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Worship leading essentials #4 – putting together a song list

One of the most rewarding and most difficult tasks of leading worship is putting together a song list. Do it well and it comes off seamless. Don’t do the prep work and it becomes a train wreck. It takes some work, but with some simple planning, you can put together a solid worship set.

First a look at a typical exchange gathering.

We begin the gathering with an opening song. I would like to think this is a highly spiritual time where people are swept into a realization of the presence of God and that they are transformed from the distractions of the day to becoming keenly aware of what God is saying. Truth is (for us anyway) that it serves as a trigger for people to finish their conversations and coffee in the atrium and come into the sanctuary.

Following the opening song is a welcome, some announcements, prayer, and teaching. We follow up the teaching with a 30 minute worship set. During the set, people are active. They come to the front to take communion, give their offering, pray at the altars, pray with friends, or spend time at some of our designated worship spaces.

Now that you know where we are coming from, on with the nuts and bolts.

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Thanks Jennifer

Jennifer Held, 14 years old, died in her sleep Saturday morning.

Just typing that sentence doesn’t seem right. Fourteen year old girls are not supposed to die in their sleep. They are supposed to grow older and get a driver’s license, go to prom, agonize over college, maybe get married and have a family.

Jennifer was part of our church and is a follower of Jesus. She even sang with the exchange worship crew a time or two. She was a lover of music, life, people, and her creator.


On Saturday I was in my daughter Mariah’s room. Mariah had been in camp with Jennifer earlier this summer and knew her from youth group. Mariah, Hannah (one of her best friends), and I were processing the whole thing. “Processing.” Like you can process something like this. We were all just kind of in shock at the whole thing. Hannah made a comment that Jennifer would always smile and would go out of her way to find people who were alone. Just Friday at school there was a new student standing between the pool and the cafe at school. He was all alone. Jennifer walked up and talked to him. A simple act that was normal for her. She was an example of a lover of people and of God.

For some reason, she was fond of green.

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The Road

Now there was a man in Jerusalem called Simeon, who was righteous and devout. He was waiting for the consolation of Israel, and the Holy Spirit was upon him. It had been revealed to him by the Holy Spirit that he would not die before he had seen the Lord’s Christ. Moved by the Spirit, he went into the temple courts. When the parents brought in the child Jesus to do for him what the custom of the Law required, Simeon took him in his arms and praised God, saying:
“Sovereign Lord, as you have promised, you now dismiss your servant in peace. – Luke 2:25-29

Simeon hangs at the Temple almost every day. Sometime in the past God made a promise to him. God had designed a special road for Simeon: he would see Christ. He would stare into the eyes of God in the flesh. He would hold the one who was present at the creation of the world. He would touch God.

Maybe he woke every day wondering “Is this the day?” Perhaps we would see parents come with a child and his heart would skip a beat. After a long day of no baby Christ, maybe he went home a bit disappointed thinking “maybe tomorrow.”

It is interesting to me that Simeon’s plan is to see the baby Christ. Somewhere God had made a promise that Simeon would not die until he saw him. That was enough for Simeon, to see Christ. But why stop there? Why not press in and ask God for more than that? I fear that I would not have accepted what God had promised. It just didn’t seem like enough.

I can imagine a conversation if I was Simeon. God says I can see Christ as a baby. Not being disrespectful in any form, but wanting to ring everything I can out of the situation, I might go a step further.

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Worship me

I, John, am the one who heard and saw these things. And when I had heard and seen them, I fell down to worship at the feet of the angel who had been showing them to me. But he said to me, “Do not do it! I am a fellow servant with you and with your brothers the prophets and of all who keep the words of this book. Worship God!” – Rev 22:8-9

John is nearing the end of his vision on the Island. He records some heavy visions to say the least. As it all piles on him and he realizes his place in this great drama he falls to the feet of the angel who had been showing him theses things. The angel immediately takes charge. Wrong move John.


Why? What is so wrong with paying some honor to an angel? What was the angel thinking? I believe that he knew that in that moment they both had the potential to go totally off mission.

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Worship Leading Essentials #3 – Teamwork

If you set your team up as being a one man show, it will eventually be a one man show! I have learned some hard and painful lessons on teamwork over the years. Tons of mistakes and tons of learning.

Currently we have a worship “pool” of musicians and vocalists. We pull from this pool to make our teams each week. Each week the band is made up of different musicians that have to come together as a team. Many have asked me if I like this approach better than having set bands that rotate. I love it. It functions well because our people serve as a team. So, how do you establish teamwork with your worship team?

  1. Establish leadership.Flat out, there HAS to be a leader. I have been a musician in bands where there is no leader. It is uncomfortable. Band members need someone to take the lead, establish direction, and make decisions. It frees them up to do their role on the team. We tell all of our team members that we all throw creative ideas into the arrangements, etc, but someone has to be the one to make the final decision. That is the leaders job. Strong, compassionate leadership is an essential in teamwork.
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Homeless conversation


Some of my best blokes and I were spending some quality time in Chicago this weekend (check out Shawn’s blog for more details).. Lots of laughs, lots of memories, and lots of gas. Correction; tons of gas. Most produced and executed by the Fox man.

Friday night we hit Blue Man Group and headed to Buca Di Beppo for a late night feast of Italian. It’s all family style at Buca and we ordered WAY more than we needed. Looking at the massive leftovers Shawn says “Box it up and let’s give it to a homeless person.” Sounded way better than the alternative of adding to the Chicago trash.

The bill was paid and we hailed a cab back to the hotel. Side note: it is legal to pile as many people as you can in a cab in Chi-town. One cabbies said he had carried 8 girls at one time. Can’t imagine that. There were 5 of us and it was highly challenging.

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Mountains and Men

And now, son of man, prophesy to the mountains of Israel. – Ezekiel 36:1

God grabbed me. God’s Spirit took me up and set me down in the middle of an open plain strewn with bones. He led me around and among them—a lot of bones! There were bones all over the plain—dry bones, bleached by the sun.

He said to me, “Son of man, can these bones live?”

I said, “Master God, only you know that.”

He said to me, “Prophesy over these bones: ‘Dry bones, listen to the Message of God!'”

– Ezekiel 37:1-4

God instructs his man of the hour, Ezekiel to prophesy to the mountains. Go speak to the mountains. I find that odd. I can imagine Ezekiel out talking to the mountains. Speaking softly, maybe getting fired up and yelling. Using hand motions. To the mountains. What would that look like? What if someone came by. “What up Zeek?” Zeek: “Um, just talkin’ to the mountains about God.”

Did it make Ezekiel feel like a crazy? What is the purpose of speaking to a mountain. They don’t respond or move or say “thanks” or anything. Just a mountain. But Ezekiel did it. God said to do it and he did.

Cooler than mountains have to be dead bones. Ezekiel’s next assignment was prophesying over some dead bones. Same as the mountains, except that the bones came to life. Check out the whole story, it’s pretty incredible.

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Looking out for #1

Therefore, you shepherds, hear the word of the Lord: As surely as I live, declares the sovereign Lord, because my flock lacks a shepherd and son has been plundered and has become food for all the wild animals, and because my shepherds did not search for my flock but cared for themselves rather thank for my flock, therefore, O shepherds, hear the word of the Lord: This is what the Sovereign Lord says: I am against the shepherds and will hold them accountable for my flock. I will remove them from tending the flock so the shepherds can no longer feed themselves. I will rescue my flock from their mouths, and it will no longer be food for them. – Ezekiel 34:7-10

God puts some pretty strong words in Ezekiel’s mouth. It seems that God always holds the leaders to higher standards. Teachers are held accountable for their influence. Here, shepherds are as well. Maybe God knows that we all have the ability to turn inward. We start out the journey wanting to help others. Somewhere along the way we forget why we were so attracted to the kingdom in the first place. Wasn’t part of it, maybe most of it, this compelling desire to live outside ourselves?

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09.10.06 evaluation

exchange line up for 9.10.06

iPod
1. All to You
Imagine video (Imagine Missions)
Welcome/Ann – Shawn
Jody – crash report from last week
Shawn – Prayer
Scot – Blessed Life #1 (quick interview with Jack)
1. King Makers
2. Nothing without You
3. Let my Words Be Few
4. Facedown
5. How Great is Our God
6. Sweetly Broken
7. Let the Praises Ring
8. Here is Our King
Dismissal – Scot
Band instrumental
Pod

Pretty good night. On “All to You” and “Let the Praises Ring,” I’m not sure that we (the band) fully dropped into the pocket. Then again, if I think that we can play them like Lincoln Browser, I am fooling myself. Even without locking in those songs, we were still able to worship and the room was chocked full of people at the altars and different worship spaces.

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