When we moved to The Lake of the Ozark, we found a church that had voted all its officers out of office and wanted to move in a different direction. I had in mind what worship style I wanted, but had to do quite of bit of study to see if the surrounding area would want it. Our worship today is a lighter, softer, simpler way of worship, not just dictated by demographic, but also because other churches were using “my style” of worship and we didn’t want to duplicate. We wanted to be unique.
The first thing that I did was designate money in the budget to hire a worship leader. I interviewed several and came upon with the one that God had placed before us to move our church into an excitable place where people can find God from where they are. We developed a liturgy and a huge repertoire of songs. We started using background tracks and videos and then God provided us with local musicians. Their presence tied us to the heart of the community. Their music reflected local tastes. They were familiar faces to many of our first-time attendees. For many of our people, a homegrown worship band compensated for having an outsider in the pulpit.
Music in church should relate to the local culture, Watch a bunch of Baby Boomers sing the original Christian words to the Drifters "Stand By Me" and you will understand what I hear, they will shed tears while worshiping God to a song by the Beatles they first heard as love-struck teenagers. Build a band that can incorporate local culture into your worship and you will own the loyalty of your community.
We teach our philosophy of worship to the band. Then we release them to function as they feel the Spirit is leading. Teach that person your philosophy. Then let God use him or her to give a unique voice to your congregation.
Many have asked since we are growing, “if we have to start a new service will it be the same or different?” If you are growing a service out of the walls of the worship center, you have a good thing going. Don’t change your worship, remain unique.