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Should The Church Accountant Be The One Called The "Worship Pastor"?
By Dan Kimball

The title of this blog post and question that I ask is not one I am totally serious about - and not really suggesting we actually do call the accountant the worship pastor. But I do have the question of how we have overwhelmingly defined "worship" to primarily be music and singing.

I have become very aware of the power of words—and the power of defining words. In the Christian culture we have created I don't believe we can ever assume anymore when we say the terms "gospel", "Jesus", "salvation", "inspired", "evangelical", "evangelism", "missional" etc. we all mean the same thing. I have learned (and sometimes the hard way) that you need to be asking definitions of terms with specific meaning to understand how someone else uses a term that may differ from your definition.

One of these terms is "worship".

If you were to ask most teenagers and young adults what comes to their minds when they hear the word "worship" it will likely be singing. I understand why they do, as we have pretty much defined worship to them over the past 20 years or more as worship = singing. Now it is totally true that we worship as we sing. But that is only one aspect of worship. We have subtly taught (in my opinion) a reductionist view of worship limiting it primarily to music and singing as what defines the word and practice.

I try to pay attention to reasons why we define worship mainly as music these days. And it is not too difficult to discover. What do we call the person in a church who leads the band or singing? It is normally the "worship pastor" or "worship leader". When our music leaders say, "Let's now worship," that is when the singing begins. When a sermon begins or when the offering is received we often don't say ""Let's now worship" like we do when the singing starts. When we think of Sunday gatherings of the church and when does worship happen, we generally think of the singing - not the teaching or the sacrifice of people who are worshiping by volunteering time in the children's ministry or other things happening. You look the Christian albums and as we call them "Best of Worship" or "Worship Greatest Hits" that reinforce the idea that music is the primary—or even only—form of worship. I just read on a Facebook post how a group was bringing in a guest person to "lead worship" and of course this guest person was a musician.We constantly, constantly reinforce by how we use that word casually all the time that it primarily means music and singing.

I recently attended a college-age gathering, and after the time of musical worship ended (I personally try to always say "musical worship" ), the person up front who announced that the offering would be taken referred to it as a time of sacrifice as we give our finances as an act of worship. The word sacrifice really stood out to me as being defined with worship.

I also fully am aware that there are times when "worship" occurred without any actual physical sacrifice. but when you study the whole of the Bible, you will see that worship so often involved the sacrifice of something. Romans 12:1-2, after the first 11 chapters teach on the act of Jesus and His sacrifice for us, tells us to "offer our bodies as living sacrifices." This kind of sacrifice includes all areas of our lives, and it is costly. We choose to refrain from something we may otherwise want to but is could be sin, so we sacrifice aligning ourselves our ways to God's ways. The Old Testament was filled with times of coming to worship and sacrificing something. Generally something that was costly with animals or grains - as it showed that worship was a sacrifice of something worth something to the worshiper, but offers it back to God who owns everything anyway. You read in 2 Samuel 24:24 "I will not offer burnt offerings to the Lord my God that cost me nothing."

What is intriguing is that as we primarily define worship as singing, in terms of sacrifice - singing doesn't cost us too much. We mentally and emotionally bring ascent to our thoughts as we sing and focus on God. But we aren't really sacrificing something. Are we? Maybe I am wrong and would love to hear other thoughts. But it is pretty easy to come into a room and sit and then "worship" by singing (which is worship). I am super glad in our church we have worship times of singing. So I am not saying at all that I don't thoroughly believe we worship in major ways as we sing. But what I am saying is that worship through singing doesn't involve much sacrifice or cost us. It is probably one of the least sacrificial ways we do worship. Worship it is of course when we sing. But I can't say it is too much sacrificial worship.

As you look at sacrificial worship, in today's world what are the two most sacrificial things that do cost us something as we worship? It seems to be our time and most of all, our finances.

At the college-age gathering I attended, I watched the bags being passed around for the offering, and maybe one out of every 20 people put anything at all in the offering bags. I fully understand that people give online, and people may give bi-weekly or monthly, so this isn't an accurate representation of how much actually was given that morning. Still, this interesting to watch response to the request for financial sacrifice served to illustrate how easy it is for us to worship God when all that is required is singing a few songs, and how difficult it is for us to worship God by giving financially or giving up some of our precious time.

In hyperbole way, I have been thinking about why we use the title of "worship pastor" or "worship leader" to designate the person who leads an area of worship that doesn't cost us to much to participate in with our singing songs. So why don't we switch the title to the person who does lead or oversee the area that people generally sacrifice the most - is finances - so shouldn't the title of "worship pastor" or "worship leader" be the person who oversees the finances of the church? Usually the church accountant. Isn't that person the one who truly oversees the most sacrificial worship of the people of the church, not the person who leads the music when people sing?

Now in our church, we don't do this. Our bookkeeper is called the bookkeeper. It would be confusing calling the accountant the "worship leader". We actually try not to use too many titles for people and on our bulletin we don't even distinguish between paid staff and key volunteer leaders in our church leading major areas of ministry.

But I am curious about whether anyone also has thought of this? Whether we unintentionally have reduced the power and true meaning of the word worship by generally assigning the title to the person who leads the music? Have we incorrectly and unintentionally taught youth, young adults to think of worship primarily as singing by how we title roles and use the term? Try listening in your church gatherings to how the word is used during the gathering. I know in our church we try our best to always say what aspect of worship we are doing. "Let's now worship God as we sing" "We are now receiving our sacrificial worship of giving finances" etc. Even on our actual offering envelope it says "Sacrificial Worship" instead of just giving or offering. Try paying attention to how you generally see the word "worship" used in the Christian world in general. It is fascinating. Words matter. Definitions matter.

Dan is on staff at Vintage Faith Church, a church in Santa Cruz, CA planted in 2004. Husband of Becky :: father of Katie and Claire. Author of the books: They Like Jesus, But Not The Church, The Emerging Church, Emerging Worship, Listening to the Beliefs of Emerging Churches, and many more. Check him out!

http://www.dankimball.com
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7 Comments »

  1. Wow - timely for me to read this!

    This weekend we are in our 3rd weekend in ta Worship series.  Main focus and purpose is to teach that worship is not singing!  It was kicked off by Rick Muchow from Saddleback - last weekend one of our music staff taught and this weekend is our Director of Spiritual Maturity who also happens to be over our finances!  He has done the announcements each weekend and has purposefully put scripture and explanation in his announcements pertaining to ‘giving as worship’

    Thanks for sharing - I will be passing this on to our worship-finacial guy!

    Comment by Lori Biddle - Aug 10, 2011 @ 06:18 AM

  2. Thank you for this! Over the past year, we have been really emphasizing that worship is all-encompassing. It is the prayers, the fellowship time, the offering, the message, and the invitation. What we have done in our bulletin to reinforce that is to use the following titles.

    Worship through Praise
    Worship through Prayer
    Worship through Song
    Worship through Giving
    Worship through God’s Word
    Worship through Response

    By doing this, it has made us more aware of the worship service as a whole and not just the “singing’ part.

    Thanks for sharing!

    Comment by Chris Justice - Aug 10, 2011 @ 11:38 AM

  3. This is great! Such a fresh perspective on the topic.
    As one of the ‘worship leaders’ at our church I will be passing this on
    Thank you

    Comment by Pauline Young - Aug 10, 2011 @ 11:51 AM

  4. I have thought of this, Dan. The root of worship is sacrifice, going all the way back to Cain and Able. The original sin was a worship war because one was accepted and the other not. From then on worship is centered on sacrifice.

    Should still be, but now instead of us sacrificing livestock and produce we gather around the table to commemorate and give thanks for the ultimate once-for-all sacrifice through Jesus Christ. This is why I think the Eucharist, or Holy Communion should be featured as a central component of worship and not occasionally tacked on the end.

    Now our worship is becoming a living sacrifice: holy, acceptable to God, our reasonable worship.

    My two cents.

    Comment by David Allison - Aug 10, 2011 @ 12:52 PM

  5. yep… i dig these types of discussions. i think there is so much in our lives - in our language, in our meetings, in our actions - that has become tradition that we don’t even consider the meaning or purpose or validity of.

    for me, if worship is about giving reverence or adoration or devotion… if it’s about demonstrating that something or someone is worthy of time/attention/sacrifice/etc., then worship is all of life. everything is worship, and it’s no longer about what i’m doing to worship - it’s instead about who or what i’m worshiping in each moment. in everything i do, what/who i am demonstrating has ultimate value?

    Comment by jon simpson - Aug 10, 2011 @ 01:30 PM

  6. The revelation of sacrifice permeates the Scriptures: in the Garden of Eden when God sacrificed an animal to clothe Adam and Eve, Abraham on the mountain in Moriah, the redeeming of the firstborn of the Israelites, the Sanctuary; all prefiguring the ultimate revelation . . . Christ.  Is worship the sacrifice of body, finances, time, resources, or whatever is precious to us? 

    Sacrifice was the shadow of the true revelation that would be demonstrated by Christ.  Christ in His birth, life, death and resurrection demonstrated what sacrifice could not reveal because sacrifice, like human works, does not bring salvation.  Only surrender, even the surrender of the will to God acknowledges that man is nothing and God is all in all.  It is when we surrender and no longer assert our independent will that the Lord may dwell in us and be a spring of life.

    Yes, we have semantically misrepresented worship.  Furthermore we have rendered worship as the work of man not the work of God.  In absolute surrender what comes forth from us is no longer us but the Spirit of God in us, fulfilling the Gospel prayer and promise of our Lord . . . that we are one with Him and that we the church are one together.

    So will tossing our cash into the offering plate bring us to worship and communion with God?  I do not think so, intimacy with God costs so much more than that.  It costs everything you are; which in true reality is nothing until He who is beyond measure abides in you.

    Comment by David de la Vega - Aug 12, 2011 @ 11:03 AM

  7. he worship titles should not be given to everyone. Only few people are true for this. Such ideas improve the worship and god will listen our prayer.

    Comment by Accountants Limerick - Oct 07, 2011 @ 03:30 AM

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