Developing A Songwriting Community Through Your Church, Concluded (pt. 4)

November 11, 2008

Writers Mingling Before A Sojourn Songwriting Seminar

Writers Mingling Before A Sojourn Songwriting Seminar

In the previous three articles we looked at reasons for establishing a songwriting community, ways to do that, and how to establish the community through regular workshops and fellowship.  But if your goal is to produce new worship music for your church fellowship, then your songwriting group hasn’t arrived until it’s doing that.  And it’s not going to do that in the most efficient manner until you provide clear direction and lay out a vision.

This can be as simple as saying “We need more songs about the cross” or “we need some good Call to Worship’ songs and some songs of assurance.”  Then you need to communicate how writers should submit songs.  If you have a small church and only a couple writers, this might be an informal process.  Large churches will need to come up with specific procedure, which might look something like this:

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Developing A Songwriting Community Through Your Church, Part Two: The Enemy And The Foundation

September 15, 2008

In part one of this series we laid out a biblical and historical case for encouraging a community approach to songwriting. Of course an exhaustive argument from the Bible alone would probably take a book, because the Bible is replete with proverbs, examples and prophecies relating to community. Isaiah 52:8 says “The voice of your watchmen - they lift up their voice; together they sing for joy” and Proverbs 11:14 tells us “… in abundance of counselors there is victory.”

As we head into the nuts-and-bolts of how to set up a songwriting circle, we must start with an awareness of two things: the enemy and the foundation:

The Enemy

“We have met the enemy, and he is us.” ~ Walt Kelley

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Developing A Songwriting Community Through Your Church, part one

August 6, 2008

“I had tried to visit Woody (Guthrie) regularly… I would usually take the bus there from the Port Authority terminal, make the hour-and-a-half ride and then walk the rest of the half mile up the hill to the hospital, a gloomy and threatening granite building…. Usually I’d play him his songs during the afternoon. Sometimes he’d ask for specific ones–”Rangers Command,” “Do Re Me,” “Dust Bowl Blues,” “Pretty Boy Floyd,” “Tom Joad,”… I knew all those songs and many more.”– Bob Dylan, Chronicles, Vol. 1

What an image: a young, pre-celebrity Bob Dylan traveling 90 minutes one way to trudge up a hill and play a few songs for his dying hero. Many hold Dylan as the archetype for the modern model of the artist: a reclusive rebel, peerless and owing nothing to artists who have come before. The truth is that not only did Dylan feel a heavy gratitude toward his musical forebears and mentors, but he constantly surrounded himself with others in his set, trading notes, swapping tales, helping with gigs.

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