Remembering Andrae Crouch, Dead at 72

Crouch was an innovator, a path-finder, a precursor in an industry noted for its conservative, often derivative approach to popular music. He combined gospel and rock, flavored it with jazz and calypso as the mood struck him and the song called for it, and is even one of the founders of what is now called “praise and worship” music. He took risks with his art and was very, very funky when he wanted to be. He died at age 72 from complications from Saturday’s heart attack.

Amy Grant may have made CCM popular; Andrae made it sound great.

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Lari Goss Remembered

Goss was well known as arranger, producer, writer, orchestrator, keyboardist and musical genius in all areas of the Christian and secular music world. He began his career in the Goss Brothers and continued in music for over 60 years. Multi-award winner, including a Grammy award, several Doves and an induction into the Gospel Music Hall of Fame, this gentleman’s resume includes the Brooklyn Tabernacle Choir, Christ Church Choir, many symphonies, orchestras, and artists world-wide. Goss was also an ordained minister.

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Praise Charts Top 10 for week ending 1/10/15

1 Jesus Loves Me
Chris Tomlin

2 This I Believe (The Creed)
Hillsong

3 Because He Lives
Matt Maher

4 Greater
MercyMe

5 How Can It Be
Lauren Daigle

6 This Is Amazing Grace
Phil Wickham

7 Forever (We Sing Hallelujah)
Kari Jobe

8 Overwhelmed
Big Daddy Weave

9 Come As You Are
David Crowder / Passion

10 Thrive
Casting Crowns

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How 2015 Can Be Your Best Ministry Year Ever

Now that you’ve had a (hopefully) relaxing break from the holiday worship rush, carve out some time in the next week to prayerfully reevaluate your worship ministry. Try a long walk or a long drive (when I have something big to consider, I’ll sometimes take an hour’s drive to one of my favorite restaurants in a nearby city. That gives me two hours of pure thinking time!)

Some things to consider:

What’s working? Does your congregation respond to a certain worship style or songs from a particular songwriter? One congregation where I served seemed to love the songs of Paul Baloche, another flipped over Hillsong United. If what you’re doing is working, find similar songs and styles. When you lead an old hymn does your congregation engage or yawn? Select hymns that can be arranged to fit your worship style.

What isn’t working? Be honest with yourself – that song you love in the style you love is met with blank stares from your congregation. Sure, indulge yourself once in awhile (it’s great to have musical variety) but stop trying to cram a style that doesn’t fit down your church’s throats.

Running a tight ship: Here’s another chance for you to be honest with yourself – where are you failing? Are you terrible at scheduling your team? Determine to do better (which probably means asking for help!) Are your chord charts a jumbled mess? Make sure they’re neat and accurate so you don’t waste your volunteer’s time during rehearsal. And speaking of rehearsals, are you trying to figure out your service order during rehearsal? Think and plan ahead so you know exactly where you’re going during limited practice time. What other procedures can be improved?

Can you be more than a musician? Good musicians, often introverts, can find it difficult or even scary to break out of their shells and reach out. Caring for people on your worship team doesn’t have to be that hard. A worship team is, in reality, a small group – if someone on your team has a crisis, a simple email or phone call will mean the world to them. Make sure they know you appreciate them (an encouraging, hand-written note on occasion works wonders.) Hang out after rehearsals with your team at the local pizza place.

Branch out: If you’ve got things running smoothly, it might be time to try something new – even something out of your comfort zone. Start a video department, a kid’s choir, an adult praise choir at special times (like Christmas and Easter), a Sunday morning prayer team that meets before the service, or whatever new and interesting thing you can dream up.

Delight your team: I worked at a church for a few years as pianist. The music director loved doing crazy fun things for the choir – he liked “mystery rehearsals” and would whisk the choir away on special occasions (like the final rehearsal before summer) to odd locations. Once he rented a huge houseboat and we had a choir rehearsal cruise. Another time he hauled the choir away from church via bus to a downtown skyscraper where we had rehearsal (and food) on a top floor with amazing views of the city. What fun things can you do for and with your team? Maybe your guitarists will come to rehearsal and find some funny, unique guitar pick on their music stand you found at the local music store. After visiting the NAMM show in LA one year I brought back a stack of bass, guitar and drum magazines for my praise band.

Are you spiritually stagnant? Sometimes we get so busy doing God’s work we forget about the One we’re working for! If you’re feeling a spiritual disconnect, James 4:8 says if we draw near to God He’ll draw near to us. Seek out a worship leader devotional. Find a friend where you can have weekly ministry chats over lunch. Stream the DailyAudioBible during your morning jog or commute.

Bottom Line: 2015 can be your best ministry year ever… if you plan for it to be!

Looking Ahead to 2015

Adam Legg has gathered a collection of posts from around the Internet to help church leaders reflect and plan.

Here are five takeaways for churches as we head into 2015.

  1. Get on Instagram! Not only is it now larger than Twitter, but it gives your church the ability to visually tell stories.
  2. Don’t shy away from the hard topics. If we have learned anything from #Ferguson, it’s that our culture is willing to engage in difficult conversation, may the church be willing as well.
  3. Get Mobile! 2014 was the year when mobile internet usage finally passed desktop usage. Just having a website for your church is no longer enough. Your church needs to think mobile. Apps, responsive sites, whatever. Make sure people can find and engage with your church from their phone.
  4. The Power of Story. Don’t default to using your church’s social media and website as an event bullhorn. Use those platforms to tell the stories of what God is doing in the lives of people at your church.
  5. Give Yourself Space To Unplug. As the world around us becomes more and more connected, the danger is to never allow ourselves to disconnect. Make sure and give yourself space to unplug. In the bedroom, on the weekend, as part of a getaway. Self care in a digital world will become increasingly important, and the church can lead the way.

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5 Tips For Leading More God Centered And Engaging Worship

Today, I want to remind us all about the purpose of our gatherings. We need to get back to a worship expression with God at the center. And a worship expression that encourages and enables people to participate, engage, and get some skin in the game.

We want to move people from spectators to singers.

We want to move people from seeing themselves as an audience to a team member.

We are the body of Christ but too often our gatherings reflect the talented, charismatic leaders on stage and an audience of consumers.

I’m not saying everyone in your church needs to join the worship team. Rather, I’m saying you should view your congregation as part of your worship team. If they’re not singing, engaging, and meeting with God in worship, something needs to change.

Every believer has access. No matter who we are or where we come from, the blood of Jesus has made a way for broken, unworthy people to come. We don’t need an “anointed” worship team to worship.

But it’s not that leadership isn’t important. When we look at the sacred assemblies of Israel in the Old Testament we see leadership. But we also see the entire company of people falling down before God.

5 Tips for Leading Engaging Worship
As a leader, you’re a catalyst for change. You’re creating an environment for people to connect with God. You are not the center. You are a worshiper, a participant just like everyone else.

So here are 5 tips for being this kind of leader. Whether you are an uber talented worship leader or a simple leader doing your best for God, we can all apply these tips to lead with greater effectiveness:

1. Understand Your Role
As worship leaders, we don’t “bring people into the presence of God” by our talent, passion, and excellence. What you do is important but it’s not paramount. Only the blood of Jesus can bring us in to the presence of complete Holiness. Understanding this helps you not take yourself too seriously.

“For we do not have a high priest who cannot sympathize with our weaknesses, but One who has been tempted in all things as we are, yet without sin. Therefore let us draw near with confidence to the throne of grace, so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help in time of need” (Hebrews 4:15-16).

Every believer has access into the presence of God through Christ. And when you as the leader understand that, and every worshiper understands that, corporate worship starts to look different. We don’t need permission from a worship leader. We can come boldly to the throne of grace.

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Fifteen Trends for Churches for 2015

Thom Rainer attempts to present the major trends for congregations for the coming twelve months.

15. A rapid increase in bi-vocational church staff. We have noted the growing trend of bi-vocational pastors. We will see in 2015 an accelerated trend of other church staff becoming bi-vocational.

14. The tipping point of churches eliminating Sunday evening worship services. We see the number of U. S. churches offering a Sunday evening service to dip below 5 percent of all churches in America. In other words, this service will become almost extinct.

13. More emphasis on congregational singing. In many of our churches, both traditional and contemporary, you can hardly hear the congregation sing. There will be an increased emphasis on intentionally bringing the congregants into worship through singing.

12. Growth of verbal incarnational evangelism. Incarnational evangelism is simply defined as presenting the good news through our Christ-like lifestyle to non-believers. There will be an increased emphasis to share the gospel verbally as well as demonstrating a gospel witness through our lifestyle.

11. The waning and reconfiguration of denominational structures. This trend is already taking place, but it will accelerate in 2015. Denominational structures will continue to get smaller and more streamlined, and churches will not be able to expect the same type of resources they have received in the past.

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Do You Hear the People Sing?

Marshall Segal says the defining sound on Sunday morning should be the singing voices of God’s people.

What does Sunday morning sound like at your church?

More specifically, what do you hear when your church worships God in song? What is the defining sound? For some, it will be the old, massive, beautiful organ — a full, enduring, and familiar tone. Others would say it’s the energy of an electric guitar and the deep pounding of a bass drum. Maybe you have one or two vocalists you love. They could sing the encyclopedia on Sunday morning and bring you to God.

I enjoy and appreciate all of the above — I really do — but I believe the defining sound on Sunday morning should be the singing voices of God’s people. It’s been taught and lived out at our church, and I love it. And I don’t think that my love is a matter of personal preference. I wouldn’t have chosen this style of worship for myself six years ago, and the music I listen to Monday–Saturday rarely sounds like Sunday morning at Bethlehem.

No, I believe there are principles for corporate worship that transcend cultural and personal preferences and fill music with unusual meaning.

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