By Brent Lacy
In most small churches, the worship leader is a volunteer who also teaches Sunday school, serves on the deacon board, and helps set up chairs before the service.
They did not go to worship school. They were not hired for this role. They said yes when nobody else would.
This guide is for them.
What Worship Leading Actually Is
Worship leading is not performing. It is not showcasing your musical ability. It is not creating an emotional experience.
Worship leading is helping a congregation direct their attention toward God. That is it. Everything else is secondary.
A worship leader who is technically excellent but focused on their own performance is not leading worship. A worship leader who is musically limited but genuinely focused on God and the congregation is.
Song Selection
Song selection is the most important decision a worship leader makes. Here are the principles that matter.
Choose songs the congregation can sing.
A song that is too high, too fast, or too unfamiliar will not be sung. A congregation that is not singing is not worshipping together. Choose songs in a singable key, at a singable tempo, that the congregation knows or can learn quickly.
Balance familiar and new.
A worship set that is entirely familiar songs becomes stale. A worship set that is entirely new songs is exhausting. A good ratio for a small church is three familiar songs to one new song.
Choose songs with theological substance.
The congregation will sing these words dozens of times over the years. Make sure the words are worth singing. Songs that are theologically shallow or emotionally manipulative do not serve the congregation well.
Leading the Congregation
Your job during worship is to lead, not to perform. Here is what that looks like.
- Make eye contact with the congregation. Not constantly, but regularly. You are leading people, not performing for them.
- Sing with conviction. If you do not believe what you are singing, the congregation will not either.
- Keep transitions smooth. Dead air between songs breaks the flow of worship. Know what you are going to say between songs before you say it.
- Do not over-talk. Brief, genuine transitions are better than lengthy explanations. The songs should do most of the work.
- Watch the congregation. Are they singing? Are they engaged? Adjust accordingly.
Working with a Small Team
Most small church worship teams are two to four people: a guitarist or pianist, a vocalist or two, and maybe a drummer. Here is how to make that work well.
- Rehearse weekly. Even one hour of rehearsal per week makes a significant difference. Unrehearsed worship is distracting worship.
- Communicate the set list in advance. Give team members the song list and any key changes at least 48 hours before Sunday.
- Start and end on time. Respect the pastor’s time and the congregation’s attention.
- Pray together before the service. The worship team should pray together before they lead. This is not optional.
Serving the Congregation Across Generations
Small churches often have a wide age range in the congregation. A worship style that serves 25-year-olds may alienate 75-year-olds, and vice versa.
The goal is not to please everyone. The goal is to lead everyone in genuine worship. That requires intentionality.
- Include at least one hymn or traditional song in most worship sets.
- Avoid volume levels that are uncomfortable for older members.
- Choose songs that are theologically rich enough to satisfy mature believers and accessible enough for new ones.
Free Resource: Church Leadership Resources
MinistryPlace offers free church leadership guides and ministry resources for small churches.
MinistryPlace has a full library of free resources for small and rural churches. No email required, no subscription, no catch.