Archive - November, 2009

Worship That Connects Part 1: The Leaders’ Role…

Photo credit: Jonathan Sloan (jonathansloan on Flickr)

Photo credit: TMP7 by Jonathan Sloan (jonathansloan on Flickr)

I’ve been leading worship at my church… And since I tend to be one of those cerebral guys that likes to think about things, I’ve been thinking a lot about leading worship… Why do some things work and others don’t?  What is it about certain songs that really get people worked up?  Why are some people completely unmoved while others weep?  What do I need to do as a worship leader to help those disconnected people engage?

And I thought that I’d share my observations (insightful and otherwise) with all of you good people…

God is in the House…

I’m really weary of hearing people beg for God’s presence.  Jesus said, that “wherever two or three gather” in His name, He’s there.  Whether we experience His presence is not about begging Him to come… It’s about showing up ourselves.  In general, the act of worship is essentially unnatural… maybe supernatural is a better description… either way, it is outside of our natural inclinations to sing, shout, dance, clap, whatever…

The Worship Team is a Bridge…

My team has heard me beat this drum on a weekly basis:  When we lead worship, we have to put the needs of the church ahead of our own desire to “enter in.”  We have to watch their response and adjust what we’re doing.  We have to connect with them.  Since the act of worship is something that has to be learned and practiced, people need a bridge to the presence of God.

Somewhere along the way, the “presence-based” traditions (pentecostal and charismatic traditions especially) got this idea that leading worship was connected to the leaders’ own worship… I’ve heard people say that we (worship leaders) can’t lead others to a place that we’re not.  Which is only true in part: We certainly can’t lead people into the presence of God if we’ve never been there, but that’s where the analogy falls apart.

I’m not leading anybody if I stand inert, hands raised, eyes closed and try with all my being to touch God.  As if I could then , “channel” this experience to the rest of the tribe (read: voodoo).  This “all about me” approach also runs afoul or the essentially selfless nature of leadership… It’s all about the people being led… I got this Idea from Jesus:

The First will be last…

Rather than thinking of ourselves as a conduit of God’s presence (which is kinda arrogant, when you think about it) we have to see ourselves as God’s doormen (or doorwomen, as the case may be).  It’s the job of the worship leaders to throw open the doors to God’s presence and invite people to come in.

When my wife was pregnant with out daughter, I used to drop her off at the door when we’d go shopping.  I remember one occasion when I parked the car and walked up to the door to find her still holding it open for a seemingly endless stream of people who didn’t say “thanks” or acknowledge that she was even there… And while this is a horrible example of how we should interact with people, it’s exactly what worship leaders should do as they serve the church:

Hold open the doors to allow others to enter in.

Tomorrow:  What that looks like and the much-maligned “P” word…

PhotoFriday: Pinion…

Photo credit: Pinon by Tim Jones (timmyjohn1 on Flickr)

Photo credit: Pinion by Tim Jones (timmyjohn1 on Flickr)

I took a little walk through Garden of the Gods in Colorado Springs with my wife and daughter. The sky was unremarkable, so I was shooting monochrome and hoping for some dramatic contrast. Which I got when I pointed the camera up at this pinion pine…

PhotoFriday is a feature of my own photographic art. Join our group on Flickr.com to submit photos for post illustrations and FlickrFriday slideshows (resuming in January).

PhotoFriday: Long’s Peak…

Long's Peak by Tim Jones (timmyjohn1 on Flickr)

Long's Peak by Tim Jones (timmyjohn1 on Flickr)

I took a hike up to Emerald Lake in Rocky Mountain National Park with my brother toward the end of the summer. It’s about a 4-mile hike, there and back again with some spectacular scenery along the way, including this view of Long’s Peak. Long’s Peak is the tallest mountain in RMNP and the park’s only 14′er. You can see a bit of glacier, still frozen in August.

PhotoFriday is a feature of my own photographic art.  Join our group on Flickr.com to submit photos for post illustrations and FlickrFriday slideshows (resuming in January).

#5 Most Stressful Job That Pays Badly: Worship Leader…

This guy's idea of stress is picking out funeral hymns... Really?

This guy's idea of stress is picking out funeral hymns... Really?

Did you see this article from CNN/Money Magazine?  It rated Worship Leaders (or Music Ministry Directors) #5 for stress, combined with low pay… Apparently, the median annual income is just over $40K (less than I made selling The Sprockets) and 67% of the people surveyed that have the job find it stressful.

In fairness, Senior Pastors made the list at #10… So did Social Workers (#1), Probation Officers (#3), Substance Abuse Counselors (#13) and High School Teachers (#15)…

Interestingly, many of the professions on the list are “helping” professions (Family Counselors) and several are creatives (TV Producers and Commercial Photographers)…

Almost all of these professions (including Event Planner) are things that I’ve heard kids and students express an interest in “being when they grow up.”  Which partly accounts for the “pays badly” part of the equation.

But what’s so hard about being a Worship Leader?  The write up in the Money article was kinda lame… Something about the stress of picking out songs for funerals…

Really?  That’s all you’ve got?

So, I’ve compiled my own list of stresses from more than 20 years of being and being close to Worship Pastors…

1. Controversy… Worship style in a church is the most divisive and controversial element of church life, so long as the staff is only sleeping with their designated spouses.  I’ve seen people walk out as soon as the music started… or as soon as the drums started playing… or as soon as the song was by David Crowder… or as soon as the song was a hymn… And as far as “helping a church accept a more contemporary style” as I’ve heard it euphemistically said… forget it… People will break fellowship with the church and blame you.

2. Changing paradigms… When I studied worship in college, I learned to “conduct” or as one pastor described it years later, “wave down the seagulls from on high.”  Sacred music majors studied voice, piano, choral directing and handbells… I haven’t seen handbells in a church since I graduated and two years ago a pastor told me that I had been removed from consideration for a position because I didn’t play guitar…

3. Creative stigmata… Most people think of creatives as flighty, unstable and irrational… Mostly because we are… I attended a church where the Worship Pastor had a PhD in theology but was never allowed to preach in the Pastor’s absence because he’d just “babble on about singing.” He eventually went on to be the pastor of a larger church…

4. Working with creatives… We’re all self-aware enough to admit that this is stressful, right?

5. Premature and enforced “retirement”… I recently heard Ed Stetzer talking about churches that he knew that forced their worship pastors into senior adult ministry positions because they had become “too old” and “couldn’t keep up” with the changing musical preferences of their congregations… And nobody will commit to an exact, chronological age for that…

6. Pressure to perform… I was on staff in a church (thankfully, I was NOT the worship leader) that met every Monday to talk about what went wrong with the Sunday service… brutal.

7. Pressure to create… A pastor that I worked with handed me a collection of (bad) original songs and asked me to create an Easter cantata… I once had to make an “Olympic flame” for Vacation Bible School with a $5 budget… Oh, and can you write a worship song for my sermon series on Leviticus?  Then if you miss a deadline or the leadership doesn’t “like” what you’ve created… See #6…

So, what about it?  What makes your worship ministry job stressful?

But what’s so hard about being a Worship Leader?  The write up in the Money article was kinda lame… Something about the stress of picking out songs for funerals…

Really?  That’s all you’ve got?

A New Way to Think About Creativity from TED…

I ran across this today… Elizabeth Gilbert, author of the runaway bestseller, Eat, Pray, Love, talks about the creative process.

It’s well worth the 19 minutes that it will take you to watch it…

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