"And do you now begin to see why Christianity has always said that the devil is a fallen angel? That is not a mere story for the children. It is a real recognition of the fact that evil is a parasite, not an original thing. The powers which enable evil to carry on are powers given it by goodness."

- C.S. Lewis
Worship Leaders Do's and Don'ts

ChurchRelevance combed through a Carlos Whitaker survey on people's gripes about worship leaders and compiled the Top Ten Worship Leader Pet Peeves.

1. Asking the Congregation to do Something (21 responses)
>> Makes us shake hands with the people around us.
>> When a worship leader tells you to lift up your hands, it takes a meaningful personal action and turns it into a obligatory command.
>> Talks like they’re at a high school pep rally, “Let me hear ya!”
>> Asks how everyone is doing. We’re not at a concert, so we’re not going to scream.
>> Tells you what to do and how to worship… to the point where it makes you feel guilty if you don’t conform yourself to her/his understanding of what worship is.
>> I hate it when worship leaders script the worship too much by telling people what to do. I’ve had worship leaders completely distract me from God when they start telling me what to do.

2. Mini-Sermons & Talking (20 responses)
>> Talks between every song.
>> I am distracted when worship leaders start talking about anything that is not directions on what we are about to do.
>> When they repeat the same catch-phrases every week.
>> Breathy speaking between songs.
>> Sermonettes are annoying if too long or common
>> You can tell a mile away when a worship leader is “sharing” because he feels obligated to. It’s always a cheesy or over emotional blurb. When God’s really laid something on a worship leader’s heart, it’s cool. But even then, say it in less than 45 seconds! Don’t meander on for 3 minutes.

3. Not Focusing on God (17 responses)
>> Forget that the audience of worship is God and start making it a performance for those sitting in front of them.
>> When they perform rather than worship themselves.
>> Showing zero emotion, standing still, focusing too much on perfection.
>> Worship leaders who seem really wrapped up in being “cool.”
>> Sometimes you can tell they’re being fake and/or showy.
>> I hate it when the music guy/gal asks the crowd to praise God but soaks it up like they are Bono and the crowd is really praising them.
>> I hate it when worship leaders don’t lead people.

4. Unprofessional (14 responses)
>> Starts service late.
>> Typos on the screen.
>> Talks to the praise band while leading worship instead of using hand signals to tell them what to do.
>> When the leader changes the key of the song and does not tell the rest of the team.
>> Goes out of order or adds another song in the middle of the set
>> When the leader and/or band member turns away from the people to mess with their gear.
>> When the production team on stage are laughing, joking, and gesturing behind the worship leader to the soundboard guys in the transition between worship and the message.

5. Singing (11 responses)
>> Can’t sing very well.
>> Doesn’t know the lyrics.
>> When worship leaders run words together.
>> When they put their own little spin on simple, common words.
>> Repeating the same line in a song 3.6 million times. There’s the Spirit’s leading and then there’s just plain losing people.
>> Our old church’s leader would sing so high that no one could sing along. She provided no harmony for us to pick up. It was to showcase her own voice.

6. Appearance (9 responses)
>> Sing with their eyes closed.
>> When singers act like they are really bored up there.
>> Wears crotch hugging jeans.
>> Looks or sounds seductive.
>> One of our young worship leaders had a really big hicky on his neck a couple of weeks ago.

7. Prayer (8 responses)
>> Inauthentic prayer – too scripted or so random that it doesn’t make sense, or rushed/dragged out to make the prayer fit the interlude.
>> Prays the words of the songs.
>> When they can’t talk or pray appropriately between songs.

8. Bad Transitions (5 responses)
>> Transitions between songs take long time.
>> Allows uncomfortable dead time between songs.
>> When they pray essentially the same prayer at a transition moment.
>> Using the song name as an introduction/transition - “You know I was thinking about how much God has done for me…it really is ‘Amazing Grace’ isn’t it?”

9. Lifestyle (4 responses)
>> When he’s obviously ungodly during practice and throughout life, but turns into a saint on Sunday morning.
>> I hate to see a person who is suppose to be leading worship acting like a jerk before service and then getting up on stage acting like nothing ever happened.
>> As a Pastor, I hate it when the music guy/gal is lazy apart from their 30 minute set on Sundays.

10. Catering to the Congregation (4 responses)
>> When they hold back because they are obviously conscious of what the congregation and/or pastor will think.
>> I hate it when worship leaders/pastors play to people who think the worship somehow revolves around what they like and what makes them feel good when it has absolutely nothing to do with our preferences or likes.
>> Has to risk being a cheerleader because the people that claim to love God exhibit no sense of joy when singing about Him.

What do you think? Agree, disagree?

I've offered my Tips for Worship Leaders previously at GDC.

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Comments on "Worship Leaders Do's and Don'ts":
1. blest - 08/20/2008 2:36 pm CDT

I know there's a lot of this that is dead-on..but some of them to me are awfully picky/perfectionistic. I mean, many comments are there wanting the worship to be genuine..and yet, some of the things that may happen in genuine worship are decried as well.

I am prone to singing with my eyes closed - because I'm severely ADHD and have a hard time focusing on God when I notice everything that's going on in the congregation.

This past Sunday I was drumming with my eyes closed because the Spirit was so present that I was about to cry...


Show joy...but don't be too showy...don't look bored.....but don't make it a performance... Be perfect...but don't be too stressed about being perfect. And hey - NO pressure! ;-)

Let's face it, if each person in the congregation were focusing on worshipping God, he or she wouldn't be nitpicking the leaders quite so much, eh?


(I'm not as cranky as this sounds, by the way, just really tired)

2. Bill - 08/20/2008 2:55 pm CDT

I agree with most of what's in this post, but Blest's comment also resonated pretty well with me (especially the part about nitpicking the leaders).

3. Jared - 08/20/2008 3:50 pm CDT

Yup yup.

4. nhe - 08/20/2008 3:55 pm CDT

Numbers one and two hit home pretty well, and the point about playing the same line 3.6 million times.......but other than that, I think we're crossing the line and expecting too much from our worship leaders.......looking/sounding suggestive is very subjective - someone really doing that isn't going to last long anyway.....agree with Blest overall

5. Shauna - 08/20/2008 5:54 pm CDT

I'm pretty sure that telling the audience to take off their shoes and wave their socks around to the glory of God should be included somewhere in this list.

Can’t sing very well.
This one is more important to me than it probably should be, and I'm not sure what to do about it when it happens (our church has alternating singers on the worship team, and some are very good but one or two cause me to cringe involuntarily). I have felt like Simon Cowell during worship before and feel bad that I can't just ignore it and focus on what I'm singing. But I don't think it's unreasonable to expect a worship leader to be able to carry a tune. (And BTW, singing notes that are merely different from the melody does not a harmony make.) Kind of makes me wish sometimes that we could just chant.

6. Andrew - 08/20/2008 6:00 pm CDT

Having been a worship leader for a time, I agree with almost everything. My problem was always musical perfectionism/truly leading. One year, I was put over a group of kids who didn't respect me or really even understand why they were doing what they were doing (with a few exceptions). My response was the wrong one. I became so wrapped up in getting the music perfect and being well prepared that I lost focus of why I was up there.

A couple of the things I disagreed on: He put a lot of emphasis on what worship leaders do in between songs. I don't know much about the way other churches do things, but many times we were told to say something here or say a prayer there, etc. We were a student band, so the staff was obviously a bit more involved than they would be in adult services, but many times they put us on the spot right before the service and told us to add something in. Some people are naturally good at that. I'm not. I am terribly uncomfortable praying in front of people because my prayers in front of people are nothing like the prayers in the quiet of my room, and I could never quite think of the right thing to say before songs. I was so uncomfortable doing it, that about midway through the year, I let one of the other band members take over that duty, even though I was the "leader". I rarely spoke to the crowd after that. So it's not always our fault. :)

And I don't really know where the singing with the eyes closed thing comes from. A lot of the audience sings with their eyes closed, especially during the slower songs. Why can't the leader? And there is nothing more awkward to me than staring at a blank space in the back of the room. No wait, I take that back. There is nothing more awkward to me than having to scan the audience and having to concentrate on not keeping your eyes on any one person too long. It's so much easier to keep your eyes closed, or at least half closed, and I have trouble seeing how it would hinder somebody's worship, or make it "about you".

Other than that, I thought it was great.

7. Daniel Ross - 08/20/2008 8:27 pm CDT

I agree with Blest, too.

I get to lead in music worship every week and it's things like this list that drive me nuts.

You know what I hate ... (since everybody was so free to share all the things they hated): When people are so picky about everything and think they have all the answers to how a worship leader is supposed to lead (armchair QBs)

I tell the congregation to do things sometimes (like the raising of hands) but not b/c i want an effect. I'm trying to teach our very reserved, German-Catholic background congregation that it's OK to do.

I sing with my eyes closed sometimes b/c i'm focusing on what I'm saying to God.

Geez, God forbid ANY typos ever appear because, you know, I'm better than human.

Feeling a bit snarky, sorry.

8. Milly - 08/20/2008 9:18 pm CDT

Typos on the screen


-Sorry the techs fault-that would be me not my worship minister.

Goes out of order or adds another song in the middle of the set


-it happens and we go with the flow. Those of us in the booth don't mind the scramble.

Blest is right.

Typos and changes happen give us in the booth and the worship minister a break.

9. gretchen from lifenut - 08/21/2008 10:19 am CDT

Heh heh to Daniel's comment. I come from a German Catholic background, and I get what he means. I cannot raise my hands. I raise my heart, my eyes, my voice. My hands stay down.

Our church (non-denom. and mega) isn't big on hand-raising anyway. When the worship leader tells us to raise our hands, only about 10% actually comply. What is hand-raising supposed to demonstrate to God? To others? To ourselves?

10. blest - 08/21/2008 4:39 pm CDT

I'm getting ready to do a post on that very subject, Gretchen. I've been thinking about it a lot - having been converted to a hand-raiser while at that worship conference.

And that's all I say, right now. Cause I really, really need to write that post! ;-)

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