The methodology for streaming worship completely shifted paradigms twelve months ago when the pandemic began. The Both/And workshop helps the next transition.
JASON MOORE
Church coach and consultant
Before the global pandemic, most congregations who were streaming worship online were (more or less) creating an experience for the people gathered in-person in their buildings. Leaders would often (at some point) look into the camera and say, “And if you’re worshiping with us online, we’re glad you’ve joined us.” They’d then look back at the people gathered in-person and continue with a worship experience designed as a physical gathering.
This meant that the home audience were observers of what was happening in real-time on-site. They could watch but not truly participate. This model (arguably) worked because – at the time – we knew nothing different.
In March 2020, when congregations ended in-person worship and went online (many for the first time), the methodology for streaming worship completely shifted paradigms. Everything was about the home audience. There was no one in the room, and the people at home could feel that shift. They knew they were being talked to directly.
Now we face one of the most critical moves in the next iteration of the online worship experience. As we move back into our buildings, we must not return to making people at home observers after talking directly to them for so long. They’ll feel that, too.
We also can’t take an approach where we treat the in-person crowd as the studio audience, providing the laugh or clap track for the people watching at home. Neither of these audiences should feel secondary.
If we fail to think about creating a BOTH/AND scenario as we go back to in-person worship, we will lose so much of what we’ve gained in these last twelve-plus months.
Join us for Both/And: Maximizing Hybrid Worship Experiences For Online and In-Person Audiences
This 2.5 hour workshop will delve into strategies for creating powerful transformative worship where no one feels like they’re an afterthought.
It will explore:
- Re-imagining worship for both/and
- How to create interactive both/and experiences
- Bringing at home and in-person audiences together in real-time
- Alternative opportunities for online audiences watching in-person live streams
- Repurposing in-person worship for online audiences
- Strategies for adapting practices for both/and
- Avoiding letting your groove becoming a rut
- And more
Last Updated on January 11, 2023