Technical artists serving in the local church understand what it means to love Jesus—but somehow hate Christmas. By the time Christmas (or any church event) is over, technical artists have poured hundreds of hours of their lives into thankless jobs—rolling cable, taping the stage, checking mics, and other invisible jobs. They’re the first to arrive and the last to leave. They work behind the scenes and dress in black. They’re the unseen heroes who have to figure out how to do the impossible. Week after week. Unnoticed. Invisible is what they do…until something goes wrong.In I Love Jesus but I Hate Christmas, Todd Elliot addresses the challenges every technical artist in the church—and those who lead them—has ever had. And he offers refreshing insight into learning to thrive as a technical artist; successfully collaborating with fellow artists; and building skilled teams of technical artists to be as effective as possible. Because when you’re more effective, the church is more effective. FILO (First in Last Out) is for technical artists in the local church. It is designed to provide skill development, community and inspiration to equip technical artists to become more effective in the church. Because when we’re more effective, the church is more effective. Visit FILO.org to learn more.
Somehow I felt this book was both for me and not for me at the same point. I'm a volunteer who's a team lead for the production team at church. Most of the time the author referred to being a staff member who oversaw the entire department. As I read I could see where the advice would be beneficial to someone who was depended upon and even paid for their serving.
There was some good advice to be gleaned as far as how to approach each event/service, how to interact with other etc. However most of the advice in this book, didn't seem to relate to me at this point and some of it can be generalized to other group settings or even at my non church job.
One of the best books I have read about tackling the tech world in church. So much truth in how to run a ministry and do it well. Much to consider and put into practice after reading this.
Thoughtful conversation about the technical side of developing and leading worship services. While there is a lack of any interaction with scholarly or practical resources, Elliott's experience makes up some of this difference. That aside, this is a helpful handbook for worship leaders and tech artists.
This book is absolutely amazing! I learned so much that I’ve already started implementing with my team! Every technical artists needs to read this book!