Worship Tools

15
Sep
An empty stage with instruments

Before The First Chord: Why The First 30 Seconds Of Worship Matter

If the early worship moments are intentional, steady, and grounded, they open a door for people to breathe, to lift their eyes, to believe: “God is here, and I am invited.”
2 min read
06
Sep
A praying worshipper

A Guided Prayer for Your Worship Service This Weekend

Guided prayers create space where the whole congregation can participate in intercession. Use this as a moment of intercession in your gathering this weekend.
2 min read
02
Sep
A man kneeling behind a worshipping crowd

The Discipleship Gap In Worship

Worship can stir our hearts… but does it always shape our lives? This is the discipleship gap: the distance between what we feel in the service and how we live in the week ahead.
2 min read
28
Aug
5 Ways to Cultivate the Prophetic in your Worship Set

5 Ways to Cultivate the Prophetic in your Worship Set

What does making room for prophetic voices in worship actually look like in practice? Here's 5 practical tips to help cultivate the prophetic in your next worship set - and beyond.
1 min read
26
Aug
Resources for Lead Pastors

Lead with wonder.

Elevate your leadership with practical, spiritually rich resources designed to transform your leadership and draw your congregation into awe and wonder.
5 min read
26
Aug
Resources for Whole Churches

Lead Your Church Into Awe.

Whether you're looking for a fresh fall series, a pre-Easter lead-in, or a full-church reset, 40 Days to Awe will help your people encounter God not just with their minds—but with their hearts, souls, and imagination.
6 min read
21
Jul
A family worshipping together

One Room, One Voice: 5 Simple Ways to Cultivate Intergenerational Worship

There’s something sacred about a room full of voices across generations — from restless toddlers to faithful octogenarians — all lifting
2 min read
20
Jul
Hands raised in heartfelt worship

The hidden gift of repetition in worship

Why singing the same thing over and over isn’t lazy—it’s formational. You’ve probably heard the critique:
1 min read