Last week we talked about characteristics that make a leader worth following.
Something I didn’t mention is that great leaders are great leaders because they learned to be great followers.
Worship Podcast
Last week we talked about characteristics that make a leader worth following.
Something I didn’t mention is that great leaders are great leaders because they learned to be great followers.
Do you love to succeed?
Do you love to hear that you did a good job?
I hope you do. It feels amazing, empowering, life-giving. But what do you do when it’s not there?
How do you truly measure success?
When I received the “call” to go into worship ministry it wasn’t just because I could play some music. In all honesty, I kinda sucked back then. But this I knew – the voice of God reverberated through my frame loud and clear:
“Your ministry will be an extension of your personal walk with Me.”
[This post is part of a series on Leading Your Team & Congregation Through Worship Tensions. Check out the rest here.]
What do you do when you are faced with a room of passionate Christians AND clueless unbelievers?
Worship Leader, how do you manage this tension?
I believe the answer to this question is one of the most important facets of a worship leader’s ministry.
Close your eyes.
Imagine you’re on vacation.
Or if you’re on vacation, you can open your eyes.
Good feeling, isn’t it?
Vacation is something we all look forward to, dare I say, live for? Especially if you are in a less-than-ideal job, you probably live for the moments you can be out of the office doing what you want. If you’re one of those people who don’t take vacations, you should probably stop murdering small puppies (because that’ obviously what non-vacationers do).
The truth is, we all need vacations. As pastors, worship leaders, & creatives, we need a break from our routines to rest and be reenergized.
[This guest post is by Rob Morgan of therobmorgan.com]
So you’ve been playing on your worship team for the past few years now and are starting to feel pretty comfortable with the music, right? I mean, nobody can nail that Brewster guitar solo like you [except for Lincoln himself… maybe.]
You’ve figured out all the instrumentation on the new Gungor album and even have a melodica on hand just waiting for your Planning Center schedule to give you the go ahead.
Even so, as musicians and artists playing in the local church, we are faced with a challenge that you may not have even recognized is there.
How do you go from being what I call a ‘Human Jukebox’ (just replaying what someone else wrote & recorded) to unlocking your own creative potential?