You probably didn’t wake up thinking, “How can I be the biggest failure possible today?”
We never set out to fail.
But when left unchecked, it’s easy for us to develop bad habits that take us where we don’t want to go.
As a worship leader myself, I’ve found that failure has a lot more to do with how we handle the small stuff behind the scenes, than it does with what happens on stage.
So here are 10 ways to ensure you fail as a worship leader. Reader, beware:
1. Leave God Out Of It
We all know how easy it is to go on autopilot – to just go through the motions. But when it comes to leading worship, we need God more than anything. We can’t just rely on our experience, talent or routines.
2. Don’t Communicate
Any artistic person falls prey to this. Don’t leave your team out of the loop. Don’t just coast from service to service. Err on the side of over-communication. Speak your vision constantly. Call team members, just to see how they’re doing. Care for your people.
3. Forget Others, Focus On Yourself
Your worship team is not a platform for you to shine. Focus your energy on raising others up and releasing them into ministry.
4. Ignore Technology
Many of us, in our zeal for something real, limit ourselves. We refuse to take musical and technological risks for fear of distracting from worship. What’s something you haven’t tried before? From creating loops, using a click track, trying new lighting, to plugging in an iPad – take a new risk. It may just help open up a new facet of worship for your team and congregation.
5. Leave Theology to the Preachers
Theology isn’t just for the preachers. If you’re not pursuing an ever-expanding view of God and immersing yourself in the Word of God, your worship leading will suffer. How can you lead people to a God you don’t care to know?
6. Ignore Your Pastor’s Vision
If you’re artsy, you know you have a hard time submitting to authority, particularly if they don’t seem to understand you. However, there’s nothing more important than for you to submit to the vision of your Senior Pastor. He’s been given a vision for your Church. He understands where God is taking your church. Humble yourself and carry it out with passion.
7. Lead Out of Routine, Not Vision
If today you have vision, tomorrow it will be gone. Vision is a flame that needs stoked every day – not just for yourself, but for your team. Don’t fall into the routine of rehearsal, service, rehearsal, service. Give your team a vision worth dying for.
8. Don’t Worship. Fake It.
The more you lead worship, the easier it is to fake it. Which is why personal worship is more important the more you lead. If you want to be effective, your personal worship needs to outshine your public worship. Spend time with Jesus every day and put that on display when you stand before your congregation.
9. Make Your Music Confusing
This can be such a tension. Musicians need to stretch their creativity to stay engaged, but the congregation needs something simple to engage with. When in doubt, err on what is congregational. Corporate worship is about the people of God engaging with the presence of God for the glory of God. If your music is confusing and keeps people watching, something needs to change. Invite them into the experience. Engage them in worship.
10. Be Unprepared
How many rehearsals have I attended with an unprepared worship leader? I’d rather not count. There’s nothing more frustrating than attending a rehearsal where the stage isn’t ready, the music not thought through, the leader clueless. Think through your rehearsal with focused organization. Be 100% prepared and ready. Your team will love you for it.
Nobody is the perfect worship leader. We are all on a journey. There’s grace if you mess up.
But, I would say the work of leading people to encounter God’s greatness is worth our greatest effort. That makes our development worth it, wouldn’t you say?
What are some other ways we can fail as worship leaders?
[Image via STOCK.XCHNG]
Matt Powell says
Wow…. fantastic stuff…. I’d love to send this to my worship leader but I don’t want him to think it is my subtle way of accusing him. 🙂 I’ll figure it out.
This is one of my favorite posts I’ve read here… thank you!
David Santistevan says
Matt, I don’t think he’ll feel accused. If anything, he’ll feel he’s doing so well that he needs to read this post 🙂
Thanks for reading!
April says
Great advice! Thanks for sharing!!
David Santistevan says
Thanks April!
Matt Brown says
Love it Dave!
David Santistevan says
Thanks Matt! Bro, you need to get yourself a gravatar: http://en.gravatar.com/
Liz Dugger says
Such practical and important advice. What others? How about: “scold” the congregation for not being responsive enough … and … use only the music you like and don’t consider the rest of the ‘body’. Great post!
David Santistevan says
Oh yes. These are fantastic as well. Mind writing a sequel? 🙂
Liz Dugger says
If you ever need a sequel, let me know — I’d be honored 🙂 When it comes to ways to fail, I’ve got plenty to say! haha.
David Santistevan says
You should post it on your blog!
Matt Powell says
“use only the music you like” – that is GREAT. So right.
David Santistevan says
I’m so guilty of that 🙂 I try and ask myself, “What to do the people of God need to sing? What will serve their connection to God today?” Then I try and do that.
Liz Dugger says
We need a “like” button — i would click it for these if it was here 🙂
Eric Dye says
Click the Facebook Like! button on the left-hand side (top). That’ll do it!
Liz Dugger says
That’ll work … !
Eric Dye says
😀
Tyler Hess says
how about “play boring music”? if the congregation is falling asleep to a ballad at 8 a.m. i’m not sure how much worship is going on.
or how about “don’t understand your congregation”…18 year olds probably want to hear something different than 40 year olds or 70 year olds
David Santistevan says
Good perspective, Tyler. This is the biggest challenge of a multi-generational church. Everyone has different preferences. Sounds to me like you guys cater towards the young? Love it.
Tyler Hess says
generally, we do have a younger readership, yes, though I try to cover as many genres as I can without sounding like a fool. I think young people are just as likely to like Hillsong as they are to like Underoath or Switchfoot, whereas the older generations kind of know what they like and pretty much stick to it…and that “it” is pretty much contemporary stuff like Casting Crowns, Third Day or Francesca Battistelli. To actually respond to your comment, though, yes it is tough for everyone in one congregation to appreciate all the elements of a service (sermons, worship, fellowship) when there can be cultural gaps even within a family. I know it is tough for me as a music reviewer to sit through certain kinds of music, but that might just be me haha 🙂
David Santistevan says
I didn’t realize you were a music reviewer. Yes, you of all people would definitely get sick of hearing boring, mediocre music 🙂 One the coolest things I’ve seen is when the older generation appreciates the younger sound – when they realize that our kids are the future. It’s awesome to see the generations worshiping together.
Tyler Hess says
and I didn’t realize that you have your own worship leader blog…consider it added to my bookmarks 🙂
David Santistevan says
Dude, much appreciated. You rock.
Justin Theng says
This is so practical, and so inspired. It applies to other creative fields as well.
David Santistevan says
Thanks Justin. Glad it could help!
Dustin W. Stout says
Awesome job David!
David Santistevan says
Thanks so much, Dustin!
Gangai Victor says
Nice…check these out too:
http://goo.gl/kDwp7
http://goo.gl/AvjCV
http://goo.gl/oF8cX
Josh Lange says
Great stuff. I really appreciate number 6. Coming under authority is so important. As a worship leader I’ve found that as I have submitted to the vision of the house I have had more freedom given to me to try different things.
David Santistevan says
Very well said, Josh. Adopting your leader’s vision is so essential. I think that’s why a lot of worship leaders don’t stay in churches very long. They can’t.