i am an offering

Five Questions on Worship

Fred McKinnon just shared a link to his answers to five questions on worship he was asked by The Worship Journals and asked that we comment on his post with the answers to our questions.  I thought this would make a better blog post than a comment so here we go:

Five Questions on Worship

1. What does Worship Mean to You?

Worship means exalting something greater than we currently or previously have exalted it in our own mind.  We could worship a situation.  We could worship an experience.  We could worship a thing.  To me, I try above all else to worship God.  This means surrending myself, my thoughts, whatever I might be exalting at any given moment in time and exalting Him above it all.  This means letting myself decrease and Him increase.  This means letting God be the object of my worship every minute of each day.

2. What Causes You to Worship?

Ultimately - the Holy Spirit.  I can’t worship without the power of God prompting me to do so.  It’s impossible, so the Holy Spirit is what causes me to worship.  But as far as what the Holy Spirit uses to prompt me to worship:  music is a given for me.  So many types of music are used to prompt me to worship.  It helps immensely if the music directs my thoughts toward God and who He is, but I can also be prompted by the beauty and design of orchestral music or the spontaneity and skill of jazz music.  I can see the Creator’s hand in the creativity and complexity of both of these types of music.  I am also prompted by seeing people honor and glorify God in decisions they make and situations they’re in.  Mountains also prompt me to worship.  They show me how puny I am and how amazingly huge God is.  If the mountains are that majestic - how much more the One who Created them!

3. How is Worship Displayed in Your Life?

I hope that it is displayed in the way I live it.  I desire to live a life that exalts God every day and puts to death everything that doesn’t.  I want to offer my life as a living sacrifice to Him.  I hope that worship is displayed in my marriage, my relationship with my daughter, my relationship with my church and pastor, my relationship with my co-workers and through every interaction I have with people.

4. What is Your Favorite Song and Why?

Can it be the top 50? :-)  I think at the moment the song that the Holy Spirit is using most to speak to me would be “Let Your Kingdom Come” by Sovereign Grace Music off of the Valley of Vision album. I keep coming back to it and it keeps replaying in my mind.  It is such a good declaration to lift God’s cause higher than our own and to get my priorities out of the way and make my life about His priorites.

How would you answer these four questions?  (You can be brief, if you like!)

What Do You Do When…The Wrong Song is on the Screen and the Projection Volunteer can’t Find the Right One?

This past Sunday at Living Word we had a bit of a minor technical difficulty where the wrong song was put into the schedule for the day and we didn’t have a backup of the correct one.  Although it was humorous and everything else went well, there was a bit of an awkward moment and it would be good to know how to avoid any awkwardness when things like this happen.  So, what do we do to avoid the awkwardness?

Plan Ahead

The first thing to do is to make sure that you’ve planned well enough ahead of time.  Check and recheck things.  Very often there are several worship songs (or even hymns) with the same title.  Check with the data entry volunteer, the volunteer who proofs and/or runs projection and yourself that you have the right song entered in.  Remind the volunteer who enters the songs that when they are in doubt which is the right song they should put in both (or all five) with the same title.  That way, if the wrong song is on the screen the right song can be found quickly (with the use of decent projection software anyway).  It is especially vital to triple or quadruple check things when you are working in a church plant and several different people in several different places are putting the elements of the service together.

Teach Everyone What To Do

It won’t really help much if you as the main worship leader know what to do when a situation like this happens but the rest of your team is clueless.  Teach them some simple ways to keep a musical flow going while you lead the congregation through the distraction.  Teach the team to:

  • Keep playing through the verse of the song that isn’t up on the screen (or the chorus, if that’s where the team is currently playing)
  • Be ready to keep playing through that song if the worship leader feels led to use it as a solo
  • Be ready to find an ending point if the worship leader feels led to go to the next or a different song

Main worship leaders need to be able to do these things while the team is doing the above:

  • Recognize that the song is not correct.  If you can see the projection screen or if you have a confidence screen or monitor that will be an easy way to tell.  If you can’t see the projection screen, watch people and see if they’ve stopped singing.
  • Don’t focus on the problem.  Quickly and gently inform the congregation that the correct song is not on the screen, then move on to what you feel the Holy Spirit is leading you to do.  A short, “It looks like we have the incorrect song up at the moment” is sufficient.
  • Use this as an opportunity to let the congregation pray and worship on their own.  After you’ve informed them that the wrong song is up, you could say something like “While we see if we have the right song, take a few moments to pray and worship God silently or with your families.”  Lead them through a couple minutes of corporate prayer or praise.  This also gives the projection volunteer time to find the correct song and get it up if they can.
  • If the projection volunteer can’t find the correct song, it’s obviously time to either move on or inform the congregation that just the worship team will be singing this song and the congregation should worship by listening to the words.  Only do this if you know beyond a shadow of a doubt that the vocalists are always clearly understood through the sound system. If you sing with no words on the screen through a muddy, unclear system, no one will be able to worship without being distracted by the fact that they can’t understand the words.
  • If you feel led by the Holy Spirit that having the congregation listen isn’t the right fit for the moment, decide to move on to the next song for the morning.  Hopefully you’ve taught your team to keep playing the verse or chorus for a bit while you’re waiting to know what to do next.  Give them a cue to end the music at an appropriate spot (not in the middle of a verse!) and then lead the congregation into the next song.

The absolute best thing to do would be to plan ahead well enough to avoid these situations but if they do arise these are some simple things you can do to help minimize the distraction and keep people’s hearts and minds focused on Jesus, not on the technical difficulty at hand.

Sufficiency in Christ - Part 2: Depending on the Holy Spirit

Posted on June 5, 2008. Filed under: Thoughts — Tags: , , , , — Ryan Egan @ 12:20 pm

Where do you find your confidence?

God has blessed me with natural talent. Learning a new song and memorizing songs come very easily for me. Remembering chord progressions and talking while I play are two things that I don’t have too much trouble with. But I’m saying this not to boast, but to tell you that it’s probably my biggest downfall when it comes to trusting Christ.

I often think that I can do things on my own, without God’s power. I often think that because things come easily to me, I don’t have to prepare or practice or rely on the Holy Spirit. That couldn’t be further from the truth.

What do you depend on?

Bob Kauflin, in his new book Worship Matters has a very encouraging and convicting chapter on the power of the Holy Spirit. As I’ve read his book so far, this chapter has been one that stands out at me the most. In it he writes:

So here’s the question: How much do you pray? Do you pray for his guidance before you start planning for Sunday? What do you place more trust in-God’s power or your performance? Do you toss up generic prayers like, “God, please bless our time today?” Or do you pray specifically, asking the Spirit to reveal Christ to everyone gathered, to help the congregation sing with understanding, and to bring forth fruit in people’s lives? (pg. 83)

Granted, Bob is talking about a worship leader praying for various aspects of a worship service, but how often do we do the same thing in our lives? How often do we not pray before we start our day? How often do we place more trust in our performance then God’s power? How often do we pray generic prayers of “God, please bless me today, or bless so-and-so today,” without getting very specific. God cares about the details.

Bob goes on to say these very convicting statements:

Confessing our utter dependence on the Holy Spirit should produce a deep sense of gratitude, humility, and peace in our hearts. It should free us from anxious thoughts about how smoothly the service will flow, whether or not the sound system will feed back, and how people will respond to us. (pg. 83)

Again, if we apply this to our own everyday lives, utter dependence on the Holy Spirit should free us from anxious thoughts about anything and everything.

So how about you? Are you finding your adequacy in God? Or are you finding yourself self-sufficient without an utter dependence on Him? Let us become God-sufficient, knowing that He is so much more than enough for all we could ever ask or imagine.

Mouse in the Church

Posted on July 25, 2007. Filed under: Leadership, Thoughts — Tags: , , , , , , , , — Ryan Egan @ 9:58 am

Well, today has been full of interesting comments and laughter because of the fact that there is a mouse apparently living under the Ministry Director’s mini-fridge in his office! It’s amazing how something so small can create such a different atmosphere.

It’s good to think about as we think about ministry. Small things can affect an entire church, even though we might think about it.

Negative effects:

  • Small sin - Which in truth doesn’t exist. No sin is small. When there is unconfessed, unrepentent sin in leadership ugly things happen.
  • Small vision - We cannot even begin to comprehend the vastness of God. Why do we limit the vastness of what He could be doing through the local church?
  • Small attitudes - Even a tiny bit of negativity towards each other can influence people much more than we realize.
  • Small planning - Ministry is hard work and needs to be prayerfully planned. While we definitely want to be open to the Holy Spirit’s promptings, we can’t blame our lack of planning on “waiting on the Holy Spirit.”

Positive effects:

  • Small pride - “He who neglects discipline despises himself. But he who listens to reproof acquires understanding. The fear of the LORD is the instruction for wisdom, and before honor comes humility.” Proverbs 15:32-33 Humility is so important in ministry.
  • Small view of ourselves compared to God - Without Him, we can do absolutely nothing.
  • Small details - Quality is very important to have in a church. Pay attention to the detail of small things that could influence others to respect the church more and eventually come to a love of God (bulletin design, worship team training, publication design, Scripture readers that read with passion, many more)

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