A few years ago I felt God prompting me to create a contemplative service but had no idea what shape it might take. So I invited others into the process. And we started a service of sorts. A few months in, one member of our team raised questions about its future, which I felt totally unprepared to answer. But another team member chimed in with wisdom I’ll never forget. “The service isn’t ready to have those questions asked of it yet.” I was reminded of my creative process as an artist. Usually I begin with no more than a feeling and a blank canvas and rarely know how the end product will look. I only know to stop when the blank canvas has taken on the feeling. Like my artwork, this contemplative service was unfolding before our eyes. Just as the space between Moses’ raised arm and the parted Red Sea is God, the space between an initial creative urge and its final shape is God. So in that moment, in that planning meeting, I chose to embrace my role as Artist-Pastor.
Here are a few questions to encourage the Artist-Pastor in yourself and others:
- Is your culture open to vulnerability and honesty? How can you create an environment of trust where members feel safe to both share and critique ideas?
- Do you know how to tweak? How much does an idea have to be developed before you’re willing to let out a beta version? Do you value the process or only the end product?
- Are you willing to be vague? To sit with unresolved questions? To have less-than-scientific goals and ways of measuring success?
- Is playfulness welcome? How can work be play and workmates playmates?
- Do you know how to nurture your creativity? For you is it being surrounded by ideas or stepping into silence? What time of day is your most creative? Does technology help or hinder you? How can sleep, food and exercise support your creative spirit?
p.s. The contemplative service lived for a year and then passed on. It could have been called a public failure. But I choose to believe it was a beautiful space for a small group of believers to sit in silence, share and sing every Saturday for a season. Not only that, it became the opportunity for me to name my Artist Pastor process. As in all creative endeavors, knowing how to start doesn’t mean knowing where you’ll end. Which feels a lot like faith.
An exercise to help develop these traits in your worship team:
Ask everyone in the group to draw a simple sketch of a plant. Then give a fist-sized lump of clay to the group and tell them you’re going to make a plant together. Make one or two tweaks to the lump yourself then pass it for each member to take turns doing something (they can do what they like–smoosh it, poke it, pull off a piece. . . whatever.) Continue to pass it around the circle until it feels finished. Then talk about the exercise and how it relates to your planning process. How does the clay plant compare to the images you drew? How did you feel when someone continued a theme you began? How did you feel when someone smashed something you added? Was there playfulness and laughter along the way or annoyance and a desire to control? Did new ideas emerge along the way? Try it with a face or an animal.
Read: A Whole New Mind: Why Right-Brainers Will Rule the Future by Daniel H. Pink.
Check out ministries led by artists:
Neighbor’s Abbey in Atlanta
The Edge Campus Ministry in CincinnatiWatch this funny, inside look at singer-songwriter, Tracy Howe Wispelwey’s creative process.
“One must keep in mind that leadership is an art, not a science.”
The Contrarian’s Guide to Leadership by Steven B. Sample
What are the fundamental differences between a scientific and artistic approach? How can we use the best of both?
Image © iStockphoto







