Nigel Briggs: The Nottingham-based worship pastor

Friday 9th January 2004

Worship pastor at Nottingham Trent Vineyard NIGEL BRIGGS spoke to Sarah Yates.



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Nigel: I really felt that I didn't want to do just another 'Christian CD.' As a naturally quiet person, the easiest option for me would have been not to do it at all. It had to be about God's vision and timing and not my own. He had to shout to get me to do it and I'm completely sure it's his album - that's my motivation. God is stretching us!

Sarah: What is your main aim for the album, what do you hope it will achieve?

Nigel: Without meaning it to be a cliché - I really want this album to bless people. We've been doing the songs in Church for a while and many people keep asking me where they can get the songs on CD. It will be fantastic for them to have an album they can own and listen to. Once again, it's important that we have a real UK sound of our own. Trevor (The producer) keeps telling me off for singing with an American accent! I come from Nottingham and I really want that to come across on the album. We're Nottingham Trent Vineyard Church and we aren't trying to be anything different.

Sarah: The Vineyard Music slogan is From the Church, For the Church. How is this reflected in the songs on the album?

Nigel: It is important to me that the songs we use are from the Church. There are a couple that are new, but the majority are already used in the Church for worship. The band are from the church and the songs come from the heart of the church. They come from the Church and are going back to it.

Sarah: What is the parallel between what is happening in the church and the messages behind the song lyrics?

Nigel: The songs have been written over a 2 yr period and through that time the church has been going through a building project. We actually moved into new offices on Monday! The slogan we adopted throughout the move was 'Our hand in his.' This slogan has really stuck with me. Our pastor John Wright has been preaching on it and we've wanted to go where God is leading us. The album title and song 'Hold On' expresses this desire clearly. Quite a lot of the songs follow this theme in some way.

Sarah: What does making songs 'accessible' mean, why is this important to you?

Nigel: What is accessible for some people isn't accessible for others. It is the responsibility of the worship leader in a church to try and interpret what is appropriate to their specific congregation. When I took over the worship at Trent, John and I (who are both 'rockers' at heart!) made the decision that the worship should be up-tempo and fairly contemporary in style. We realised that this is what the Church wanted. However, elsewhere, a different musical style may be appropriate. If a song is good it will withstand various arrangements, from acoustic guitar to a full-on arrangement. There are a lot of great songs out there, which in essence are very easy and simple and yet the arrangement can bring a distinctive life to that song. As a worship leader, it is really important for me to be able to say that ' I really like this song acoustically.' In terms of song writing it's about keeping something simple without it being simplistic. This recording is not done with the intention that the sound should be replicated in churches across the world. When we record we seek to be as creative as possible, whilst we have the opportunity to do so - God loves our creativity. However, in the Vineyard we do not seek to replicate songs from a recording, but to interpret them in a way that is appropriate to a given situation. This depends on resources, musical ability and the needs of the congregation; it is this process that helps to make the song accessible.

Sarah: The songs (such as 'Hold On', 'Sweetest Sound', 'Turn It All down' and 'Journey Home') seem to revolve around the realisation of the truth of our utter dependence upon God's grace and the intimacy, love and trust that stem from this simple but profound realisation. Is this something you were conscious of as a theme when you were writing, or did it just evolve?

Nigel: With going through a building project the church was certainly more conscious of this theme and more aware of our reliance upon God. It also affects me deeply on a personal level: I was not born into a Christian family and did not get saved until I was age 20. The whole experience of discovering God in this way was incredibly powerful, and it is something that will always stay with me. I realised how incomprehendably big God is, how small I am in comparison and just how much I depend upon him who has given me everything.

Sarah: What would you say is the overriding theme running throughout the songs on the album?

Nigel: 'Our hand in his' - my way of trying to say that was 'Hold on'

Sarah: Were there any songs that you found particularly difficult/easy to write? Why was this?

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