September 09 2008
Leading worship in spiritual and practical balance
Tagged Under : charismatic, church, music, worship
Balanced corporate worship combines two components: spiritual and practical. It is easy and even enticing to over emphasis one to the detriment of the other. In order to insure God is our only object of worship while doing it in a unified, excellent, spirit filled manner we have to walk in balance of these two components. I’ll discuss what happens when we go out of balance on these two points, what the definition of worship and successful worship is in each scenario. This post primarily addresses two extremes as commonly demonstrated in the charismatic church or churches that participate in the larger charismatic worship tradition.
Lean to Practical
Churches that over emphasize practical measures tend to produce a great musical product and a great overall experience but a poor example of God glorifying, spirit filled corporate worship that continues after the music stops. This tends to be very experience based whether participatory or observational and people leave glorifying and remembering more about the production than God. Because of this there’s a feeling that worship can’t occur without the band, in other words the band has become a required mediator in their worship and that is what we call idolatry.
- Worship = What the band does on Sunday mornings and whatever can be consumed by the ears and eyes.
- Successful Worship = How well the band played, if you liked the songs they chose and how cool the videos were. How memorable of an experience it was. Successful worship now becomes a floating target as the bar of excellence and amazing production is continually increased.
Lean to Spiritual
When the spiritual component is over emphasized the quality and musical excellence tends to suffer since the attitude is, “who cares what we sound like as long as God is moving.” While that seems like an admirable thought the reality is what you sound like can be a barrier, distraction and hindrance. So we can’t let that attitude undermine the importance of excellence. If this is your attitude then the question really becomes, why are you playing music at all? If God doesn’t require your excellent music to move then he sure doesn’t require your crappy music to move. The swing is so far away from music mediation that the band absolves themselves of any responsibility. There’s an issue of first fruits and sacrificial worship that stems here but we’ll save that for another day. Sets in this environment start becoming very disorganized and difficult for the congregation to follow and be united in. A lot of spontaneous choruses are sung, which requires a lot of repetition and songs in turn start taking 10 minutes+. These types of sets tend not to fortify the importance of corporate unified worship but instead promote individualistic worship while in the presence of others.
- Worship = Whatever you feel and express through postures: dancing, singing, clapping, crying, raising your hands, kneeling, etc…
- Successful Worship = If room was given for people to express whatever God was doing in them and there was a response emotionally and physically through postures.
How do we find balance between these extremes?
We must realize as worship leaders, both are important. First on the practical side, musical excellence and organization is important. We are to be the instrument of unity in the church’s gathered worship, so yes we have practical responsibilities that are important to the success of gathered, corporate worship. Worship is continuing all week long without your musical assistance, but when the body gathers to meet we do as Colossians 3:16 instructs we lead in the singing of psalms, hymns and spiritual songs. Your physical gifting matters, it’s important, so use it, maintain it and improve it.
Secondly, realize the notes are dead without the Holy Spirit. The only thing that makes our gathered worship worthwhile is the presence of the Holy Spirit. So we should have much reverence, thankfulness and humility because we’ve come together to glorify our Creator, Father, Savior Jesus. So it’s the inevitable outcome that upon viewing God’s mercy and grace that we respond in spirit and truth. There will be dancing, singing, clapping, crying, a full array of emotional response because quite simply the living God is amongst us. That’s an intense emotional experience I’d say. But don’t mistake the fruit as the source, continue to worship the source. This is the great deception that has a foothold in the charismatic church and must be confronted and dealt with candidly in our church bodies.
What does the result look like?
A balanced approach to worship would be a leader grounded in truth, completely reliant upon God’s grace, mercy and Holy Spirit, offering his best sacrifice of praise and leading his team and congregation in unified, redeemed worship of Jesus Christ. A worship leader should work continuously at improving his craft, making sure he’s leading not just songs in excellence but leading the congregation. You have to teach on worship, it’s an absolute must! Here are some questions to ask yourself to see if you’re off balance.
- What circumstances, environments or tools does your congregation need to worship? Correct lighting, just the right combination of songs, etc…
- In what areas does your congregation engage in worship? Spirit, mind, body, soul?
- What determines a successful worship service?
- What role does a successful worship service play in a life of worship?
- Has our worship service become a consumption experience?
In the coming days I will post on how to use this balanced approach in set selection and music. I welcome your comments, disagreements and confessions of unbalance.






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