7 Great Tips for Church Media Operators

By Chess Hoyle ~

One of my biggest frustrations during a church service is when the media operator (the person running lyrics & sermon slides) just isn’t on the ball. It’s hard for the entire crowd not to be distracted when slides are early, late, or just not there; which is why the media operator is arguably the most important role on the production team.

It turns out that often times the mistakes made by media operators have more to do with a lack of training than a lack of talent.

With volunteers, a little direction goes a long way, so I’ve assembled this list of my seven favorite tips to help your media operator become a pro presenter (excuse the pun).

Church Media

1. Focus up. 

As tempting as your phone may be, you need to put it away. Remember, as the media operator, you are leading the crowd as much as the worship leader is. You need to be focused on your role in leading people into the throne room of the Creator, so don’t allow distractions to steal your attention.

2. Know your content. Know your people.

This one is huge. As a media operator, you should be every bit as familiar with the songs as the band is expected to be. Being familiar really helps you know where the band is going during a song. You should also make sure to run through slides as the band is rehearsing, just to confirm that your lyrics line up with their arrangement.

The same principle goes for sermon slides: Knowing what Scripture slides you do (or don’t) have will keep you from panicking when things don’t go exactly as expected.

Bonus tip: Getting full teaching notes from your speaker makes it much easier to know when you’ll be using that sermon point or Scripture slide.

3. Lead worship. Follow sermon points.

If you only take one thing away from this post, make it this. People need to be led with lyric slides. Slow lyric slides take people completely out of the spirit of worship, especially people who are relying on the slides because they are unfamiliar with the songs. It’s so frustrating to me when media operators wait for the crowd to finish singing the current slide before moving on to the next. Doing this guarantees you will always be behind. As a rule of thumb, click on the next slide when the crowd is halfway through the last line of the current slide.

This goes for group readings as well. If your crowd is reading slides together, be it Scripture or prayer, make sure to give some lead time on slides so that there isn’t an awkward pause between every slide.

The opposite is true for sermon slides. If you put up a sermon point too early, you’ll steal your speaker’s thunder. Wait for them to state their point before putting it on the screen.

Another classic mistake for new media operators is to put up Scripture slides too early. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve seen a speaker say they’re about to start reading (at which point, the media operator puts up a Scripture slide), then go into a five minute backstory that sets up the Scripture at hand. It’s always awkward to have the Scripture on the screens during that five minutes, so to prevent this, I tell my media operators to always wait until the speaker actually starts reading to put the Scripture up.

4. Watch the stage.

It may seem counter-intuitive not to stare at your computer screen, but watching the stage is one of the easiest ways to get your timing right for lyric slides. Worship leaders usually step away from the microphone for instrumentals, then step back up to the mic when it’s time to sing again. Watching your worship leader’s body language will help you nail timing, catch unexpected changes, and avoid the awkwardness of putting up lyrics ten seconds early (or worse, a few seconds late).

5. Mistakes are okay.

That’s right: It’s okay to make mistakes. We are imperfect beings and it’s how we learn. If you make a mistake, don’t panic. Just shake it off, correct your course, and move on. One point of clarification: Mistakes are okay, poor decisions are not. Clicking on the wrong slide is a mistake. Missing a cue because you were on Facebook is a poor decision.

6. Own your role!

You have been placed in this position because you are trusted. Don’t be afraid to ask questions and give direction when it’s needed. If the worship leader keeps singing a lyric that doesn’t match your slides, ask about it. If you see a spelling error in the message notes, fix it. If lyric slides need rearranging, rearrange them.

Another excellent practice is to cue the rest of your team during videos. During our services, the media operator gives cues when there are 60 seconds, 30 seconds, 10 seconds, and 5 seconds left during a video. Being confident in your role and communicating with your team makes you invaluable.

7. Be flexible.

Even with the best of intentions, sometimes things come up last minute. Songs need to be changed, Scripture needs to be added, videos need to be cut. Don’t get frustrated; it will do nothing but distract you from what you are here to do. Instead, choose to be patient with your team and work together to make sure everyone is on the same page.

Communication with your team will be the difference in flourishing and floundering during your services, so make sure to build relationships and keep open lines of communication with your worship team and your pastor. Your services will be better for it.

Did I miss anything?

What are your favorite tips for media operators?

The original post is here.

Check out my Mark’s new book.. “Leading Worship ~ Notes from a Grand Adventure’ available in Kindle or Soft Cover Editions.  This is a great gift for the musician or worshipper in your life.

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Great C.S. Lewis Quotes

I’m a big C.S. Lewis fan. I have read many of his major works: The 7 book series, ‘The Chronicles of Narnia’, ‘Mere Christianity’, ‘The Screwtape Letters’, ‘Great Divorce’ and his space trilogy: ‘Out Of The Silent Planet’, ‘Perelandra’, and ‘That Hideous Strength’.

For the few that might not know C.S. Lewis, he was a professor at both Oxford and Cambridge Universities and he became a Christian at 32 years of age. He was a good friend of J.R. Tolkien (Lord of the Rings) and he was a novelist, poet, academic, medievalist, literary critic, essayist, lay theologian, broadcaster, lecturer, and Christian apologist who died in 1963.

Here are some of my favorite C.S. Lewis quotes:

I believe Son of God Humility Importance Low points Needs trust Jesus Never to old Aim at heaven Take the whole of you Success Feelings come and go Silly prayers Relying on God Bad men ignore God God forgives Shouts in our pain Dirty telescope Devil is a liar Dependent Changes Love Pure in heart Thirst The sun looks down Forgivness Happiness and peace Thy Will Be Done

Check out my Mark’s new book.. “Leading Worship ~ Notes from a Grand Adventure’ available in Kindle or Soft Cover Editions.  This is a great gift for the musician or worshipper in your life.

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The Search For God

What do you do to search for God? Unfortunately, there is no formula to finding God, but the good news is that God is searching for you — and He wants you to find Him. Here are a few ideas to help you in your search for God.

Screen Shot 2015-12-09 at 10.31.43 AM

Pray. Ask God to help you find Him. Ask Him to show you Himself even if you’re unsure He’s there. Prayer is simply talking honestly with God from your heart. Tell Him you’re looking for Him. As you search, tell Him your questions, thoughts, doubts, fears and hopes.

Focus your search on Jesus. What is God like? What is His character? We can find the most tangible picture of who God is in the person of Jesus. A letter from one of Jesus’ followers writes, “He is the image of the invisible God” (Colossians 1:15). When we look at Jesus we see the God who cannot be seen. Investigating Jesus — His character and claims — will lead you to God.

Read the Bible. The Bible is a book of people’s search and relationship with God throughout history. It is also the most direct way to gain a clear picture of God in looking at the person of Jesus, because everything in the Bible points to Jesus. Start here.

Engage your brain… Embarking on a spiritual search doesn’t mean you have to turn your brain off. As author Brian McLaren writes in his book Finding Faith, “Though a healthy faith is bigger than the intellect, the search for faith cannot bypass the intellect…This is a journey that will require you to think bigger than you ever have before and then to think bigger still.” Ask questions. Look at your discoveries — does it make reasonable sense? Knowing God shouldn’t be illogical.

…but search with all your heart. On the other hand, don’t leave your heart behind either. God doesn’t want you to merely find out about Him, He wants you to actually find Him — He wants you to know Him personally and have a relationship with Him. A relationship that involves intellect with no heart is no relationship at all.

Know your past and stay open to what you’re looking for. Our past influences the way we see and understand things in our present and future experiences. Know your past experiences and presuppositions — the things you currently believe. These will profoundly affect your search for God. Just as we are reminded from a scene in The Passion of the Christ where Pontius Pilate and his wife Claudia discuss truth, we won’t be able to recognize the truth if we aren’t open to hearing it.

Ask questions. Question things that people seem to take for granted. Anything true or worth pursuing should be able to stand up against tough cross examination. Write down your questions, especially about the Bible and Jesus.

Where can you ask and discuss your questions? Talk with people you know who follow Jesus. Join a discussion group in your area that explores God and Jesus. Express your questions and thoughts on message boards. Send your question via email. iamnext.com has a team of people ready to dialogue with you.

Investigate and read articles, books, the Bible, websites to see what others have to say. Ask people who follow Jesus what books and resources they have found helpful in getting a clearer picture of Jesus and God.

Talk to people who love and follow Jesus, who show evidence of living according to a different set of principles. Ask how they discovered Jesus — how did they search? Why do they believe? How do they continue to discover more and develop their relationship with God?

Journal your thoughts, questions, discoveries and new insights. Think of it as a scrapbook of your spiritual journey.

Spend time in nature. A letter from one of Jesus’ followers explains the value of observing and experiencing God’s creation, “By taking a long and thoughtful look at what God has created, people have always been able to see what their eyes as such can’t see: eternal power, for instance, and the mystery of his divine being.” (Romans 1:20)

Make time for your search for God. The unseen and spiritual things in our lives are easily crowded out by the many things that urgently grab for our attention. Decide when you’ll take a few practical steps — read a book, spend an hour searching online, find someone to talk to. Give yourself a general time frame to search — then draw some initial conclusions you can act on.

Evaluate and respond. There will come times where you need to react to what you discover about Jesus — what do you think of who He says He is? Is it true? How will you respond? Remember that you don’t have to know everything about something to know it, especially if that “something” is as vast as God! Even if you searched for evidence of God your whole lifetime, at some point finding God will involve an element of faith.

Expect ongoing questions and doubts along the way. Finding God certainly doesn’t mean having the answers to all your questions immediately or completely. Questions are a natural and necessary part of your spiritual journey and growth, whether you are just beginning to search for God or whether you found Him years ago. There are a million discoveries about God that are yet to come.

As you search for God, know that you are not the only one searching. Jesus is searching for you and wants you to find Him. In His own words, Jesus says: “Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you. For everyone who asks receives; he who seeks finds; and to him who knocks, the door will be opened.” (Matthew 7:7)

Adapted from ‘Practical Steps In Your Search For God’.

Check out my Mark’s new book.. Leading Worship ~ Notes from a Grand Adventure’ available in Kindle or Soft Cover Editions.  This is a great gift for the musician or worshipper in your life.

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10 Principles To Build A Great Guest Experience At Your Church

By Paul Alexander ~

Do you know how to build a great guest experience at your church? Are you starting with the right building blocks? This top 10 list has been built from my experience of working with churches across the country the past couple of years with theUnstuck Group.

When we engage churches in a Ministry Health Assessment we help them gain a fresh perspective of their strategies, systems and structures. The process gives churches with a current snapshot of their ministry’s health and steps to best position your church to fulfill your vision. Here’s some of what I’ve learned along the way.

Welcome

1. Stop Acting like a Church

Instead of learning from other churches, begin looking at other public space that people go to. Visit resorts, restaurants, stores and other public venues that have a great guest experience and have people coming back for more. Take your teams, debrief, and build a list of what you can learn and principles and ideas to transfer to your church campus.

2. Give people the Opportunity to Self-Identify

Guest parking, children’s check-in, a physical guest services location, and communication cards in the program/bulletin are all simple ways to create avenues for guests to self-identify. By a guest self-identifying they are essentially “opting-in” or giving you permission to speak with them. Instead of spamming them you are engaging them in a dialogue with their permission.

3. Ask, “What’s Next?”

It can be frustrating going onto a church campus for the first time. It can seem like everyone else(insiders) already know where to go and what to do. It can be intimidating. Make it easier for people by thinking through a “what’s next” exercise with your team. Imagine a guest drives into your parking lot…what next? Imagine they find the right place to park…what’s next? Asking, “What’s next?” moving through the moment a guest arrives on your campus to the moment they leave will help you create an audit of your guest experience.

4. Make it Personal

It’s a nice touch when I make reservations for my wife’s birthday and we show up at the restaurant to be greeted by a, “Happy Birthday Mrs. Alexander,” (and I don’t mind the free dessert either). The more personal you can make it, the more memorable it will be. Instead of a cookie-cutter guest follow-up letter, could you write a personal handwritten note? Could the person who greeted them actually be the one writing it? How about a personal phone call to say thank you for visiting, instead of trying to get them to come back. Think: personal without intrusive.

5. Cleanliness IS Next to godliness

If you go into a restaurant bathroom and it’s filthy, how does that make you feel about what goes on in the kitchen? Build a team and give them responsibility for keeping the facility clean. Don’t just make sure it’s clean, (including the parking lot and sidewalks) for guests when they arrive but make sure the bathrooms get cleaned in between services and the facility is maintained during use.

6. Please don’t have a kid watching my kid

I’m not sure about you, but I have kids. And they’re pretty much the most important things I have on this planet. So when I go to check my kids into a classroom at a church and a young teenager greets me and asks me to hand over one of my kids, I get nervous. Now, do I think teenagers should serve at church? Yep. Do I think they can serve with kids? Sure. But have a responsible adult in the room with them coaching them and interacting with the parents.

7. Engage People BEFORE they come to your Church Building

The guest experience begins before guests ever get to your church campus. More and more people are checking out your church before they ever go to it. They’re church shopping online and gauging whether or not they will attend based on what they can learn about you on your website. So does your church website acknowledge and engage guests? Is it easy and intuitive to navigate? Is the Google map correct? Have you posted a short experience video or brief welcome video from the pastor so guests can know what to expect when they arrive? Can they check-in their kids and actually schedule their visit before they arrive on your campus?

8. Call things what they are

One of the worst guest experiences I ever had at a church was when I was wandering around trying to figure out where to check-in my kids. Fortunately I saw someone walking by with a lanyard on, “Finally someone who can help me,” I thought. When I asked where I should go to check in my kids they pointed and said, “The ‘B’ Building,” and kept walking. Great! What’s the ‘B” Building, I thought. Please call the nursery, preschool ministry, elementary, Jr. High and so on what they actually are. I know you’re trying to be cute and cool with your great church brands but it doesn’t help guests. Clear trumps cute or cool all day long.

9. Don’t Single People Out

There is a difference between acknowledging guests and singling them out. Having guests wear a special name tag, a rose on their lapel, or remain seated during the worship service so everyone else can come by and say hello singles people out. Very few people like to stand out. Remember your Junior High years? Most people will go to great lengths to blend in. So don’t single your guests out at church, or they probably won’t come back again.

10. Follow Through

The easiest way to gain or lose trust is to follow through, or not follow through on what you say you’re going to do. If guests take a step and self identify, then follow-up with them. This can be a simple email sent the day of their visit, a handwritten note sent on Monday or a personal phone call. If guests ask for help or information, then give it to them. Quickly.

Obviously this isn’t an exhaustive list, but it is probably a good place to start. What else would you add to the list? Leave a comment!

Interested in learning more about engaging the Unstuck Group and participating in a Ministry Health Assessment? Follow this link!

The original post is here.

Check out my Mark’s new book.. “Leading Worship ~ Notes from a Grand Adventure’ available in Kindle or Soft Cover Editions.  This is a great gift for the musician or worshipper in your life.

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7 Distinguishing Habits of Highly Effective Pastors

By Thom S. Ranier ~

Determining the effectiveness of a pastor is a highly subjective exercise. While certain metrics may prove helpful, they do not tell the whole story. In that context, I reviewed my 40 years of serving churches in a variety of capacities and noted several very effective pastors I knew well. My list was lengthy: nearly 30 pastors total.

Since I knew each of these pastors so well, I began to write down traits that distinguished them from most other pastors. I wanted to know what made them tick; I wanted to know how and why they were so effective.

7habits

There are many characteristics most pastors have: prayerful; committed to the Word; dedicated to their families; high character; and others. My interest in this exercise, however, was to find the traits that set them apart from most others. When I finished this assignment, I found seven distinguishing characteristic or habits.

  1. They have genuine enthusiasm. I am not referring to the vocal cheerleader type. These pastors may be quiet, but their passion and enthusiasm for their churches, their families, and their ministries are evident in all they say and do. It is not a contrived enthusiasm; it is real and contagious.
  2. They are great listeners. When you are around these pastors, they genuinely want to focus on you. They seem to have little desire to talk about themselves; they would rather hear your stories. They can make you feel very important because they genuinely care and genuinely listen.
  3. Their identity is not their vocation. They don’t have to climb a perceived ladder of success because their greatest reward comes from serving Christ in whatever manner He directs them. You don’t have to worry about these pastors manipulating the network or the system for their own advancement. Their identities are in Christ, not their vocations.
  4. They are intentional about personal witnessing. These pastors don’t see the Great Commission as an abstract concept or something that others are supposed to do. They love to share the gospel personally with others. They are also highly intentional about personal witnessing.
  5. They have unconditional love of their critics. So many leaders, pastors included, have limited effectiveness because critics constantly hound them. They are drained emotionally and sometimes walk in fear of the critics. These effective pastors, however, include in their prayer lives intercession for their critics. They learn to love them because they are asking God to help them to have that love.
  6. They have a gentle spirit. We often forget that gentleness is part of the fruit of the Spirit. In this hypercritical social media world, aggression and negativity have become normative, even in our churches. These pastors, to the contrary, have a calm and gentleness that can only come from the Holy Spirit.
  7. They persevere. Ministry is not easy. Local church ministry can be especially difficult. There are too many wounded warriors in our churches. Unfortunately, most of their wounds have come from friendly fire (though I’m not sure the word “friendly” fits well in this metaphor). Highly effective pastors hang in there. Sure, they get hurt. Sure, they get discouraged. But they ultimately keep on doing ministry in God’s power. Though it’s cliché, they look for strength to keep on ministering one day at a time.

At the risk of redundancy, let me remind you that these seven traits are not necessarily the same as the biblical qualifications of a pastor. They are, according to my subjective research, those traits that set them apart from most other pastors. They are thus the seven distinguishing habits of highly effective pastors.

See the original post here.

Check out my Mark’s new book.. “Leading Worship ~ Notes from a Grand Adventure’ available in Kindle or Soft Cover Editions.  This is a great gift for the musician or worshipper in your life.

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Leadership Means Having to Say You Are Sorry

by Lolly Daskal ~

In the movie Love Story the main character famously says, “Love means never having to say you’re sorry.”

It sounds very romantic, and for a long time I loved that quote—but over all the years that I have worked with leaders and organizations and teams, I’ve come to realize that it doesn’t really apply in leadership or in life.

When it comes to building, restoring and developing relationships, you have to say you are sorry.

Sorry

And it’s not enough to just say you’re sorry—you have to sincerely apologize, to show that you’re willing to break old patterns and take real action in a timely and powerful way.

Here are some of the factors in a true apology:

Vulnerability. The first step in restoring a relationship is to let go of ego. This can be hard for those who value strength and control in their leadership. But apologizing gives you more control and potential power that you could imagine. To be vulnerable is to show strength; to let go of the ego can transform any relationship instantaneously.

Timing. Apologies need to happen sooner than later—as quickly as possible. Delays often make the situation worse. Your apology loses its meaning and you end up causing more harm then good. The time and circumstance need to be both immediate and right.

Accountability. In leadership and in life, it’s a natural impulse to blame someone for your faults and mistakes. But the best leaders know that the best policy is always to take accountability for yourself. Blaming others destroys relationships; playing victim destroys your reputation. Accountability strengthens both.

Fence-mending. Many leaders pride themselves on being right, but the best —the ones who lead from within—know that being kind might be even more important. Even if you know you are right, sometimes the best reward is to mend fences. Prolonging an argument and lengthening a dispute doesn’t further your leadership. On the other hand, mending fences is characteristic someone who understands that leadership is not about scoring points but building lasting relationship and restoring faith.

The best way to apologize is by letting go of your ego, speaking as soon as the time is right, holding yourself accountable, and staying on the high road. Whether or not you win the battle, you’ll win in character. And your kindness will affect your leadership, which in turn will affect those around you.

The only thing stopping you from healthy and happy relationships may be the belief that leadership means not having to say you’re sorry.

Lead From Within: A true leader is able to apologize when they are wrong and mend fences when they are broken to restore trust to their relationships and friendships.

The original post is here.

Check out my Mark’s new book.. “Leading Worship ~ Notes from a Grand Adventure’ available in Kindle or Soft Cover Editions.  This is a great gift for the musician or worshipper in your life.

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5 Things Every Worship Leader Should Learn From Jimmy Fallon

By Josh Maze ~

No matter the guest, they’re the “absolute best” on the “absolute best” TV show or film. Isn’t it amazing that every. single. night… Jimmy’s “favorite” person is on the show… and we believe him? I believe him. I follow him. All the way to the desk where he is absolutely enthralled by the special guest. Completely engaged.

Late Night With Jimmy Fallon - Season 4

As a matter of fact, he’s so engaged – I’m engaged. I’m engaged through him. All the sudden I find myself interested in the guest / the subject / the conversation. Through Jimmy’s excitement & passion, I find myself involved. I never knew that I could become such a fan of some random C-list celebrity… but seeing Jimmy as such a fanatic about this person, here I am. Participating.

Here are 5 things every worship leader should learn from Jimmy Fallon.

1. He’s always smiling.
This may be the most important and underrated aspect of Jimmy’s career. He smiles. A lot. Like… constantly. And that’s really good because, he’s in our living rooms and our bedrooms. And we want happy / positive people in our home. Smiles break down barriers.

Smiles invite you in. Every worship leader who doesn’t smile while singing about Love… Grace… Hope… Jesus… is completely missing the mark. If you’re not smiling, you’re not winning. If you’re not smiling, you probably don’t look friendly. You might even be coming across too serious, overly spiritual, or arrogant. Let’s avoid that at all cost.

2. He’s got great energy.
It’s rarely hype. It’s always excitement. He loves what he does, and it’s obvious. But check this out… Jimmy Fallon has bad days too. He’s a human being. But you may never know it. We don’t see it. He presses through and does his job… making us feel at home.

People need a confident leader to bring the energy to the room. Energy is contagious. Bad / low energy is contagious. Great / high energy is contagious. Be yourself, yes. Be vulnerable, of course. But get excited about what you’re doing!

3. He’s humble.
I’ve heard a ton of different people make comments about Jimmy. “He’s awesome… He’s the best… I love him… I have a crush on him… He’s literally perfect…” (And those are just from my wife…) 🙂 But I have never heard anyone say anything about his ego, his pride, or his arrogance.

Yet – he’s one of the biggest stars in the world. He’s self-deprecating. He knows his strengths – He knows his weaknesses. He doesn’t take himself too seriously. He’s quick to laugh at himself. That’s endearing. I like being around people like that, don’t you? With his ratings up 27% in the households & up 40% in the 18-49 demographic. Yes. You do. We do.

4. He’s prepared.
Monologues, singing, dancing, bits, sketches, dialogues, interviews… he does it all. And he’s ready. We think we have something to get ready for on Sundays? Once a week? Imagine having to be fresh, funny, smart, & interesting 5 nights a week. He nails it. And yes, he’s got a great team around him that help him prep.

What can we learn from this as worship leaders? What can we take away? Very little excellent happens in life without proper preparation and planning. Let’s do our part to prepare, and let God do what only He can do.

5. He’s relevant.
‘Relevant’ isn’t my favorite word ever. But let’s remind ourselves… It’s a real word:

Relevant
 adjective rel·e·vant ˈre-lə-vənt relating to a subject in an appropriate way

If I tried doing what we do at Highpoint Church at the big Episcopal Cathedral down the street, it wouldn’t work. I’d be dead in the water. You have to speak the language of the people you are speaking to. You have to relate. You have to know who is in the room and have an idea of where they are coming from.

Jimmy’s show is so relevant, it’s ridiculous. The monologues are literally centered around the day’s news, the day’s gossip, and even the day’s tragedy. The interviews are centered around the film or TV show that just premiered or is about to premier. Why do so many churches miss this? We at Highpoint have decided to teach timeless truths in a timely way.
That’s a Non-negotiable.

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So, all in all, while Jimmy is leading us in the praise of the people he adores – like Bruce Springsteen, Paul McCartney, Tom Cruise, Justin Timberlake, or Brad Pitt.

We still have a lot to learn. If we are leading people in the worship of JESUS, how much more then should we be smiling, energetic, humble, prepared, & relevant? Jimmy, if you’re out there, I for one, am inspired to be a better worship leader. Thank you.

The original post is here.

Check out my new book.. “Leading Worship ~ Notes from a Grand Adventure available in Kindle or Soft Cover Editions.  This is a great gift for the musician or worshipper in your life.

This blog is part of my vision to train over 100,000 worship leaders around the world. If you would like to support this vision you can help by giving any amount ($1, $5, $20, etc.) on my PayPal account.

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5 Reasons Why The Bible Is The Most Important Book You Will Ever Read

by Dan Buttafuoco ~

The Bible is the single most important book ever written. It is an eyewitness account of historical events of such magnitude that they have literally shaped the world in which we live. Without this book the Western world and a good deal of the Eastern world would be completely different today than if the events of this book had never occurred.

It is not too much to say that the events recorded in this book are claimed by a significant percentage of people who have ever lived on this earth to be the most important events ever recorded in the history of the world. This book is foundational to just about everything mankind will ever know or accomplish. It has directly led to massive undertakings of good will and charity. Because of this book, great projects have been undertaken, hospitals have been built, multitudes fed and clothed and orphanages founded.

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Here are five primary reasons why you need to read the Bible:

REASON #1:
THE BIBLE HAS TRANSFORMED THE WORLD

Importance of BibleIt would be impossible to claim to be an educated person in today’s world without having at least some familiarity with the events contained in this book. Actually, all of the events contained in this book should be known by everyone.

  • A good number of people around the world read portions of this book every day. It is one of the most published and printed books in the history of the world. It has been printed in just about every known language (including braille) and each year, since it was first written, it has been the world’s greatest bestseller year after year. As time marches on it is continually printed in yet more languages. Collectors of rare books treasure it in every form.
  • The Bible was the first book ever put to the printing press. The man who first printed it, Johannes Gutenberg, was recently voted the most important man to have ever lived within the past 1000 years!
  • A good number of museums exist today which are dedicated solely to this very book and the events contained therein.
  • The Bible is available in every corner of the globe, even where it is illegal to own or read this book. It is available in electronic format and on CD as well. You can find it on the internet for free. Famous actors and personages regularly quote it. It was quoted by William Shakespeare many times in his writings.
  • Worldwide organizations and associations have been formed because of this book and its message, many of them existing for centuries. Together they represent multiple hundreds of millions of members.

REASON #2:
PEOPLE ARE WILLING TO DIE FOR THIS BOOK

Importance of BiblePeople have died torturous deaths simply to gain access to this book. You may, even now, be in a country where this book is discouraged or even banned outright. In many countries it is a crime to distribute or even possess this book.

  • This book has been praised, cursed, restricted, banned, desecrated, burned and fought over. People swear on it and at it.
  • Some have tried to eliminate it. All who have tried have failed. People have suffered exquisite tortures and loss of freedom and even their lives for printing it. This has occurred recently and over many centuries past, as well. It is, in fact, a regular occurrence in this world.
  • This book is simultaneously hated and loved. Once read it would be impossible to be indifferent to it; for its claims are monumental and beyond exaggerating. It provokes a strong response in either a positive or negative direction; you will either love it or hate it. It was meant to be so by design. It is so controversial that wars have been fought over its interpretation. Governments have toppled on account of it and kings have been deposed because of it. Most importantly, lives have been dramatically changed for good because of this book.

REASON #3:
IT’S THE MOST ACCURATE BOOK OF ANTIQUITY

Importance of BibleThe Bible is the most copied book of antiquity. Written over a time period of some 1,500 years, it was completed approximately 2,000 years ago. Yet, in all the centuries that have passed, none of its contents have ever been found inaccurate.

  • It has been translated into its present form directly from the original languages from a vast supply of ancient manuscripts sifted by the best minds and most competent scholars of our day and of many prior generations. It has been translated into every known existing language.
  • It is surpassingly accurate to the smallest details. Its contents, as translated, are as close to the original words of the authors as humanly possible. Only a few words of the entire book (a tiny, insignificant percentage) are in any doubt as to the original words and none of the disputed text affects the message of the book. Additionally, new discoveries of previously unknown ancient manuscripts continue to provide ever greater accuracy to the contents of this book.
  • It has been sifted, studied, commentated upon and dissected more than any book in history. Volumes of books have been written about it and if they were stacked on top of one another they would reach to the sky.
  • Where this book can be verified by external events such as archeology, geography, custom, politics, culture, known world history and writings in other ancient texts it has been so verified as to be accurate in all respects. New discoveries always support it, never vice versa. It has never once been proven faulty on single detail or fact, although many have mightily tried and failed.

REASON #4:
IT CONTAINS A LIFE-CHANGING MESSAGE OF FREEDOM

Importance of BibleThe Bible has liberated many from oppression by its clear teachings. It raises the dignity and rights of every human being ever born. It is truly an amazing and remarkable piece of writing. It contains clear teaching on the value and worth of every individual. It will astonish and surprise you and likely move you to tears.

  • It has freed minds and hearts throughout history. The events recorded in this book have generated more great works of art (and some not-so-great ones, as well) than any other subject matter in the history of the world. All the museums in the world, added together, could not possibly contain all of the artwork inspired by the events of this book.
  • This book itself represents true freedom. It has never been in the custody and control of a single group of people, unlike other important books. It belongs to everyone and it has been possessed by everyone, every culture and every tribe and race of people. Reading it will strike you directly in your heart. It has the “ring of truth” to all who love the same.
  • This book contains a message at its very core. It is a message to all people everywhere, in every time period, relevant to their everyday lives. It claims to be the very words of God… an audacious claim, for sure. It is for you to decide whether to believe the message of this book and apply it to your own life.
  • If you now know nothing about God, you will know a great deal about God after reading this book. If you believe you know much about God, you will know even more about him after you read this book. You may even decide to re-evaluate your knowledge of God after reading it.

REASON #5:
IT CONNECTS YOU TO HISTORY’S MOST IMPORTANT FIGURE

Importance of BibleYou may have heard of the “Godman,” Jesus of Nazareth, also called the “Christ” (i.e.”Anointed One”). You may even think you know Him. But if you have not read the account offered firsthand throughout this book, you will, in effect, know nothing definite about Him. The entire Old Testament points to His coming, and the entire New Testament testifies to His teachings and actions.

  • His name has been used to bless people and it has been used as a curse word by those who despise Him. People have been healed and set free in His name. One thing is for sure: when you meet Jesus in the pages of this book and understand who He claims to be it is impossible for you to remain indifferent to Him.
  • This story is either the biggest fraud ever perpetrated on mankind or it describes Jesus as exactly who He claims to be: the Supreme Lord and Ruler over all of mankind and the very creator God of the Universe. Logically speaking, this is either a nice poetic story created from a fantasy with an intent to deceive you or a clear and accurate picture of God, who is our judge (both mine and yours). You decide. If you think you know about God already, consider the source of that “knowledge” and examine if this book may, in fact, be a better source for true knowledge about the one true Creator God that made you and everything else, both known an unknown in this Universe.
  • People are free to reject this book and what it says. God made us “free moral agents” to choose as we desire. Yet, people violate the teachings and wisdom of this book at their own peril.
  • Because of the main person in this book, Jesus of Nazareth, time has been split into two main epochs (B.C. “before Christ” and A.D. “anno Domini” for “year of our Lord”).
  • Each year, over a billion people celebrate His birth, His death and His bodily resurrection from the dead.
  • Jesus is the only religious leader ever to make the claim that He has risen from the dead. All others are dead and buried. Abraham is dead. Moses is dead. Mohammed has died and remains dead, Buddha is dead, Gandhi is dead. Only Jesus claims to be alive. Even Muslims revere Jesus as a holy man and a great prophet. All told, about half of the world today accepts that this Jesus was a great and remarkable personage.

CONCLUSION

Keep turning the pages of this remarkable book. Read it with an open mind and open heart. It contains pure truth about God, about life, the nature of mankind and our own hearts as human beings. The Gospel of John is a wonderful place to start, but read the whole thing — Old and New Testaments. You’ll be amazed what you discover about God, and about yourself.

If this God is indeed your judge, before whom you will someday give an account of your life, it really is important that you are aware of who He is and the simple thing He asks of us before that solemn time comes. In essence, this book will help you to deal with that very event for which we are all destined. Be warned: you will not be the same after you read this book.

Content ©2013 Daniel P. Buttafuoco

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Dan Buttafuoco, an attorney in New York City, is president of the Historical Bible Society.

Check out my Mark’s new book.. “Leading Worship ~ Notes from a Grand Adventure’ available in Kindle or Soft Cover Editions.  This is a great gift for the musician or worshipper in your life.

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6 Ways to Plug the Power Back Into Your Rehearsals

by Branon Dempsey ~

Maximizing Your Time

No matter if you rehearse during the week, or all-in-one-shot Sunday, it can be a waste of time or a value to others. Think about the uses for home electricity. Without it, the simplest task would be problematic. When we experience a good and productive rehearsal, our team is better prepared and energized to lead. The result is a worship service that is vibrant, confident, and full of life.

As you read below, keep in mind that these are suggestions, not rules. Every church and rehearsal setting is different. My hope is that you can acquire some of these ideas and make them work for you. Wherever your team may be, it might be time to plug in and recharge those rehearsal batteries.

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Get Organized

You may have experienced the all-too-familiar scenario: the rehearsal starts at 7pm, people show at 7.15pm and the amps aren’t cranking until 7.30pm. Stragglers, pow-wows and talk-time now land us at 7.45pm, and it’s already 45 minutes into “rehearsal,” and we haven’t even touched the music. This repetitive weekly event can often lead team members to eject.

Make A Plan

This involves the overall rehearsal time, down to the individual songs. Beyond writing out the set list, think about which songs deserve the most time to rehearse along with the tough parts. Keep track of your players to handle certain songs and team rotations. Jot down your musical ideas in order reference them in the moment. Out of habit, I will put minute markings per song, indicating the length of time to work each tune. Next, I’ll scribble-down notes about the key, tempo, trouble spots and when to change-out the drummer (just kidding).

Be Early On Time

Having the simple things ready to go like music and charts is huge. Go through your music, and notate what needs fixing. When your finished, make those copies and bring them to rehearsal. Maybe do a walk through on your stage to clean up trash, reorganize music stands, cables, etc.

Preparing your own gear is another added benefit: change those guitar strings and swap out that old sustain pedal. Create your own catalogue of music, kept in a folder and easy to locate. Don’t forget that pencil. Plan to arrive early at rehearsal and get your gear ready. If meeting time is 7pm, your downbeat time is 7pm. Vince Lombardi once said: “To be on time is to be late, to be early is to be on time.” (a.k.a Lombardi Time)

30-20-10 Rule

When leading a rehearsal, your time management is to serve the members of your team. Rather than rehearsing three songs for two hours, I follow what I call the 30-20-10 Rule. Let’s say we have five songs, we’ll take 30 minutes total to work trouble spots – that’s 5 min per song. Take 20 minutes (4 minutes per song) to run the set top to bottom without stopping, and the last 10 minutes of rehearsal for questions.

The idea is to work backwards: begin with each song’s toughest part first to the easiest, address the transitions, and move to the next song. This plan takes about an hour, give or take depending on the music material and needs. The purpose is to stay on task and finish on time without missing a beat.

Rehearsal Time is Not Practice Time

Another large problem in rehearsals is people not knowing their music. We are busy people with many excuses. Practicing at home is a must have before entering rehearsal. Ask any professional live, studio or orchestral musician, and they will tell you the same. When you arrive, you simply rehearse what you’ve practiced. At this pace, your Sunday mornings become a run-through and not another rehearsal.

In your rehearsals, when a song sticks out and not jiving,’ immediately fix it. Never rehearse mistakes. Don’t run through your set trying to make it perfect. In reality, you want to look for the mistakes in order to improve the song. When the problem goes un-addressed, most likely you will repeat the same mistake in a real service. Make it right and move on. Another big component is communication: keep it clear, positive, concise and never point out anyone publically. Lastly, make it fun.

Ending Well

When you finish rehearsal, thank people for both their time and commitment. Remind them of the musical points mentioned and confirm your meeting time for Sunday. Take that extra time as well to check on others to make sure everything else in life is cool. Pray for one another and be there for one another.

Before you know it, making music will be more fun, more productive and more meaningful. Plug the power back into your worship team and make your next rehearsal one that people will remember.

Copyright 2014, Branon Dempsey | Worship Team Training® | Administered by For His Music. All Rights Reserved.

Check out my Mark’s new book.. “Leading Worship ~ Notes from a Grand Adventure’ available in Kindle or Soft Cover Editions.  This is a great gift for the musician or worshipper in your life.

 

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Worship Leading Tips: Timeless Songs

By Gary Durbin ~

As constructing a sermon is to a pastor, so constructing a worship set is to a worship leader. You want to have solid content and memorable hooks that will stick with your church as they walk away.

For a worship leader, song selection is a very important and delicate, weekly task.

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I don’t view myself as an entertainer, therefore I want my church to be able to easily engage, participate and sing the songs every week. That being said, I try to select SINGABLE songs! Novel idea, right? It doesn’t sound very profound, but it seems to be somewhat of a lost art.

What I’ve found is that the songs that seem to be the most accessible for the church are those songs that are timeless. They are those new or old songs that have that timeless, ageless quality. Timeless songs are songs that could have been written this week or 300 years ago. If we as worship leaders embrace them, I believe we can more effectively help our churches embrace God in corporate worship.

Here’s some qualities I look for in a timeless song:

1. SIMPLE MELODY – Think of the most popular songs that have been passed down from generation to generation. Most of them have a memorable, simple melody line. The melody is the key to a great song. The more complicated the melody, the harder it is to sing. I’m not saying that every great song has a simple melody, but if you want most of the people in your church to sing a song, a simple melody will enable that greatly.

I was in a work shop at the National Worship Leader Conference one year, when I heard Nathan Nockels critiquing a song. He talked about keeping the melody simple, which means to limit the fluctuation in the notes of the melody line. I think the reason the Beatles’ songs have stood the test of time so well is because of their gift for writing memorable, yet simple melodies. It doesn’t have to be complicated to be great and when it’s simple, more people will be able to sing it. Keep it simple!

2. AGE ADAPTABILITY – A timeless song is an ageless song. It’s melody is simple enough to be adapted to any generation. A timeless song can be sung by my 7 year old daughter or my 81 year old grandpa. When you look at your setlist, is it geared for just one age group or can it be embraced by multiple generations? The church is a multi-generational organism and a healthy church accurately represents that.

I am, in no way, suggesting a blended style worship set. That can sometimes be more confusing than constructive. I’m simply challenging that we use songs that are simple and accessible to the past generations all the way to the next generation.  One of the timeless songs I use is “10,000 Reasons”. That’s a great example of a song that’s embraced by every generation in my church.

I expect my generation and younger to like most of the songs I use, but there’s nothing sweeter to me than when I hear a compliment from someone who’s 30 to 50 years older than me. It tells me that most everyone was able to engage in worship in the same hour. That means I’m serving the whole church and not just one demographic of it.

3. STYLE VERSATILITY – A song that stands the test of time is largely preserved by it’s versatility. When you strip all of the instrumentation away, do you still have a great song? When a song is too dependent on the accompaniment, it’s versatility is extremely limited.

The obvious examples of versatile songs are the revised hymns that we’ve all heard in the past decade. A timeless song can be played by a rock band, acoustic set or an old-school piano and organ. When you have style versatility in a song, it’s life-span is drastically increased. I think one of the greatest examples of this is “All Creatures of our God and King”. It was written in the 1600’s, yet it is easily translated to today’s popular style. Why? Because of it’s versatility. When you’re looking for a timeless song, test it with different styles.

The goal of this post is not to promote old hymns. God does not care about the date of a song, as long as the heart is right behind it. This post is about helping our people engage in corporate worship. Singing a song can be one of the most unifying elements for a group of people to do. A worship setlist that does not accomplish that is an oxymoron.

Psalm 100:2 says, “Worship the LORD with gladness. Come before him, singing with joy.”

This is not a suggestion. This is a command.

As worship leaders, let’s have a heart for God, His commands and His church, no matter what demographic they belong to. Let’s give them songs they can sing. Timeless songs can be a very effective tool in this mission.

What are some songs that you think are timeless? 

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