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When Your Gift Is Not Your God

There’s a kind of idolatry that only happens to people in ministry: worshiping our usefulness. A devotional for worship leaders, with team questions and a prayer.

April 26, 2026 //  by admin

Week 2 • Season 1 • Worship Team Devotionals

Therefore, I urge you, brothers and sisters, in view of God’s mercy, to offer your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God; this is your true and proper worship.

Romans 12:1 (NIV)

What’s actually going on

There is a particular kind of idolatry that only happens to people in ministry. We don’t worship the work of our hands like the people in Isaiah did. We worship our usefulness. We worship the calling itself.

It looks holy from the outside. You’re at the church on your day off. You’re stressed about the Sunday set during your kid’s baseball game. You’re answering a team text in bed at midnight. From a distance, it all reads as faithfulness. From the inside, you and the Lord both know it’s something else.

Most of the worship leaders we talk to didn’t set out to make worship leading their identity. It happened slowly. Affirmation reinforced effort. Effort started to feel like obedience. Eventually you couldn’t tell which parts were love for Jesus and which parts were love for being known as someone who loves Jesus.

And here’s the part that stings: a gift can be entirely real, given by God, used for His glory, and still become an idol. The idol isn’t always the bad thing. Sometimes the idol is the good thing in the wrong place.

Eric Liddell said he felt God’s pleasure when he ran. That’s a holy line. But the line doesn’t mean running was God. It meant running was a window. The window isn’t the view.

What’s true

Romans 12 tells us our worship is to offer our bodies, all of who we are, to God. Not to offer our usefulness. Not to offer our skill. Ourselves.

Worship leading is one of the most beautiful expressions of that kind of life. It is also one of the easiest places to confuse the offering with the offerer. To start thinking that your gift is what makes you valuable to God. To start fearing what would happen to your sense of self if the gift went away.

Here is what’s true: God isn’t impressed by your ability. He delights in you. The two are not the same thing. He loved you before you ever held a microphone, and He’ll love you the same when you set it down.

Setting your gift down for a moment, even mentally, is one of the holiest things a worship leader can do. Not because the gift is bad. Because you need to remember which one is your God.

For your team

Three discussion questions for your pre-rehearsal team huddle.

  1. If your gift went away tomorrow, what would still be true about your relationship with Jesus?
  2. Where in the last month did you feel pressure to perform rather than to offer?
  3. What’s one thing you can do this week to remind yourself that your gift is not your God?

Pray this

Jesus, I offer myself, not just my gifts. Free me from the quiet idolatry of usefulness. Help me lead from love, not from need to be needed. Amen.

This Sunday

This Sunday, before sound check, take ninety seconds alone and name God as God and yourself as His. Then play.

Go deeper

Listen: When Ministry Replaced the Love That Started It, on the Formation to Transformation podcast. John 15:9 and the slow drift from love into labor. Available at formationtotransformation.com/.


This is Week 2 of 52 Weekly Worship Team Devotionals from The Church Collective. The first 12 (including this one) are available now — grab them as a free PDF. New devotionals drop every Monday morning. Free, denominationally diverse, 501(c)(3). Made possible by our Supporters: become a Supporter or give one-time.

← Week 1: Who Are You When No One’s Clapping?  |  Week 3: Why Are We Actually Doing This? →
Back to all 52 worship team devotionals

Category: Devotionals

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