House Lights Podcast

Ep 13: The Ministry of Showing Up Early

29 min · 22 jun 2026
aflevering Ep 13: The Ministry of Showing Up Early artwork

Beschrijving

I’ve had Sundays where I showed up with plenty of time—calm, prepared, ready to lead. And I’ve had Sundays where I was rushing in at the last minute, stressed before the day even began. The difference wasn’t talent or experience. It was margin. And margin starts with showing up early. In this episode, I tell the story of the morning I forgot to print the run sheets—dead laptop, no power cable, an entire team waiting on me—and what it taught me about preparation, leadership, and ministry. Why showing up early matters: * It gives you time for preparation—the things that can’t be done until day-of * It sets the tone for the day. If you’re frantic, your team feels it. If you’re calm, they feel that too. * It’s pastoral work—time to pray over the room, prepare your heart, and be available when volunteers need you * The first person in the building sets the temperature for the day What it communicates: * To your team: you care about them, you respect their time, you’re reliable * To leadership: you’re professional, you’re bought in, you bring unique value * To yourself: you’re a leader, not just a technician Common objections (and why they don’t hold up): * “I’m not a morning person” — it’s discipline, not preference * “I don’t have time” — try saying “I haven’t made the time” instead and see how that feels * “No one notices” — they may not notice when you show up early, but they’ll notice when you don’t Rushed Sundays are way worse than early wake-ups. And showing up early isn’t about clocking hours—it’s about creating space to lead well. No one may thank you. No one may see it. Except someone does. God sees the hidden work, the early mornings, the preparation no one else witnesses. We’re working for an audience of one. The ministry of showing up early: nobody sees it, but everybody benefits from it. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit houselightspod.substack.com [https://houselightspod.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

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Alle afleveringen

14 afleveringen

aflevering Ep 13: The Ministry of Showing Up Early artwork

Ep 13: The Ministry of Showing Up Early

I’ve had Sundays where I showed up with plenty of time—calm, prepared, ready to lead. And I’ve had Sundays where I was rushing in at the last minute, stressed before the day even began. The difference wasn’t talent or experience. It was margin. And margin starts with showing up early. In this episode, I tell the story of the morning I forgot to print the run sheets—dead laptop, no power cable, an entire team waiting on me—and what it taught me about preparation, leadership, and ministry. Why showing up early matters: * It gives you time for preparation—the things that can’t be done until day-of * It sets the tone for the day. If you’re frantic, your team feels it. If you’re calm, they feel that too. * It’s pastoral work—time to pray over the room, prepare your heart, and be available when volunteers need you * The first person in the building sets the temperature for the day What it communicates: * To your team: you care about them, you respect their time, you’re reliable * To leadership: you’re professional, you’re bought in, you bring unique value * To yourself: you’re a leader, not just a technician Common objections (and why they don’t hold up): * “I’m not a morning person” — it’s discipline, not preference * “I don’t have time” — try saying “I haven’t made the time” instead and see how that feels * “No one notices” — they may not notice when you show up early, but they’ll notice when you don’t Rushed Sundays are way worse than early wake-ups. And showing up early isn’t about clocking hours—it’s about creating space to lead well. No one may thank you. No one may see it. Except someone does. God sees the hidden work, the early mornings, the preparation no one else witnesses. We’re working for an audience of one. The ministry of showing up early: nobody sees it, but everybody benefits from it. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit houselightspod.substack.com [https://houselightspod.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

22 jun 202629 min
aflevering Ep 12: How to Build Trust With Every Team You Work With artwork

Ep 12: How to Build Trust With Every Team You Work With

Trust doesn’t just happen. It’s built — deliberately, consistently, and often in the small moments nobody’s watching. In this episode, Gabe gets practical about one of the most important — and most overlooked — leadership skills in church production: building trust across every team you work with. Not just hoping it develops over time, but actively cultivating it. This one covers four relationships that production leaders navigate constantly: worship teams, volunteers, pastors and church leadership, and — the one most of us skip entirely — yourself. Whether you’re walking into a room where trust has been broken, or you just want to be more intentional about strengthening the relationships you already have, this episode gives you specific, actionable ways to start. Topics include: * Why trust is something you can extend before it’s earned — and why that changes everything * How the way you talk about people (and to people) either builds or erodes trust faster than anything else * The habit that worship teams notice more than you think: believing them when they hear or feel something is wrong * What volunteers are most afraid of — and the culture shift that puts them at ease * How to earn trust with pastors and church leadership through stewardship, clarity, and preparation * Why self-trust is the foundation everything else is built on Trust is the cornerstone of every healthy team. This is how you start building it on purpose. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit houselightspod.substack.com [https://houselightspod.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

8 jun 202628 min
aflevering Ep 11: Stage vs. Booth: Building Trust Across the Divide with Landon Boggs artwork

Ep 11: Stage vs. Booth: Building Trust Across the Divide with Landon Boggs

The tension between the stage and the booth is one of the most common — and least talked about — dynamics in church production. In this episode, Gabe sits down with Landon Boggs, Experience Director at New Point Community Church (six campuses across eastern Ohio), for an honest, behind-the-scenes conversation about what it actually takes to lead both sides of the room well. Landon brings a rare perspective: decades of experience as a working musician and worship leader, now in an executive leadership role overseeing worship, production, video, and communications across a multi-site church. He’s lived on both sides of the tension — and he has a lot to say about it. This one covers a lot of ground: why production people are so often misunderstood by the leaders above them, what it looks like to lead people who are technically smarter than you, how to build a culture where volunteers become reproducers, and why trust — not title — is the real currency between the stage and the booth. Landon also tells the story of a young intern who had no idea what he was doing but was too good to let go — and what happened when a leader chose to invest instead of automate. Topics include: * The unique burden of leading highly capable, ministry-minded technicians * Why production people generate almost none of their own workload * Automation and AI: where to draw the line with volunteer positions * Building a pipeline from volunteer to staff (a real story, not a framework) * What worship leaders wish their production teams understood — and vice versa * Why you don’t need a microphone to lead worship This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit houselightspod.substack.com [https://houselightspod.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

25 mei 202654 min
aflevering Ep 10: Fighting the Production Guy Stereotype artwork

Ep 10: Fighting the Production Guy Stereotype

Production people have a reputation: defensive, condescending, care more about gear than people. “My way or the highway.” The stereotype exists because some of us earned it. But it doesn’t have to be this way. In this episode, I’m talking about how to fight the production guy stereotype by becoming the kind of leaders people actually want to follow—leaders who look like Jesus. We are a support ministry. By design, we’re not in the spotlight—we make the people on stage look and sound awesome. That’s servant leadership. Scripture foundation: * Mark 10:45 - “The Son of Man came not to be served, but to serve” * John 13 - Jesus washing the disciples’ feet * Galatians 5:22-23 - The fruit of the Spirit Jesus washed feet. We mix audio and run cameras. Same heart. The fruit of the Spirit in production leadership: Love, patience, kindness, gentleness, self-control. The best production people are both deeply skilled AND deeply pastoral. If people can’t see the fruit of the Spirit in how you lead, you’re doing it wrong. How to fight the stereotype: * Humility - Take feedback graciously (Matthew 11:29) * Clarity - Jesus taught simply. Kill the jargon. * Collaboration - Jesus invited input. Don’t dictate. * People over protocol - Jesus chose people over rules (Mark 2:27) * Servant leadership - Serve your team first The challenge: Be excellent in your craft AND Christ-like in your character. When we all look more like Jesus, the stereotype dies. Don’t just be good at production. Be like Jesus to people. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit houselightspod.substack.com [https://houselightspod.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

11 mei 202628 min
aflevering Ep 9: You Can't Lead Others Well If You're Not Leading Yourself artwork

Ep 9: You Can't Lead Others Well If You're Not Leading Yourself

You showed up. You set the stage, ran the pre-service checks, briefed your volunteers — and you haven’t slept more than five hours in three days. This is the episode nobody wants to admit they need. In this episode, Gabriel gets honest about a season where personal neglect quietly turned him into someone his teammates didn’t recognize — and what it took to climb back. He walks through the three pillars of health that every church production leader needs to steward: physical, mental and emotional, and spiritual — and why all three are more connected than most of us want to acknowledge. This isn’t a wellness lecture. It’s a conversation about sustainability, leadership integrity, and what it actually means to serve from fullness instead of emptiness. James Clear said it well: “You don’t rise to the level of your goals, you fall to the level of your systems.” This episode helps you build better ones. Topics include: * Why sleep, food, and movement aren’t optional for leaders * The real cost of carrying a heavy mental load with no margin * Why being in church every weekend doesn’t mean your walk with God is healthy * The Bible reading stat that might change how seriously you take daily devotion * Practical systems for all three pillars — specific, repeatable, and actually doable God doesn’t need you to burn out for him. He needs you to be healthy. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit houselightspod.substack.com [https://houselightspod.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

27 apr 202628 min