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Posts tagged ‘Easter’

what does Lent look like for you?

Year after year, I’ve been involved in creating opportunities for our church to remember Jesus’ sacrifice and his resurrection.  Sometimes it seems that Easter Sunday comes and we’re trying to create momentum where there isn’t any. Clearly, Easter doesn’t quite have the same cultural machine around it as Christmas. There is much to lament regarding the commercialization of Christmas, but it is true is that our culture has a natural momentum around that time. It is always easier to focus and re-direct momentum than to create it. It seems as if we, in the church, need to help each other experience this season of rebirth to the fullest. It seems as though what’s been missing is an intentional, thoughtful observation of Lent. 

I did not grow up in, nor do I now attend, a church with a strong, orthodox practice of the observation of Lent. I understand the history of the season as it relates to Easter, but I never experienced an intentional tie between Lent and the celebration of Jesus’ resurrection and life.

I’m sure there are people within our church who have been observing Lent in a very disciplined way for years. But we want to invite our church family as a whole to take part in this season in order to walk through the fullness of both the sadness and the joy of this season. 

So, my question… do you take a serious approach to linking Lent to the celebration of Easter? what does Lent look like for you? 

Worship Reflections: Easter 04.12.09

Easter morning worship services all over the world were, I hope, great opportunities to reflect on and celebrate what Jesus’ resurrection means for us… for all of us.  Our service was such a celebration, especially focusing on the fact that Jesus’ resurrection means there can be change and transformation. 

For largely logistical reasons, we decided that our three worship services would be identical this Easter. We’ve taken this approach before, but this is the first Easter we’ve had since moving to our current service configuration, so our journey to this decision was new. I do think it was the right decision.

Setlist & flow (songs in bold are linked to iTunes store) 

Crown Him with Many Crowns: traditional hymn. full orchestra & choir.
welcome, set stage for the morning
Rejoice the Lord is King: traditional hymn. full orchestra & choir.
Happy Day (Tim Hughes): came directly out of ‘Rejoice’.  worship band, orchestra, soloist, 20 voice ensemble.
scripture:  Rom 6 (Message) and Gal 6:14 (NIV) (link between resurrection & our own lives)
The Power of the Cross (Keith Getty, Stuart Townend): orchestra & choir.
I Stand Amazed (How Marvelous): came directly out of “The Power”. 4 vocalists & worship band.
Message: ‘Changed’: the story of Paul.  Ended with an invitation to write down where we land in our level of being ‘changed’ by God, whether it be ‘wish it would happen faster’ or ‘I don’t believe at all’.  
Jesus Paid it All (Grape, Nifong, Hall. Hal Leonard arr.): 4 vocalists, piano, strings.
You are My King (Billy Foote): came directly out of “Jesus Paid”. 4 vocalists, worship band, strings. 
verbal transition to offering
Do it, Lord (Tommy Walker): worship band, orchestra, soloist and 20 voice ensemble.
Closing… Rejoice the Lord is King (1 verse): Led by full orchestra and vocal ensemble.

Behind the scenes

I have the distinct joy of working closely with a very talented, creative, and open-minded choir/orchestra director. (She is also my neighbor and the mommy of 2 of my kids’ very best friends. Suffice it to say, our lives are intertwined.) She usually plans and leads our 8:30 classic service.  She works with the choir (about 35-40 people) for that service, works with a smaller contemporary vocal ensemble (about 20 people), and works with the orchestra.  There is nobody better at sifting through mounds of choir & orchestra music to find really beautiful, powerful arrangements of well-written music.  Plus she values contemporary music as well as more classic styles.

Like I said, it is a joy to work with her.  

For a service plan like this one, we bring our two worlds of music together and collaborate in ways that we usually don’t. Using a full orchestra in worship is…well…amazing!  The power and the beauty of the music is incredible when used well.  But it presents a very different dynamic for our worship band, who are used to working off of chord charts and call-it-as-we-go transitions and repeats.  Most orchestral music that includes a band come with musical score for those players… but that score involves things like notes and staffs and measures and doesn’t include the lyrics. So we created chord charts that match the score exactly to cut down on confusion in rehearsal. The orchestra and band rehearsed separately, then came together a week ahead for a rehearsal without vocalists. On Wednesday night we put everyone together and it seemed to go very smoothly.

Musically, it can be tricky to move between songs that are such different styles.  We chose songs based on their themes, of course, but then considered arrangement & keys. For example, ‘Rejoice the Lord is King’ and ‘Happy Day’ were in the same key.  ’Rejoice’ ended with a big, full orchestral build… ‘lift up your voice rejoice again I say… re… JOICE!’ but on that syllable ‘joice’, the band kicked in with the intro of ‘Happy Day’, and the orchestra soon followed.  Choosing the right songs is important, but it takes great musicians to literally make it ‘sing’.  We are blessed to have such musicians.

What I won’t soon forget

Three full worship services.  Full.
Serving all morning with such a great group of musicians. Seriously. 
The beauty of some of the music… ‘The Power of the Cross”, the strings on “You are My King”, “Do It, Lord”
Singing my heart out with the choir.  I don’t usually get to do that.
Watching my friend conduct.  She is amazing.
The vocal harmonies that happened on ‘I Stand Amazed’.
Faces.  People.
My friend who stood up alone in the back of the room during “Do it Lord”.  Made me cry.
Speaking of “Do it, Lord”, what an amazing song!!!! 
A message that asked great questions. 


img_01541One little pic…
Took this before third service started, from the stage.  Wish I could have pulled off an effective shot while the orchestra was playing, but… yeah, not really possible as one of the singers. Shows the room filling up, the orchestra seats, etc.

One final point of interest:  because of some complications in our current building process, the ceiling over the back half of the auditorium, including the storage balcony & rear screen visible in this pic, will be torn up for about 3 weeks beginning today.  This also includes our A/V area which is to the right of what you see in the pic.  We managed to stay  ’all dressed up’ for Easter, but starting next Sunday, things are going to look quite different.

This post is a part of Sunday Setlists at Fred McKinnon’s blog.  
Check it out for Easter worship recaps from everywhere!

Easter Sunday part 3: Tech Confessional

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This is the main part of our auditorium sound system. Recoil in horror if you like, but except for an amp rack and the part of the board you’re not seeing in this pic, this is our usual set up.

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This is Betty.

Betty is the personal property of our extremely talented tech director.

Betty came to visit for Easter and, can I just say, she made all things new.

We love Betty.

Easter Sunday part 1: Worship Confessional 03.23.08

For a variety of reasons, we offered three identical services on Easter Sunday, rather than our usual 2 blended & 1 contemporary. My co-director and I had worked hard to find music that would include the various groups & styles of musicians that usually are involved in our worship services: the choir that sings every week in our blended services…. the orchestra that plays once a month and for large events…. the worship bands that play in all services…. the worship vocalists that lead. It was the first time we used orchestra + band as accompaniment for congregational worship songs. With those two groups having such different cultures of operation, it was a bit tricky to navigate. But we figured it out. Read more

Holy Week Journey, content

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Our holy week journey began last night.  I love doing interactives like this, because the impact on people has to do with having conversation with God. Period. No other explanation for it. We’re just providing time, space, and prompts.
The picture above is what my warrior-princess daughter wrote on the worship wall in the first station… her description of Jesus as he entered Jerusalem: Holy and ‘Couragious‘. Love that.
 Here’s a list of our various stations and their basic themes:
‘We Were There: the Journey’

Station 1: the crowd (Jesus enters Jerusalem; worship)
Station 2: Mary Magdalene (acceptance of Jesus’ work in our lives)
Station 3: Judas (idolatry, betrayal, forgiveness)
Station 4: Peter (betrayal, forgiveness)
Station 5: Pilate (self-preservation, justice, righteousness)
Station 6: the crowd (the call for Jesus’ crucifixion; understanding who Jesus really is)
Station 7: the Lord’s Supper (Jesus’ sacrifice)
Station 8: the cross (invitation for all to come to the cross with thoughts, prayers, and confessions from the journey)

Click here for the complete booklet that guides participants through the journey.
we-were-there-booklet-08-version.doc
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