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Worship Jobs (NOW HIRING)

Worship Director

Bryan, TX · On-site

$62K/yr

The Worship Director does not carry the entire volunteer administration system alone. The Volunteer Coordinator owns the church-wide volunteer pipeline, scheduling support, onboarding workflow ...

Worship Leader

Naples, FL · On-site

$2.0K - $4.0K/mo

Guest Worship Leader (Part-Time Contract - Must Play Guitar or Keys) We are seeking a passionate and engaging Guest Worship Leader to lead worship during Sunday services and special events. The ideal ...

Worship Leader (Full-Time or Part-Time) Creative Church - Twin Cities, MN Creative Church is a diverse, Spirit-filled, non-denominational church located in the Greater Twin Cities, Minnesota area.

The Worship Director does not carry the entire volunteer administration system alone. The Volunteer Coordinator owns the church-wide volunteer pipeline, scheduling support, onboarding workflow ...

WORSHIP PASTOR Colorado Springs, CO 80907 Overview Full-Time | Trace Church | 3,500+ Weekly Attendance Vision & Calling At Trace Church, we believe worship is more than music -- it is spiritual ...

Worship Planning and Service Execution * Serve as a primary leader at a site, rotating periodically to other locations to support the Worship Central Services model and ensure a cohesive worship ...

Worship Team, Production / AVL Teams, Volunteers Function The Worship Pastor will lead, shape, and pastor the worship life of Overflow Church, overseeing weekend gatherings and cultivating a worship ...

Salary: DOE Worship Leader (Full-Time or Part-Time) Creative Church Twin Cities, MN Creative Church is a diverse, Spirit-filled, non-denominational church located in the Greater Twin Cities ...

Worship Pastor

Benton Harbor, MI · On-site

$60K - $65K/yr

Worship Pastor Overflow Church - Benton Harbor/ Saint Joseph, MI Position Overview • Organization: Overflow Church • Location: Southwest Michigan (St. Joseph / Benton Harbor region) • Position ...

Join Our Vibrant Worship Family! Step into a community where worship is alive, creativity flows, and hearts are united in lifting up the name of Jesus. We're looking for a Spirit-filled leader who ...

Plan weekly worship services and worship events * Lead the Grace Church community in worship that exalts Jesus. * Shepherd and guide the worship ministry volunteers. Essential Duties and ...

Worship Leader

Panama City, FL · On-site

$18.50 - $25/hr

April 12, 2026 Pay: $18.50 - $25.00 per hour Lead Worship Pastor Location: Panama City, Florida Job Type: Full-Time, Part-time, Contract About Northstar Church Northstar Church exists to connect ...

Worship Pastor

Birmingham, AL · On-site

$60K - $80K/yr

Vision insurance The worship pastor at DOCC will plan, prepare, and lead worship services and provide worship elements in pastoral contexts (such as weddings and funerals) in partnership with the ...

Worship Pastor

Danville, IL · On-site

$49K - $52K/yr

worship pastor Thanks for considering our Job opening at the Rock Church in Danville Illinois . If you answer yes to the following questions, we could be the perfect fit for you. At the end you will ...

Urgent

Join Our Vibrant Worship Family! Step into a community where worship is alive, creativity flows, and hearts are united in lifting up the name of Jesus. We're looking for a Spirit-filled leader who ...

Worship Leader

Dayton, OH · On-site

$75K - $85K/hr

This is a chance to shape the worship culture of a multigenerational church, build a team from the ground up, and leave a real mark on how thousands of people encounter God week after week. This role ...

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Showing results 1-20

Worship information

See salary details

$21.5K

$50.1K

$73.5K

How much do worship jobs pay per year?

As of Jul 14, 2026, the average yearly pay for worship in the United States is $50,117.00, according to ZipRecruiter salary data. Most workers in this role earn between $38,500.00 and $59,000.00 per year, depending on experience, location, and employer.

What are worship leaders?

Worship leaders are individuals responsible for guiding a congregation in musical and spiritual worship during religious services. They select songs, lead singing, and often coordinate with musicians and other team members to create a meaningful worship experience. Worship leaders also help set the tone for the service and may facilitate prayer, scripture readings, or other elements of worship. Their goal is to inspire and engage the congregation in collective praise and spiritual reflection.

What is the difference between Worship vs Music Director?

AspectWorshipMusic Director
CredentialsReligious training, spiritual certificationsMusic degrees, conducting or performance certifications
Work EnvironmentChurch services, religious eventsMusic rehearsals, concerts, church services
Employer & IndustryReligious organizations, churchesMusic organizations, churches, schools
Search & Comparison IntentReligious roles, spiritual leadershipMusic management, performance roles

Worship primarily involves leading religious services and spiritual activities, often requiring religious training and a focus on spiritual guidance. A Music Director, on the other hand, manages musical aspects of services or performances, requiring music expertise and leadership skills. While both roles may work within churches, Worship emphasizes spiritual leadership, whereas Music Directors focus on musical excellence and coordination.

What Are Worship Jobs?

Worship jobs take place in religious settings, and in these positions, your responsibilities revolve around encouraging a positive relationship between people and God. As a pastor of a church, you deliver the message, meet with members, and run bible studies. A ministry team leader coordinates programs for the congregation, works directly with the pastor, and provides support during various worship activities. A music director handles duties like choosing songs for the service, leading a choir, special programs, and worship band, and more. There are part-time and full-time positions as an usher, liturgist, youth group leader, and more.

What does a typical week look like for someone in a Worship Leader role at a church?

A typical week for a Worship Leader often involves a mix of planning, rehearsing, and leading worship services. Early in the week, you'll collaborate with pastors and team members to select music and coordinate service elements. Midweek, you'll prepare materials, communicate with musicians, and lead rehearsals to ensure everyone is ready. On weekends or service days, you'll oversee sound checks, support your team, and lead worship for the congregation. Flexibility, strong communication, and teamwork are key to balancing these responsibilities effectively.

What are the key skills and qualifications needed to thrive as a Worship Leader, and why are they important?

To thrive as a Worship Leader, you generally need musical proficiency, strong vocal or instrumental abilities, and familiarity with contemporary and traditional worship music, often supported by experience in church or ministry settings. Proficiency with sound systems, music production software, and presentation tools like ProPresenter or Planning Center is typically required. Leadership, adaptability, and the ability to foster spiritual engagement are standout soft skills in this role. These skills enable effective worship experiences, strong team collaboration, and meaningful congregation connections.
What cities are hiring for Worship jobs? Cities with the most Worship job openings:
What are the most commonly searched types of Worship jobs? The most popular types of Worship jobs are:
What states have the most Worship jobs? States with the most job openings for Worship jobs include:
Infographic showing various Worship job openings in the United States as of July 2026, with employment types broken down into 1% Internship, 86% Full Time, 12% Part Time, and 1% Temporary. Highlights an 99% Physical, and 1% Remote job distribution, with an average salary of $50,117 per year, or $24.1 per hour.
Worship Director

$62K/yr

Full-time

Posted 7 days ago


Job description

Hours: 36-40 per week
Reports to: Senior Pastor
Operational Alignment: Director of Ministries
Works Closely With: Volunteer Coordinator, Worship Ministry Coach, Production & Environments Director, Bottom Line Leaders, Preaching Team, Youth Ministry Leadership, and other ministry leaders as needed
One-Line Job Description
Lead Antioch's worship ministry by cultivating a Christ-centered, Spirit-led, biblically grounded, and congregational worship culture through Sunday worship direction, worship leader development, team shepherding, worship-specific volunteer discernment, and healthy ministry systems.
Primary Purpose
The Worship Director exists to lead the worship ministry so that Antioch's gatherings help the church behold Jesus, respond to Scripture, worship in Spirit and truth, and grow as a radiant church ready for Christ's return.
This role owns the worship ministry's direction, health, quality, leadership development, worship-specific decisions, and team culture.
The Worship Director does not carry the entire volunteer administration system alone. The Volunteer Coordinator owns the church-wide volunteer pipeline, scheduling support, onboarding workflow, communication systems, and volunteer database processes. The Worship Director partners with the Volunteer Coordinator while retaining responsibility for worship-specific discernment, standards, training, placement, and ministry outcomes.
The Worship Director does not own production systems. The Production & Environments Director owns sound, slides, livestream, AVL systems, stage execution, and production volunteers. The Worship Director partners with Production to ensure worship-related production needs are clear and Sunday execution is smooth.
Desired Outcomes and Responsibilities
1. Sunday Worship Is Christ-Centered, Biblically Faithful, Spirit-Led, and Congregational
The Worship Director owns the worship portion of Antioch's Sunday gatherings, ensuring that worship helps the church behold Christ, respond to Scripture, and participate meaningfully as a congregation.
Responsibilities
  • Ensure alignment of the theological, pastoral, musical, and practical direction of worship at Antioch.
  • Oversee the worship plan for Sunday gatherings.
  • Select songs that are biblically faithful, pastorally appropriate, and congregationally singable.
  • Curate and introduce new worship songs thoughtfully.
  • Maintain clarity around Antioch's worship values: Christ-centered, Spirit-led, biblically grounded, emotionally honest, ordered, humble, and congregational.
  • Partner with the Senior Pastor, preaching team, and service-planning team so worship supports the overall direction of Sunday gatherings.
  • Attend or review Sunday services regularly to evaluate worship health and effectiveness.
  • Guard against worship becoming performative, emotionally manipulative, theologically shallow, overly controlled, poorly prepared, or disconnected from the congregation.
  • Help ensure worship moments are pastorally wise, spiritually attentive, and appropriately ordered.

2. Worship Leaders and Bottom Line Leaders Are Developed, Supported, and Accountable
The Worship Director develops the leaders who carry worship leadership in the church.
Responsibilities
  • Recruit, develop, and support worship leaders and Bottom Line Leaders.
  • Meet with Bottom Line Leaders at least once per semester to assess needs, team health, leader development, and ministry concerns.
  • Provide regular feedback to worship leaders and Bottom Line Leaders after they lead.
  • Help leaders grow in spiritual leadership, musical leadership, team communication, preparation, congregational awareness, and pastoral sensitivity.
  • Help Bottom Line Leaders lead their teams spiritually and relationally, not merely musically.
  • Identify emerging worship leaders and build a clear development pathway for them.
  • Promote a feedback culture marked by humility, encouragement, clarity, teachability, and growth.
  • Partner with the Worship Ministry Coach as needed to strengthen worship leader coaching and feedback.

3. Worship Team Culture Is Healthy, Unified, and Spiritually Mature
The Worship Director shapes and protects the relational and spiritual culture of the worship team.
Responsibilities
  • Cultivate a worship team culture marked by humility, joy, preparation, spiritual maturity, teachability, excellence, and unity.
  • Provide consistent encouragement to worship leaders, Bottom Line Leaders, and worship volunteers.
  • Personally connect with key volunteers and leaders so the team feels known, supported, and covered.
  • Address unhealthy attitudes, relational tension, repeated lack of preparation, reliability concerns, or team culture issues.
  • Encourage worship volunteers to prepare spiritually, not merely musically.
  • Help volunteers understand that worship ministry is both musical and pastoral.
  • Protect volunteer health by evaluating team capacity before accepting additional worship-related event requests.
  • Surface concerns early before they become larger team problems.
  • Model humility, teachability, spiritual hunger, and emotional maturity.

4. Worship-Specific Volunteer Discernment and Placement Are Clear
The Worship Director owns worship-specific standards, evaluation, discernment, and final placement decisions. The Volunteer Coordinator supports the broader process and systems.
Responsibilities
  • Define worship team standards for character, spiritual maturity, musical ability, preparation, reliability, and team fit.
  • Identify and personally welcome potential new worship volunteers.
  • Conduct or participate in worship-team onboarding interviews.
  • Evaluate new volunteers for worship-specific readiness.
  • Coordinate with Bottom Line Leaders for musical evaluation and role-specific feedback.
  • Approve final placement of worship volunteers into appropriate roles.
  • Communicate clearly when someone is ready, not yet ready, better suited for another role, or in need of further development.
  • Ensure worship volunteers are placed wisely, not merely because there is a scheduling need.
  • Partner with the Volunteer Coordinator to ensure new volunteers receive the worship team handbook, required apps, PCO access, Multitracks access, and any other necessary onboarding steps.

5. Worship Training and Leadership Pipeline Are Being Built
The Worship Director is responsible not only for maintaining the current worship ministry but also for developing future worship leaders, musicians, vocalists, and Bottom Line Leaders.
Responsibilities
  • Build and maintain a pathway for developing future worship leaders and Bottom Line Leaders.
  • Identify emerging leaders and help discern their readiness.
  • Create or maintain worship values training for worship volunteers.
  • Create or maintain onboarding and training content for new worship team members.
  • Plan occasional skill development opportunities for the worship team.
  • Help develop musicians and vocalists as needed.
  • Train new youth worship leaders as appropriate and in partnership with youth ministry leadership.
  • Help ensure the worship ministry is not dependent on one person, one team, or one generation of leaders.
  • Develop worship volunteers who are spiritually mature, musically prepared, relationally healthy, and pastorally aware.

6. Worship Systems, Planning, and Readiness Are Clear and Sustainable
The Worship Director ensures worship ministry systems serve the ministry without personally carrying every administrative task.
Responsibilities
  • Maintain clear worship ministry roles, expectations, and communication rhythms.
  • Ensure weekly worship plans are prepared with adequate time for team preparation.
  • Work with Bottom Line Leaders to ensure each worship team is prepared for Sunday.
  • Coordinate with the Production & Environments Director regarding tracks, stage setup, IEMs, sound needs, rehearsal needs, and service flow.
  • Confirm that team members have what they need to prepare well.
  • Ensure service communication rhythms are clear, whether through PCO, Telegram, email, or another agreed-upon tool.
  • Partner with the Volunteer Coordinator on PCO scheduling support, volunteer responses, reminders, and follow-up.
  • Maintain and periodically clean up the worship song list in Planning Center.
  • Ensure worship-related licenses, supplies, instruments, and gear needs are handled by the appropriate owner.
  • Identify recurring worship-related equipment or stage-system issues and help resolve them with the appropriate team.
  • Oversee the worship ministry task system and ensure responsibilities are assigned to the appropriate owner: Worship Director, Volunteer Coordinator, Bottom Line Leaders, Production Team, Communications, or another staff member.
  • Monitor worship-related event requests and make ministry-level decisions about worship team capacity, priority, and readiness.

Worship Event Priority Order
Worship team capacity should be stewarded according to the following priority order:
  1. Sunday morning gatherings
  2. Major church-wide gatherings
  3. Worship nights / prayer nights
  4. Young adult or college-related gatherings
  5. Youth gatherings
  6. Other ministry requests as capacity allows

The Worship Director has authority to recommend "not now," "not with live worship," or "not with the full team" when a request would overextend the worship ministry or weaken Sunday readiness.
Responsibilities Primarily Owned by the Volunteer Coordinator
The Volunteer Coordinator owns or substantially supports the following:
  • Church-wide volunteer recruitment systems.
  • General volunteer onboarding workflow.
  • Volunteer database management.
  • Background check and screening processes where applicable.
  • PCO scheduling support and schedule follow-up.
  • Weekly follow-up with volunteers who have not responded to PCO requests.
  • Sending or automating worship-team-wide feedback forms when requested by the Worship Director.
  • Sending worship team handbook and onboarding materials to new volunteers.
  • Helping ensure new volunteers have required apps and access.
  • Maintaining general volunteer communication processes.
  • Supporting volunteer appreciation and broad volunteer care initiatives.
  • Helping ministries arrange substitutes or fill last-minute gaps.

The Worship Director partners with these processes but should not personally carry all volunteer administration.
Responsibilities Primarily Owned by the Worship Ministry Coach
The Worship Ministry Coach serves as a support and feedback role, not as the direct supervisor of the Worship Director.
The Worship Ministry Coach primarily helps with:
  • Watching or reviewing Sunday worship and providing feedback.
  • Helping guard worship culture and theology.
  • Coaching worship leaders or Bottom Line Leaders as requested.
  • Identifying repeated worship patterns that need attention.
  • Supporting a healthy feedback culture.
  • Advising the Worship Director and Senior Pastor on worship health.
  • Helping ensure worship remains Christ-centered, biblically grounded, Spirit-led, humble, and congregational.

The Worship Director remains the primary owner of the worship ministry.
Responsibilities Primarily Owned by the Production & Environments Director
The Production & Environments Director owns production systems and Sunday execution support.
This includes:
  • Sound systems.
  • Slides and presentation software.
  • Livestream.
  • Lighting.
  • Stage setup.
  • Production volunteers.
  • Production orders and service-flow execution.
  • AVL troubleshooting.
  • Technical readiness for Sunday services and major gatherings.
  • Room and environment execution in partnership with the appropriate ministry/event owners.

The Worship Director collaborates with Production on worship-related needs but does not own production systems.
Responsibilities the Worship Director Does Not Primarily Own
The Worship Director does not primarily own:
  • Church-wide volunteer recruitment.
  • General volunteer database management.
  • Background check administration.
  • General onboarding systems across all ministries.
  • Church-wide volunteer appreciation systems.
  • Chasing every PCO response personally.
  • Filling every last-minute volunteer gap personally.
  • All worship administration by default.
  • Production systems outside worship-specific coordination.
  • Church-wide communications.
  • Event project management.
  • Final authority over the entire Sunday gathering apart from the Senior Pastor's direction.

The Worship Director must lead the worship ministry without absorbing every operational detail.
Team Structure
Reports To
Senior Pastor
The Senior Pastor owns overall Sunday vision, theological direction, preaching direction, and final worship alignment with Antioch's mission, vision, values, and pastoral priorities.
Operational Alignment
Director of Ministries
The Director of Ministries helps ensure the Worship Director is aligned with staff rhythms, ministry systems, cross-department coordination, and organizational priorities. The DoM does not replace the Senior Pastor's theological and cultural oversight of worship.
Works Closely With
  • Volunteer Coordinator
  • Worship Ministry Coach
  • Production & Environments Director
  • Preaching Team
  • Bottom Line Leaders
  • Youth Ministry Leadership
  • Communications & Events Coordinator
  • Other ministry leaders requesting worship support

Supervisory / Leadership Responsibilities
The Worship Director provides direct ministry lead