Worship leader, this article will save you days, weeks and even years of frustration!
Have you ever noticed that congregations have personalities? Iāve had the wonderful opportunity to visit hundreds of churches in my life, and I donāt think Iāve been to 2 that are alike.
From what Iāve read, a churchās personality stems from the pastor and his leadership (the fascinating book āThe Habits of Highly Effective Churchesā by George Barna describes several different personalities of churches.)
A churchās personality is also evident in the music. And hereās the momentous tip for you: donāt force a congregation into doing music against their personality!
I know of a church where the music director is cramming nothing but Hillsong down the throat of the congregation. They absolutely hate the music, but the music director is determined to make the congregation more āhip.ā The congregation is not āhip,ā nor do they desire to be. Iām sure you can imagine the battles there.
The pastor of the church I grew up in decided to transition the church from hymns and gospel songs into more contemporary music. Today, years later, itās a different church with a new personality. I scarcely recognize anyone there. Oh, a few folks made the transition, but most left to find a new church home (although some hung around for years, fighting for the old ways.) Would it have been better to keep the original musical personality of the church intact while starting a new, separate church with a new personality?
Iām sure you have your own examples. Youāll bang your head against the wall if you continually present music against the grain of your congregation. As a worship leader, I believe my job is to size up the musical personality of the congregation, not force them to be what I want them to be (or better yet, make sure your musical tastes match the tastes of the church before you accept the job!) I believe this is one of the most important ideas youāll read here at WorshipIdeas. Itās a rare church thatās mature enough to transition from Bach to Lincoln Brewster!
Of course you can introduce new styles, and be your congregationās guide to new music. Years ago, the church plant where I worked seemed to love the driving songs of Paul Baloche. However, they never warmed up to many of the Passion songs. I would throw in a Passion song from time to time to test the waters, and occasionally Iād hit on a song with which theyād connect.
Your congregation may not care for Bethel worship songs, but perhaps there are a few that would work in your setting. Each worship genre may have a few songs that lean to your congregationās personality. One reason āShout to the Lordā was so popular was that it fit the personality of a broad range of churches, whereas many of Hillsongās other songs did not.
If I arrived at a church today to serve as the new worship leader, Iād not change a musical thing for weeks. Iād get used to their style and see what songs they love most. Then Iād gradually introduce new material that fit but expanded their musical taste. Donāt throw out the old, but supplement the old with the new.
>Bottom Line: Determine the musical personality of your church and select appropriate music. Donāt be afraid to try new things, but work carefully and prayerfully.




