10. Lead more than perform.
I am grateful for
talented vocalists and musicians serving as worship leaders, but I’m especially
grateful when our leaders don’t treat their position as a showcase for their
gifts but as an opportunity to shepherd the flock. I love it when worship leaders
choose songs that lend themselves more to congregational singing than band
performance and lead in such a way that it’s easier to follow along—appropriate
keys and pacing, not over-improvising, following the printed or projected
lyrics, and so on. And speaking of shepherding, I love it when you . . .
9. Approach the worship gathering with
a pastoral sensibility.
The worship
gathering shouldn’t be some bland, un-creative exercise in avoiding anything
remotely artistic, but I’m grateful for worship leaders who think primarily
about what the flock needs more
than what the flock wants—because they are not always the
same thing—and seeks to steward the music time and other worship order elements
with Christ’s glory at heart and Christ’s church in mind. (And pastors, this is
why often the most gifted singers/musicians in your church are not the best
candidates for worship leaders.)
8. Let theology drive their decision
making.
Too many worship
services are driven by a consumeristic or pragmatic ethos. Too many worship
leaders (and their pastors and creative teams) over-busy themselves asking,
“What else can we do?” as if the worship gathering is a blank artistic slate
for creative expression. But as Jeff Goldblum says in Jurassic
Park, “You were so busy asking if you could do something, you never
bothered to ask if you should.” This is why I’m grateful for
worship leaders who know how to evaluate songs for theological soundness,
biblical coherence, and doctrinal clarity. And I like it when this commitment
to theology is reflected in a fearlessness about old songs and a discriminating
taste about new songs. But I also love it when you . . .
7. Think about the service beyond the
songs.
And I don’t mean
simply videos or whatever. I am grateful for worship leaders who think about
the worship order as a whole, who think about the story a worship order tells.
Every church has a liturgy, even if they don’t like that word or they’ve never
even heard of that word! Your worship elements and their order communicate
something about God about his Word and about your church. I love it when it’s
clear the worship team hasn’t just busied themselves picking good songs but has
also thought about the progression of song content in relation to the different
elements of the service (confession, prayers, communion, sermon, and so on) and
how all the pieces together point to God in Christ as our hope.
6. Aren’t afraid of silence.
Not every space has
to be thick with sound and visuals. I know silence between songs can sound like
awkward transitions, but not every square inch of the worship service has to be
“produced.” Is that fuzzy synthesizer ambiance in between songs and during
prayers there to create a mood? Why? What for? I love it when worship leaders
“embrace the real.” One thing my
church’s worship leader does—after
the sermon has been preached and before he leads us in the closing song—is give
us a time to silently reflect on the message. It’s not a long time, but it’s
long enough to start to feel awkward to those who are new to the practice. But
there’s no ambient music. No vocal prayer. Just silence. You can hear those
scattered coughs. Kids whispering. A Bible hitting the floor. The rustling of
paper. But mostly just stillness and quiet. In our daily lives we are awash
with noise. We are hurry-sick. Even when we’re alone, we’re taking in the
“noise” of the internet or something else. I think it’s wonderful to take this
into account in our worship services, not feel inclined to mirror the constant
noise of the world, and give us some time to hush. It’s good for our souls.
5. Pray for real.
I love it when
worship leaders are God-conscious and their prayers sound like they’re actually
talking to their Father. Sometimes it is easy for worship leaders to lapse into
“stage prayers,” where the prayer is simply filler, a way to introduce the next
song, or full of verbal tics that don’t make it sound like the leader is
well-versed in prayer outside the worship service (“FatherGod we just love you
FatherGod and we just FatherGod just want to just…”). When you “pray naked,”
even in your skinny jeans, I am inspired and encouraged to bring my true self
before God. I am led to cry out to God myself when it sounds like my worship
leader is crying out to God.
4. Prioritize the Word.
Feelings are great.
It is unChristian to deny the importance of feelings. But it is unChristian to
prioritize (idolize) our feelings. Our life is not to be dictated by our
feelings—even spiritual feelings—but by the inspired, infallible Word of God.
So I love it when worship leaders choose songs that reflect biblical truths,
echo the full-hearted human experience of the Psalms and other biblical texts,
and read or recite Scripture in their introductions and transitions. I love it
when worship leaders being the gathering not with a rockin’ song to loosen (or
wake) everybody up, but with a Scriptural call to worship. This is a reminder
that our worship gathering is a response to God’s active work in the world and
his specific summoning of us through the gospel of Christ. I also love it when
worship leaders remind me that the worship time doesn’t end when the songs do,
and that the preaching of the word is both the continuation of—and the
apex of—the worship gathering.
3. Lead with serious joy.
I always feel like
I’m on a cruise ship or at a cocktail lounge—not that I frequent either one of
those places!—when the worship leader is up there constantly cracking jokes and
treating his banter like practice for his improv class. You don’t need to treat
the service like a funeral, of course, and about the only thing as annoying as
a constantly silly worship leader is a constantly humorless one—but I love it
when worship leaders capture both the gladness and the gravity of responding to
the Lord’s call to worship. So instead of taking on the personas of gameshow
host on one hand or “I’d rather be alone in my room with my principles” artiste
on the other, I love it when you are both happy in and humbled by the holiness
of God.
2. Don’t try to out-preach the
preacher.
Okay, this is just a
minor point, but I’ve heard this additional critique from enough folks in
response to the
previous post to know
that it’s not just my own “pet peeve.” I love it when worship leaders shepherd
the congregation well by introducing songs by giving theological context,
praying in transitions, reciting Scripture, and of course using non-singing
time for equipping the congregation. But sometimes you guys just talk too much!
This is especially notable after a sermon, when a worship leader will sometimes
try to re-preach a particular point. The subtext sometimes appears to be “Let
me take a crack at this, because the preacher whiffed it.” Worship leader, I
love it when you leave the sermon to the preacher (and when the preacher leaves
to the songs to you).
1. Point me to the gospel.
This is why I’m
there, whether I remember it or not. This is what I need. I need the
announcement of the historical work of Christ on the cross and out of the tomb
more than I need oxygen! So I’m very, very grateful when your song choice,
banter, worship order, and everything else makes it clear that the grace of God
given to sinners through Jesus is your reason for being. I love it when you
take care not to distract from the gospel, whether by content or creativity. I
love it when you take care that your artistic efforts adorn the gospel and
don’t obscure it. And I love it when you rehearse the gospel with us. It is the
greatest gift you have, and it’s the greatest gift you can share.
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