Why a MusicArts Mission Movement – By Mark Powers

•August 10, 2011 • Leave a Comment

“Why a MusicArts Mission Movement?” – Mark Powers, SCBC

From the moment I accepted the offer to become Worship & Music Director in the Fall of 2007, I knew that God had something different in store for me to do.  Publishing nice brochures, planning training events and camps, and resourcing our 2100 SC Baptist churches is a great job and lots of fun.  But I sensed that there was something more that God wanted from me in my new leadership position.  After 28 years as a full-time worship leader in SC churches and now as Worship & Music Director, I assumed that the task ahead would be all about worship.  I was only partially right.

In the spring of 2010, while sick at home with bronchitis, God distinctly spoke to me and revealed a plan for our worship ministries to go beyond weekly worship and pour out our giftedness into our communities.  (No, it was not the medicine talking!)

The evangelical church has been in a worship revolution for the past 30 years or so, and that has been much needed.  In the process, however, we have often made worship an end-in-itself.  But God calls His church to fulfill Jesus’ Great Commission as our primary goal.  So worship rightfully should be a means to igniting us to the mission of winning the world and making disciples for Christ.

After much prayer and consulting with wise counselors, I shaped the vision and began to share it. In August 2010, we announced the MusicArts Mission Movement (M3) at the SC Worship Summit at White Oak.  The following month, 6 young worship leaders and two ministry coaches joined me to shape the movement.  Meeting monthly in the context of Leaders Edge training, we joined in prayer and study and visioning together.  Along the way, God brought clarity as well as other people and organizations to join us as partners.

In December, I had the privilege of presenting the M3 concept to fellow State Music Directors at the Lifeway Summit in Nashville and then taught a class about it at the Baptist Church Music Conference in June, 2011 in Houston.  Those who hear about the movement seem very receptive because they know that 80% of our Southern Baptist Churches are plateau’d or dying.  Across the American church, there has been a cry for the church to become missional again in all it does.  Yet many churches remain complacent and self-centered.  But in SC, all those partnering in the M3 effort are ready to take action and get to work.

In September 2011, our office is starting four M3 Regional Resource Groups which will meet monthly  for worship leaders to study, pray, receive resources, and plan ways to lead their worship teams to impact their communities for Christ.  Stay tuned to this blog for more information.  Or e-mail me at markpowers@scbaptist.org to enquire about the sign-up process for a Regional Resource Group near you.  Let’s show the rest of the USA how to follow Christ into the world using worship arts and serving our communities.

 

It’s All Yours! (Steven Curtis Chapman)

•August 10, 2011 • Leave a Comment

This song/video by Steven Curtis Chapman is inspirational to motivate a passion about missions because it is all Yours, God!  Claim your city for God!

Love Loud Lancaster (Video Upoaded by Jason Burley)

•August 9, 2011 • Leave a Comment

Ministers of Music Jason Burley and Adam Langley collaborate to form a Community Choir and bring Christian music to their great city. Love Loud was a contemporary gospel concert that included over 100 singers from 6-7 churches in the area and a 20 piece orchestra. The music was fabulous, and it was such a great and fun way for our churches to share God’s love in the community. Jason and Adam put in many hours of planning, promoting, and rehearsing. Love Loud coincided with the Red Rose Festival.

The WC – By Rick McCollum

•August 8, 2011 • Leave a Comment

THE WC

I call it the “WC.” That does not stand for water closet (which is the term used in England for rest room).  Instead, it stands for “Worship Choir.”  On that “WC” file at my church, I have all kinds of information, including the list of every person who has ever sung in our choir, any person who has indicated they might be interested in singing with us and all people who have been submitted as prospects for our choir.  With one look at this list, I can tell you which service they attend, whether or not they are active, their vocal part, which folder and robe they use, their birthday, their height, their mailing address, email address, phone numbers, the last time I contacted them, how I made that contact, when to make the next contact and any other pertinent comments about them.

Yes, my choir members know that I have this tool and that I use it.  In fact, I get teased about knowing everything about them, including their blood type (I don’t really know that information).  Yet, this tool has proven helpful in activating musicians. Even those who are inactive from ministry for years get contacts.  Some of these include people who have stopped coming to church altogether.  Not too long ago, a baritone in my choir who had become inactive and not darkened the church doors in nearly ten years, rejoined our choir specifically because of my persistent contacts.  He probably would have become “out of sight, out of mind” if not for this WC tool to keep me reminded.

This is a tool I developed for myself three decades ago and it is still serving me well. What started out as a card file became a Word document and now is an Excel file. It could probably serve as my “home page” for my computer because it is the most used file on my network. Why is that?  It is because people are the reason for ministry.  With the best music in the world, still neither ministry nor missions can come to life without the people.  More than that, I see each person as gifted and called to be used by God.  Therefore, when a person who is gifted tells me “no,” I take that as a “not now.”  People do go through seasons of life when they, perhaps because of medical or personal issues, cannot get activated into the church music ministry.  However, even if they cannot see their calling, it is my duty to make sure they are reminded throughout their life of that giftedness and the calling to use it for the kingdom.

 Activation is the starting place for a lifetime of music missions.  Using a tool like the WC in my ministry keeps me reminded of the name of every person that I have sensed God is calling to activate their giftedness. I pray for them and contact them. I seek them out and give them reminders. I challenge them and offer them ways to be equipped.  The WC is just a tool, but it is a great one for me and one of the biggest ways that I can stay focused on people instead of focused on the mechanics of the music ministry. It is also the first step of activating individuals to a lifetime of being on mission with music.

 

Global Missions Opportunities (Global Missions Project, Kennesaw, Georgia)

•August 8, 2011 • Leave a Comment

Join Global Missions Project and take the music of God around the world.

Reggie McNeal Interviewed: Defining Missional (Video by Leadership Network)

•August 7, 2011 • Leave a Comment

One of today’s missional movement guys is interviewed on what it all means. In this video, Eric Swanson interviews Reggie McNeal about missional churches while Keith Young scribes.

50 Ways to Mobilize Musicianaries in Your Church – By Rick McCollum

•August 6, 2011 • Leave a Comment

50 WAYS TO MOBILIZE THE “MUSICIANARIES” IN YOUR CHURCH

Here are examples of how church music groups can use music to be on mission for Christ. Groups may include vocal or instrumental choirs or ensembles.

  1. Present a Christmas, Easter or Patriotic musical, pageant or play for the community.
  2. Perform at a nursing home, assisted living facility or retirement center.
  3. Perform the national anthem at a local ball game.
  4. Perform at the mall or shopping center.
  5. Go door-to-door Christmas caroling.
  6. Perform at the hospital or prison.
  7. Perform at the airport, subway or bus station.
  8. Perform at a civic club or organization.
  9. Perform on a float or marching in a Christmas, Thanksgiving, New Years, Veteran’s Day or town festival parade.
  10. Provide pre-performance music at a local show or theater.
  11. Perform on television or radio.
  12. Record an album for sale or give-away.
  13. Record a YouTube or website video.
  14. Record a jingle for a radio station or advertisement.
  15. Go on tour around the state, nation or internationally.
  16. Provide “singing valentines” or “singing telegrams.”
  17. Provide music for a birthday, anniversary or retirement party.
  18. Perform for a book signing, ribbon cutting or grand opening.
  19. Perform at the Court House, State House or White House.
  20. Perform at a campground or state park.
  21. Perform at the beach, lake or on a boat.
  22. Wear uniforms or alike-shirts when traveling as a group.
  23. Travel on buses that have the name of the group and/or destination on the bus.
  24. Present a “mob” extemporaneous music performance for the public.
  25. Perform at a fair or carnival.
  26. Perform at a fashion show or a beauty pageant.
  27. Perform at a school.
  28. Present an outdoor drive-by Christmas or Easter event.
  29. Enter your music group in a talent show.
  30. Involve your music group in a “geo-cache” treasure hunt that promotes with your upcoming music presentation.
  31. Place personal salvation testimonies of members of the music group on your website.
  32. Take your major musical event and perform it in a large secular venue (i.e. Center for the Arts)
  33. Provide personal evangelism cards for members of your music group.
  34. Take on a service project and offer a music selection at the conclusion of the work time together.
  35. Have your music group start or sponsor a scholarship for a student to major in Christian music in college.
  36. Create a Facebook page for the group and then members of the group post that page on their Facebook page for others to see.
  37. Conduct an old fashioned singing and watermelon cutting at a neighborhood park.
  38. Provide a music camp for children in the community.
  39. Develop a Music School or Academy.
  40. Provide a special concert as part of the local town festival or celebration.
  41. Learn music in a new language (Spanish, French, Sign Language, etc.) and take your music group to sing for that culture in your city.
  42. Provide music (such as student worship band) for student lunch club for those allowed off campus during school lunch break.
  43. Provide free simple instruments (i.e. kazoos) to a multi-housing community and teach individuals, one-on-one, songs to play.
  44. Take your band and play pep songs at the local football game for a team that has no band.
  45. Provide blue grass music at a local barbecue restaurant.
  46. Provide your music groups with promotional wrist bands, key chains, etc. as conversation starters.
  47. Provide music at a vacation spot (i.e. Biltmore Home, Caraway Gardens, Alabama Theater, etc.).
  48. Sponsor an annual Christmas Tree Lighting for the city, using your music ministry.
  49. Give your group effective witnessing tracks that they can share with others such as the Million Dollar Bill.
  50. Present a Christmas Eve or Thanksgiving Eve Community service.

50 Ways to Activate the Musicianary in You – By Rick McCollum

•July 29, 2011 • Leave a Comment

50 WAYS TO ACTIVATE THE “MUSICIANARY” IN YOU

Here are examples of how one person can use music to be on mission for Christ.

  1. Invite someone to sing with you in the church choir.
  2. Get involved with the local community choir and casually share with members of the group about your personal relationship with Jesus Christ.
  3. Have your radio tuned to a local Christian radio station when traveling in the car.
  4. Get involved in local community theater and build relationships that will lead to a witness.
  5. Get involved or form your own chapter of quartet music such as Sweet Adeline or Barbershop group and make connections with musicians that lead to sharing your faith.
  6. Sing or play music as background or performance music for a local restaurant or bookstore.
  7. If you are a music teacher, use hymns, contemporary Christian music or sacred songs to instruct your students.
  8. Gather the family and friends around the piano or guitar for some fun singing of Christian songs at the end of the day.
  9. Place a hymnal on your piano for conversation starter.
  10. Invite someone from your school band to join the church orchestra.
  11. Talk with the musicians who provide street music or restaurant music and ask them about their spiritual journey and if they have ever played in church.
  12. Listen to group singing (in a church congregation, karaoke, etc.) and ask those who sing well to consider joining the church choir.
  13. Sing the national anthem at the local ball game. Others will speak to you about your singing – then is the time to share your testimony.
  14. Volunteer to sing or play music at the local nursing home or retirement center.
  15. Wear your church shirt or choir logo lapel or tie pin as a conversation starter.
  16. Send email or Facebook links to great Christian music to your friends.
  17. Learn a new language – foreign language or sign language, for example – and sing a song using that new language to connect with people of different languages about the Lord.
  18. Write a letter to the editor of your local newspaper, sharing your faith story, citing the power of music.
  19. Purchase a Christian music CD for someone’s birthday or Christmas gift.
  20. Share your music in the local hospital or contact a chaplain to provide a concert for those in prison.
  21. Volunteer to play “charge” on your trumpet for a local high school football team that does not have a band.
  22. Go sing for the homebound in your church; that might lead to singing for homebound persons who are outside the church.
  23. Become a street musician of Christian music.
  24. Go door to door and invite your neighbors to a Christian music concert at your church.
  25. Attend alumni events at your high school and/or college and volunteer to sing or play at their event.
  26. Place a Christian music theme on your cell phone as a ringtone.
  27. Place Christian music on your cell phone or business phone as people wait to be connected with the call.
  28. Post scripture about music in the Bible on social media such as Facebook.
  29. Post Youtube or Godtube videos on Facebook.
  30. Find local Christian music events and support them with your prayers and attendance.
  31. Encourage your children and neighborhood children to participate in your church’s children’s choir program.
  32. Send notes of encouragement and congratulations to students who are in a Christian musical or production, encouraging them to continue to participate in Christian music.
  33. Whistle or hum a Christian song, anytime, anywhere.
  34. Hang artwork in your home that includes lyrics of a Christian song.
  35. If auditioning for a talent show, use a Christian song.
  36. Sing a Christian song to your newborn baby in the hospital.
  37. You can be a witness when your wedding music honors God.
  38. You can be a witness when your funeral music honors God.
  39. Hang a poster of an upcoming Christian music concert in a local business.
  40. Volunteer to help in your school’s music program and share your Christian witness as you work.
  41. Volunteer to be the chaplain for the local school choir, band or orchestra.
  42. Buy a musical toy that plays Christian music for a child or baby for their birthday.
  43. Produce a Christian music album and give a concert in a non-church setting.
  44. Walk into a piano store and start playing Christian music.
  45. Tell your waitress or waiter that you are a Christian musician and would like to know if they have any prayer requests.
  46. Produce your own business or calling-cards that include a witness such as a scripture verse or logo about Christian music.
  47. Become known as a collector of certain types of Christian music memorabilia such as a hymnal collector, Christian album collector, etc. so you can ask others to look for those items for you as they shop.
  48. Provide a community book study in your home on a Christian music book.
  49. Compose music that yields a Christian witness.
  50. When sitting on a plane or bus, pull out a Christian music book or magazine as a conversation starter.

Being Missional (Video by Missional Multiplication Movement)

•July 21, 2011 • Leave a Comment

This video presents a challenge and a solution for the missional movement.

Providing Resources: Guitar/Hymnals – By Rick McCollum

•July 20, 2011 • Leave a Comment

Providing Resources: Guitar/Hymnals

One way that we can be on mission for the Lord is to provide resources for others to carry out the mission to which they are called.  Recently, my daughter was on a mission trip with our church to Honduras.  Our music ministry purchased a used but quality guitar for her to take and use on the trip.  Prior to the trip, I told her that if she was led to do so, she could leave the guitar as a gift from our music ministry to further the mission effort there.  My daughter was able to teach the Honduras interpreter how to play the guitar.  At the conclusion of the week, she gave this young 16-year-old interpreter the guitar as a gift to use and to continue the mission effort in Honduras.  God gave us a vision prior to the mission trip that there might be a need and sure enough, there was.

 I recently found a new church (and 3 new church starts) in North Bennington, Vermont that are in need of hymnals. Our church purchased the new Baptist Hymnals for our congregation and we had many older hymnals that had been taken from the pew and packed up in our music room. I found out that Capstone Baptist Church in North Bennington, Vermont was looking for just such hymnals.  While talking with their pastor, we determined that we will indeed send hymnals to cover their need and the three other new churches that are in the planning stages in that community. They are planning to build a new Christian college in that area, also, so many more mission needs will be presented in the future.  This might be just the start of a new relationship.

 A guitar is being used to provide Christian music in Honduras. Pews will soon be filled with hymnals in Vermont. Providing resources is an exciting part of worshipers on mission.