WHAT MAKES THE KENANIAH METHOD DIFFERENT?
A Formation Pathway — Not Just a Singing Method
The Kenaniah Method™ is not simply singing lessons or a worship team program.
It is a formation pathway designed specifically for worship singers — those who serve on worship teams, support congregational singing, and contribute to the worship life of the church.
The Kenaniah Method Exists…
Through conversations, surveys, and ministry experience, several common challenges consistently emerge among worship singers and worship teams.
The Kenaniah Method was developed to address these challenges, and provide a bridge across four key gaps:
Meaning Gap
Skill Gap
Formation Gap
Participation Gap
What sets The Kenaniah Method apart:
Designed specifically for worship singers
Strengthens the role of the worship singer
Develops vocal skill that supports clear communication
Strengthens both the singer and the team
Provides a clear, proven growth pathway
Forming worship singers who develop their voice, understand the truth they sing, and serve the worship of the church with clarity, confidence, and authenticity.
The Kenaniah Method
shaping REAL singers in REAL settings
Across workshops, choirs, and one-on-one lessons, a shift happens when singers understand how their voice works and what they’re communicating.
Vocal Workshop — From Copying to Communicating
In a recent workshop, singers completed a short reflection on how they naturally approach singing and their voice.
They quickly recognised themselves and responded with laughter — “that’s me.”
After a simple message-focused exercise, they were asked what they would take away and apply to their singing.
The response was the same thing:
“It’s not about trying to sound like the original, or like someone else…
it’s about the words and making it clearly understood by others.”
Private Lesson — From Instruction to Authenticity
A worship singer who faithfully follows her leaders directions and listening to others on her team, noticed a difference when she was able to “interpret” what was being asked and use her singing training and skills to achieve the result.
After a simple natural-expression approach to a song, she said:
“It sounds more authentic.”
The sound itself still aligned with what was needed — but the way she arrived there had changed.
Instead of copying or following, she was now making informed vocal choices that stayed real for her.
Choir Rehearsal - From Understanding to Engagement
In a choir session, one member became emotional, saying the song took him to a place — exactly what the message described.
Another commented on the atmosphere in the room, and another noted that “everyone was right there together.”
This wasn’t just about vocal sound —
it was about connection to the message and shared understanding of it.
When singers understand and engage with what they’re singing, everything changes.