Worship Musician July 2020 | Page 44

LEADERSHIP BUILDING HEALTHY TEAM ROTATIONS - YOU CAN DO IT (PART 1 OF 3) | Brian Fuller What if I told you that I had the solution to all of your ministry problems? What if I told you that the majority of your team and volunteer issues are stemming from one very common problem that you could probably fix within the next 6 to 12 months? What if I told you that you could raise team morale, create a more fun and more engaging musical environment, have your team show up on time, including your drummer, already knowing the music and begging you to schedule them more? Sound too good to be true? Well Ok, maybe that’s a stretch, but I can guarantee that if you implement the practices that I am about to lay out, you will see a lot of the problems that you face weekly get fixed naturally. If you are interested, read on. Ask yourself this one simple question. Is your worship team the same people every Sunday? If you are like most worship leaders I talk to, the common and unfortunate answer is, “Yes”. In a startling amount of churches across the country, the same exact people lead worship every single Sunday. Same band, same singers, same tech crew and same worship pastor. And what’s crazier than that, is that most of them have been serving for years! This is a recipe for burnout and bitterness. You may not have given much thought to this, or you may think it is totally fine, but I would like to challenge your thinking. I would like to present to you, over the course of the next few articles, why this is not the most effective way to do ministry and give you the tools and resources to do something about it. Let me distill this down into one simple thought. There are basically two ways to lead your worship ministry. One, you get enough people to form a band and then you schedule them every week until someone quits, leading to you finding a new person to fill their spot. In the other approach, you spend your time and energy building a healthy culture of weekly team rotations and incorporating new people onto your teams constantly. Seems like a nobrainer to me. Not convinced yet? Read on. Allow me to list the pros and cons of each scenario. SCENARIO 1 – SAME TEAM EVERY WEEK Pros: • You have a loyal and reliable team every Sunday • Everybody knows everybody • You know exactly what to expect from each person • You don’t have to worry about recruiting Cons: • Your people basically work for you, but they don’t get paid • If someone gets sick, you have no back-up • They won’t tell you, but they would love some time off • Your corporate worship experience becomes predictable and complacent • Team members often gain unhealthy entitlement to their roles • People get burned out and instead of talking about it they just leave SCENARIO 2 – MULTIPLE TEAMS ROTATING ON A WEEKLY BASIS Pros: • You are fulfilling God’s call on your life to mobilize more people for His work • New and fresh diverse sounds from different musicians every week • Volunteers have healthy time off to spend attending church with their families • Musicians are more likely to come prepared and on-time • Team members see serving as an opportunity not an obligation • If someone gets sick, you have back-ups to call • You are forced to become a better leader Cons: • It’s more work for you at the beginning • You need to recruit, recruit, recruit • You need to be well organized and more administrative • Transitioning to this scenario requires great vision While this list is not all inclusive, these are some of the most consistent patterns I’ve seen play out over and over again as I mentor and coach people through leading their worship ministry. Let me encourage you with this thought. God does not use people to complete a task, He uses the task to complete people. Serving in ministry is how we grow to be more like Jesus. It’s not just a gig. As such, it is our responsibility to find great spots to serve for as many folks that God sends our way. We have a duty to provide serving opportunities. It goes way beyond just making sure we have a guitar player every Sunday. Stay tuned for Part 2. When we discuss the practical approaches to form your teams including details on scheduling, managing expectations and organizing your planning software. Brian Michael Fuller Brian is a composer, multi-instrumentalist and worship musician who currently serves as the worship leader at several churches in North Carolina. You can hear some of his original production music at www.fullertime.com. www.FullerTime.com 44 July 2020 Subscribe for Free...