Maranatha! Come Lord Jesus: Advent Longing for Jesus' Second Coming
This service of Lessons and Carols from 2015 eagerly anticipates Christ's second coming with Christ-centered hope.
Expand Your Church’s Bilingual Music Repertoire
Maybe there are people in your church or neighborhood whose first language is different than yours. Singing simple songs in their language is a fantastic way to welcome them in worship.
Copyright Information, Clearing up the Confusion
Churches are constantly navigating the copyright maze when they use music, other print resources, and videos. Each medium has slightly different laws regulating it.
Charsie Randolph Sawyer on Healthy Gospel Singing
Having a good voice isn’t enough to sing gospel music well and lead people into worship. This ministry requires health in body, mind and spirit.
Reconciliation, Story Telling, and Music
This workshop looks at how the church can lead by example in diversity and reconciliation through storytelling and music.
Christian Weddings Worth Remembering
Making weddings more like worship infuses them with sparkle and meaning that last far beyond memories of who wore what.
Larry Visser on Wedding Music
Here is guidance on what to consider when choosing wedding music for the prelude, procession, ceremony, recession and postlude.
African American 91ÁÔÆæ Treasures
Six church musicians and scholars explain why treasures and challenges in African American worship traditions apply to churches in any cultural context.
Songwriting from the Inside - Friday
Every week congregations sing songs old and new, but rarely think about where they come from.
Songwriting from the Inside - Saturday
Every week congregations sing songs old and new, but rarely think about where they come from.
Hip Hop and 91ÁÔÆæ: Dealing with the Dilemma
Why is the church still wrestling with whether to engage or not engage Hip Hop Culture, particularly Hip Hop created and performed by Christian artists? Is there such a thing as Christian Hip Hop?
Becoming Instruments of God: Singing and 91ÁÔÆæ
How can we, as musicians and lay and ordained ministers, cultivate our bodies as active instruments of God?