......because no one's perfect, 'cept Gawd.
From Worshipideas.com
WorshipIdea: Preparation Makes Perfect
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by Don Chapman
I received an email a few weeks ago from a woman who complained that my WorshipIdeas emails were worthless to her because I often talk about what I'm doing at Brookwood Church as well as what other megachurches are doing. Since she was in a tiny church she assumed nothing applied to her.
If you've read my emails for any length of time you know I started writing them back in 2002 when I was the worship director at a church of around 200 that set up each week in a public elementary school cafeteria.
I was watching our Brookwood Christmas Eve and Easter services online the other day and had to chuckle - what I'm doing now at Brookwood is nearly exactly what I did in a church of 200 - the same music and order of service - except now I'm doing it for 10,000 people and have more help.
Before I did everything myself - writing and charting, making notebooks, scheduling and running rehearsals, selecting music, creating the PowerPoint slides - because we simply didn't have the staff at a small church to help me. At one point I didn't miss a single Sunday over a 2 year period (this is all a recipe for burnout, by the way!) One difference, and the luxury of being in a larger church, is that there are people to do each of these jobs.
But besides the staffing issues, the worship's basically the same. The basics of a good worship program are the same for large and small churches. For instance:
1. Plan ahead. I can't believe it when I hear of worship teams that meet thirty minutes before the service and throw together a song set.
The more you plan, the more people can be involved. Flying by the seat of your pants (or skirt) can often result in a musical train wreck. Multiple train wrecks tend to make your congregation think you don't know what you're doing. If the service isn't worth planning, maybe it isn't worth attending.
Planning ahead gives you time to work out your praise set like a puzzle, fitting songs together in a perfect flow. It also makes your rehearsals more efficient.
Use one of the many online planning websites to schedule your worship team. Have your songs charted and online so your musicians can at least be familiar with the music before rehearsal.