Formation to Transformation | A Worship Devotional

The God of Hope Fills You | Before the Doors Open

2 min · 31 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio The God of Hope Fills You | Before the Doors Open

Descripción

For the audio engineer with a flashlight in their teeth and fifteen minutes till doors open. Or the worship leader still figuring out the bridge of the second song. Or the tech still tracing a cable that was running fine yesterday. Anchored in Romans 15:13. The God of hope fills you with joy and peace in the power of the Spirit. Regardless of how the morning is going. The Sunday liturgy from Before the Doors Open. Formation to Transformation is a worship devotional for the whole worship team — leaders, musicians, vocalists, audio engineers, lighting directors, ProPresenter operators, camera, FILO. #WorshipLeader #ChurchTech #BeforeTheDoorsOpen #Romans15 #FormationToTransformation Mentioned in this episode: If you've enjoyed this devotional, would you please leave a rating and a review? You can keep up with everything at ryanloche.substack.com

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118 episodios

episode You Are Mid-Formation While You Lead Worship | Before the Doors Open artwork

You Are Mid-Formation While You Lead Worship | Before the Doors Open

For the worship leader doing vocal warm-ups in the car on the drive in. For the audio engineer powering up the rig before the coffee is hot. For the lighting director walking the room while it is still empty. Anchored in 1 Thessalonians 5:23-24. The God of peace himself sanctifies you completely while you serve. Spirit, soul, and body. The voice you are warming up, the body that has been carrying the week, the soul that is tired, the spirit that has been distracted. All of it. The same God who calls you to lead today is the one who is forming you while you lead. The sanctifying does not stop when the lights go up. You are not on a break from formation while you lead worship. You are mid-formation, in front of people, with hands full and the Spirit at work. He who calls you is faithful, who will also do it. New podcast episodes every weekday. Sunday mornings, Before the Doors Open. Read the written version and get extra notes at ryanloche.substack.com. Mentioned in this episode: If you've enjoyed this devotional, would you please leave a rating and a review? You can keep up with everything at ryanloche.substack.com

7 de jun de 20262 min
episode Both Abound and Be Abased | Philippians 4:12 artwork

Both Abound and Be Abased | Philippians 4:12

Most spiritual writing on contentment focuses on lack. Paul wrote those things too. But in this verse he says something almost nobody says out loud about the other side. He had to learn contentment in abundance too. And the abundance is the harder lesson. Paul calls it a secret. Both seasons are tests. Both seasons are teachers. Both seasons want to lie to you about what is actually holding you up. In lack, the lie is that God has abandoned you. In plenty, the lie is that you no longer need him as much as you did. For the worship leader in a hard season: your job is not to wait for the season to change. For the worship leader in abundance: your job is not to enjoy it without noticing what it is doing to you. Both are formation. Anchored in Philippians 4:12. Episode 10 of the Philippians season. Formation to Transformation is a daily worship devotional for worship leaders, worship pastors, musicians, audio engineers, lighting directors, ProPresenter operators, camera ops, and the whole worship team. #WorshipLeader #ChurchTech #Philippians4 #Contentment #FormationToTransformation Mentioned in this episode: If you've enjoyed this devotional, would you please leave a rating and a review? You can keep up with everything at ryanloche.substack.com

5 de jun de 20264 min
episode I Have Learned | Philippians 4:11 artwork

I Have Learned | Philippians 4:11

The most famous verse in Philippians 4 is about to come. Verse 13. The one on the coffee mugs. But verse 11 contains a word that gives verse 13 its meaning. That word is learned. Paul did not have contentment from the beginning. He did not receive it as a download. He learned it. The Greek is manthano, the same root as disciple. Contentment is not a personality trait. It is a learned discipline, formed in you over years, taught by the actual circumstances of your life. You are not behind. You are mid-curriculum. The classroom is your actual life. The state you are in right now is doing the teaching. Anchored in Philippians 4:11. Episode 9 of the Philippians season. Formation to Transformation is a daily worship devotional for worship leaders, worship pastors, musicians, audio engineers, lighting directors, ProPresenter operators, camera ops, and the whole worship team. #WorshipLeader #ChurchTech #Philippians4 #Contentment #FormationToTransformation Mentioned in this episode: If you've enjoyed this devotional, would you please leave a rating and a review? You can keep up with everything at ryanloche.substack.com

4 de jun de 20263 min
episode Let It Return Clean | Philippians 4:10 artwork

Let It Return Clean | Philippians 4:10

There is a quiet moment in Philippians 4 that nobody preaches. Paul is in prison. Support from the Philippians went quiet for a while. Then it came back. And Paul has to figure out how to receive it without bitterness, without manipulation, without making them pay for the gap. He gives the most pastorally generous sentence in the New Testament. He rejoices in the Lord. He gives them the benefit of the doubt. He moves forward without scar tissue. That is a learned posture, not a personality trait. For the worship team: when the senior pastor reaches back out, when the volunteer signs up again, when the friend texts after the gap, let it return clean. Anchored in Philippians 4:10. Episode 8 of the Philippians season. Formation to Transformation is a daily worship devotional for worship leaders, worship pastors, musicians, audio engineers, lighting directors, ProPresenter operators, camera ops, and the whole worship team. #WorshipLeader #ChurchTech #Philippians4 #Support #FormationToTransformation Mentioned in this episode: If you've enjoyed this devotional, would you please leave a rating and a review? You can keep up with everything at ryanloche.substack.com

3 de jun de 20264 min
episode Do What You Saw in Me | Philippians 4:9 artwork

Do What You Saw in Me | Philippians 4:9

Paul says one of the boldest sentences in the New Testament in this verse. And almost nobody quotes it. He says — do what you saw in me. Most modern teachers shrink from a sentence like that. Paul does not. Four verbs in order. Learned. Received. Heard. Saw. Saw is the bridge between content and embodiment. Discipleship is not finished when the teaching is done. It is finished when the watching is done. That is a very specific kind of pastoral courage. The courage to be watched. The team you lead is being discipled by what they see in you, whether you meant it or not. Anchored in Philippians 4:9. Episode 7 of the Philippians season. Formation to Transformation is a daily worship devotional for worship leaders, worship pastors, musicians, audio engineers, lighting directors, ProPresenter operators, camera ops, and the whole worship team. #WorshipLeader #ChurchTech #Discipleship #Philippians4 #FormationToTransformation Mentioned in this episode: If you've enjoyed this devotional, would you please leave a rating and a review? You can keep up with everything at ryanloche.substack.com

2 de jun de 20264 min