On Earth as it is in Heaven
to receive power and wealth and wisdom and strength
The small living room is glowing with the scent of candles. The handful of people are not focused on one another, some look at the floor, some at the ceiling, some have their eyes tightly closed. One person quietly strums a guitar while most others sing along. The air is heavy with heart felt praise. This small gathering is an intimate moment in worship.
The huge arena shakes with the power of the sound system. Tens of thousands of people stand and raise their arms toward heaven. It is so loud you cannot hear your own voice. The air is hazy from the light show and fog machine but it adds to the ethereal experience of so many believers in one place, with one voice praising God!
I have worshipped in a living room, I have worshipped in an arena and everywhere in-between. Ultimately it doesn’t matter where you worship. It matters who you worship. And it matters when you worship. Worship is not a once a week thing. It is not only an hour on Sunday. Worship is a lifestyle. It is a habit. It is a spiritual discipline we must practice constantly. Real, true worshippers do not just experience great music or emotional events, they experience the Presence of God!
This week, spend time in the days before your worship services pursuing the Presence of God. It doesn’t matter if your service is 5 or 5,000. All worship matters to God.
Here are some verses to consider about the Presence of God:
‘My Presence will go with you, and I will give you rest.’ – Exodus 33:14
‘You will seek me and find me, when you seek me with all your heart.’ – Jeremiah 29:13
‘The LORD your God is in your midst, a mighty one who will save, He will rejoice over you with gladness, He will quiet you by his love, He will rejoice over you with loud singing.’ – Zephaniah 3:17
The husband wakes up and drags himself out of bed to go downstairs and make the morning coffee. The wife follows through the dark house in hushed tones. Smells of coffee and quiet sounds of cereal bowls fills the air in a moment of quiet before the storm. Suddenly, and without warning, the shouts of multiple children pierce the calm like thunder over the horizon. The day has begun. Zero to 120 in four seconds. The whiplash hurts momentarily, but there’s no time for that now. We are moving at the speed of family, and it is Sunday. We have got to get to church, and get there on time. Tension goes from tropical island to raging volcano in seconds. Kids are fighting, pajamas are flying, teeth are not getting brushed. How can so many shoes not have a mate? Are your teeth still not brushed? They pile in the car like clowns at a circus, the smell of coffee and breakfast are long gone, replaced with tween-age boys in need of a shower, but there’s no time for that, it is church day! Traffic rules do not apply this morning. Sweat builds as the clock counts down to the service start time. The pedal gets closer to the floor and the meter rises dangerously high. Like a suburban Nascar, the family makes the final turn into the lot. Made it, and only five minutes late this week…
This may or may not ring true for you, but I guarantee it is pretty close to the story of many families in your church this weekend. As worship leaders we spend all week, or sometimes all our lives preparing for the services. This is not the case for your average attendee. They barely made it with their life. Yes, they want to be there, mostly. However, there is an uphill battle for the average person to transition from the chaos of their life to the transcendent worship of their Creator. As worship leaders, we must constantly keep this in mind. Don’t make the on ramp so steep that there is no chance the average human can get on the path to worship together.
Plan your service with the normal, tired, busy, overworked, exhausted person in mind. Spend time allowing the regular attender to ‘catch up’ with the worship team. You might just find that you all will worship better together!
We can only worship what we know.
We live in the Information Age. We constantly seek out more information about our favorite celebrities because the more we know, the more we can fawn over them, or imitate them, or be like them. Unfortunately the current celebrity is the wrong focus of our worship. And if you really think about it, you probably don’t really want to be like them.
We were made to be shaped into God’s image so our focus should be on how to be more like Him. And in fact this is the way we grow in our worship. When we know God we are not only able, but we are drawn to worship Him. When we realize the fullness of his love and the extent of his grace, we can’t help but worship him!
David, King of Israel, had this experience as well. He wanted to build a temple to worship God. Ultimately his son Solomon built it, but when it was completed, David worshipped!
Here’s his prayer:
“David praised the Lord in the presence of the whole assembly, saying, “Praise be to you, Lord, the God of our father Israel, from everlasting to everlasting. Yours, Lord, is the greatness and the power and the glory and the majesty and the splendor, for everything in heaven and earth is yours. Yours, Lord, is the kingdom; you are exalted as head over all. Wealth and honor come from you; you are the ruler of all things. In your hands are strength and power to exalt and give strength to all. Now, our God, we give you thanks, and praise your glorious name.”
1 Chronicles 29:10-13 NIV
Spend some time reading through all the attributes of God mentioned in this passage and then spend some time growing in your worship of God!
I’m reading a book where George Barna says ‘eight out of ten believers do not feel they have entered into the presence of God, or experience a connection with Him, during the worship service. Half of all believers say they do not feel they have entered into the presence of God or experienced a genuine connection with Him during the past year.’
Do you find this to be true in your congregation? Are we that disconnected?
If this is even remotely true than as worship leaders our job is SO much more important! Our role goes far beyond the walls of church on Sunday. We must educate our fellow believers on a lifestyle of worship that flows out of the very heart of God.
As you lead or just participate this weekend know that you play an important role in Growing Worship!
1 It is good to praise the Lord
and make music to your name, O Most High,
2 proclaiming your love in the morning
and your faithfulness at night,
3 to the music of the ten-stringed lyre
and the melody of the harp.
4 For you make me glad by your deeds, Lord;
I sing for joy at what your hands have done.
-Psalm 92
Life is a journey. When Christ enters a life, that life is forever changed.
2 Corinthians 3:17 Now the Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom. 18 And we all, who with unveiled faces contemplate the Lord’s glory, are being transformed into his image with ever-increasing glory, which comes from the Lord, who is the Spirit.
As a believer in Christ you are being transformed into HIS IMAGE! If this is actually true, as the Scripture says, than we should act accordingly. God is working on your life. He is working in your heart and wants you to leave the old ways of your sin filled life behind and be transformed into the person you were really made to be!
As a worship leader, your heart is the most important thing you have. Your gifts and talents and abilities are great. They will be used for God’s glory to shine, but God wants to take the potential he has given you and transform you into the image of his son, Jesus. Jesus is the perfect human. He overcame all the temptation, he knew the will of his Father. He was the living example of perfect Love and perfect Truth.
Spend some time today seeking the Spirit of God and asking how you can be more like Jesus! Then prepare to lead others in Worship with the transformed life you have been given in Christ!!!
This is the final in a three part series about the basics of Worship Leading and how I mentor Worship Leaders.
You can check out Part 1 and Part 2 if you are interested!
As I’ve discussed, I break down three parts of Worship Leading; the Leading itself, Playing – vocally or instrumentally, and finally Directing; this is the role of Band Director. Again, I break these up into three parts because most people don’t come pre-wired with all three. I have met people who are great singers who need help leading. I have met people who have the heart of a worshipper, but need help learning an instrument. And most often I meet people who have a little of those two skills, but don’t know how to speak ‘Band.’ Some of you know what I mean. That time during rehearsal where you want the drummer to kick on 1 and 3 and snare on 2 and 4. Or maybe you want 4 on the floor. Then the bass player needs to do a chord substitution for the C# instead of the A. Some of that is music theory, some of it is experience with different instruments. All of it is Band Directing. I spend a lot of time coaching Worship Leaders on this. The best approach I’ve found is to co-lead with a Worship Leader and have them watch what I do. I’ll even call out to them what I’m doing, while I’m doing it. Then we’ll follow up and have a specific conversation afterwards. This is a very important skill in Worship Leading that unfortunately is not really taught in schools that I’ve seen. You don’t generally get it in a music education. You certainly don’t get it in a Biblical education. If you were in a garage band in high school, maybe you saw it happening or learned it by accident. Most however, need examples to show them what to do, what to say and when. It is just like learning another language. It is one half the language of music theory and the other half the language of sounds. Sometimes calling out chord changes or rhythm accents. Sometimes just saying ‘boom, boom, boom.’
So, if you are a less experienced Worship Leader, seek out a seasoned veteran Band Director. Chances are you already know one! There is a scary element here of asking for help, but don’t avoid the learning process. One thing I learned a long time ago is that I am usually not the best musician in the group, I am just the leader. My job is not to run musical circles around the team. My job is to pull the team together. My job is to take the weekend guitar shredder and the classical pianist and the classic rock drummer with the basement bass player and create cohesive Worship music. This takes the three skills of Leading, Playing and Directing, all at the same time with excellence to the Glory of our God and King, Jesus!
If you are a seasoned Worship Leader, maybe you could look around for someone less experienced and see if you can teach them what you’ve learned over the years. They will be grateful and the Kingdom of God will grow in ways you probably can’t even imagine!
Make a Joyful Noise!
This is the second installment in the Guide to Worship Leading. You can read Part 1 here.
When I begin mentoring Worship Leaders I always begin with a conversation about three things. The first is Worship Leading. To read more about that check out Part 1.
The second element of Worship Leading is Music – honing your craft, or growing your musicianship. This could be singing, or playing an instrument or both. Each person I mentor has been selected as a worship leader for a reason. Often it is because they are good at singing or playing. As I mentioned last time, that is not the only thing, but it is an important thing. We are called as Worship Leaders to pursue excellence! ‘Live a life worthy of the calling you have received’ (Ephesians 4:1) Sometimes this means giving a Worship Leader in training singing lessons or guitar lessons or encouraging them to go to school for music, etc. We must pursue excellence in our craft, not for the sake of excellence, as we see too often in the ‘ego’ side of life, but we pursue excellence because God is worthy of our best!
If you are a Worship Leader, young or old, experienced or just starting out, you should ask yourself the question, ‘How am I growing?’ I know I ask myself that question all the time! If you are a guitar player, how much are you practicing? If you are a piano player, what styles do you know? If you are a vocalist, how are you managing your voice? This is a whole topic unto itself! Sometimes as singers we forget that our voice is a muscle and just like going to the gym and getting exercise for our body, we need to exercise our voices to maintain them and grow them toward health and effectiveness. How many of you sing multiple services each week? With a rehearsal added, that can lead up to several hours of singing each week. Now how many of you warm up your vocal chords before singing…?
So whatever your instrument, spend time this week dedicating it to God and work toward improving. You don’t need to be the greatest guitar player or piano player or even singer, but I believe there is always room to get better at what you do. As with so much in life it comes down to intentionality. We can reach a level where we coast by, or we can intentionally push into growth. That is what we are here to do! That is the essence of Growing Worship!
God Bless you and your ministry this week!
-Matt
ps – stay tuned for Part 3 of A Guide to Worship Leading