In addition to his advice to focus on the metrics you have set to evaluate a worship service, Pastor Jolicoeur also mentions some pitfalls to avoid. Here are the five that he mentions specifically.
In his own practice, he does a personal reflection on Monday. Then he does a group reflection on Tuesday, which leads to his second piece of advice.
Galatians 6:2 says that we should “bear one another’s burdens.” This dynamic should be true of a worship team as well. Pastor Jolicoeur also admonishes you not to be buried under your church’s burdens.
The ideal review team is open, objective, and constructive in its criticism while also being gracious. If you are building a worship team, these are the kinds of individuals that you will want to have on the team. As Patrick Lencioni has put it, a good team member is “humble, hungry, and smart.”
At the same time, be thankful for praise. Don’t deflect the kind words that others give you. Accept it with thanksgiving despite any self-critique you might have. Although it is more blessed to give than to receive, receiving is also a blessing that we should, well, receive.
If, as they say, it is not about you, then the goal of receiving critique should be to progress in facilitating the worship of the One it is really about, God. So look for critique, but don’t internalize it. Instead, use it as a tool to grow and for your worship services to improve.
Pastor Jolicoeur suggests that you make the time to go to worship services other than the ones you are leading. Go to a service whose “innards” you are not intimately involved with. Detach from the analytics and experience God yourself. Even if you have to slip away to another church, find time to be enchanted by God so that worship is a living and jumping frog, not a dissected one.