HammerStone said:
We, of course, live by Christ so that question is non sequitar.
This is not about being moral. This is about fostering the kind of questions, moral dilemmas, and other thinking that can lead a nonbeliever to Jesus. A prime example of this in the Bible would be Esther. God's not clearly mentioned anywhere in the book, yet it was canonized as divinely inspired aside from the subtle references contained therein. If you gave someone the book of Esther say on an island that had never encountered a Christian, the book would likely make the reader ponder the meaning and message. This is hardly directing anyone to a life of moralism, but is instead sowing the seeds that may germinate at a later time. Esther asks some deep questions, that's the beauty of the book.
The rub is that Christians don't generally produce good art. We slap the name Jesus on the work 10-20 times and then call it Christian where it's sold on a certain aisle in the bookstore. The thesis advanced here is that we merely produce good art, which cannot help but be permeated by our Christian ideals. It doesn't need the name of Christ slapped on it to be explicitly Christian or to point Christwards, when the message pointing to Christ is born in the very nature of it.
Even though many would argue music as a whole is going downhill with the advent of digital techniques, it's like when you turn on the local CCM station. The lyrics are poor, the chords simple, and the complexity of the message is a crappy rendition of what I can hear on the local top 40. There are some very good bands in various genres that are not explicitly Christian, but their songs run over with Christian themes, analogies and struggles.
True, music pales in comparison to ages, ago. Architecture also pales in comparison. Art does, too. Look at some of the great Christian artists and musicians from long ago that seemed to be divinely inspired. Maybe that is what is missing today. Divine inspiration which comes from a nearness and fierce loyalty to God. Maybe, deep spirituality is missing.
Some composers that had a sincere faith, many coping with difficult circumstances and had their share of human failings. Among them is a surprising level of agreement on the basic Christian beliefs.
Johann Sebastian Bach, George Frederic Handel, Franz Joseph Haydn, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Ludwig van Beethoven, Franz Peter Schubert, Felix Mendelssohn, Frederic Chopin, Franz Liszt, Richard Wagner, Charles Gounod, Cesar Franck, Anton Bruckner, Johannes Brahms, Antonin Dvorak, Edward Elgar, Ralph Vaughan Williams, Charles Ives, Igor Stravinsky, Olivier Messiaen.
Have we artists like these today? Who inspire faith and belief with their music?
For another kind of artist: Rembrandt for instance. Good read:
http://digitalcommons.liberty.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1174&context=sor_fac_pubs
Of course there are many, many writers of yesterday that had a deep spirituality. Is this what is missing, today?