Current issue

May 2024

  • General Assembly
  • Christian Aid Week
Home  >  News  >  New Study into Music and Spirituality

News

Image: organ-g38fe69d5e1280_cropped_734_255.jpg

New Study into Music and Spirituality

Wednesday April 26

A new study at the University of St Andrews is exploring the relationship between music and spirituality.

The world-famous composer and conductor Sir James MacMillan, who holds a professorship at St Andrews, has often referred to music as ‘the most spiritual of the arts’. This claim about music has challenged and united academics from leading universities from the UK all the way across the world to Australia, and in fields as diverse as theology and neuroscience. 

Now an international team of academics, led by Professor George Corbett and Dr Sarah Moerman from the University’s School of Divinity at the University of St Andrews, is inviting members of the public to respond to a survey as part of the study.

Professor Corbett explains: “We know that people in all different cultures have turned to music to express their experiences of love, of suffering and death, and of a relationship to the divine.

“Music seems to open up dimensions of human experience beyond the material or what we might call spiritual realities, and our project is trying to see if there are ways of demonstrating empirically that commonly perceived relationship between music and spiritual realities.”

The study states its aim as helping all faith groups, and even those that do not identify with any faith, to improve their connection with their spiritual needs through the power of music.

The group of academics, who come from varied religious belief backgrounds, have already begun to agree on certain observations, particularly on the effect on communities and congregations of worshipping online during the Covid-19 pandemic. Being together but not together, singing with other people but by yourself, has been described as destabilising – but has also seen unexpected benefits such as rethinking what is important, and rediscovering the importance of community in both spiritual expression and in music-making.

The project is grant funded by Templeton Religion Trust, as part of the Trust’s Art Seeking Understanding programme, which looks to advance human understanding across all faiths and belief systems.

Professor Corbett concludes: “The unique impact of this project will be the way it unites religious and scientific disciplines to explore and understand the way we engage with, and indeed need, music in our lives.”


Life and Work is the magazine of the Church of Scotland. Subscribe here.


Comments

Kathleen Coubrough - Wednesday, April 26th, 2023

“This looks very interesting.”


Rev Phyllis Wilson - Friday, April 28th, 2023

“Our son, Gareth Wilson, did his PhD on this subject: How might the human relationship to God and the world be assessed in the light of aesthetic experience?”


Add a reply

All fields are required. Email address will not be published.