I've now read all of Zac Hicks' books. This man is on a different level. Not only is he a careful thinker, but he applies his lofty and accurate theology to his people through worship and now preaching. This book makes me want to stop writing about worship altogether and say, "This guy said it all in this book." Thoughtful. Careful. Precise. Substantial. Nuanced. Challenging. Comforting. What more can I say? I think Hicks pushes the line of "pastoral ministry" to all leaders a bit too much for my liking, but then because he's so carefully nuanced he guards the office of pastor so well (17-18). He's careful to tell worship leaders, "Hey your responsibility is is deeply pastoral. Acknowledge this, and do your best by the power of the Holy Spirit" while guarding the office of pastor, so perhaps I take my critique back.
A wonderful book to give to a pastor who wants to think about worship some more or a worship leader who needs to be pushed to the "pastoral" side of things. Short, readable, and dense chapters full of food for thought and practical suggestions.
Good quotes:
"Our job is simple. Though we don't usher people into God's presence, we stubbornly, insistently point to the One who des" (38).
"Augustine is credited with saying, 'Whoever sings prays twice'" (64).
"As worship leaders, we have a pressing question before us: If all that the people of God had were the worship services we plan and lead, what would they know about Him, and how would they relate to Him?" (69)
"When we sing too much about our surrender for God, our living for His name, our triumph, our zeal, our giving it all away, our passion, our fervor, and our commitment, we are making room for what Paul calls 'confidence in the flesh' (Phil. 3:3-4)" (77).
"Jesus conquered His enemies in battle by bleeding before them" (85)/
"The fragrance of worship is justice. Where there is no justice, there is no fragrance" (95, quote of David Ruis, The Justice God is Seeking, 18).
"Proper contextualization–being a faithful missionary to your flock–involves listening to every voice, not just the young and attractive" (105).
"Christianity does not begin with the good news of my life changed, but Christ's life exchanged" (117).
"Worship is the portal where heaven leaks into our present existence in dribbles" (135).
"When we begin to worship as a gathered community each week, we aren't starting from scratch. We're jumping into heaven's praise on the third verse of the song" (136).
"A worship service which creates a cage around the emotions in the names of decency, orderliness, and self-control–all good, biblical in and of themselves–is just as mal-formative as the emotionally unhinged, wildly charismatic free-for-alls that are so often uniquely vilified in these conversations" (148).
"Just because worship is the one time the entire body is gathered does not mean the church's communicative burden must fall here" (182).
"Our one true Worship Leader, Jesus Christ, is the worship pastor every church (and every human) longs for" (197).