Worship Post-Fessional, Sunday October 26


This post is part of Sunday Set Lists over on Fred McKinnon's site.

Well, October is gone--and November stares us straight ahead. We are 6 weeks into this series--about halfway through. Today's topic was Chapter 3: The Conscience. We did a couple of creative elements in the service ( a flash video that I made using SWISHMAX and the pictures came from Stock Exhange) and a skit that we wrote to intro the sermon (with the Youth Minister play the good voice and the Children's Minister play the bad voice) Sorry there's no audio--for copyright purposes I couldn't include it.

Here's the set:
The Lord Reigns (Gateway)--week 2. We were missing our regular drummer and our tracks this week. I don't know how this one went over.
Great Things (Maher)--we brought this one back from August when we wore it out. Good tune
Welcome
Offering
Conscience statements
Be Thou My Vision (Praise Charts)
Still (Hillsong)
From The Inside Out (Hillsong)--was a little hard since we had no percussion on this one-our drummer became our GOOD voice for the skit. We had to lose him on this back sset.
Intro-Skit
Message
Take My Life (Tomlin)

So how was your Sunday?

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

we run Still in the ground and our people still love it. it's very timely to the state of America right now. Great list.

Anonymous said...

our people love "The Lord Reigns" but if they walk in asleep it always feels dead. If the people don't respond on the "let the people shout" and "let the people clap their hands" it would probably be better if we just shut the song down there. HAHA!

a lot of worshipers are used to being told how to worship in the middle of a song....it may take a couple times around. it did for us.

Jim Drake said...

Jon

I understand about the "shout" "clap" your hands part of that song. My team told me that it was pitched too high--females can't sing it low and guys can't sing that high. I haven't tried Bb--but we'll see. We'll let it sit a week or two and come back to it.

Thanks for the great comments