New Testament Professor Don Carson on worship:
My mother died of Alzheimer’s disease, over nine years. Nine or ten months before she died, you’d get a small flicker from the eyes or squeeze of the hand if you held up pictures of her grandchildren. Six months before she died, if you sang an old hymn like ‘Blessed assurance, Jesus is mine’, you’d get a squeeze. Or a quote from the King James Version that she’d been brought up on. That was about the last thing that produced any response in her. The most deeply embedded memories in that decaying brain were those old hymns and memorised Scripture. There is something worrying to me about a generation that sings choruses that won’t last more than five years. There’s not much memorization of Scripture, and there’s not much memorization of doctrinally profound hymns. I want to see that reborn. Nobody’s going to die remembering ‘He’s a great big wonderful God’.
From an interview by Tony Payne (via Justin Taylor)