Numbers matter. I know I’m not supposed to say that. But when it comes to corporate worship, they do. The number of singers. The number of instruments. The number of hours put into planning and preparing the worship gathering. The number of dollars spent on the worship space – lighting, sound, décor. And the number of people that fill that space – there’s a difference between a group of 60 and 150. Between 225 and 700. Between a 1000 and 20,000.
But it’s more than quantifiable. There’s also a qualitative difference. At the extreme, think Broadway versus a community theater--both performing the same musical.

However.
Only an idiot would sit in the Renaissance Theater in Mansfield, Ohio and say, “Donny Osmond was a way better Joseph.”

And that comparison is strangling the worship in smaller churches.
Smaller church worship ministries can’t be scale models of larger ministries. The lower attendance isn’t just a difference in quantity--there’s a completely different quality to a small church. And by quality, I don’t mean Kmart versus Macy’s. If we look at Merriam-Webster’s definitions, the Kmart versus Macy’s analogy is the 2nd entry for quality: “degree of excellence; superiority in kind.”
But the first definition of quality is: “peculiar and essential character; nature; an inherent feature.”
The smaller church has a peculiar and essential character that sets it apart from a larger church. It’s inherently different. And that’s neither bad nor good. It just is. And it just needs to be understood.
And that’s what this Small Church/Big Worship series* is about. If you’re part of a smaller church--paid or volunteer, pastor or lay-person, worship leader or team member, I want to help free you from trying to be what you can’t be (right now) and embrace who and what you are (right now). We’ll look traps and diversions that smaller churches fall prey to. We’ll explore some practical ways you can develop and thrive with what you already have, and find ways to grow more. And ultimately, I want to help you leverage your “peculiar and essential quality” to create remarkable times of worship that larger churches could only have in their Technicolor dreams.
*this series will be ongoing - no promises on how often or how much. I have a few thoughts written down, but it will largely take shape as I write and think - and get feedback from you. Please feel free to comment and email your thoughts and challenges.
I'm in :) I'd like to say that for our church of 50-100, we have a solid team of 8 musicians/singers and God sees fit to show up and show off regularly. I like to think we've honed our groove into the best it can be with what we have. Very interested in this series.
ReplyDeleteWe're a small international church (Japanese, English-speakers) of about 30 members. We're just moving from piano+guitar to drum+bass+kybd+guitars structure. Really interested in following this topic. Thanks.
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