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| Crossway Church |
At 24, he is a father, husband, and pastor. Purchase has helped plant two churches, and has been leading worship for 10 years. Currently the worship pastor at Crossway Church in Davie, Purchase works with lead pastor Jon Elswick to impact the community with the gospel. I had the privilege of sitting down with Jimmy over some ribs at Scruby's, to discuss the joys and struggles of being a church planting worship pastor.
NWL: How did you start worship leading?
Jimmy: I started as a 6th
grader, playing guitar for a new contemporary service my church was starting up. From there I went to bass, and then just started playing church music every week from
then on. I was leading the youth band by 7th grade, and at 14 I was like, “Hmm.” (laughs) Thought it was something I could
do full time.
NWL: Crossway was planted
in 2010, and has been doing some awesome things in the community. You were with it from it's launch, so can you tell us some struggles you find as a “church plant worship pastor?” Ones that
maybe a worship pastor from an established church doesn't have?
Jimmy: I'd say the biggest difference
is the man power. Many churches have multiple staff members wearing
different hats. I kind of wear all of them at once on a week by week basis:
worship pastor, community group leader, producer on sunday, graphic
communications director, assistant to Jon.
NWL: Are you a good multi-tasker?
Jimmy: No (laughs). Not at all.
NWL: With all of that, how do you
maintain your balance?
Jimmy: I'm still figuring that out. (laughs) I
think the hardest thing is that for me, to really excel in one aspect
you have to neglect others. I think I'm working to schedule my time
better. I'm a focus guy, I need one thing to chew on at a time. We're
getting to a place at Crossway where I try and give myself like three
weeks to really engage in a project. Time management is huge for us.
NWL: Are there things that you've
learned being a worship pastor in a church plant that you may have
not gotten otherwise?
Jimmy: Oh for sure. It brought in a new view
of what it means to be an artist that strives to support the lead
pastor. Planting has shown me my role is to help and and serve Jon. I see it like when the Israelites
fought Amalek in Exodus 17, you know? When Moses had his hands up, the
israelites would be winning. And when Moses grew tired, Aaron and Hur
held up his hands for him. To me, that is a picture of what I do. My
job is to help hold up the lead pastor's hands to do what God is
calling him to do.
NWL: That's awesome. In addition to
doing work for Crossway, you recently began hosting a worship
leader's gathering once a month at Sheridan House. Can you tell us a
little about that?
Jimmy: That idea came from a pattern I
saw based from my own experiences. As a worship leader, I had been
able to meet other leaders from all over. I was able to reach out to
them, build relationships. The more I met, the more I realized that my experience was actually a rare one. I saw this
pattern of worship leaders being isolated behind their desks,
carrying their own burdens, and many of them feel like there is no support system out there. I believe friends don't let friends do
ministry alone, so
I had the idea some time last year to
host an event to help worship leaders from all over south florida
connect to each other.
Then my daughter Rowan was born and it kind of got pushed to
the backburner. But in January of this year, I began to start
re-examining the concept. And then literally later that day I got a Facebook
invite by Steve Villafane from The Lighthouse Church to join this
group called Worship Leaders United. I realized that I wasn't the
only person feeling this need to connect with the worship leading
community.
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| Jimmy and Rowan |
NWL: What is the purpose of these
meetings?
Jimmy: The idea is pretty simple- Strengthen the kingdom, sharpen skills, seek encouragement. It's
super relational, and bridges the divide of distance, the divide of
denomination, the divide of style. We all love Jesus, we all want to
see people saved, and see the renewal of South Florida. We want to
see God work in a mighty way. We write together, share music, discuss
issues we face...it's a cool thing.
NWL: Lastly, how
does the gospel impact your worship leading, your pastoring, your
church planting?
Jimmy: To me the gospel frees, saves,
liberates. When I can't wear five hats, the gospel frees me up. The
Spirit heals, brings peace, and brings clarity, which I think is rare
sometimes. The gospel reminds me that those things I ask for aren't
based on my actions, and frees me up from thinking it all is on my
shoulders. It prevents me from thinking the church will grow based on
what I do. If I couldn't save myself, how can I grow a church by
myself? It's all God, man. He grows. He saves. He gathers. He
sustains. The Bible says God is the author and finisher of our faith,
and I believe He is the author and finisher of our church.
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MUSICAL INFLUENCES:
Death Cab for Cutie, Sigur Ros, Explosions
in the Sky, Mogwai, Dennison Marrs, Bon Iver
GEAR:
Fender Tele 72 Thinline with humbuckers
Reverent Buckshot
99 Taylor 710
Gibson Les Paul
CHECK OUT: Crossway Church

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Hey, I know that guy!!! He owes me, $50. Just kidding...he's really a great guy and a wonderful Pastor. (now he owes me $75)
ReplyDeleteCrossway has an awesome worship pastor.
ReplyDelete