it Tufts refutes report that it’s broken ties with Seth Moulton over transgender comments By www.boston.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 00:05:04 +0000 A Tufts professor reportedly said they would no longer send students to Moulton's office for internships, but the university refuted the report. The post Tufts refutes report that it’s broken ties with Seth Moulton over transgender comments appeared first on Boston.com. Full Article News Colleges Local News Politics Seth Moulton Tufts University
it Trump says Elon Musk, Vivek Ramaswamy will form outside group to advise White House on government efficiency By www.boston.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 01:59:29 +0000 The acronym “DOGE” is a nod to Musk's favorite cryptocurrency, dogecoin. The post Trump says Elon Musk, Vivek Ramaswamy will form outside group to advise White House on government efficiency appeared first on Boston.com. Full Article News Donald Trump Politics
it Trump chooses New York Rep. Elise Stefanik as ambassador to United Nations By www.boston.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 15:56:25 +0000 Stefanik, 40, who serves as House Republican Conference Chair, has long been one of Trump's most loyal allies in the House, and was among those discussed as a potential vice presidential choice. The post Trump chooses New York Rep. Elise Stefanik as ambassador to United Nations appeared first on Boston.com. Full Article News 2024 Election Donald Trump National News Politics World News
it Mattel mistakenly lists porn site on packaging for ‘Wicked’ dolls By www.boston.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 21:20:12 +0000 The site has a similar address to one that promotes a film adaptation of the hit musical. The toymaker apologized for the “unfortunate error.” The post Mattel mistakenly lists porn site on packaging for ‘Wicked’ dolls appeared first on Boston.com. Full Article News Business Movies National News
it Trump picks Gov. Kristi Noem to serve as homeland security secretary By www.boston.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 17:37:57 +0000 As homeland security secretary, Noem would lead a sprawling federal bureaucracy with a $60 billion budget and more than 230,000 employees. The post Trump picks Gov. Kristi Noem to serve as homeland security secretary appeared first on Boston.com. Full Article News Donald Trump National News Politics
it 3 Questions with Flavio Sala, Italian Guitarist By www.cmuse.org Published On :: Thu, 04 Dec 2014 19:20:04 +0000 Meet Flavio Sala! Flavio is a remarkably well-rounded Italian guitarist from Bojano, currently living in the United States. Throughout his career Flavio has been captivating all kinds ... Read more The post 3 Questions with Flavio Sala, Italian Guitarist appeared first on CMUSE. Full Article 3 QUESTIONS FEATURED acoustic guitar classical guitarist Guitar Lessons Online Mi Guitarra y Mis Amores
it 3 Questions with Anna Leonova, Ukrainian Composer By www.cmuse.org Published On :: Tue, 16 Dec 2014 23:16:08 +0000 Meet Anna Leonova! Anna Leonova is an Ukrainian composer of contemporary classical music, pianist, composition teacher, piano and music theory teacher, currently living in Qatar. At an ... Read more The post 3 Questions with Anna Leonova, Ukrainian Composer appeared first on CMUSE. Full Article 3 QUESTIONS CLASSICAL FEATURED composition teacher Forum of young music Kyiv Music Fest Kyiv Organ Hall Mammern Classics Music Premieres of the Season music theory teacher piano teacher TCU Festival of Ukrainian Chamber Music
it 3 Questions with Anneleen Lenaerts, Principal Harpist of the Vienna Philharmonic By www.cmuse.org Published On :: Mon, 12 Oct 2015 09:48:54 +0000 Back in 2011, Belgian harpist Anneleen Lenaerts, now a soloist at the Vienna Philharmonic, recorded an album containing harp arrangements of Chopin’s and Liszt’s most ... Read more The post 3 Questions with Anneleen Lenaerts, Principal Harpist of the Vienna Philharmonic appeared first on CMUSE. Full Article 3 QUESTIONS CLASSICAL FEATURED Harp
it MTV VMAs 2024: How to watch it live from the West Coast with a VPN By www.yahoo.com Published On :: 2024-09-11T15:29:00Z Full Article
it Am I a Hypocrite? - By Michael Farren By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Mon, 30 May 2016 11:39:12 -0500 Warning, bubble bursting, thoroughly raw post commencing now...read no further if you by some chance hold us Farrens in some undeserved place of sainthood. (Which if you do, this should help adjust that a bit). My truly amazing daughter Madison and I got into a spectacular fight this last Saturday. And If you know the Farrens at all, you know that we are a very passionate clan...we love big, and we fight big. And to be fair, this test of wills did not ensue over some small frivolous matter. No, this “ruin a whole day miserable” episode was wrapped around the intricacies and responsibilities of adulthood, or more to my very loudly made point, the lack thereof. The reality is I could not be more proud of Madison, who is 21 this July, and lives almost an hour away about to start her Senior year of college. She's a bonafide rockstar in my book, but even still, some things just need to be said right?! Of course as with any epic fight, it escalated quickly, and lasted longer than it should have. I was right, (yep, still sticking to my guns on that) but my delivery was less than desirable. There may or may not have been some slamming of fist on tables, and through a litany of now regretted words I finally had the last word…but at a heavy emotional cost to us both. But here is the real kicker, of all the weekends for this to happen, it just so happens that this was the weekend Madison and I were scheduled to lead worship together the following Sunday morning...oh the maddening mystery of Divine timing. We did not speak the rest of the day after this episode, and due to a party we were both attending that evening she ended up spending the night and riding with me to church. It was a somber start of a morning to say the least. As we were walking across the parking lot into the church, I asked Madison why we would still show up to lead worship even after having such a crappy weekend, and she replied quickly, "Because He is still worthy of our worship". Well said daughter, well said. But as we continued into the building, her response got me thinking about something in a completely different way. Even after all my years of leading worship, knowing full well that it has nothing to do with my worth or perfection, I will admit to still wrestling the question of hypocrisy every time I step onto the stage in a broken or messy state of being. But it's not just a worship pastor problem. I would make a very unscientific yet experienced observation that roughly half of all attendees walk into church on any given Sunday feeling more or less hypocritical. But prompted by the Holy Spirit, just before the second service started I actually read for maybe the first time the actual Webster's definition of a hypocrite. Here goes...Hypocrite: "a person who claims or pretends to have certain beliefs about what is right but who behaves in a way that disagrees with those beliefs". And just like that, for the first time I truly got it. Week after week I stand and declare that God is great and worthy of all of my adoration and praise. Sunday after Sunday, I passionately exhort almost 600 other people to join me in that refrain. And showing up and continuing to sing about His greatness even after a really rough weekend is the one thing keeping me from being a hypocrite...because for me to keep silent or stay away would most certainly classify me by the definition of "a person who claims or pretends to have certain beliefs about what is right but who behaves in a way that disagrees with those beliefs". If He was worthy of praise last Sunday, He's still worthy of it this Sunday, in spite of me. His love and affection for me has never wavered, and so neither should my response to it. My belief in who He is remains the same. Declaring the greatness of our God in our times of greatest brokenness and mess does not make us hypocrites...it makes us believers! Harsh as it may sound, for the first time ever I now see that there are way more hypocrites at home on Sunday than are sitting in the pews. And I'd rather stand with my hands raised next to messy, broken, yet hope filled people, than become a hypocrite. I refuse to let the enemy blackmail me with his lies and accusations...if we have placed our belief in the goodness and kindness of the one true God, let's stop behaving in a way that disagrees with that belief. Show up. And not just on Sunday, but every day. Make the enemy eat his words. Take back your God given righteousness. Stand on your brokenness and lift an even louder praise...no longer bridled by guilt or shame...we are hypocrites no more! Full Article
it How and Why You Should Recruit a Christmas Choir By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Tue, 20 Sep 2016 11:13:23 -0500 It may not feel or look anything remotely close to Christmas outside, but there is something in the air that brings back that ol’ “It’s after Labor Day, better get ready for Christmas” feeling. A season enjoyed by some, dreaded by others, but necessary for any who are involved with music in the life of a Church. At All About Worship we are here to help you navigate your way through the challenges and on to a successful season of Christmas cheer and high fives from your Pastor. First up is how and why you should recruit a choir. So let’s begin with why. It looks, sounds, and feels like Christmas: Blame it on Hollywood Producers if you want, but we all have an iconic image of choirs at Christmas lodged into our brain that actually began at the birth of Jesus with choirs of angels. It’s Biblical and it satisfies the itch. It gets people involved…at a temporary level: Pastors are supernaturally driven to see the gifts of their people developed. Most worship leaders are concerned about letting people on the team who are may not be the best at singing or those whose abilities are an unknown. The solution is a Christmas Choir. A chance to let people be a part of something in a group setting where voices are blended and there is no promise of further involvement. A win-win situation. Talent scouting: Through the process of rehearsals you will have an opportunity to audition people without having an audition. While you may find some who don’t sing very well, you will also find some diamonds in the rough. People who you didn’t know could sing. Once identified, if you want, ask them to be a part of the regular team. It Boosts Attendance: More people involved means more people will show up for the special service. (Also a great reason to include a Children’s choir in your plans as well) It’s Fun: Gatherings are a big part of Christmas and it can be a lot of fun. Have people bring snacks and let there be an element of social time. Ok so now you’re motivated to do it. But now ‘the how’ comes to the forefront so here are some tips: Decide if you’re a recruit/plan or a plan/recruit: If you have a specific piece of music you want to do, it might determine the kind of voices that you are looking for. Thus changing how you will recruit. For example a men’s number will obviously not include the ladies. It might also be that the piece is complicated or that you only have sheet music so a certain level of knowledge or skill is required to participate. However you can also recruit and see whom you get. Then adjust your plan accordingly. Determine the Qualifications and Commitment: Make a list of the requirements for participation. Make sure to think about Age, Gender, Ability, Part they Sing, and whether they need to attend your church. You will also want to be able to communicate when rehearsals and events are. Ask the Traditional Ways: When it comes to asking for participation most people immediately turn to the bulletin or ask for time during the announcements. A sign up table in foyer or/and a web based sign up form can add some names. Ask the Non-Traditional Ways: Have your pastor or announcement person ask the congregation for a show of hands of who has ever been in choir. Take a moment and look around as these are prime targets for recruitment. If you feel comfortable in doing so, put a little social pressure on these people from the stage to participate.While the above mentioned methods are good, hands down the best way to recruit is to ask personally. But who to ask? And more specifically what to ask? The best way is to ask anyone, “Do you know anyone who sings?” or “Do you know anyone who was ever in choir?” That’s when people will tell on their friends and neighbors. Giving you the opportunity to approach that person and say, “I heard you used to be in choir?” and then ask them to be a part of the group. Have the next step determined: Make it easy to do and clear to understand what to do next. Do they need to fill out a form or just show up at this place on this date?I would recommend getting people to put their name to something as it can have a higher level of cementing their decision. People are more likely to come if they have signed up rather than if they can decide later if they are coming or not. Hopefully you have inspiration and motivation surging through your veins at this very moment for an amazing Christmas season. In the coming weeks through articles and podcasts we will be discussing what to sing, how to teach people their parts even if they can’t read music, and where to find those resources. But for now, get started because it’s almost the middle of September and time is running out. Full Article
it Interview with Paul Baloche By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Mon, 10 Oct 2016 11:32:54 -0500 Interview w/ Paul Bloche by Steven Reed The ministry of Paul Baloche has literally touched the lives of millions of people around the globe. His 1997 song, “Open The Eyes of My Heart” is still in the CCLI top 100. We caught up with Paul over the phone this week to ask him about life, keys to longevity in ministry, and about his new album that just released on October 7th. With the bustling sounds of a New York street in the background, one of the most influential worship leaders humbly imparted some incredibly massive wisdom for any worship leader to follow. How to stay fresh, hear the voice of God, how to reach millennials, where the best worship songs come from and much more. Read the interview here and get ready to take some notes. All About Worship: Paul thanks for taking the time to talk to us today. Your ministry has had such a massive platform over so many decades that some people consider you the ‘Godfather of Modern Worship’ and yet others may just now be learning about you. When you meet people for the first time how do you describe what you do? Paul: I try to help others worship through songs and training resources. Really, I just want to help others worship. That’s the simple answer. I leave it up to them if they want to Google my name and see the rest. It also depends if they are a stranger or a believer. If my Jewish neighbor were to ask me, “Hey Paul, what do you do?” To keep the conversation alive I would maybe say, “I’m a musician. That I play guitar and write songs”, cause you if you tell someone right off the bat that, “I do Christian music” it shuts it down right away. All About Worship: For those of us who have such a rich history in worshiping God to the songs you’ve written, what is your response to the gratitude people express? Paul: I think people are very kind and I’m always super encouraged in my spirit, not for my ego but in my spirit. I’m especially encouraged when people comment about the training resources that I made years ago by faith, as it almost seemed presumptuous to make them. I thought, “Who am I to make a guitar video? You know, Phil Keaggy should be making this,” but it was just a desire to pass on some things I’ve learned. It’s really gratifying to meet people, who are in their 20’s whose dad had a set of my VHS videos, back before YouTube and all. To have them say something like, “I grew up learning guitar and worship from watching your videos and now I’m a worship pastor at such a church in such a city.” That just blows me away Then there is another group of folks that have been touched by a certain song and again, usually, they are very kind. They will share some personal story about some sort of difficult time in their life when maybe one of the songs really helped them to process and get through. That again is humbling and super encouraging. But for myself, I feel disconnected at this point. Not trying to be Mr. Humble here, but it’s a true feeling. I had a part in delivering those songs, almost like a mid-wife or something. I kind of helped birth the song but eventually the song grows up and becomes and adult and gets translated into 10 different languages. It becomes objective and I can appreciate it like, “Hey good for you little song, way to go!” All About Worship: What does God have you doing in the season of life? Paul: God has me continuing to be a husband of what will be 30 years next year, a dad, and recently a granddad. Just had a little grandson, so that’s on my mind. I want to stay healthy physically and spiritually. Live a healthy life to be available to my immediate family and have the energy to serve in ministry until God taps me on the shoulder and says that I’m done. New York become home for us last year. After 26 years in the same church, same neighborhood, we moved to New York really because our kids grew up and then moved to here and to Philadelphia. Seeing the empty bedrooms and having the feeling like 25 years is maybe a good time, while the church is healthy and after the 2nd generation of worship leaders had been trained, to hand it over. We tested the waters a bit and thought, “let’s go down the road.” You know Proverbs 3:6 says, “In all your ways acknowledge Him and He will direct your steps.” We’d all love a parchment to fall out the sky with the will of God written on it. Usually, it’s a bit more difficult. I find taking little steps towards the leaning of your heart, while acknowledging the Lord daily, and if you don’t feel any resistance or breaks then you should keep moving in that direction. It’s almost like your computer when you’ve got all these windows and tabs open and it’s getting kind of crazy. You think, “I need to close things down and reboot.” That’s kind of what we did. Rebooted. Here we are. Plugged into a local church. Not working there or on staff but I attend and worship. Then occasionally I’ll look up and see they need a bass player and I jump in. It’s been fun. I’ve led a couple times when the main person is out of town. Just recently I’ve become a staff member of a church in Chicago where I lead 8-10 times a year and are a part of their team, the projects, and get to speak into the life of their ministry. All About Worship: You’ve led worship around the world, recorded many albums, written many songs, and helped so many people with your training. Is there any one of those that is more your passion than the others? Paul: I do love the training, equipping, and the encouraging of leaders, especially next generation leaders. So it’s Pastoral. I always feel like more of a pastor anyway. It’s not like I’m an amazing singer anyway. I’m good enough to lead worship and I’m really glad I get to do a project. Those are all wonderful. All About Worship: Has that changed over time? Paul: It’s almost like the process of breathing. There is an inhale and an exhale. It feels like the leading worship, the prayer, the preparation, and the leading is like an inhale. Then your lungs expel the air and then out comes new songs, training, and ministry. You kind of can’t have the one without the other. You can’t exhale all the time. I can’t see myself not leading worship because to me it’s where the best songs begin. You’re not trying to write a clever song but you’re just worshiping God and then, in the midst of worship, out of your mouth comes a line that sounds sincere. You say, “Hey that’s worth spending some time with and seeing if a song might arise.” All About Worship: Would you say there is a key to your relevance and longevity of ministry? Paul: Adapt or die: musically and spiritually! Just having your natural and spiritual ear to the wind to discern when things are changing. I would say that in the last 5 years I’m just paying attention to the 20 some-things, for one because my kids are that age. I’m looking for the things most of them resonate with and the things they have rejected in terms of their expression of worship. 20 some-things don’t have much patience for entertainment. They are not really looking to be entertained, in general. Though there will always be a percentage of people who are. They are looking for something authentic and transparent even if it doesn’t all look pretty and shinny. They would rather have the honesty. So I’m challenged by that and am trying to grow. Even in my spiritual life I want to continue to grow and adapt and not be stuck. I’m having an open mind to the idea that what may have been effective in ministry before may not be as effective now. What might be a bit outdated could be worth being updated. I’m not saying that you got to be a 25 year old kid again and make a fool of yourself, but I’m saying just be open and pay attention. All About Worship: Your new album drops on October 7th. What is the focus of this project? Paul: The focus has never really changed for me. I’m a local church guy, that all I know. I never had an agent and never had a manager. I’ve always seen myself as a local church guy and not an artist. Not that there’s anything wrong with being an artist. There are true artist out there, but I’m a worship pastor that gets to do a worship album every year and half. The focus is always to help others worship. I want to write songs that when people read the lyric, when they hear the song, and feel the experience it helps them engage emotionally and spiritually in every way. I would say that sounds generic and yet it’s not. It’s always been the focus. It’s sounds too simple but that’ the bull’s-eye. All About Worship: What’s you’re favorite song on this project and why? Paul: That’s hard. It’s like saying whose your favorite child? That sounds like, “Oh come on now Paul,” but it’s still really fresh. These 12 songs have received a lot of time, attention, and care over the last 9 months, it’s still so early. In each one of them there are things about it that I look at and say, “Yep, that’s why you made the team.” If the album is like a football team you intentionally make them different because you don’t want 12 quarterbacks. You need some running backs and some blockers and someone to play defense. So I think on an album, I like to shoot for the variety. We need some outer court songs. I find those challenging to write. An up-tempo happy song that‘s not cheesy. I feel like “Psalm 92” and “Found In You” are two songs you could start your service with. You can’t have an entire album of intense songs, but there are a couple of songs that are deeper. “I Will Worship You” and “Your Mercy” are more confessional, more about acknowledging the reality of life. Most of us have the season where we’ve lost our way or turned our eyes and got distracted but God, Your mercy. All About Worship: We asked some people to submit questions via social media and so here are a few questions: @sarahahopkins asked: What is the most important lesson you have learned in ministering to others through music? Paul: The most important lesson is appreciating the mystery of how powerful music is in the context of God’s spirit. I’m always surprised because, as a musician you’re around it so much that, we can forget how much of an effect it has on people. I’ve found myself diminishing that. Then I’m just amazed when you hear from people about how they are impacted by the song you’ve written or the songs you’ve led. Like someone coming up in tears to the worship pastor and saying how much it means to them. @jeffdlivsey asked: What are some “North Stars” or “Guiding Principles” you have? Paul: So heavy, but I like being put on the spot here. Wow! It’s sounds so cliché but you got to start with the word of God. In terms of a “North Star” it is becoming steeped in the scriptures. Doing Col 3:16, “letting the word of Christ dwell in you richly.” I know in my 20’s I did a lot of studying and memorization. We were also writing a lot of scripture memory songs at the time. There are so many scriptures that I can’t forget. I’ve read them and sang them so many times that as soon as I hear the first two words I know them. It needs to be said because it can be overlooked. We’re looking for the next book from the next leader and that’s all good but we really need to be reading a Psalm, a Proverb, and something out of the New Testament every day. Then you can work the Old Testament stories and the Pentateuch. Try to memorize passages. I used to use 3x5 cards. Sermon on the mount, Mathew 5-7, is so rich. Get it off the page and into your heart, off the page and into your mind. If you read through the NIV then next year do another version. Be a student of the word. Listen to the Bible on tape. Not that they have those anymore. Ha that’s hilarious, cassette tape! @KelsieR95 asked: Worship leaders have a fine line between leading worship and performing. How have you found the middle ground? Paul: I think this answer has evolved over the years. It’s too easy to say, “Oh yeah we don’t want to be performing we just want to lead worship.” Which of course, but we can’t deny, whether we call it performing or not, there is a role to play. I liken it to a waiter or waitress. When they come to your table and they have a good attitude and they offer great service. Is he performing? He’s bringing the best version of himself because he has a role to play. Maybe he’s having a bad day but because of what his job is, he has to bring the best. As worship leaders we have to comfortable. The performing aspect would include being able to stand on a platform with an instrument or microphone and relax in that role. It needs to be like driving a stick shift. To be able to put the clutch in and shift gears without even thinking about it. To get there, we can’t kid ourselves, you have to practice performance. In a mirror or videotape your services and see how you come across. Maybe you have some weird quirk or something is a little awkward. You can even ask some close friends about things that seem funny to them. You practice your performance just like you’d practice your guitar so it’s become more realistic, more natural, and you don’t have to think about it anymore. Then you can be relaxed and be thinking about what’s going in the room. What do I sense from the Lord? What feels like the right thing to do? Do I pray or go onto the next song? You’ll be a much better ministry when the practical is second nature. Well, that is, becoming second nature because frankly I still struggle. I have to play in two days and I get a little nervous. I need to practice so I don’t choke. It never goes away. Check out more about Paul Baloche, his music, and training resources on his website http://www.paulbaloche.com Full Article
it The Best Little Sunday Christmas Morning By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Tue, 18 Oct 2016 11:44:55 -0500 Have you heard the news? Christmas IS ON A SUNDAY this year! It doesn’t happen again till 2022 and then again in 2033,2039 and 2050. But like it or not, it’s a reality in the here and now. So what are you going to do about it? The last time Christmas was on a Sunday was in 2011. Back then a LifeWay Research poll of 1,000 Protestant pastors, 91% were planning on having a service of some kind on Christmas Sunday morning. While 69% said they were also going to have a Christmas Eve service. Of the estimated 9%, who were not planning on having a service, some made national headlines when they decided to cancel. You might have noticed the term, “service of some kind,” as many churches had modified their regular activities to allow for people to participate in both their family traditions and attend a church service. Many had elected to only do one “family service” (which offered no separate children’s programs) held later in the morning. This was to minimize the demands on volunteers but also to be together on a special day. This was the approach that my church took in 2011. To say the least, I was a bit skeptical at first. Thinking that few would come and after all the work that goes into Christmas Eve I was not excited about showing up early the next morning. But I can honestly say it was one of the best Christmas’s. First of all, we left everything in place from the night before so we didn’t have to set anything up. Then, like I previously mentioned, the service was later in the day, which allowed for Christmas morning traditions, presents, and breakfast. So that after the wrapping paper had been torn to shreds we actually had something to do. The service lasted about an hour. The worship team did two Christmas songs, we had the kids do a few special songs to tracks, which all the parents and grandparents loved (also brought their family out to church) and didn’t require a bunch of prep or costumes. Our Pastor shared a short message of hope. Not to sound overly spiritual here but it really was a very spiritual moment to be in church on Christmas. After the service concluded we exchanged Christmas greetings with our church family and then headed home to play with new toys, eat again, and spend the day with family. No matter what you choose to do this Christmas, we just wanted to make you aware it was coming so you could plan. Also wanted to share some thoughts and experiences, but we really wanted to get the conversation started. What did your church do on Sunday Morning Christmas 2011? What worked and what didn’t? What are you going to do this year? Leave a comment below or hit us up on twitter. Full Article
it Surrender to the Process - An interview with Sarah Reeves By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Wed, 12 Apr 2017 14:12:26 -0500 It makes perfect sense to all who know Sarah Reeves that she is where she is and doing what she is doing. But the journey it took to get her here has not been an easy or uneventful one. I got the chance to visit with Sarah about her recent single release, Nowhere, and God’s ongoing story in her life. Having been raised in the church and music industry by her record producer father and mother, a nurse, at the age of 15 Sarah encountered the presence of God in a way she never had before. She knew at that moment that He was calling her into a life of music and ministry. She dove head first into leading worship within her local church and by 18 was signed to a label and touring the country leading worship. After some time, she met and married her husband, Philip Kothlow, and decided for a season to step out of music and sort of discover herself and “live some real life . . . away from music”. She took a job working as a preschool teacher and Philip was an electrician at the time. A couple of years into marriage, she found herself in a place she never thought she’d be. “About three years ago . . . I remember us just reaching this point in our marriage where we were facing wall after wall, and struggle after struggle. We came to this place where we found ourselves on the verge of divorce and we knew at that point we had to make a drastic change. We were both working full-time jobs . . . and we decided to step away from those. We went away and really just kind of started over. Focused on each other. Focused on God and putting Him at the center of our marriage. We learned how to be married and fell in love all over again. During that time . . . I started putting out YouTube covers and slowly God started to open up doors again into music. Things were really starting to happen. He had redeemed our marriage and now he was redeeming my artistry again. What I thought was over was just beginning.” Today, Philip is Sarah’s manager and together they are storming back with a fresh perspective on music and a renewed passion for worship. Nowhere dropped April 7th in anticipation of her full album release with Word Records in the fall. When talking about the direction of this new project Sarah said, “God has given me this specific sound . . . but there’s always been this inner battle between being a worship leader and being an artist. There’s this style that I love but I felt the pressure to always keep it straight down the middle if I wanted to be a worship leader. About a year and a half ago, a friend sent me a track . . . and I wrote this song to it that I just loved and something in me came alive in that moment. Through that song I found so much clarity as if God said, ‘Sarah, I’ve given you this sound and you don’t have to choose . . . I’ve given you this gift for you to merge the two together.’ The production is very electronic and pop and hopefully will push the limits of worship leaders to write and produce outside of the box.” When it comes to songwriting, Sarah always tries to “write songs that come from a place of things (she’s) walked through or that would encourage other people.” Her hope is to stretch stylistically and for people to not put the stereotypical worship mindset on this project, but rather to think bigger and more creatively. A lot of her musical style and depth of worship comes from influences such as Jeff Deyo (former lead singer of Sonic Flood who, funnily enough, introduced Sarah to her now husband), Bethel Music, Glades, Ellie Goulding, and Coldplay. Personally, some of the people who have helped shape and mold her into the person she is today are her mother, who has been a huge prayer warrior, her husband, who knows how to encourage and challenge her to be a better person and artist, and her pastors Henry and Alex Seeley from The Belonging, a church that meets in Nashville. Given the journey that it’s taken to get where she is today, we asked Sarah what words of encouragement she would give to those coming up as artists and worship leaders now who might be growing weary of the grind. “One thing that I’ve learned came from a message that Alex Seeley preached a while back called Surrender To The Process, and it’s just been something that I’ve clung to and have had to learn how to do. I had to let my dreams die and had to come to a place where I had completely surrendered my heart, my dreams, my career, everything that I wanted . . . and once I came to that point, He finally was enough for me. I think when we get to that point, it just doesn’t matter . . . our craft, our music, everything that we can see . . . it’s amazing. And if it happens, awesome, but if it doesn’t happen, it’s okay. Our purpose is eternity and to build the Kingdom of God with whatever He’s given us in the moment. Be faithful in those little things and surrender to whatever process He wants to take you through.” Make sure to check out Sarah’s single, Nowhere, available anywhere music is sold. And make sure to keep an eye out for other singles she will release as her full project date this fall gets closer. Full Article
it Three Boring, Spiritually Unspiritual, Simple Ideas You Can’t Not Do to Grow Your Team, Part 1 By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Tue, 25 Apr 2017 10:37:54 -0500 This is the first of a three-part series on team building. The ideas are simple, but the why behind the what is the secret sauce to growing a solid team. Like most people reading this, I’ve made mistakes. And those disasters have forged the conviction that we can’t be in ministry without being radically committed to loving Jesus and his church more, and on a daily basis. Keep Jesus close, make sure that your family always takes the right priority (more on that in the future) and be willing to make your church better. Notice I said better, not different. Better, Not Different One of the biggest complaints I hear from worship pastors/leaders is that somehow, they have found themselves in a church that they really don’t like. They don’t feel appreciated by their lead pastors. They don’t like the weekend worship experience. They don’t like the people. At the end of the day, there is so much complaining that I am left scratching my head wondering if they even love Jesus. If this is you, take some time to pray if you can make your lead pastors vision for your church come alive. If you aren’t in agreement, you may be in the wrong place. Do yourself, your family and your people a favor and get connected with someone or something that is complimenting to your convictions and your philosophy. God created you to be you, but we are servants before leading anything. Some of us carry the responsibility to make things different. Most of us don’t. Know your place. Is it your burden to change things? …or is it your job to make things better. Talk to your teams about this. This is a fantastic “clarity” question that will free up your bandwidth. Is it your burden to change things? …or is it your job to make things better. OK, that is my soap box! ☺ As I give you these three helpful tips, it’s important for you to know that these are just tools. You can’t fake or replace strong spiritual foundations of ministry leadership. Love Jesus and use tools and resources to LOVE His PEOPLE better. We try to change people or churches. But what I’ve found is that when you develop people, things change. But what I’ve found is that when you develop people, things change. So, if it’s our job to make things better, what are some ideas that we can do to commit to improving? Develop a leadership pipeline Developing a leadership pipeline is a helpful tool to bring clarity to “who’s responsible for who and who’s responsible for what”. It’s really difficult for a worship pastor to carry the burden of a ministry on their shoulders alone…and they shouldn’t. I don’t have to tell you that the apostle Paul makes it clear that we are called to empower people to do the work of the Kingdom, not do it all on our own! (Ephesians 4:11-13) We also get a peek into Moses' anxiety in Numbers chapter 11, where he's at his wit’s end and well over his capacity. The Lord tells him to gather 70 of his most trusted and responsible people. Moses brings them to the "tent of meetings" and the Spirit of the Lord pours over them. God helped Moses build his team. He will help you build yours. A leadership pipeline helps you identify your 70 (or even 7 figuratively speaking). This is the pipeline our church utilizes. How this works: In this chart, we document how responsibility falls within a team. An assistant is the first place in which we invite someone to be developed as a leader. A leader is the first level in which a person is responsible for a team. A coach is the first level in which a leader is overseeing other leaders. A director is responsible for directing a particular team. A pastor is responsible for care, culture and vision. My favorite area to develop is our coaches. In worship ministry, I am so lucky to have some of the best coaches. Here's how this role works: Jordan Hicks is my guitar coach. He is responsible for developing all guitar leaders, recruitment and assimilating guitarists for all of our campuses, adult, youth and kids’ teams. He's responsible for all communication and administration for this group as well. Because Jordan is the leader I've poured into, he completely understands my values, our church’s values and culture, and our end goal. He's a volunteer, but he brings a priceless value of leadership and excellence to our church. Our worship leaders never should worry about who they are leading with. We are spoiled because of warriors like Jordan. He's just one example of Ephesians 4 coming to life in our ministry. I grew up as a jazz musician—tenor sax. I loved John Coltrane, Miles Davis and Thelonius Monk. C’mon somebody! I was in high school when I first played in combos with some older pro musicians in our city. We started playing a blues tune when one of the guys stopped me and said, “In the words of Miles Davis, man…you can’t play blues because you haven’t hurt enough yet.” Apparently, I lacked any sense of emotive playing ability as a teenager. And I hadn’t hurt enough yet. If playing jazz and blues is an expression of pain and hurt that we’ve experienced, then singing worship music is an expression of the HOPE we know. We can’t and shouldn’t do this alone. Lean on your team. Empower them. I am excited to share with you the next two tips over the next few months. You’ll be able to find them right here at allaboutworship.com. If you have questions about developing your leadership pipeline, you can email me at mike@worship.coach. For free development resources, check out www.worship.coach. Full Article
it Through Psalms, Hymns, And Songs From The Spirit - Interview With Shane Barnard By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Mon, 08 May 2017 12:10:00 -0500 For thousands of younger Gen Xers and older Millennials who were raised in the church, much of our maturing as worshippers is marked by the poetic lyrics and fluid vocals of the duo known as Shane & Shane. I personally remember having Be Near on repeat during a difficult season of transition in my personal life. And I don’t know about you, but just about every guy in my high school youth group could be found working their double strum on acoustic guitar at any given moment. But it wasn’t just their original songs that sunk deep into the hearts of their listeners. Barnard and Everett also have this uncanny ability to take songs recorded years earlier or made popular by big names such as Hillsong or Passion and make them fresh and accessible to our generation of worshippers. They are capitalizing on this significant gift through their latest ministry effort called The Worship Initiative (TWI). I recently got the chance to talk with Shane Barnard at length and hear more about their journey through ministry, how they juggle it all, and their hopes for the future. Hopefully you’ll find the perspective and insight he offered up as encouraging as I did. When I asked him to share the story of how the vision of The Worship Initiative came to be, he jumped right into an impassioned explanation. They had been doing the touring, writing, and recording thing for years and gotten to experience worship from and with just about every kind of stage, venue, and demographic. As they got to know hundreds of worship leaders from everywhere you can think of, they began to see a gaping hole . . . that being the understanding of the true weight of the calling of the worship leader. A scripture that they’d read hundreds of times and even used as a sort of mantra throughout their ministry also played an enormous role in their starting TWI. Colossians 3:16 says, “Let the message of Christ dwell among you richly as you teach and admonish one another with all wisdom through psalms, hymns, and songs from the Spirit, singing to God with gratitude in your hearts.” One day a word jumped off their pages in a way that opened their eyes afresh – THROUGH. These times of worship they were leading on a regular basis were not just a means to an end. They actually serve as one of the primary ways the Church conveys the message of Jesus to raise up a generation of Christ followers who can change the world. Yet somehow, this position has gotten watered down to nothing more than a song leader in most church settings. They suddenly felt a whole new level of responsibility. So the two set out to discover a way to pour into worship leaders around the world, both spiritually and practically. They started by taking a more personal look at their own gifts and bents. Barnard says about Everett, “I can’t think of a better salesman or evangelist . . . He’s just loud, funny, always cutting up, and can win anybody over to do anything . . . and unleashing that in an overseer role and our relational PR person has been awesome to watch. I think God dumped the PR side and evangelist side of Shane so hard into him that I think we still have yet to see what God is going to do in that regard.” Whereas for Barnard, his skill in songwriting and producing contends with just about anyone you could name. Over the last 20 years of ministering together, they’ve learned to “embrace who God has made [them] and not be disappointed in that anymore but just know that this is how God has made [them].” They’ve worked incredibly hard to figure out how to balance all of the overlap between their personal and professional lives, which is inevitable when you’ve worked so closely together for that long. “You would think we would have some kind of system after 20 years, but we are getting better. I would say that a few words come to mind . . . simplifying, strategizing, doing things on purpose. These are the things that have kind of been a banner over our lives the last two or three years.” For a long time, all the different aspects of their lives were spread out all over the DFW area of Texas. Their studio was far south, much of their steady worship leading opportunities were at a church in the heart of Dallas, and they were living a good jump from either of those. So they are in the process of bringing all of those components closer together so that doing life with the families, church community, and ministry partners is easier. Taking this step has made it easier to grow their efforts with The Worship Initiative more rapidly. So what is The Worship Initiative and what does it look like for someone to participate or take advantage of these resources? Basically, an individual can pay a yearly fee and access a list of over 150 (and constantly growing) worship songs that each have multiple tutorial videos and charts accompanying them. These videos break down how to play the songs in different keys, on different instruments, and with varying skill levels. A worship leader on staff at a church can also pay an annual group fee, based on the number of people, for his team to be able to access everything as well. There are also craft training videos for everything from the different instruments and vocals to tech/production and using the number system. If that’s not enough, the site has an entire section dedicated to heart training, where they break down all the different spiritual and practical components for worship leading with the likes of John Piper and Ben Stuart. There are even creative devotionals to accompany every song on the different TWI records. TheWorshipInitiative.com truly is a wealth of knowledge and wisdom for anyone looking to grow as a leader or team member, and there are still exciting things to come. Shane shared a bit about what’s ahead for TWI. “Our next phase of The Worship Initiative is to create what we’re calling learning paths. Some people love to be given a world of information to explore on their own. But most people would really love to be told what to do to get from point A to point B. We will take our existing content and add to it and give them a year long path to stick to and see measurable growth in both skill and leadership.” Given the length of time and the platform they’ve had over these last two decades, I asked Shane how he feels his perspective of worship both personally and within the Church has evolved over the years. “I think worship, and even the idea of worship, has come a long way, in a good way. I think we’ve seen a pretty good uptick on understanding the Romans 12:1 life of worship. I often think back to a time when I was leading worship in a basement or college dorm room for several years, and it was always the oddest songs ever.” He recalled singing, with hands lifted, Make It Right by Kenny Marks (and yes, I might’ve gotten a solid 30 second serenade over the phone . . . it’s fine!) and other obscure songs that really had no purpose or meaning to the one worshipping. Yet, what we see all throughout the Psalms is “this gut-wrenching, very honest, it is okay to pour out your heart to the one who cares for you mentality. . . and that language is okay.” He remembered hearing the words to Breathe for the first time, where it says “I’m desperate for you,” and thinking “is this okay to have this kind of language in front of people? But yes, it is okay even in a congregation or corporately to say ‘I am thirsty for You in a dry land where there is no water.’ In fact that can be really helpful to the person sitting next to you. That can be us ‘singing spiritual hymns and songs to one another’, just that opening up of the heart and the embracing of singing those honest songs and using them to allow ‘the message of Christ to dwell among us richly.’” Learn more about The Worship Initiative, as well as Shane & Shane, at www.theworshipinitiative.com. Here at All About Worship, we believe in what these guys are doing and the ministry they are fostering. We can’t wait to partner with them in the future as God continues opening those doors. Full Article
it Three Boring, Spiritually Unspiritual, Simple Ideas You Can’t Not Do to Grow Your Team, Part 2 By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Tue, 23 May 2017 11:07:51 -0500 Last month we explored the idea of developing a Leadership Pipeline for your worship ministry. (If you missed it, please check out their link here. A “leadership pipeline” is an established development path for your leaders. It shows “who’s responsible for who" and "who's responsible for what." It also helps clarify a communications path for burden and responsibility. Empowering leaders to lead requires clarity. Being clear is hard work. I’ve made the mistake of keeping my “plans” top secret. I mean, what if something or someone doesn't work out or someone tries to hijack my direction! Can I tell you this…Insecurities stink! Can you relate? Ugh. I’ve learned a few priceless lessons along the way, and one of them is this: Pull the RIGHT people close and make your dreams/vision known. When you do this, you will create a culture that trusts communication from the leaders who carry a certain level of responsibility and burden. The people that you have pulled close know the dreams and plans that God has given you. They can share the weight of your dream with you and help you navigate potential problems. Sometimes, lack of clarity happens because only one person is looking at the map. Let your map be known…and let others drive. Empowering leaders to lead requires clarity Here is a sample of the leadership pipeline we use as a whole at our church. If you have any questions regarding developing a "leadership pipeline," please contact me. I have several resources to help you with this discussion and discovery. This applies to your whole church and not solely the Worship Ministry. Now on to IDEA #2. Idea #2. Make recruitment and assimilation a “normal” for everyone Here is the heart behind this: This past week at my church we hosted our monthly "OPEN." “OPEN” is a time in which we “open up” our team devotional time, production time and pre-service experience to visiting churches and leaders. The visiting church this week was a church from a different stylistic approach but from our city. They wanted to observe how we produced a "contemporary" worship service. We met for coffee a few weeks ago, and I was excited that they said yes to my invitation to attend "OPEN." During their time with us, I gave them a tour of our church and talked about our teams. I spoke about some of our values. I sensed that they wanted to talk about guitars and keyboards. We ended up talking about the power of God’s presence and how He changes lives, always. While standing backstage after rehearsal, I noticed that one of their leaders looked overwhelmed. When I asked her what she was processing, she shared with me that she was amazed that all our teams were volunteers. I responded to her that it’s amazing what people will do when they've been given the gift of second, third, fourth and fifth chances. It’s unrealistic and somewhat unfair to expect leaders to step forth without a testimony attached. The look of being overwhelmed shifted and was now accompanied by tears of awe and wonder. Saved people save people. It’s unrealistic and somewhat unfair to expect leaders to step forth without a testimony attached. She asked me a question: “How is it that so many people are involved?” Here is what I have found. Like attracts like. Visibility replicates. "Like attracts like" implies that the things that we are most excited about attracts people that are passionate about the same things. I love Apple computers and Chick-fil-A. Wouldn't you know it, I happen to attract people that tend to like Apple computers and Chick-fil-A. God is doing something special at my church. People are excited about being on our team. They attract people to our teams. “Visibility replicates” implies that whatever you make visible, whether that is a talent or behavior, is what will replicate in your culture. If you make it a priority to foster a genuine culture of prayer in your ministry, there's a pretty good chance the people that want to be a part of it have a desire to grow or be involved with the same. Likewise, if you put your worst guitar players on the platform in your biggest service every week, it tells every other bad guitar player in your church that they too are guaranteed a spot on your stage. Visibility replicates. Here’s the practical behind this: Having the right people on your team, to begin with, can be THE biggest hurdle. You know you have the RIGHT people on your team when they are EXCITED about what God is doing in your team, and YOU want to replicate them. Here are a few ideas to help you develop an assimilation culture: Decentralize the “responsibility” of getting people into your ministry by empowering capable leaders you trust. Here’s how this works at my church. Coaches are responsible for recruiting and assimilating their teams. (Guitar coach is responsible for building the guitar team). I meet with all the coaches monthly, and they give me an update on the things I need to know. They own this completely. These are the RIGHT people that have been vetted. They are VISIBLE leaders who replicate. Make “being a bringer” your “new normal." Whenever new ministry team members are on-ramped, ask them to bring someone with them! Language like “YOU DON’T HAVE TO COME ALONE!”, “WE WILL FIND A PLACE FOR YOU” really helps create consistency in an inviting team. This is where I’ve seen “Like attracts like” come alive. This is a core value that is communicated from day one, and it has become our “normal” over time. These might seem small, but they are significant. We DREAM DREAMS, but we LIVE MOMENTS. These principles are what I would call moments. "Moments" matter because they cause a chain reaction that affects forever. These two moments lead to a bigger dream of seeing our team members be “MINISTRY OWNERS." The practice of MINISTRY OWNERSHIP is a significant value. “So Christ himself gave the apostles, the prophets, the evangelists, the pastors and teachers, to equip his people for works of service, so that the body of Christ may be built up until we all reach unity in the faith and in the knowledge of the Son of God and become mature, attaining to the whole measure of the fullness of Christ.” Ephesians 4:11-13 NIV "Ministry Ownership" tells a volunteer that they don't need a title to carry a burden. They don't need a title to help pastor a team. We all have different roles and talents and spiritual gifts. “Ministry Ownership” is a culture in which team members take responsibility to shepherd and build the ministry that they are a part of. I’ve just noticed that in general, people who own houses are more aware of the condition of their homes than renters are. So, let me ask you, what dream are you dreaming today? Are there smaller moments that are hijacking your bigger dream? Take some time today and pray through this. I believe that being involved in our teams has nothing to do with what God wants from us, but it's what He has for us. Jesus will be bringing the right people to your teams because God desires to use you and your leadership gifting to change the world . . . one willing person at a time. Jesus, I pray for those that might read this blog. I pray that this would be an encouragement to those feeling stuck today. I feel stuck a lot, and I am thankful that you give me grace daily to start over. I pray that you would continue to instill a spirit of bravery amongst my brothers and sisters. None of us have it all figured out, but you are still consistent and always for us. Amen. Thank you for checking out these first two ideas. Next month we will dive into Idea #3! Michael King @michaelkingjr I free resources available at www.worship.coach Full Article
it AN INTERVIEW WITH DARA MACLEAN By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Wed, 31 May 2017 21:00:40 -0500 If you aren’t yet familiar with her, the name to be looking out for in the coming year without a doubt is Dara Maclean. With two studio records behind her, the Lord is paving a fresh path for her ministry that hearts everywhere are sure to resonate with. She’s been singing and doing music and ministry since she was seven years old. In her words, “it was not good sounding by any means. I remember at seven, I ran into my dad’s office and I had a walls of Jericho type song, and he applauded me because he’s a really good dad, but I’m sure it was really rough. But I felt called to the industry from a very young age and that has been everything for me.” Having grown up in the church, she experienced first-hand that church really can be what you need regarding your maturing as a believer, a worshiper, and a leader. In her community she had “the opportunity to really fail forward in the sense of what not to do as a worship leader or youth leader. That was school for me in a lot of ways. God just knows how He uniquely creates us. I had to learn by doing and was forced into situations where experience didn’t get me there, but only the Lord could do it.” “My parents looked at me and did NOT say, ‘You can be anything when you grow up.’ They said ‘there’s a specific calling on your life, and until you learn to hear from the Lord yourself, we’re going to help you.’ It has never been a question as I’ve pursued that calling.” Some of Dara’s musical influences include Crystal Lewis, Martha Munizzi, CeCe Winans, and Brian & Jenn Johnson. These influences combined with her own experience in the recording industry served as the inspiration behind her and her husband’s heart to be a safe place for creatives to grow and learn and get tools to pursue their passions without having to step outside of the church. Right now Dara is in the process of writing for a live worship record. It’s something that she is taking her time with in order to make it the very best it can possibly be. “For me personally I had to get off of the pump-out-a-record-every-two-years train. I could never take away from what the Lord had done on my journey, but I just had to stop and say ‘this project is worth it, I want more, I want another level, and that just takes time.’” Also around that same time, Dara married her husband Donnie Petty, so her life focus began shifting dramatically. Leading up to the live recording, they have been and will continue to release one single at a time as a build up to the full project. Blameless was released in the fall of 2016 and then her latest song, Ashes, hit the scene just in time for Easter this year.Along with being a songwriter and recording artist, Dara and her husband serve at a church in Fort Worth, TX. When it comes to balancing a music career and pastoring in the local church context, Dara says that it’s not something she did very well for a long time. “I became very overwhelmed. In the past I’ve been an all-or-nothing person and the Lord has helped me tremendously. I had to learn to not be a perfectionist when I didn’t need to be, and to stop carrying the weight of things I didn’t need to carry. I was putting all of that pressure on myself, so the balance began to come when I sort of ‘got over myself.’ God is perfectly faithful and fit and He has qualified us for what He has called us to do. Not by might and not by power, but by the Spirit. When working in the first two only, you grow weary in well-doing.” The story behind her most recent release, Ashes, is a very personal one. Dara takes songwriting very seriously and carries the full weight and responsibility of her name being attached to anything. So when she walks into a co-write, nine times out of ten she already has a theme in mind, if not a full set of bones for an idea. But this particular session with Travis Ryan (We Believe) happened to be the last of a week straight of two co-writes per day. “I walked in and Travis had this concept of Ashes, and we knew immediately ‘God You just have just given us a gift.’ We definitely should not be focusing on this just for Easter, because victory of death, what a revelation! There are definitely areas of my life that have died . . . full on valley of dry bones. Jesus did not die so that things in me would remain dead. He longs to show off in the marriage that is dying. For those who struggle with self-harm issues, fill in the blank . . . we need Jesus. The goal is to prophetically proclaim this over people because I’ve needed it myself. The reality is, there is stuff in our past that needs to remain dead. But shame and condemnation is trying to keep dead that which God said ‘I gave that to you as a gift of life’. I believe those things, through the power of revelation, can be resurrected and that will lead people to the Lord. That’s huge!” One thing is for sure; this sister has a gifting and a message from the Lord that will not easily go unheard. And the soul in her voice only solidifies the power behind the words she is singing. So if you haven’t already, check out her music today.You can get Ashes here and keep up with what Dara is up to here. Full Article
it Three Boring, Spiritually Unspiritual, Simple Ideas You Can’t Not Do to Grow Your Team, Part 3 By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Wed, 05 Jul 2017 21:41:56 -0500 Over the last few months we’ve tackled the topic of TEAM BUILDING. As much as I would love to feel as if we have this one nailed, we don’t. TEAM BUILDING is a muscle that every leader needs to continue to develop. It’s easy to let this one slip away from us! Just when we start to feel like we are getting on top of this, something changes. A vital team member leaves. A leader needs to take on the responsibility of a different area. Your best guitar player gets hired as the worship pastor at another church. These are all real-life situations that happen in even the best teams. They will happen to yours as well. In our “Month One” blog on team building we presented the IDEA of developing a Leadership Pipeline within your worship ministry. This IDEA helped support that idea that building an EMPOWERED TEAM is a powerful Kingdom tool. “Who’s responsible for who?” and “Who’s responsible for what?” are two of the most important questions that needs to be answered in any team environment. When you lead a team with clarity and spread out the responsibility for others to own your team, you ignite growth opportunities that might have went unnoticed. In “Month Two” we presented the idea of “Making Recruitment and Assimilation a Normal for Everyone”. So many times, I bump into Worship Leaders and Pastors that feel the very unfair burden of building ALONE. With this IDEA, we present the notion that every team can build better and faster when the team members who are on the teams are your best recruiters. Make this a normal practice. At my church, we practice asking new team members to “bring one” with you. We have found that by making this a standard practice at ground level, we never have to ask for participation from the 10,000-foot level. Whatever is visible is what replicates. Empower your best leaders to build. So here we are. Month Three. Idea #3. Clearly Identify and Communicate Simple On-Ramps. I love my city. I live in Lincoln, Ne. Home of the Nebraska Cornhuskers. I love the youthful spirit and progressive nature of our city. I have even grown to love and cherish the special college football atmosphere that engulfs our city on game day. It’s addictive to say the least. But one thing that I am not a big fan of is traffic on game day. There is one primary road that leads into Lincoln and over 90,000 fans make the trek to our city on game day. There are probable more if you include tailgaters. THIS IS A BIG PROBLEM: The roads infrastructure needs to be able to support the traffic flow to the desired destination. If there are too many confusing pieces of communication, it would put our city into emergency mode and have catastrophic effects. I mean, the world might come to an end if people missed a Cornhusker Football Game! (No, but seriously) ;) Having clear and simple communication about “what to DO next” can make or break your teams culture. Every month I host a worship leaders round table in Omaha Ne. At this round table, Worship leaders from multiple different denominations gather for friendship and peer coaching. These leaders have become family and they are amazing. We discuss a wide range of worship ministry issues. One topic that comes up regularly is “attracting the right volunteers”. If a leader starts to pour their heart out to me about how they can’t get enough volunteers, I always ask one question to start the conversation. “Can you tell me about your on-ramp?” This might sound overly simplistic, but what I have found is that sometimes we make it more complicated than it needs to be or we haven’t identified the answer to the most important question at all. Every leader on your team, in unity, needs to be able to answer this question with clarity and simplicity. THIS IS THE QUESTION “Where do I go and What do I do?” Having clear and simple communication about “what to DO next” can make or break your teams culture. Here are a few suggestions when it comes to identifying your onramp into your ministry: 1. KEEP IT SIMPLE- Keep it simple in language and communication. Your “on-ramp” shouldn’t be riddled with complex forms, interviews and assessments. Not yet anyways. Create an “on-ramp’ that just answers the question, “where do I go and what do I do?”. Worry about next steps later. But for now, getting a “willing one” to show up is your biggest win. Make it simple for them. For example, I person asks about playing guitar on the worship team. Any leader in your department should be able to have the same simple answer. ”I am so glad you are interested! We host all our new volunteers on Monday Nights at 6:30pm! Would you be my guest?!” 2. USE WHATS ALREADY WORKING AS YOUR BEST FOOT FORWARD- What is already working in your church? Do you have a rehearsal process that is spot on? USE IT! Is God’s presence so thick in your weekend worship services that lives are being transformed? USE IT! I’ve made the mistake of overthinking and over programming. I’ve launched the “extra” visitor’s night or the quarterly worship night with the intentions of attracting new people. Sometimes those things work. But the problem is that even though they may be effective, it takes a long time for those events to represent the culture and team that we want people to be attracted to. Identify what’s already working and utilize those moments to “on-ramp” your team. 3. KEEP IT CONSISTENT- Nothing can steal the wind out of the sails of progress like a good dose of inconsistency. If you “welcome” new team members on Monday nights, keep that consistent for a season. If you “welcome” new people to your choir rehearsal and you celebrate leaders that brought them, don’t change that unless you are communicating change. Consistency, on this point, allows us the opportunity to get buy in from our team! Consistency builds reliability. Consistency gives our leaders tools to build with. (Side note: We will be talking about “embracing change” and reinvention in the upcoming months.) Consistency tells our teams that we aren’t building a kingdom that only serves us, but we are leading an army that can fight battles when we share the burden. Identifying your “on-ramps” could be a simple strategy that could help you engage people better. Below is a sample of an “on-ramps” document that I created for our kid’s ministry at our church. This idea isn’t just for worship/creative teams, but for everyone. It is essential that you clearly communicate the “WHERE/HOW” to START whenever you are building teams. Keep your communication clear and simple. Try utilizing opportunities that your church is already doing well to interact with potential volunteers. Lastly, be consistent. Everyone should know the answer to this question: “Where do I go and What do I do?”. Having clear and simple communication about “what to DO next” can make or break your teams culture. Jesus, I pray today for the burden and stress that our worship leaders and pastors feel daily. We pray that you would continue to grow our capacity to shepherd well. Thank you for entrusting us with big things. We are honored to pastor your people. Please feel free to use this resource or any that you find at worship.coach. Feel free to send me an email if you have any questions about these three helpful tips. I am always glad to help. Michael King @michaelkingjr free resources available at www.worship.coach Full Article
it So it's been a while ... WE'RE BACK! By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Mon, 06 Nov 2017 13:12:11 -0600 Our brand new host, Michael King, makes his introduction into the AllAboutWorship Community! He's spoken at the conferences, but now you'll get to hang out a few times a month on the podcast! On this episode, you'll hear from a familiar face, Dustin Smith. You'll hear them chat about the new focus of AAW and some of the vision for the future. We're majoring on the core values, the power of God's Presence, the power of His People, and the power of a Sound. We want to continue the practical teaching, new music, artist interviews and worship teaching & coaching moments. Come along as AAW takes off into a brand new season - it's gonna be great and we are excited to be on this journey with YOU! We're back!!!! Stay connected with us twitter.com/allaboutworshipfacebook.com/allaboutworshipinstagram.com/allaboutworshippodcast[at]allaboutworship.com Full Article Podcasts
it Introducing: AAW Podcast "Artist Edition" (with Matt Maher) By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Mon, 13 Nov 2017 13:47:09 -0600 We are stoked to bring you this edition of the podcast! These gems will be released throughout the year in addition to our normally scheduled releases. We appreciate the voice that all of our worship pastors, leaders and artists bring to the table. We hope that you enjoy this as much as we do! On this episode, Michael King gets a chance to talk to Matt Maher. Matt is currently promoting his new release, Echoes, and is on tour with Chris Tomlin. Matt shares his heart on the meaning behind “Echoes” and some great perspective that we have, as worship leaders, to lead with authority and with great burden. Check out more on Matt Maher by doing the following: Visit his website to learn more about him as an artist, his music & traveling dates Check Out "Echoes" on iTunes Follow Matt as an Artist on Spotify Subscribe on YouTube for even more content & music A special thank you to Matt Maher for joining us. Next week we will pick back up on Part 2 of the Dustin Smith/Michael King discussion on the future of AAW. You won’t want to miss it ... HAVE A GREAT WEEK! Full Article Matt Maher Podcasts
it 182 AAW: The Power of God's Presence (Part 2 with Dustin Smith) By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Mon, 20 Nov 2017 09:47:59 -0600 We continue the values conversation with Michael King and Dustin Smith. This week, we recap the power of HIS presence, the power of his people and the power of the sound. We spend a significant amount of time on the POWER OF HIS PRESENCE, because that’s what defines us. We are really excited for you to hear this conversation. And to James, the Uber driver … thank you for the lyric contribution Full Article Podcasts
it 183 AAW: 'Leading Songs' vs. 'Pastoring People' with Michael Farren By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Mon, 04 Dec 2017 14:51:46 -0600 Michael King and Michael Farren continue the discussion on the main focus areas for All About Worship - Power of His Presence, Power of His People, and the Power of a Sound. King catches up with Farren in the middle of the KINGDOM SONGS BOOT CAMP and there are some amazing takeaways. “Stop leading songs and start pastoring people” - Michael Farren. Full Article Michael Farren Podcasts
it 184 AAW: Building Community in Your Worship Team (with Jordan Merritt) By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Mon, 15 Jan 2018 11:31:13 -0600 Today, we're excited to introduce you to someone on the front lines of worship every single week at a local church, just like you! He's a worship leader, pastor, husband, father and a good friend of the ministry: Jordan Merritt. Jordan is currently serving as Worship Pastor at Embrace Church in Sioux Falls, SD, one of the fastest-growing churches in the country. In addition to leading worship, he is a gifted songwriter. He co-wrote the Newsboys single, “You Hold It All,” and he has written songs for multiple projects with artists including Newsboys, Selah, Travis Ryan, and others. Jordan’s desire is to see the Church equipped, refreshed, and reminded of God’s promises through worship. Thank you to Jordan for taking the time to sit down with us! We hope you are encouraged by a "fellow soldier in the fight", who is leading worship in a local church every week. Be encouraged and be confident that God has put you on mission as a worshipper in your church ... to restore the honor of God, to restore the People of God and to bring His presence into your services each and every week. Have a great week! Full Article Podcasts
it 185 AAW: Artist Edition || Corey Voss Interview & Album Release (Songs of Heaven & Earth) By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Thu, 25 Jan 2018 22:32:27 -0600 We had the opportunity to sit down with worship leader, songwriter and All About Worship team member, Corey Voss. Corey has a heart for the local church and currently serves on staff at Gateway Church : Shelbyville as Worship & Creative Arts Pastor. He gave his life to Jesus at 15 and he quickly developed a hunger for God's Presence when he started playing worship songs at home on the family piano. From there God led him on a journey, all the way up to today's exciting announcement of... HIS NEW ALBUM RELEASE!! It's called "Songs of Heaven & Earth". Check it out on iTunes and Apple Music Today! Full Article Corey Voss Podcasts
it AAWGear Talk with Casey Moore By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Mon, 12 Feb 2018 14:45:30 -0600 Rigs, Gear and the Pursuit of Happiness. [ALL ABOUT WORSHIP GEAR TALK] CASEY MOORE from the band called Leeland, lives in Nashville living the dream with his family. He is an accomplished musician, writer and overall cool guy. He's recorded for artists/producers such as: Michael W. Smith, Bethel Music, Jason Upton, Fleurie, Phil Wickham, Audrey, Normies, Ed Cash and Vertical Worship to name a few. Mastermind PBC \ http://bit.ly/2CfI7EoWalrus Audio Deep Six Compressor \ http://amzn.to/2nUbFTOKlon Centaur Gold \ http://bit.ly/2BpFNOqJHS Kilt \ http://amzn.to/2EmC171JHS Prestige \ http://amzn.to/2EnO603Micro Pog (not modded) \ http://amzn.to/2Ez0YQ1Strymon Mobius \ https://www.strymon.net/Strymon Timeline \ https://www.strymon.net/JHS Emperor \ http://amzn.to/2BWwfeMStrymon Big Sky \ https://www.strymon.net/Strymon El Capistan \ https://www.strymon.net/Boss RV-5 \ http://amzn.to/2F1uXhDHilton Pro Guitar Volume \ https://hiltonelectronics.com/Strymon Zuma Power \ https://www.strymon.net/ Pro Tip #1 (Do I Need All That Gear?): Pro Tip #2 (How Do I Record on a Budget?): Full Article
it 186 AAW: Artist Edition || Brad + Rebekah & Album Release (Sound of Heaven) By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Thu, 15 Mar 2018 12:36:27 -0500 “What is the Sound the of Heaven? Its the people of God. Us. It is our calling, in whatever arena, to be His light, His hands and feet to a lost world. These songs are a declaration of the desire to walk in the identity of Christ and be the audible and visible Sound of Heaven.” -- Brad + Rebekah This is the mission statement from the newest album released by our friends, Brad & Rebekah Bichsel!! We had the chance to sit down and talk with this awesome couple, who both lead worship together, and have such a great heart for the Church. Take a moment and listen in! Brad & Rebekah share some personal things that they are walking through, and how this album is really a declaration of faith. And speaking of that album, check it out: Also, take some time and head over to their website at Brad + Rebekah Music. Make sure to check out the "About" section and read up on their story. There's even some images and stories behind a few of the songs on this album - many times we write songs out of real experiences. This album, and their stories, are no exception, and you'll be impacted by it. If you're looking to get the album ( YOU SHOULD! ), there's a few ways to do that: Buy it on iTunes Listen on Apple Music Listen on Spotify Download on Amazon Music Download on Google Play There's plenty of options there for you, there's no excuse! Last but not least, Brad + Rebekah have even released multi tracks, chord charts & videos along with everything. You can find that under the "Music" section of their website here. We pray that these songs would minister powerfully both to you & to your church! Full Article Brad + Rebekah Podcasts
it 187 AAW: Artist Edition || River Valley Worship & Album Release (Million Lifetimes) By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Fri, 30 Mar 2018 11:58:54 -0500 We are excited for you to meet our guests on the AAW podcast, Clinton Allen & Ryan Williams from River Valley Worship! They both lead worship at their church in Minneapolis, MN. In today’s interview, we’re talking with Ryan & Clinton specifically about their story as worship leaders and as songwriters. They talk to us about their current roles in their local church as worship leaders and leading teams. They also have some great insights about how they approach writing new songs for their church - considering the people that will be singing those songs and even their senior pastor - It starts with relationship! They share experiences from leading REAL people in REAL ministry week to week, so we really believe this will speak to many of you listening that are also leading worship week in & week out. You have authority as a pastoral musician. Last but certainly not least - you can find out more about River Valley Worship's brand new album! Head on over to rivervalleyworship.org and find ways to listen below: Buy it on iTunes Listen on Apple Music Listen on Spotify Download on Amazon Music Download on Google Play Watch on YouTube There's plenty of options there for you, there's no excuse! Be blessed, and be sure to check out their new album —- “MILLION LIFETIMES”! Full Article Articles Podcasts
it 188 AAW: A Sit-Down with Hope Darst from The Belonging Co. By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Thu, 17 May 2018 13:39:57 -0500 All About Worship talks with The Belonging Co. worship leader, Hope Darst about leading teams and showing true character through hard times. She voices the story about writing the song “Peace Be Still”, as it evolved into one of the breakthrough worship songs of 2018. Enjoy this week's sit down with Hope Darst! Full Article
it 189 AAW: Transition & Celebration w/ Andrew Holt, worship leader at The Belonging Co. By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Fri, 01 Jun 2018 15:25:29 -0500 The belonging Co worship leader Andrew Holt sits with us this week to talk about dealing with transition and celebration. Andrew talks about his story and his transition into leading worship. Also, can we take celebration too far in church? Some people may think we go too far ... how about you? Listen in! Full Article Podcasts
it The Worship Podcast (Episode 3): A House Divided, with Jonathan Brown - President of Integrity Music By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Wed, 20 Jun 2018 12:44:08 -0500 James & Dustin had a chance to sit down with Jonathan Brown - President of Integrity Music - to discuss unity and division among the people of God, and among worshipers in the church. JB (Jonathan Brown) and Dustin both had the chance to be part of a tour with WeAreWorship, where they visited multiple church leaders in multiple cities. There were so many great things experienced and along with that, there were so many things learned. At the end of the day, we want unity in the the people of God and especially among the leaders of God's Church, and we need to have inspired conversation on this topic. Enjoy! ----- The Worship Podcast is powered by All About Worship (Dustin Smith & James Galbraith) and WeAreWorship (Wisdom Moon & Morgan Shirey). You can also connect with The Worship Podcast on social media: The Worship Podcast on Facebook The Worship Podcast on Instagram The Worship Podcast on Twitter Full Article Podcasts
it The Worship Podcast (Episode 5): Women in Ministry, with Krissy Nordhoff By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Wed, 04 Jul 2018 11:11:43 -0500 On today's podcast, we wanted to cover a very important topic. It's forefront in our culture, yes, but it's also important in the church, too. Specifically, in worship and songwriting. That topic is ... women in ministry. We here at The Worship Podcast (All About Worship & WeAreWorship) completely affirm and believe in the ability, anointing and commission of women to minister to the church body, and of course, to others around them. In a way, it's strange to even feel the need to type that sentence. But as society and culture is starting to have some real confusion and controversy over this gender topic, we believe as Christians we should lead the way in freedom! We should set the example in empowerment, equal contribution in the Kingdom of God and a general attitude of preferring one another. Now, this is a huge topic! So we wanted to sit down with someone who is making a real difference in this world. Her name is Krissy Nordhoff. She leads a ministry called "Brave Worship". She's also an accomplished songwriter, anointed worship leader, wife, mother, and lucky for us, a friend of The Worship Podcast ministry! It doesn't matter what "side of the aisle" you believe you are on when it comes to this topic - we can all benefit from having genuine conversation and even more important, listening. Find out more about Brave Worship and make sure to check out their podcast, as well! And oh yeah, last (and certainly least in this case), Dustin & James don't mince words about their travels to India ... stomach issues and all. Enjoy! -------- The Worship Podcast is powered by All About Worship (Dustin Smith & James Galbraith) and WeAreWorship (Wisdom Moon & Morgan Shirey). You can also connect with The Worship Podcast on social media:The Worship Podcast on FacebookThe Worship Podcast on InstagramThe Worship Podcast on Twitter Full Article Training Worship Leading Podcasts
it The Worship Podcast (Episode 7): How Does A Worship Leader With A Flip Phone Read The Bible? [Part II w/ Gabe Finocchio] By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Wed, 18 Jul 2018 14:00:06 -0500 On today's podcast: What do you believe? That's the question we discuss with Gabe Finocchio (The Royal Royal) as we dive into the, sometimes complex, worlds of doctrine & worship. As worship leaders, we can easily neglect God's word & focus more on the songs themselves or our own church services. Well today, we talk with Gabe about that journey between theology & our song. We think what comes out could surprise you. Enjoy! ----- The Worship Podcast is powered by All About Worship (Dustin Smith & James Galbraith) and WeAreWorship (Wisdom Moon & Morgan Shirey). Subscribe to the podcast and find the show notes: https://linktr.ee/theworshippodcast You can also connect with The Worship Podcast on social media: The Worship Podcast on Facebook The Worship Podcast on Instagram The Worship Podcast on Twitter Full Article Podcasts
it People Or Position By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Tue, 21 Aug 2018 22:19:58 -0500 I don't know if you have ever been on a 15-hour flight with 8 and 13-year-old boys, but that is where I found myself a couple weeks ago. I had been invited to minister at a conference in Australia and my wife and I decided it was finally time to take the whole family to the land down under. This meant we would be taking 3 different flights that would total about 24 hours of flying. Lucky for me, my kids are pro travelers. I even remember one trip when my youngest was just 6 years old, he asked how long one of the trips was going to be and I said 8 hours. His reply was, "oh, that's not too bad." I knew at that time that my kids were going to be able to handle almost any trip I threw at them. So here we are on the 15-hour flight and the first thing everyone does is start choosing their movies. My first thought is, no phone, no email, no communication...sleep. This is a rare opportunity for me. But instead I start filtering mindlessly through the movies and it only takes one swipe of the page before my 13-year-old elbows me and points to a movie that I have been telling him about since he was a little boy, Braveheart. He was always too young to watch it before and it had been so long since I had seen it that I told him I would watch it and then decide if I thought he was ready. So instead of sleeping, I embarked on the three hour Braveheart adventure. If you have ever seen this movie then you know it is not for the weak of heart. I love how Robert Ebert describes it in his 1995 movie review . . . Mel Gibson's "Braveheart" is a full-throated, red-blooded battle epic about William Wallace, the legendary Scots warrior who led his nation into battle against the English in the years around 1300. It's an ambitious film, big on simple emotions like love, patriotism, and treachery, and avoids the travelogue style of so many historical swashbucklers: Its locations look green, wet, vast, muddy and rugged. Not much is known about Wallace, known as Braveheart, except that according to an old epic poem, he unified the clans of Scotland and won famous battles against the English before being captured, tortured and executed as a traitor. From that review does this sound like the type of movie I should be watching on a plane? Yet here I am, three hours into the flight completely locked in. All the lights are off in the plane. Both boys are asleep and William Wallace is getting tortured. My testosterone is through the roof. I forget I'm on a plane. I want to stand up and yell, mercy! I am a mess. Tears are pouring down my face. I don't care who you are. If you don't feel something when Mel Gibson yells, "FREEDOM", while being tortured, then you need a pulse check. NOTE TO SELF . . . DON’T WATCH BRAVEHEART ON A PLANE! As I watched this movie, God was doing a work in me that I was not expecting. He was reminding me of the fight that he has called me to and the leanings of human nature to take over and fight for itself. The story of Braveheart, like so many stories in the Bible, is centered around men who fought for power instead of people. As I was sitting in the plane watching the soldiers mock the townspeople and abuse their position, I felt myself shrinking in my seat. As I watched the King and those that he had placed in leadership abuse their power, I felt like it is much of what Jesus encountered when he walked the earth and a lot of what we encounter in church leadership today. As I travel around the world I see men and women who are fighting for position, but they have stopped fighting for people. When Jesus stepped on the scene he was not concerned about a position, he was fighting always for people. The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, for he has anointed me to bring Good News to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim that captives will be released, that the blind will see, that the oppressed will be set free,and that the time of the Lord’s favor has come. - Luke 4:18-19 One of my favorite lines in the movie Braveheart is when William Wallace says to Robert the Bruce . . . There's a difference between us. You think the people of this country exist to provide you with position. I think your position exists to provide those people with freedom. And I go to make sure they have it. I feel like this is what Jesus would say to a lot of ministers today. I know it is what he said to a lot of leaders in the Bible who abused their positions. Is it what he is saying to you today? Full Article
it The Worship Podcast (Episode 13): Position or the People - Dustin Smith & James Galbraith By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Wed, 29 Aug 2018 11:16:29 -0500 Today's podcast is a sit down with the hosts of All About Worship, Dustin Smith & James Galbraith, talking about the important of valuing people, over the titles or positions we hold. God has asked us to be responsible - able to gauge a response - for the people we lead. Enjoy! ----------------- The Worship Podcast is powered by All About Worship (Dustin Smith & James Galbraith) and WeAreWorship (Wisdom Moon & Morgan Shirey). Subscribe to the podcast: theworshippodcast.com linktr.ee/theworshippodcast You can also connect with The Worship Podcast on social media: The Worship Podcast on Facebook The Worship Podcast on Instagram The Worship Podcast on Twitter Full Article Podcasts
it Humble Entitlement By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Tue, 04 Sep 2018 11:15:00 -0500 Alright friends . . . we’re about to get real personal here. It’s not something I am proud of, but it’s also something that I’m confident I’m not alone in. I’ve got a sneaking suspicion that most of you who have been serving God faithfully for a long time, regardless of platform and capacity, have also had to battle this on a regular basis. I lovingly, and a little embarrassingly, refer to it as “humble entitlement.” It’s that thought or feeling that rises up from time to time where we question an apparent lack of blessing despite the fact that we have given of ourselves willingly for years. Look me in the eye (you know what I mean) and tell me these thoughts, or something like them, haven’t crossed your mind. “But God, I’ve sacrificed my life, my family’s life, everything to serve You, and yet I still can barely make ends meet.” “How is it that I work so hard at living a holy life and am still in the same place I was 5 years ago, and yet this other person is getting to do amazing things even though I know that Godliness is the furthest thing from their mind?” In our finite humanity, we get it into our minds that the “reward” for our service is somehow measurable and earthly. Then before we know it, the enemy has a foothold and bitterness begins to set in. I’m sure that every facet of ministry - be it pastoring, writing, student ministry, whatever - has their particular achievements to strive for or that unknowingly serve as their North Star. Maybe it’s the pastor of a mega-church that other pastors model their approaches after. Perhaps student ministers get a specific number in their minds that would mean they’ve “made it”. For us as worship leaders, it’s easy to fall into the trap of comparing our accomplishments to those of others (the skill level of our team members, how many streams our latest singles have gotten, how many “outside” events we’ve been invited to). Who knows what it is that sits tucked away in the recesses of our ministry brains that serves as our measuring stick for success? But we all have them, whether we want to admit it or not. I’m not so sure that it’s bad or wrong for us to have goals to strive for, so long as these goals don’t take precedence over the heart of ministry itself - to love God and His people. Romans 11:33-36 says . . . Oh, the depth of the riches of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable his judgments, and his paths beyond tracing out! Who has known the mind of the Lord? Or who has been his counselor? Who has ever given to God, that God should repay them? For from him and through him and for him are all things. To him be the glory forever! Amen. In other words, He owes us nothing! Just recently I was in a co-write with a close friend and we wound up settling in on the idea that we as believers often try to stand on promises that the Lord never made. We put words in His mouth that He never spoke. We claim things that He never put forth for us. Sometimes it’s healthy to take a step back every now and then and remind ourselves of the promises that He has made . . . that He will never leave or forsake us, that He wants to give us a full life, that He will always provide a way out when tempted, etc . . . and prune out the ones we (or the enemy) have somehow convinced ourselves of . . . that if we strive hard enough we will reach that coveted platform, that the number of people in front of us somehow reflects our effectiveness, that our talents and skills determine our reach, etc . . . Paul reminds us in Romans 9:15 of God’s words to Moses. I will have mercy on whom I have mercy, and I will have compassion on whom I have compassion. We have no say over who He chooses to use, in what capacities He places them, and to what level He raises them. It is not our job to worry about that. Our job is to fix our eyes on the task set before us, the ministries placed under our care, and the hearts entrusted to us. If we get the pouty lip every time someone else who may seem less qualified gets elevated, our attention is diverted at the expense of those we were called to serve. Imagine if the commander of a troop of soldiers found out that the leader of another troop got promoted ahead of him even though he’d been serving 10 years less than himself; and instead of staying focused on his assignment, he decided to take his toys and go home, leaving his entire troop leaderless and visionless. We may never know the magnitude of our ministries this side of heaven, but one thing is for sure. The trajectory of the lives of the people we have been called to serve can and will be affected by our obedience or lack thereof. If we lead them out of an attitude of humble entitlement, we are leading out of a divided mind and heart. But if we can manage to keep our eyes focused on the race set before us, only God knows just how vast and limitless the reach of our ministries will stretch. Full Article
it The Worship Podcast (Episode 16): Should Worship Leaders Be Pastors? - Dustin Smith & James Galbraith By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Thu, 20 Sep 2018 11:01:10 -0500 On this episode of The Worship Podcast, Dustin & James talk funny stories from leading worship, break down what community really means in a team environment, and do we really know how to do it effectively? Worship leaders have to care about people. Not unlike .... well you'll just have to listen. Enjoy! ----------------- The Worship Podcast is powered by All About Worship (Dustin Smith & James Galbraith) and WeAreWorship (Morgan Shirey). Subscribe to the podcast: theworshippodcast.com linktr.ee/theworshippodcast You can also connect with The Worship Podcast on social media: The Worship Podcast on Facebook The Worship Podcast on Instagram The Worship Podcast on Twitter Full Article
it The Worship Podcast (Episode 18): What Does Revival Worship Sound Like? - Dustin Smith & James Galbraith By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Wed, 10 Oct 2018 17:42:19 -0500 On this episode of The Worship Podcast, Dustin and James talk about their experience in revival movements, as well as lessons learned and things to consider for your worship experience. What's the new sound? Where is the sound of worship headed? You might be surprised at their answer. ----------------- The Worship Podcast is powered by All About Worship in partnership with WeAreWorship. Subscribe to the podcast: theworshippodcast.com linktr.ee/theworshippodcast You can also connect with The Worship Podcast on social media: The Worship Podcast on Facebook The Worship Podcast on Instagram The Worship Podcast on Twitter Full Article Podcasts
it The Worship Podcast (Episode 19): Holy Distractions Batman! - Dustin Smith & James Galbraith By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Wed, 24 Oct 2018 14:42:44 -0500 Today Dustin and James talk about all those pesky little distractions during worship. Is flag waving, pottery and painting true expressions of worship? I mean…really? Can someone be too loud during our praise and worship sets? Are these really distractions to us? Take a listen and let’s find out. ----------------- The Worship Podcast is powered by All About Worship in partnership with WeAreWorship. Subscribe to the podcast: theworshippodcast.com linktr.ee/theworshippodcast You can also connect with The Worship Podcast on social media: The Worship Podcast on Facebook The Worship Podcast on Instagram The Worship Podcast on Twitter Full Article Podcasts
it In The Waiting By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Tue, 30 Oct 2018 13:02:46 -0500 Endure = Character = Hope Have you ever been in a situation where all you can do is wait? Like say your car breaks down. You call AAA or something like that, and you wait. Or maybe you’ve been a part of one of those awesome phone calls when your internet isn’t working like it’s supposed to. They are incredibly generous with their time and will try to keep you on hold as long as possible. Most of us in the modern world hate waiting. Waiting almost has a negative connotation to it. People say stuff like, “Sorry to keep you waiting” all the time, yet waiting can be a great thing. Sometimes in the waiting we are able to take a step back and breathe. Many of us are so busy not waiting, that we never take a second to slow down. I know from personal experience that being in a “waiting” season can be difficult, but also very rewarding. Sometime we are looking for answers that aren’t coming when we would’ve liked them. Or maybe we’re waiting for doors to open that we feel should’ve already been opened. It’s here, in the waiting, that something great happens. Let’s read this amazing passage out of Romans 5:3-5 We can rejoice, too, when we run into problems and trials, for we know that they help us develop endurance. And endurance develops strength of character, and character strengthens our confident hope of salvation. And this hope will not lead to disappointment. For we know how dearly God loves us, because he has given us the Holy Spirit to fill our hearts with his love. This verse right here has helped me keep my head above water during seasons where it felt like I was drowning. When we encounter trials or storms sometimes we just have to wait it out. But in the waiting, our endurance is built. This is a foundational principle that we must have established in us. How can we run the good race if we have no endurance? How can we be overcomers if we have nothing to overcome? The waiting period eventually builds endurance - character - hope. And I love how the verse reads that this hope will not lead to disappointment. We see the love of God in every battle and after every battle. So don’t discount the waiting season. The bible says that those who wait on the Lord will renew their strength. Those who wait, those who hope, and those who have been through a trial and have had their endurance built, their character sharpened, and their hope restored will be unstoppable. What can stop someone who’s hope in God can’t be shaken? Cherish the waiting times because it’s in those moments that we can sometimes hear God the clearest. So take a step back and breathe. Then let your endurance be developed. Let your endurance build your character, and then let your character continue to strengthen your hope in God. Full Article
it The Sheep or The Parade - an interview with Jesse Reeves By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Tue, 13 Nov 2018 18:14:05 -0600 If you’ve been attending a church with a contemporary bent for any length of time, then you’ve likely sung songs on a regular basis written by a gentleman named Jesse Reeves. Jesse has co-written on some of the most widely known worship songs of our generation such as How Great It Our God, Lord I Need You, and Our God - just to name a few. Growing up in the Bible Memory Association, Jesse’s spiritual life consisted mostly of rules and regulations, until September 23, 1990 when he met Jesus at the ages of 15 and his life was changed forever. A rancher’s son, his love for playing music left his father stumped, but he continued following his passion and played with a band all the way through college. Then in 1997, Jesse met a country boy from Grand Saline, TX named Chris Tomlin who asked him if he’d like to lead worship, to which Jesse responded in all sincerity that he didn’t know what that was. At this point in the contemporary worship movement, the term “worship leader” hadn’t really caught on. There were music ministers, and that definitely was not the route Jesse wanted to go. But the two had lunch and the rest was history. I, myself, was raised in the church as the daughter of a Baptist youth minister (or student pastor as they’re called these days), and I was finishing up my high school years in youth group right about the time all of this was taking place. In fact, much of the soundtrack to the season in my life when God called me to ministry and began shaping and forming my passion for leading worship was penned and recorded by these two Texas boys. So to find myself today sitting in an 8,000 sq. ft. mountain lodge at a writing camp with the likes of Jesse Reeves is a full-circle, what-even-is-my-life moment to say the least. Nevertheless, you better believe I took full advantage of the opportunity to sit down with Jesse and talk about his heart for worship, the worship leader, and this next generation that God is raising up. I asked him first about the role that worship has had in his life growing up and how it has evolved throughout his time in ministry. “If you’re talking about the expression of worship through music, growing up it was just hymns and they didn’t mean anything to me. But now looking back, I have a huge appreciation for my childhood and learning those songs, because I learned what it means to teach theology through lyrics. It’s a lost art and so I’m very passionate about trying to revive some of that. And I’ve done this long enough to see that everything is on a pendulum. When I first started playing, everything sounded like U2, and then everything sounded like Coldplay, and then everything sounded like Mumford & Sons, and now it’s probably like Chainsmokers. And I just always come back to the question of ‘If the Spirit of the living God lives inside of us, why aren’t we creating things that are original and better than what the world is doing, instead of trying to chase what they’re doing?’ I do understand the context of being relevant and playing stuff that’s going to resonate with people, but I always want to come back to what the Spirit of the living God wants to hear, not what we want to play.” Over his 20+ years in the worship leading world, Jesse has stood on every platform and stage imaginable and in front of every crowd size imaginable. I would venture to guess that making that mental shift from event to event and church to church had to require some form of finesse and adaptability. So I asked him what it looked like for him to make that adjustment, especially as it relates to transitioning out of touring and back into the local church setting. “I would say that I’ve worked my way all the way to the bottom, and I think it’s kind of where I want to be. I didn’t always want to be there and it wasn’t an easy journey. I have been to the mountain top of Christian music and definitely want to honor that, but I very specifically was called out of that. It was through a sermon that I heard from Tommy Nelson. He was preaching on the anointing of David as king. If you go back and read 1 Samuel 16, they are looking to anoint the next king of Israel. Samuel shows up and they have this parade of all of Jesse’s sons . . . this is Eliab, this is Abinadab, this is Shammah . . . they went through seven sons, to which Samuel’s response was that none of these are the king, do you have any others? Jesse says that yes, he has one other son but that he was in the field tending the sheep. Now when I was listening to this sermon, I was on a run training for a marathon, so I was a good 15 miles from my house. Tommy Nelson said one statement and it was this. “What God is looking for in a man is a man that more concerned about the sheep than the parade.” And I don’t know why, but that’s when the Holy Spirit wrecked me and I literally started weeping. I was still running, but now I’m running with my hands in the air and I’m saying “Jesus, I’m listening.” On a public path by the way. People are passing me thinking that this guy has lost his mind. But that was a moment in my life when Jesus started trying to get my attention. Hear me say this, there is nothing wrong with the parade. God sent Samuel to the parade. There’s a time and a place for the parade. But our generation lives for the parade and there’s not enough people who care about the sheep. I feel like that’s my mission in life going forward, to simply care for sheep. The parade will take care of itself. So to bring it back around to the question, yes I’ve been in megachurches to now I have a house church of about 20 people that meets in my home and it’s awesome. And right now, my favorite worship leader on the planet is the girl who leads worship in my house, because she has an anointing on her, and to get 20 people to sing in a living room is actually way harder than getting 10,000 people to sing because it’s awkward, but it’s beautifully awkward. And she has an authority on her that she can pull this out of people and turn people’s eyes on Jesus in such a way that you forget there’s only 20 people in the room. That’s something I haven’t seen in a long time.” Reeves has a strong passion for pouring into worship leaders and songwriters and has done so in different ways over the past several years since settling back down with his family in Austin, TX. We discussed the fact that it seems like every generation of worship leaders has something that really marks them. For our particular generation, we were a part of that group that sort of stepped in right as that transition from traditional to blended to contemporary was really gaining its momentum, and so maturing as a worship leader looked very different from what it does now. I asked Jesse what he thinks the “mark” is for this current generation of worship leaders taking up roles in the church and coming into their own as leaders, and what it might look like for them to reach their full potential. “While I don’t want to make a blanket statement about it, I do feel like we have a generation of people who looked at my generation and saw what we did and thought, “That’s really cool, I want to do that.” And so we have a large percent of churches with people filling the platform that wanted to do that because it was cool, instead of because they have a calling on their life from God. So honestly I think what’s marking this generation is that, but I’m also not a doomsday-er. I don’t think all is lost. I think what God is calling people to right now, and you can see it across the nation, God is calling people out who are authentic. And that is who is rising to the top. I read a book called The Forgotten Ways by Alan Hirsch and he says that this next generation wants three things . . . they want authenticity, they want community, and they want social justice. And if they don’t find those things in the church, they’re just not going to go. My generation will go to church just to check a box. Not this next generation. I think what is going to have to mark this generation is for true worship leaders to figure out how to reach them because they’re not going to come to us. Which means we’re going to have to lead worship not with just songs. We’re going to have to lead worship with our actions. So maybe God is raising up a new generation of worship leaders that has very little to do with music. Look at Romans 12:1. Therefore, I urge you, brothers and sisters, in view of God’s mercy, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God - this is your spiritual act of worship. That’s our definition. That definition doesn’t say anything about music, it doesn’t say anything about songs. We’ve had a whole generation that defines worship by our songs. God defines our worship by the degree to which we present our bodies as a living sacrifice. So what I pray is that the next generation will lead the charge in that. That’s something I would be willing to follow.” As you can imagine, there’s not a whole lot to say after that, except this . . . where are you pouring out? Where are you investing your resources and energy? Is it into the parade or is it into the sheep? This is probably a question that we as worship leaders need to ask and re-ask ourselves on a regular basis. Like Jesse said, neither is right or wrong and there is a time and place for both. But it is always worth checking in periodically to make sure we are spending ourselves where He wants us spending ourselves. The alternatively will leave us simply exhausted. Full Article
it 5 Qualities Of A Great Worship Team Member By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Tue, 27 Nov 2018 15:33:45 -0600 Over the years I have found myself in the midst of teams, as well as leading them. Here are some of my thoughts around qualities that make a great worship team member. 1. THEY UNDERSTAND THE IMPORTANCE AND POWER OF UNITY They champion the vision of the church, team and leaders, and they are responsive and vocal about it. They esteem others! They celebrate the wins of the team and individuals. They always speak well of church, team, and leadership. 2. THEY ALWAYS COME PREPARED AND READY They learn the songs. They know the repertoire. They maintain their instruments and gear at a professional level. They always bring their best to the platform, and they understand that this is a part of their worship. 3. THEY ARE TEACHABLE They are willing and eager to learn. They don’t just wait to be told, they are pro-active in asking ‘what can I do better?’. They have the maturity and humility to handle correction, even when it is something that they may find hard to hear. 4. THEY ARE CONSISTENT They always have an attitude of excellence. They live, not without, but above their emotions. They are always warm, friendly and kind. They are approachable and relational. They are loyal, reliable and faithful. 5. THEY PRAY AND READ THEIR BIBLE They have a devotional life of their own. They prioritise their relationship with Jesus. They are regularly in prayer and the word of God They are a worshiper! For more articles by Dan and the C3 staff, visit www.c3music.com/blog/. Full Article
it The Worship Podcast (Episode 22): Q&A - You didn't ask for it, so here it is. By www.allaboutworship.com Published On :: Wed, 05 Dec 2018 13:11:42 -0600 Dustin and James answer YOUR most pressing questions. On this episode we cover everything from distractions to multiple services, being the authority to playing at the back of the church. You won’t want to miss these tips on living a better church life! ----------------- The Worship Podcast is powered by All About Worship in partnership with WeAreWorship providing weekly worship resources. Subscribe to the podcast:theworshippodcast.comlinktr.ee/theworshippodcast You can also connect with The Worship Podcast on social media:The Worship Podcast on FacebookThe Worship Podcast on InstagramThe Worship Podcast on Twitter Full Article Podcasts
it Shaikin: Baseball's best rivalry is no longer Yankees-Red Sox. It's Dodgers vs. Padres By sports.yahoo.com Published On :: Fri, 01 Nov 2024 11:00:06 GMT The Dodgers and Padres have created the best rivalry in MLB through a willingness to spend on big-name players and be contenders every season. Full Article article Sports
it White Sox decline $25 million option on Yoán Moncada, $7.5 million option on Max Stassi By sports.yahoo.com Published On :: Fri, 01 Nov 2024 23:19:53 GMT Chicago set the post-1900 record for losses in a season, going 41-121. Full Article article Sports
it MLB free agent rankings: Top 10 right-handed hitters By sports.yahoo.com Published On :: Mon, 04 Nov 2024 20:08:02 GMT The Red Sox need to add a right-handed-hitting slugger or two to balance out their left-handed-heavy lineup. Here are the top 10 right-handed hitters set to hit free agency. Full Article article Sports
it Roki Sasaki has little reason to consider Red Sox, even if they spend By sports.yahoo.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 14:26:12 GMT It's hard to imagine Japanese ace Roki Sasaki wanting to come to the Red Sox based on their recent track record, writes John Tomase. Full Article article Sports
it MLB Rumors: Red Sox 'In' On Free-Agent Slugger, But Not Favorite By nesn.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 16:51:25 GMT The Boston Red Sox reportedly are “in” on free agent Teoscar Hernández. ESPN's Jeff Passan on Tuesday published a wide-ranging MLB offseason preview and reported the Red Sox, while not the favorite to sign the outfielder, are among teams interested. “The Dodgers are the favorites to bring him back where he thrived in 2024,” Passan wrote. Full Article article News
it Red Sox Have Substantial Competition for Reunion With Starting Pitcher By www.wtnh.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 20:59:07 GMT Eovaldi gets ready to pitch against the Royals. | Jay Biggerstaff-Imagn Images Boston's former ace is reportedly on their radar this offseason. by: Michael Kadlick Posted: Nov 12, 2024 / 03:59 PM EST Updated: Nov 12, 2024 / 03:59 PM EST SHARE As the MLB's 2025 offseason begins, the Red Sox have a former ace on their radar. According to WEEI's Rob Bradford , Boston is among "about a dozen teams" who have shown interest in starting pitcher Nathan Eovaldi. He declined his 2025 player option on Nov. 4 and is set to hit free agency this winter. While top tier available pitchers remain Red Sox priority, they are one of about a dozen teams who have shown some level of interest in Nathan Eovaldi — Rob Full Article article News
it Red Sox $45 Million Power Hitter Predicted To Ditch Boston In Favor Of Royals By www.si.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 23:00:00 GMT There was once a time when the Boston Red Sox never had to worry about losing a prized free agent to an American League Central team, but that time may have passed. The Kansas City Royals appear to be leading the charge, having spent over $100 million in free-agent contracts last winter. This winter, the Royals look to be active again, already inking starting pitcher Michael Wacha to a three-year, $51 million extension. Perhaps their next move could be to pilfer a big bat from the Boston lineup. Full Article article News