Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts

Friday, April 10, 2015

The Role of the Arts in the Church

Image source: baumoi.com

In my conversations with church leaders I often get the question about the role of media and the arts in the Church. Most of the time you can boil their objections down to trying to “dress up” the message of the Gospel, as if it couldn’t stand on its own. The typical argument is that some churches are trying to repackage the Gospel to make it “seeker-friendly”, and in doing so they are watering down the message.

While I have seen this done more often than I care to admit, I have also seen many churches that are accessible, yet producing both converts and disciples.

A number of years ago we took a road trip Paris. While there we took the kids to see the Notre Dame Cathedral. What a beautiful church! As I was explaining to the girls about the meaning of the different stained glass pictures and the carvings, it hit me: The Early Church (and the Church of the Dark Ages) explained the message of the Gospel to an illiterate people through images and stories. And this is exactly how today’s Church will be able to explain the message of the Gospel to a biblically illiterate, media-saturated culture!

Tweet This: How do you explain the message of the Gospel to a biblically illiterate, media-saturated culture? The arts! #PostChristianity @jonperrin

What do you think?  Add your voice to the discussion!

Thursday, January 1, 2015

Thoughts for Worship Leaders


I was coaching a young worship leader recently.  He has a lot of raw talent, but is new to worship leading.  I gave him some advice that I thought other worship leaders might find helpful.

David shepherded them with a devoted heart,
      and led them with skillful hands.
- Psalm 78:72 ISV
I see a couple of important things in this verse.  It was David's devoted heart that earned him the right to shepherd God's people.  But it was his skill that caused them to follow him.  It takes both heart and skill to be a worship leader.

We've all seen worship leaders that had no business singing, much less leading.  They had very little musical gifting, and were usually in the position of leadership because of their relationship to the pastor or one of his "cronies."

We've also seen people with amazing musical skill that are in it for themselves.  It's just another gig for them - a chance to show off their gifts.

We have to remember that our gifts are simply that: gifts!  We didn't earn them.  We can't take credit for them.  Yes, we did have to develop them.  But in the end, they are still gifts from God that were simply entrusted to us.  Those with high gifting will have people that follow them.  We should never take this lightly.  God will hold us accountable for it.

With that in mind, let me give you five things that you need to be mindful of as you lead worship.

1.  The Holy Spirit - We need to have a plan.  We need to know what songs we're singing, in which order and which key.  And we need to work out the transitions beforehand.  But we need to be prepared for the Holy Spirit to call an audible.  We don't want to follow our every whim or passing thought... that would lead to chaos.  But we do need to learn to be led by the Holy Spirit.  There may be something He wants to say or do, and we need to be paying attention.

2.  The pastor - He (or she) is ultimately responsible for the flow of the service.  He has prayed out the message God wants him to deliver.  He has prepared to deliver it.  When he's ready to take the service you need to shut down the worship and step aside.  If he wants you to tone it down or speed it up, just cooperate.  Don't be a diva!  It's not about you, anyway.  It's about Jesus and His Kingdom.

I've seen far too many worship leaders that think their part of the service is the most important.  You, as the worship leader, may not agree with how they are leading a service.  That's okay.  You need to submit.  Later, behind closed doors, you can discuss what happened, if you feel it's appropriate.

And if you are going to play while he's talking (prayer, altar call, etc), be sure to play UNDER him.  It's not the time to show off your new riff.  You are there to set the mood so people can connect with God.  Remember: "God is not a God of disorder but of peace." (1 Corinthians 14:33)

3.  The congregation - Confucius is credited as saying, "He that thinks he's leading but no one is following is merely going on a walk by himself."  We have to connect with the congregation where they are and then bring them into God's presence.  You've got to learn to read your people.  If you start to lose them you will need to either draw them back in or wind it down.  You always want to leave them wanting more, rather than wanting less.  By the way, don't give a sermon... that's the pastor's job.

4.  The music - I know worship leaders that get so caught up in the moment that they either lose the beat (adding or subtracting a beat) or lose where they are in the song.  This doesn't help anyone.  You've got to develop the ability to connect with God's presence while maintaining a musical flow.  This only comes through practice.

5.  The band - Some worship leaders are more gifted than their band.  Others just forget to let the band know what they are doing.  This leaves the entire band looking bad.  You should always practice the types of intros, "outros", tags and transitions that you might do.  I like to go with the flow, so I've developed some signals and give vocal cues that I give to my band and singers.  It helps the flow of worship if we are all on the same page.

Join the conversation... what thoughts would you add?

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

PODCAST - Duesseldorf Worship Workshop (pt 2)

Duesseldorf Worship Workshop (Jon Perrin) – This podcast is from a Worship Workshop I taught in Duesseldorf, Germany in 2004. Although it primarily applies to worship leaders, the principles taught will benefit anyone in church or ministry leadership.

Dieses “Podcast” kommt von ein Worship Workshop das ich in Duesseldorf, Deutschland gelehrt habe. Obwohl es sich hauptsächlich auf den Lobpreisleiter fokussiert, sind die Prinzipien die gelehrt werden für jeden der in der Leiterschaft ist, sei es im Dienst oder in der Gemeinde, von Vorteil.

http://www.perrinministries.org/upload/Dues_Worship_Workshop2.mp3