Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Four Things to Do During the Week Before Leading Worship

Once the band is booked and set list is finalized, you might feel like you've done all your work to prepare for the weekend. You might have an hour set aside during the week to practice the songs, but if you want to lead an engaging, meaningful worship experience for your congregation you're going to have to do more.

The worship leaders' job is two fold; worship facilitator on stage, worship administrator behind the scenes. In order to be confident and effective as the worship facilitator on stage, you have to put in significant time and effort as the worship administrator behind the scenes. Here are four things I do during the week that help me be an effective worship facilitator for my congregation...


ONE :: print out the charts and take notes

Early in the week, I print out the charts and listen to each song - taking notes on dynamics, tricky transitions, timing and instrumentation. This step is the foundation to providing clear expectations for the band and vocalists. This step only takes 30 minutes, but gives me an opportunity to see the big picture and be able to communicate clearly before and at rehearsal. You may want to then sit down with your guitar or at a piano and go through everything to make any notes on changes you'd like to implement that will make the song different from the recording (i. e. ending the song after Chorus 2 at the 5 minute mark instead of going all Jesus Culture and doing the 13 minute version).

In this chart for "Like a Lion," I've marked up the song order on the right side and then written several "notes" throughout the song to help me communicate my expectations to the band members.

TWO :: email the band my expectations

Once I have taken the notes, it's time to transcribe them into paragraph form. I've determined the song order, transitions and dynamics as well as identified some parts of the songs that I think will be difficult. I then email those notes with instructions and warnings to the band so they can have some guidance in their personal preparation and practice.

Now here in the Planning Center email I sent to the entire band, you can see my notes for "Like a Lion" in paragraph form. I'll often use bullet points to help break things up by instrument as well, as I've done here.

THREE :: follow up and communication

Now that the band knows what I expect them to do in their preparation, I always try to bug them once or twice later in the week to make sure they are preparing. I'll text, email or call the band members (often depending on their track record of preparation) to make sure they remember to prepare and to give them an opportunity to ask questions to help them gain clarity on parts they're working on. Sometimes, a quick reminder can make the difference between someone showing up prepared and not prepared.

At the end of the day, it's my responsibility that the band members all be prepared. Sending them a text, email, Facebook message or whatever can take just a few seconds, but help remind someone to be working on the music.

FOUR :: prayer and spiritual prep

In order to lead the congregation on a spiritual journey through the worship set, the worship leader (and everyone on stage) must have had the experience on their own as well. I do this by reading through the lyrics and adopting some of the phrases as my personal prayers and then finding the biblical allusions within songs and reading through the passages that relate to them. Playing through the songs in my personal worship time also give me the opportunity to sense the "moments" I am about to lead the congregation through. There are highs and lows that being aware of will help me lead the congregation through them sensitively.

Solomon (Proverbs 4:23) and Jesus (Luke 6:45) taught us that whatever we put into our hearts and minds will be what flows out of our mouths. How valuable then can it be for us to digest the relevant scriptural truths that relate to the songs we lead?!?! Those passages and the hope contained in them will help us articulate the range of emotions from thankfulness to desperation within a worship experience.

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Worship is an Overflow

For some time, I've believed that worship is an overflow. I'm convicted of this because of my experience - my relationship with God and my understanding of His work in my life. Some of my most meaningful moments of worship have directly correlated with what God has done in my heart. As a worship leader, my relationship with God and my understanding of His work in my life shape the worship experiences I create and lead. I make every effort to believe the words (and sing them with conviction) of the songs that I lead each weekend, but some of them are going to more clearly reveal an emotion I am feeling or a truth I am grasping.

I'm now believing something deeper and broader about that statement. There is nothing in my life that does not affect my worship. Everything; every thought I think, every song I listen to, every book I read, every image I see affects my heart and my mind and will eventually affect my worship. Jesus spoke to this idea...

No good tree bears bad fruit, nor does a bad tree bear good fruit. Each tree is recognized by its own fruit. People do not pick figs from thornbushes, or grapes from briers. A good man brings good things out of the good stored up in his heart, and an evil man brings evil things out of the evil stored up in his heart. For the mouth speaks what the heart is full of. (1)
To be effective in my worship leading, I must be conscience of what affects me. I need to be intentional about filling my mind with things that honor God. Filling my mind with "good fruit" so that it naturally overflows from my heart.
Finally, brothers and sisters, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things. (2)
Let our prayer be that God cleans us of unrighteousness as we surrender to Him and fill us with the love, hope and peace that we can only find in Jesus. And may His righteousness be the overflow of our hearts, allowing us to lead worship with contagious conviction because of the work He is performing within us.



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References
(1) - Luke 6:44-45
(2) - Philipians 4:8