The Purpose Behind Excellent Easter Production

Easter and Christmas are the most attended services for churches across America. These are incredible opportunities to reach unbelievers with the gospel message. Unfortunately many churches miss this chance due to inadequate preparation and planning.

Months in advance, the church begins the process of creating a memorable experience that will draw people back for regular services. Attendance spikes about 250% for Easter and Christmas compared to other Sundays. While numbers don’t define church health, the church would miss out on reaching many if it didn’t take these services seriously.

The lead pastor sets the sermon direction. Then ministry leaders meet to align everything with that vision. In follow-ups, the team ensures all details come together. The creative team makes the ideas reality. The church incorporates theatrical elements in the intro and outro, with a more typical worship set in between. The goal is an excellent, distraction-free, Jesus-focused service to impact new people.

No matter the church’s production value, the church should keep this in mind – if people encounter Jesus, it has succeeded. On Easter, the resurrection message matters most. All glory goes to Him.

How To Find Musicians For The Worship Team

If you’re looking for singers and musicians for the worship team, it can be difficult to fill those spots. Jeff Hall from Life.Church Worship in Oklahoma City shares his tips and ideas on where to find people for the worship band and how to get connected into the music networks of your town.

Why Your Church Isn’t Bigger

I recently visited a church and enjoyed a wonderful service. They’ve been in existence for well over a decade but only have about 175 in worship. Those may be good numbers for a Communist country or a blue state, but not for South Carolina.

The pastor is a great guy. Good preaching. Love the music and worship leader. Terrific band. Even their website and graphics are professional and well done. I don’t know of any trouble in the church. In fact, they’re doing everything that the Official WorshipIdeas Handbook for Successful Worship (i.e. this website!) would advise. So I’m sitting in the service wondering “why won’t this place grow?”

Then it hit me: oversaturation.

Greenville, SC has been called the buckle of the Bible belt. There’s almost literally a church on every corner. There simply aren’t enough Christians to go around. Here’s a general breakdown of the church numbers in the area:

  • Church 1: Expository preaching church: 2,500
  • Church 2: A more contemporary version of Church 1: 4,000
  • Church 3: A less contemporary version of Church 1: 1,700
  • Church 4: Charismatic Church 1: 2,000
  • Church 5: Charismatic Church 2: 2,000
  • Church 6: Famous Charismatic Church: 10,000
  • Church 7: Northpoint-type Church 1: 4,000
  • Church 8: Northpoint-type Church 2: 1,500
  • Church 9: Northpoint-type Church 3: 2,500
  • Church 10: Famous Evangelical Church plant: 5,000
  • Big Southern Baptist Church 1: 2,000
  • Big Southern Baptist Church 2: 2,300
  • Big Southern Baptist Church 3: 2,000
  • Big Presbyterian Church: 2,000
  • Plus over 60 little Southern Baptist churches, probably running between 50-300.
  • Plus a myriad of Methodist, Lutheran and Charismatic churches, probably running between 50-300.
  • Plus a contemporary church plant in every movie theater and many strip malls, probably running between 50-300.
  • Plus, 30 minutes away from Greenville in one direction are a few Southern Baptist churches over 2,000, and 30 minutes in the other direction is one of the largest churches in the country with over 10,000.

If you’re looking for a church here you’ll find one to match your taste. We’ve got the bases covered, so if you want to start a church in Greenville you better have dancing monkeys, robots or something equally incredible to set yourselves apart.

The church I referred to earlier, while wonderful, is really just a tiny, less glamorous version of Church #10 with 5,000 people. “But some people like smaller churches!” you might argue. Yep, about 175.

It isn’t just about Christian attendees. This church has seen several conversions. But then again, Church #10 has seen hundreds. The big Church #10 is experiencing the snowball effect – the bigger it gets the faster it gets even bigger. My guess is an unsaved person would be more likely to visit, or have even heard about, Church #10 and not the tiny copy.

Does size matter? Yes and no. A healthy church should be growing, whether you’re growing at 20 new members a year or 2,000. I know of another new church plant meeting in a movie theater, yet another carbon copy of big Church #10, that has amassed 300 people. The pastor is frustrated that they’re not bigger. I say they should be thrilled they’re as big as they are here in Greenville, especially within the shadow of Church #10.

Bottom Line: God has a purpose for ministries both big and small. But if your attendance is not what you think it should be and everything else is in check, you might simply be experiencing ovesaturation – especially in the South. How can your worship service be unique?

EDIT: In the few years since I originally wrote this article, Greenville has seen a surge of growth (probably because it shows up on many national “Top Places to Live/Retire” -type lists.) Interestingly, the church I speak about here has over doubled in size. Same great preaching and music – nothing has changed. My theory is the only thing that has changed is that there are more people in town. I’d guess other churches are also seeing growth as the population increases.

The Best Bass Guitars for Worship

Ever wondered what bass guitars are best for worship? David Curran walks you through his all time favorite basses for worship. David has years of professional experience playing with artists such as Kari Jobe, Elevation Worship, and currently tours with Lauren Daigle.

Worship Growing Pains

I started as a worship leader in a church plant that set up weekly in an elementary school cafeteria. After having worked on staff at “big” churches I enjoyed the challenge of mobile ministry, and what I learned each week became the basis of WorshipIdeas.com. In a nutshell, it was all we could do to pull off a decent praise set – the enormity of setting up church every week left little time or energy to get really creative.

Once the church grew and we moved into our own building, the setup stress was gone but I discovered a whole new set of problems. Everything became more complex – tracks, loops, more volunteers, longer sets, videos, etc. – and we could no longer “wing it” on Sunday mornings.

I learned our commitment levels needed to be beefed up a bit. For instance, after a few Sunday morning audio train wrecks our sound guys agreed to come to rehearsals. This gave them more time to get comfortable with the service order and any sound issues instead of being in last-minute panic mode right before church.

I also remembered a rule from my big-church days: nothing ever stays put in a church unless it’s nailed down or locked up! We created a safe area for cables, batteries, light bulbs and other necessities.

Bottom Line: Has your ministry grown but you’re still operating like it hasn’t? Re-evaluate your praise team procedures this week to determine if you could be more efficient and effective.

Should You Play Your Worship Songs Just Like The Recording?

There’s certainly a lot of fun and excitement that comes from trying to come up with your own spin on a worship song, but when it comes to helping your band be prepared for rehearsal and for the service, providing a reference mp3 and telling them to learn their part exactly like the original actually makes things easier—both on them and on you as the leader.

How to Choose Worship Songs

VIDEO: Tim Challies talks about choosing songs for your church that will be helpful to the congregation.

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