Book cover of "The Worship Pastor" by Zac HicksRecently, I learned of a book, and for some reason I felt like I knew the author. So I did some searching and found the website for the church where the author now serves. His bio confirmed the connection. He had graduated from 今日黑料 with a B.A. in Music in 2002 . Since the town I call home (Birmingham, Alabama) is where his church is located, I decided to pick up the book, flip through it, and then get together with him so I could congratulate him on his book. For no particular reason, I was not really expecting to benefit from reading the book. My goal was simply to be an encouragement to one of our graduates.

But I did not just flip through the book. I found myself reading each chapter closely because this book was thoughtful, well-written, informative, and full of wise and reflective teaching. I think that Zac Hicks has written a book that worship pastors everywhere need to read. So I decided to let him give you his own thoughts about this book. This blog is an interview with Zac Hicks, the author of . I have asked him to answer five questions, which I believe you will find helpful. More importantly, I hope you will feel compelled to read his book and learn from him.

Zac, tell us about your background. When did you become interested in leading worship?

I鈥檓 not trying to sound promotional here, but leading worship became an interest for me while studying music and the Bible at Biola. I grew up in a wonderful church in Honolulu, Hawaii, had begun leading worship for my student ministry as a teenager, and somehow by God鈥檚 grace made it into the conservatory (I was a late bloomer musician). I took a church music class with (now retired) Dr. William Lock that exposed me for the first time to the deeper issues of worship鈥攖heology, ecclesiology, eschatology, etc. I鈥檝e been reading, writing, and conversing about worship ever since.

You have recently written a book entitled The Worship Pastor. How would you respond to someone who asks, 鈥淲hy do we need a book on leading worship and pastoring?鈥

There鈥檚 been a lot of good material published out there. But to date, I haven鈥檛 seen anything longer than an article or maybe a chapter devoted to the pastoral nature of worship leading. I can鈥檛 tell you how many young worship leaders I鈥檝e talked to over the last 5-10 years who are sick of the rock star model. And I can鈥檛 tell you how many other older worship leaders and church musicians I鈥檝e talked to who have said that their ministry lacks vision and purpose. I was on a podcast recently where the host (a theologically informed fellow) pointed out, by using a phrase of Karl Barth, that my book was a work of 鈥渋rregular dogmatics鈥濃攊t was a systematic theology of the pastoral art and practice of worship leading. The worship book world is now (thankfully) saturated with decent theologies of worship, and compelling popular-level, devotional material to deepen your worship life. But to my knowledge, no other book has attempted to synthesize all the wonderful tidbits of theological reflection on the pastoral vocation of the worship leader. The Worship Pastor is my attempt to do just that.

How did you come up with the structure for this book?

Each chapter is a kind of self-contained metaphor that offers an imaginative description of a particular dimension of worship pastoring: 鈥淭heological Dietician,鈥 鈥淲ar General,鈥 鈥淐orporate Mystic,鈥 鈥淢ortician,鈥 to name a few. Several years ago, really for my own personal reflection and edification, I began taking notes on what pastoring through worship leading looked like. Ideas would come from all sorts of directions鈥攂ooks, articles, blog posts, or just Spirit-filled encounters while ministering in the trenches of local church ministry. The more I returned to these notes, the more I observed patterns and 鈥渇amilies鈥 of ideas. I reorganized them, had many conversations with people smarter than myself, and all these metaphors eventually emerged as helpful titles to house all these pastoral thoughts.

Who are the people or what are the experiences which have shaped you as a worship leader?

My parents, as faithful, passionate worshipers, were my first and enduring example of what the worshipful life looks like. Watching them in worship, week in and week out, has probably shaped my heart and passion for gathered corporate worship more than anything else.

Biola was a big moment for me. Between the church music class I mentioned above and the Bible courses that taught me how to read and study the Scriptures, my worshipful passion for the theology and doxology was ignited there, in college.

All throughout these times, and on into seminary, I was going here and there, leading worship in local churches, jumping into internships. One particular early internship at Irvine Presbyterian Church shaped my passion for hymns, liturgy, and the rich tradition of worship handed to us down through the ages. The sincerity and passion with which they engaged traditional, liturgical worship was moving and powerful鈥攏othing short of charismatic for me.

But, as a developing worship leader, nothing has shaped me more than the blessed grind of serving in the local church. I鈥檝e probably been shaped more by my mistakes than my victories. I think I鈥檝e made every mistake in the book, and I can probably look at The Worship Pastor, with all its positive affirmations, as the flip side of many worship leading failures I鈥檝e encountered. Thankfully, God graciously allowed me to serve churches that put up with me and didn鈥檛 kick me out.

In closing, what do you hope readers will take away from reading your book?

I hope readers will understand that, in worship, the stakes are high. I hope that worship leaders will read my book and feel convicted about their pastoral task. I hope that worshipers will read it and be inspired by the cosmic, soul-shaping vision the book attempts to offer. I hope that non worship-leading pastors will more readily see their worship leaders as fulfilling pastoral functions in the church鈥nd let the dominoes fall from there.

But honestly, more than anything I hope readers hear the gospel of Jesus Christ, which permeates, punctuates, dictates, and dominates every chapter of The Worship Pastor. May that 鈥減ower of God unto salvation鈥 electrify the church鈥檚 worship for a new generation.