Top 10 CCLI for week ending 8/6/2011

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1 Our God
Matt Redman, Chris Tomlin, Jonas Myrin, Jesse Reeves

2 Mighty To Save
Ben Fielding, Reuben Morgan

3 How Great Is Our God
Chris Tomlin, Jesse Reeves, Ed Cash

4 Revelation Song
Jennie Lee Riddle

5 Blessed Be Your Name
Beth Redman, Matt Redman

6 How He Loves
John Mark McMillan

7 Everlasting God
Brenton Brown, Ken Riley

8 From The Inside Out
Joel Houston

9 Amazing Grace (My Chains Are Gone)
Chris Tomlin, Louie Giglio, John Newton

10 The Stand
Joel Houston

Lakewood First USA Church To Average Over 30,000

Best selling author and evangelist Joel Olsteen presides over America’s largest church, the Lakewood Church, in Houston, TX. The Trinity Broadcasting Network (TBN) reports that Lakewood recently became the first church in the United States to average more than 30,000 worshipers weekly, and estimates that over seven million tune-in weekly to listen to Osteen’s message.

The church recently moved to the Houston Compaq Center, which has a seating capacity of 16,000. The facility was filled to capacity on July 19 during the grand opening, broadcast by TBN.

According to TBN, Osteen asked his congregation, “How do you like our new home?” The crowd responded with a thunderous roar of applause. An elated Osteen replied, “It looks pretty good doesn’t it? This is a dream come true.”

Governor Rick Perry of Texas was struck by the church’s new look, according to TBN. “This is nothing short of amazing,” said Perry during a brief welcoming address to the congregation and other VIPs in attendance. “It is so great to look across this crowd and see the wonderful diversity of this great state we call Texas. As lawmakers we do a lot of things, but only the church can teach people to love.”

Church Trip: Elevation Church

WorshipIdeas correspondent Alex Workman visits the famous Elevation Church led by pastor Steven Furtick in Charlotte, NC and shares his impressions.

I recently had the opportunity to visit the Blakeney Campus of Elevation Church in Charlotte, North Carolina. Pastor Steven Furtick planted Elevation in February of 2006 and in just over five years, they have reached over 8,000 people in their weekly attendance, earning them multiple spots on Outreach Magazine’s “Fastest Growing Churches” list

First Impressions: Elevation Church, without a doubt, had the best first time visitor experience that I have ever encountered at a church. As I pulled onto the property, there were signs directing new visitors to turn on their hazard lights. As soon as I did, I was directed to a special section of parking in the front row. Walking into the building, I was greeted and handed a CD with music from the Elevation worship team, as well as a message from Pastor Steven. They even gave me an Elevation Church t-shirt just for visiting.

Atmosphere: The lobby was full of life. There were walls of flat screen displays that showed all sorts of information about the church. The worship center had stadium seating with blue LEDs everywhere to mark walkways. The room was dark, but the stage was anything but unlit. The stage had lights everywhere; LEDs, intelligence lights, and a backdrop that was an illuminated cargo net filled with lights. There was even a pre-service DJ playing as the countdown was shown on the screens.

Sermon: The week I attended was the last week of their “Summer Concert Series.” The guest speaker was Lysa Terkhurst, who is the best selling author of “Made to Crave” and founder of Proverbs 31 Ministries. The sermon was entitled “Reaction Determines Reach” and was taught out of 2 Chronicles 20.

Worship: Elevation Church has four different bands on each of their campuses, with the same set list on any given weekend. The band at the Blakeney campus consisted of three worship leaders, who lead without instruments, two electric guitars, bass, keys and drums. Let me tell you, it was loud! So loud in fact, that they offered ear plugs at the doors of the worship center.

Over the past few years, Elevation Worship has released a number of albums containing original music. A few of these contain songs that I love in my own personal worship, as well as some that I am excited to teach at my church. Their program was incredible from a technical standpoint, as well. There never seemed to be a break in the service, as each element seamlessly transitioned into the next. Their set that weekend was:

Go – Hillsong
God Be Praised – Elevation Worship
Welcome
One Thing Remains – Brian Johnson
Message
‘Tis So Sweet – Traditional hymn
Offering/Sermon Series Trailer
Kingdom Come – Elevation Worship

Their arrangement of Tis So Sweet was probably one of the best arrangements I have heard. They used this as a time of reflection, with passages of Scripture shown on the screens, and pastors and leaders praying with those in need. They ended the service with an original song that is an anthem of the church and definitely had me leaving quite pumped up!

Bottom Line: Elevation Church is definitely reaching a specific demographic in Charlotte and they are not afraid to say that Elevation is not for everybody. Their program was extremely well excited, their worship was loud and very well done, engaging the crowd from the front row to the back, and the message was rooted in and taught directly from scripture. If you are ever in the Charlotte, stop by Elevation Church as they are a great resource for modern worship teams.

Photos from Elevation Church:

Nancy Beach: The Role of the Arts in Worship

Nancy Beach, programming director for Willow Creek Community Church for over 20 years, talks about the role of the arts in worship:

“We come to church to learn about truth, but also to be inspired, to be lifted, and to be moved. And the arts move us! Our goal should be to prepare artistic elements that have the potential to become transcendent moments – moments which the Holy Spirit has unmistakably anointed and which can lead to life transformation.”

Read more.

Top 10 CCLI for week ending 7/30/2011

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1 Mighty To Save
Ben Fielding, Reuben Morgan

2 How Great Is Our God
Chris Tomlin, Jesse Reeves, Ed Cash

3 Blessed Be Your Name
Beth Redman, Matt Redman

4 Everlasting God
Brenton Brown, Ken Riley

5 Revelation Song
Jennie Lee Riddle

6 Here I Am To Worship
Tim Hughes

7 Amazing Grace (My Chains Are Gone)
Chris Tomlin, Louie Giglio, John Newton

8 Open The Eyes Of My Heart
Paul Baloche

9 Your Grace Is Enough
Matt Maher

10 Jesus Messiah
Chris Tomlin, Daniel Carson, Jesse Reeves, Ed Cash

Are You A Professional Worship Leader?

Worship leader Fred McKinnon posted this article on his blog, and has given us permission to reprint it here at WorshipIdeas.

You can design a masterful flow of songs…
You can recite Scripture, encourage, and effortlessly transition between songs…
You can close your eyes, raise your hands, and demonstrate physical acts of worship…
all the while, your heart is far from God.

You know just where to raise the key…
You know exactly where the people will start standing because of the response to your arrangement…
You can predict precisely how the mood of the room will be…
all the while, your heart is far from God.

You can play in any key…
Your vocal range is mammoth…
Your repertoire is endless…
Your band is flawless…
all the while, your heart is far from God.

You have the look…
You have the hair…
You have the clothes…
You can pause for tears…
Stand before the crowd with no fear…
all the while, your heart is far from God.

It’s become a job. A paycheck.
You are skilled. You can do this in your sleep.
Everyone thinks you are the best worship leader ever
after all…
You are a professional.

Dear Worship Leaders,
Fight the tendency to minister in your own strength and skill. Let your worship be an outflow of your heart. There are a million things to distract us from truly being in God’s presence, and sharing that with others. Honestly, it’s quite easy to become the professional worship leader. Sadly, many folks don’t discern the difference. When you stand to minister, your conscience will tell you is this overflow? Or is this a job?

Click Track Philosophy

Are you ready to take the next step in the quality of your worship music? I’ve seen firsthand how a click track can take an average group of amateurs and turn them into something special.

Any time changes are tried in ministry, even for the better, you’ll be met with attitudes. Here are some things to expect:

Drummers: You’ll probably get the most resistance from the drummer. You’ll hear things like “I never play with a click because it destroys the feel” (which being interpreted is “I have no internal rhythm and a click track will make that glaringly obvious.”)

Pianists: Classically trained church pianists are notorious for having zero rhythm. I was classically trained and, out of college, my rocker friends would laugh at me when I tried to play with them – I simply could not keep in time with the drummer.

As pianists we’re taught not to follow a steady rhythm (except using a metronome when practicing a Bach fugue.) One of the first things I did when I graduated was to buy a drum machine to knock myself out of the classical mentality (anyone remember the Alesis HR-16? It’s in the picture at the top of this post.) I’d play along with a drum pattern, get lost in myself and be off the beat within 10 seconds. But after time I learned to lock in.

[quote_left]And that’s what any drummer or pianist must do to learn to play with a click: practice. Get used to hearing that sound boring into your brain and start obeying it.[/quote_left] And that’s what any drummer or pianist must do to learn to play with a click: practice. Get used to hearing that sound boring into your brain and start obeying it. And once you do amazing things can happen: the band’s groove will improve, you can sync to video and add drum loops and other sweetening.

Quality means balance. I talked in a recent article about my experience at Lifechurch where the entire set was programmed to a strict click. This either/or mentality is rampant in churches – you’ll either see only programmed perfection or a wandering free for all. Why not have both: a mature music ministry should have moments of tight rocking as well as tender moments where the Spirit leads.

I got into a debate over this when planning our Christmas Eve service. A member of our team insisted the entire service be on a click. But one of worship leader Steve Smith’s strengths is facilitating that moment of ministry when the programmed praise set settles down, he talks a bit then leads into a worship ballad – and those moments can’t be programmed.

Plan a hole or two in your set where the pianist/keyboardist can exercise his or her talents by noodling under a prayer then flowing into a piano worship ballad without the click. This gives your worship experience a chance to breathe. If you make room to let the Spirit move, maybe He will.

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