes for movies or any other thing in life. If you look at my other posts, you will see I'm attracted to creepy-looking stuff. Monsters, aliens, death-metal art. I like it. So perhaps this is my issue alone, and I'm just sharing with all of you the strange workings of my mind and faith. Can Christians co-op the world's stuff? C.S. Lewis and Tolkien did. Can Impending Doom? Well, they do, along with Pantakrator, Mortification, and Living Sacrifice. Maybe they can, because God built them that way. Me, I don't know yet. I will leave you with some cool album art anyway, because we're here already. This is from the afore-mentioned Slechtvalk.
Till next time. . .



 

8 comments:

  1. Slechtvalk is from Netherlands, not Norway

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  2. I am a fan of melodic metal and listen exclusively to Christian bands. The bands you mentioned can reach the lost where they are. Let's face it, a kid who listens to death metal will never listen to a CCM pop band or listen to the local Christian radio station. They will check out a CD with cool cover art and music they like and they just might take out the liner notes and read the lyrics. This may be the only exposure to God's word these kids ever have. I do not care for the growlers much, but hey, I hate rap as well, but... there are tons of kids and young adults that can be reached through these genres of music that would not otherwise be exposed to the Gospel. Good post by the way.

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    1. Paul did say "be all things to all people". I guess the point is to reach everyone with the Gospel in any way that they can hear it!

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  3. I personally believe it is not good to be christian anything when it comes to business. Christian metal or christian gospel, no matter the style, it's really grey area to use it as a platform to make money.
    I am no longer a christian, but when I was, I refused to be in a christian band for that very reason. It's morally inappropriate to me.

    I do, however, believe that you can be in a metal band that is not anti-christian or has occult lyrics. I always made sure my lyrics were about life and the human condition. It had no religious affiliation. Not everything you say or everything you create has to be directly rooted in the bible. Music does not specifically have to be written to talk about jesus in order for it to be of good report. And metal can function as a construct for this. Especially the negative or darker experiences in life that we all experience, christian or not.

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    1. Good words, my friend. I think Christians struggle with not appearing evil, thus the conflict over metal, tattoos, and clothing. But you are right, music doesn't have to be overtly Christian to be "good". And their are metal bands that are not evil or occultic. The struggle for me sometimes is whether it "sounds" evil. But that's my own issue!

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    2. I think if you feel it sounds evil and you think it hurts your spirit, you should stay away from it. :)

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    3. "If it's not of faith, it is sin." Thanks, brother.

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