i am an offering

Sunday Recap - Excitement and Energy at Living Word!

Posted on September 8, 2008. Filed under: Sunday Recap — Tags: , , , , , , , , , — Ryan Egan @ 8:31 am

Yesterday at Living Word can be summed up with one word, I think: energy.  Not in the new-age sense of the word, but just a general excitement around the place.  Sunday school kicked off yesterday, and consequently, our normal numbers of people attending picked up.  It was so much fun to hear lots of people singing again!   Some dear saints led us in worship by doing a medley of choruses and ending with a song I hadn’t ever heard before, but really enjoyed:

  • How Majestic is Your Name
  • Great and Mighty (our daughter starting bouncing and clapping during this song, she’s starting early!)
  • Almighty
  • Antiphonal praise (a great echo song I had never heard before) - Wilson mentioned that the word “alleluia” means “praise the Lord” in virtually every language, so when you say (or sing) it, you know how to say “praise the Lord” in almost every language - fun stuff!

After the service we had a fairly busy, but relaxing day due to the fact that I was involved in a retreat and some teaching sessions all weekend (more in that the rest of the week) and my wife played for a wedding on Saturday, causing us to not get much housework done on Saturday in order to rest Sunday.  However, we still enjoyed the day thoroughly, with lots of time spent with family.

And the icing on the cake: the Bears won :-)  And Matt Forte glorfies Jesus more than himself after playing a record-breaking game as a rookie running back.  I have a feeling this is going to be an enjoyable season.

This post is part of the Sunday Setlists community.

Pride.

Posted on July 29, 2008. Filed under: Culture, For Worship Leaders, Thoughts, questions — Tags: , , , , , , , , — Ryan Egan @ 9:36 am

I have to make a confession today.  What I’d like to confess is that I want this blog only to be used for the glory of Jesus Christ and to lift Him up.  What I’d like to confess is that I don’t want to use this blog to spread my name.  But, what I’m confessing is actually the exact opposite.  My human nature is fighting, fighting with the fact that I know I need to give up my thoughts of spreading the word about what I write.  My human nature is fighting the fact that when I look at my stats and see them rising I know that it shouldn’t matter.  My human nature is fighting pride.

God’s Name or Our Name?

Especially as bloggers - we tend to do what we can to build our followers, promote our blogs, trade links, whatever - but why? Are we truly doing it so that God’s glory can be known and exalted through our blogs - or are we doing it so that our name can be known?  I don’t know about you, but I am fearful that there will be a constant struggle for me as I write and continue to make new acquaintances that I will want more and more to promote myself.

I pray that God is always rightly exalted through me and that I would continue to decrease while He continues to increase.

I guess I just wanted to confess this to the world today, ask for prayer - and encourage us all to keep things in perspective.  Is it wrong to want to promote ourselves?  If it’s under the guise of “oh - I’m doing this so that Jesus will be lifted up” but really, deep down we just want ourselves promoted - yes, I think it’s wrong.  If we truly have the desire to lift Jesus up more than anything, maybe not.

What About You?

So, those of you who are bloggers out there - what do you do to remain humble?  Are you justifying self-promotion because “it’s all about Jesus” but it’s really all about you?  For me, thankfully, God used a couple of different circumstances to say, “Hey, Ryan, slow down - this is about me, not you.”  And it was right when I needed it.  God’s Word says,

Young men, in the same way be submissive to those who are older. All of you, clothe yourselves with humility toward one another, because, “God opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble.” (1 Peter 5:5) as well as

“When pride comes, then comes disgrace, but with humility comes wisdom.” (Proverbs 11:2)

My prayer, for all of us, is that we would have humility and wisdom before everything else.

Complete and Continuing Action - Hebrews 10:14

Posted on July 23, 2008. Filed under: Bible Study, Thoughts — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , — Ryan Egan @ 8:36 am

Scripture will never cease to amaze me.  It truly is “living and active” as the book of Hebrews says.  So often I will come across a verse that I’m sure I’ve read before but all of a sudden it will become alive and breathe amazing new life into me.  It is also amazing that God chose to use Greek as the primary language of the New Testament.  More on that in a minute.

Hebrews 10:14

One of the verse that has jumped out at me lately and spoken to me over and over again is Hebrews 10:14.  Let’s take a look:

For by one offering He has perfected for all time those who are sanctified.

At first glance this might not look like a particularly amazing verse of Scripture - but it is so packed full of truth that it is mind-blowing.  The part I want to take a quick look at now is the phrase “perfected for all time.”

Greek’s Perfect Tense

Unlike the English language, Greek has a lot more ways of saying things just by switching to a different tense.  We English-speaking folks think of past tense, present tense, and future tense.  In Greek there is the perfect tense, combining all three tenses into one, signifying that:

  1. Something happened in the past.
  2. Even though it already happened, the results of what happened are continually happening in the present.
  3. The results of what happened will continue to happen forever in the future.

The phrase “perfected for all time” is in the perfect tense in Greek.  So what’s amazing is, Jesus’ sacrifice on the Cross not only happened - it happened with lasting results. And these lasting results won’t fade.  In fact, they’re eternal.  Do you realize what that means for us?  We change daily.  We can’t rely on ourselves.  We will not go a day in our lives without sinning.  But if we trust in the Cross and what Jesus did there, the power of what happened didn’t stop! It is continually applied to us if we are trusting in the blood of Christ!  Even though we waver and fall, our status in Christ doesn’t! Even though we offer imperfect offerings because of our sin - Jesus has made them perfect forever through His blood!

What an amazing promise!

What do You do When…Your Guitar is So Badly Out of Tune You Have to Stop the Music?

Posted on July 2, 2008. Filed under: For Worship Leaders, Guitar, Leadership, Piano & Keyboard, Training — Tags: , , , , , , , — Ryan Egan @ 12:21 pm

I’ll give you a little hint behind this one.  This post comes directly out of personal experience.  Keep that in mind as your reading. :-)

There are probably going to be times when something is out of tune.  Badly out of tune.  It could be your own instrument.  It could be the instrument of an inexpereinced player.  Regardless of whose instrument it is, something that’s out of tune is a major disctration that keeps us from focusing on Jesus.  If something is slightly out of tune it will distract any skilled musicians in the congregation because they can pick it out.  It will distract average non-musical people in the congregation as well because they know something is wrong but can’t quite figure out what it is.  If something is badly out of tune, everyone notices and everyone is distracted.  So what do you to when this happens?

Plan Ahead

Like yesterday’s post on screen projection, it is so important to plan ahead.  If you are the guitar player - make sure you have fresh strings and you are in tune.  Get a tuner or ask the church to buy you one (preferably a pedal tuner that you can use during the worship time to always make sure you’re in tune.)  If you are the piano player know how to tell when the piano is out of tune and make sure the church is on top of getting it tuned.

If you are overseeing guitar players always make sure that they tune before rehearsal, before soundcheck, before the worship time and during the worship time.  Ask your church to be able to budget for new strings for the guitar players.  Buy your guitar players tuners if they don’t have them.

A Personal Account

These things seem fairly obvious to most of us, but let my share a story that happened when I was a bit more inexperienced.

We made plans to bring Arlen Salte from Break Forth Ministries to do a worship team workshop at our church.  We had planned well and there were about 300 people from different states coming.  It was an exciting time for us.  Our worship team agreed that we would do a worship set in the afternoon and them let him critique us.  Unfortunately, in my excitement about the workshop, I forgot to plan ahead so that I would have new strings that weekend.  My strings were old.  Ancient.  It was bad.  In my rush to make sure all of the logistics were worked out for the weekend, I completely forgot about the fact that my strings were not going to stay in tune.  We started our set with “Blessed Be Your Name” with a driving acoustic guitar part.  After about two measures I thought, “Uh-oh.  This is bad.  Really bad.”  What did I do?

What To Do If It Happens

I could have kept going and played through the whole song with a badly out-of-tune guitar.  But I knew it was a major disctraction - especially in a room full of musicians.  So, I stopped the band, addressed the problem, admitted that I was out of tune and had the band restart the song without me.  Things went well and Arlen mentioned that it was better that I took a couple minutes to address the distraction and then move on, rather than letting the disctration keep going.  That night, I bought new strings and restringed my guitar as Sunday morning worship was the next morning. (Although, I hate to admit it - I bought strings from Wal-Mart.  They’re the only place open at 10:30pm that sold guitar strings!)  What I probably should have done is just let the band keep going without the guitar.  At the time, they relied heavily on the guitar leading things, so sometimes if I would stop, the whole band would stop.  So, if you’re the one out of tune, drop out in a non-distracting way, tune if you can and then come back in.  If you can’t tune, be able to communicate to other musicians that they need to lead the music.

But, what if it’s not you that’s out of tune?

Work out a signal before hand that might be able to let your guitar players know that they are out of tune and they need to drop out (hint, don’t use the hand cutting through the throat signal!).  Find a subtle gesture that says “sit out” to someone.  If you have an opportunity to lean over and talk to them quickly (during a prayer time or instrumental interlude) tell them that they need to retune and ask for a thumbs up or some sort of signal that lets you know they’re back in tune.

Being in tune is so important in music and is a skill that we should always take care to remember.  Do you have any suggestions for a situation like this or any stories of your own experience?

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.

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