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By Brent Lacy
In most small churches, worship planning happens on Saturday night. The pastor picks a few songs, the worship leader finds out what they are on Sunday morning, and everyone hopes it comes together.
It usually does. But it does not have to be that way. A simple weekly planning system produces better worship with less stress. Here is how to build one.
The Foundation: A Preaching Calendar
Worship planning starts with the preaching calendar. When you know what you are preaching three months in advance, you can plan worship that reinforces the sermon theme. Songs, Scripture readings, and prayers can all point in the same direction.
If you do not have a preaching calendar, start there. See the Sermon Prep for Bi-Vocational Pastors guide for a simple system.
The Weekly Planning Process
Once you have a preaching calendar, worship planning becomes a weekly rhythm rather than a weekly scramble.
Monday or Tuesday: Identify the theme.
What is the sermon about? What is the main truth you want the congregation to encounter this Sunday? Write it in one sentence. This is the theme that will shape every element of the service.
Wednesday: Choose the songs.
Select three to five songs that connect to the theme. At least two should be songs the congregation knows well. One can be newer. Check that the keys are singable and the tempos are appropriate for your worship team.
Thursday: Plan the full order of service.
Write out the complete order of service: welcome, songs, Scripture reading, offering, sermon, response, benediction. Note any transitions, announcements, or special elements. Send the order of service to the worship team.
Friday: Confirm logistics.
Confirm that all volunteers are in place. Confirm that any special elements (communion, baptism, guest speaker) are prepared. Confirm that the sound system and any technology are ready.
Saturday: Rest.
Do not plan worship on Saturday. If you have done the work earlier in the week, Saturday should be a day of rest and preparation, not scrambling.
Elements of a Complete Worship Service
A complete worship service in a small church typically includes these elements. Not all of them every week, but most of them most weeks.
- Welcome and announcements. Brief. Three items maximum. Save the rest for the bulletin or email.
- Opening worship. Two to three songs that prepare the congregation to encounter God.
- Scripture reading. A passage that connects to the sermon theme. Read it well. Slowly. With meaning.
- Pastoral prayer. A prayer that brings the congregation’s needs and the world’s needs before God.
- Offering. A brief word about why giving matters, then receive the offering.
- Sermon. The central act of worship. The Word proclaimed.
- Response. A song, a time of prayer, or an invitation that gives the congregation an opportunity to respond to what they have heard.
- Benediction. A blessing that sends the congregation into the week.
Seasonal Planning
The church calendar provides a natural structure for worship planning. Advent, Christmas, Epiphany, Lent, Holy Week, Easter, Pentecost. Even churches that do not follow a formal liturgical calendar can benefit from planning worship around these seasons.
Seasonal planning allows you to build toward significant moments rather than treating every Sunday as equally important. It also helps the congregation experience the full story of Scripture over the course of the year.
Free Resource: Church Leadership Resources
MinistryPlace offers free church leadership guides, worship planning tools, 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.
Ready for more? Read the next article.
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