Sound check is a familiar time for most of us. A room that was once eerily quiet has now been filled with the sounds of people chatting and gear being set-up, instrument tuning and off-line rehearsing. Now, it’s finally time to “make noise.”
Isn’t it amazing what happens once the mics are turned on? Sound fills the room. It comes from people who are making little to no effort compared to what they were doing before, and yet their sounds fill the room. The microphone simply amplifies what’s already there; it helps it reach wider and farther than it once did. There’s nothing necessarily heroic about the person behind the microphone, but he or she is in a position to have what they’re doing amplified for a wide range of listeners.
In a production context, we certainly want to amplify good content, whether that be from an audio, video or lighting perspective. But we don’t want to fall into the habit of believing that the only content worth amplifying is coming from the platform.
Andy Stanley once said: “Don’t confuse giftedness with holiness. The person with the microphone isn’t always the holiest one in the room.”
I think we’d all agree that we’ve been in some situations where that was most certainly the case. But, even in the situations where the person with the microphone is communicating amazing truth, it’s still worth noting that for some people in the room, it will be their interactions with people like you and me that make the biggest impact.
It’s quite possible that as far as God is concerned, one of us might be the holiest in the room on any given week. As we already know from I Samuel 16:7, God is not looking at our outward productions because He doesn’t see as man sees. Instead, He’s looking at our hearts and lives. And if that’s true, I think it begs the question: What is being amplified by my life?
Are people more convinced of the goodness of God after they’ve been with me? Do my responses to stress and production glitches magnify what’s coming off the platform or detract from it? Are people encouraged or discouraged after they’ve been part of a team I’m leading? Do I prioritize the task or the person? Is the content I’m communicating worth amplifying? Would I want a mic to be on me?
Each of us, no matter our role, is being used by God to tell of Him. Because most of us are in a production context in Christian environments or churches, people can rightly assume what we believe about God based on their interactions with us. In the same way, many of us have certainly been in some scenarios where we’ve experienced the very stark contrast between what someone portrayed on the platform and what we experienced of them off the platform. We know what we think about those people; we think that their behavior off the platform makes what they say on the platform suspect and inauthentic. We feel we know what they’re really like now.
Have you noticed that every time someone picks up a microphone for a sound check, they say the same thing practically the same thing? It’s strangely universal.
Check. Check. Check 1, 2, 3…check.
Well, no matter how overused that might be, I think this is a great time for a mic check of our own—the mic check of our lives. Let’s think about what’s being amplified to the people around us. After all, what’s being amplified is what was already there.