
This is the third installment on a series of posts that involves some of our staff (pastoral and worship) discussing Bob Kauflin’s book “Worship Matters”. We actually made a little more progress this week by getting through more than 1 chapter. We finished off the first section of the book (Chapters 1-5) entitled "The Leader". Chapter 5 deals with the life and character of the leader. This chapter echoes the message from Bob’s close friend, C.J. Mahaney, in one of his talks entitled “WATCH YOUR LIFE”. This chapter also reminded me of my father’s life verse, 1 Corinthians 10:31 - So, whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God. Chapter 6 begins the second major section of the book called "The Task". This began the most vigorous discussion of the meeting. There was a resounding stir of strong opinions as we began this section. Kauflin begins by asking some difficult questions about the significance christian culture has placed on the role of the worship leader, and why it’s important to gain a biblical grasp of what the task really is. He finishes Chapter 6 by stating his extremely well thought out definition of what a worship leaders task is. This definition then becomes the basis for this section of the book. Each chapter takes one line of the definition and expands on it. The chapters are short (3 or 4 pages) and basically expand the statements for further clarity on the subject. We finished up our meeting by working through the first line of the statement in Chapter 7 - A FAITHFUL WORSHIP LEADER. This chapter, again, elicited strong opinions on the topic. Below are my personal thoughts on what we discussed and insights I have gained for personal growth and corporate edification.
- My life on the stage and my life off of the stage should be a true reflection of each other. People should not be surprised at how I live privately away from the spotlight. My actions, my parenting, my work ethic, my recreation should be in rhythm with my actions, thoughts, and words when I am leading worship.
- Purity is of utmost importance when leading others in worship - “God wants our worship to be sincere, not hypocritical; willing, not forced; wholehearted, not distracted. In other words, pure.” (page 47)
- “Wordly musicians can make great music on stage and live totally decadent lives - and no one thinks twice about it. Worship leaders don’t have that option. God wants our conduct to be an example to others. If the way we live doesn’t back up what we proclaim on Sunday morning, we’re not only deceiving the church - we’re misrepresenting the God we claim to be worshipping. I don’t ever want people who see me lead worship publicly to be surprised by the way I live privately. It’s not my songs that define my worship, it’s my life.” (page 45.)
- Accountability is HUGE! We must have others in our lives that know how we spend our money and treat our spouses and what we do for recreation - so that they can point out sin issues in our lives that we don’t always see - or just avoid altogether.
- We realized that while we as leaders understand that worship shouldn’t be compartmentalized during a worship service - ie, worship is singing, not teaching or giving etc. - we are battling against our christian culture. We have “worship concerts”, “worship artists”, our local christian radio station now plays “worship music” and the latest “worship songs” constantly - people walk into church inundated with what our christian culture tells them - WORSHIP HAPPENS WITH MUSIC. We all agreed that we MUST become very intentional when on stage about communicating the flow of worship throughout the service - our language has to change to begin to combat outside influences on our own local community.
- One of our pastors expressed conviction when Bob reminded us that the PASTOR is the worship leader. He is the one that God will hold accountable for what happens on that stage - not just his message, but every element that is used from beginning to end. Our pastors have in NO WAY abdicated that responsibility - it has been delegated to us and it is overseen by them and they are involved in the planning aspect from beginning to end - but this thought carries a greater weight as we move forward.
- Worship Leaders MUST gain a biblical perspective on their roles in the local church - stop assuming what your role is or placing more significance on it then it should have. Find out what God says you should be doing and do it.
- The goal of the worship leader is to serve his local church, not to write the next song that travels around the world and is sung by millions. Write the next song that helps your church become a more biblical community of believers. If God opens doors for more people to be served by that song then give Him glory for it - but don’t pursue it! Our culture is addicted to celebrity - we must not be! We are not called to be rock stars - we are called to be servants. We are not called to make millions - we are called to make disciples. We are not called to a career - we are called to a lifestyle. We must move our gaze away from the crowds and onto the cross!


2 comments:
Thanks for writing Brad. For some reason this week, I jumped ahead and read the last two chapters of the book. I agree with the assessment that the Pastor is the one accountable for the services and the church as a whole. As worship leaders, this should keep our hearts soft towards him as this is an incredible burden to shoulder. I often times sense this burden from my pastor as he speaks about our church to me.
I also think it will only continue to increase our Pastor's trust in us as we put all our thoughts and desires for the worship experience in submission to his.
Last week, our pastor had a particular song that he thought would really resonate with the talk. (He rarely asks for songs anymore). We talked for a while over email about how we could pull it off with the limited time we had. I kept pressing that I wanted to make the song happen, but that something else would have to fall to the side. I sent him lyrics to songs and gave suggestions. After numerous exchanges...he ended the email conversations with "I trust you man...whatever you decide."
We ended up doing the song he was requesting and it was amazing to hear him tie it into his talk. That song was on his heart and it only served to fuel his delivery that morning.
Great post man!
Tim,
There IS a huge amount of trust that is given to us. I can't speak for Kauflin, but I have listened to many of the talks he has given at conferences - this has a lot to do with why he wrote the book. Pastors and churches have abdicated the work we do completely to worship leaders...worship leaders who might be able to carry a tune, jam on a guitar and wow a crowd, but worship leaders who are not theologically and biblically trained to understand what they are doing.
It's humbling to me that God has allowed me to work with such great leadership that will never be satisfied to have someone just sing a song and strum a guitar.
I'm going to post soon on Planning and Preparation - maybe we could gain from each other what we do to get ready. Thanks for commenting, glad you're hanging around!
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