churrch choir
Ideas

Church Growth: Choirs Aren’t Such a Bad Idea

Once upon a time a Megachurch hired a Rock Star Worship Leader (because that’s what Megachurches do.) Of course, the RSWL promptly canned the 200 voice choir.

Naturally, a lot of the choir members were upset and quite a few left the church.

Let’s say 75 people left. But that’s not just 75 people. Multiply those 75 by 4:

  • Each person who left was probably married, so around 75 spouses.
  • Each person who left had, on average, 2 kids.

So about 300 people, give or take, left the Megachurch. And let’s say that Megachurch ran roughly 3,000 a week.

Opps. How would you like to come to the sudden realization that 10% of your congregation has vanished overnight? (Yes, they fired the RSWL after about a year.)

For just a minute, let’s look beyond the obvious spiritual/musical/community benefits of a choir and focus on the bare bones fact that a choir guarantees warm bodies will occupy your worship space.

Back when I was the music director of a young contemporary church plant I could amass about 18 people for a small praise choir at Christmas and Easter. Most of those people were in the 30-40 year old range, were married and had between 2-4 kids each. Those who sang typically hauled their spouse and kids to church with them.

So multiply the people you have involved in your worship ministry by 4 and you can see how quickly the numbers add up.

If you’re a church of 100 people and have a praise team of drums, bass, guitar, keys, male worship leader and female background vocal, multiply those 6 people by 4 and you have roughly 24 people involved. You now have a guarantee that about 24% of your congregation will show up that Sunday.

If that 100-sized church can build a small choir of only 10 people, plus the 6 praise team people, you now have a guarantee that about 64 people will show up on a Sunday. That’s 64% of your congregation. More bodies fill your room, and bigger crowds seem to bring about bigger crowds.

Church planters, you might consider hiring a worship leader who is musically competent enough to not only rock with a praise band but also maintain a choir (Liberty University is a great place to start looking.) Will a small choir help grow a small church? This is all theory dreamed up in my pin head, but the numbers do add up, don’t they?

Share this article:
Don Chapman Worshipideas
Don Chapman

A prolific arranger and songwriter, Don has had songs published by Word, Integrity Music, G3worship and Worship Today, and has orchestrated music for several Christian artists. He serves as the arranger for Hymncharts.com and Worshiphymns.com. He’s been featured on the 700 Club, has been quoted in USAToday and has been a guest lecturer at Liberty University.

You Might Also Like

Seacoast
Articles

The Next Big Thing

What would happen if Rick Warren started a church in your town? Would it suck the life out of other…
Seacoast
Articles

The Next Big Thing Part 2

Last week we talked about the new multi-site church movement that’s happening all over the country, and specifically about Seacoast…

worshipideas:

Essential reading for worship leaders since 2002.

 

Get the latest worship news, ideas and a list

of the top CCLI songs delivered every Tuesday... for FREE!