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Print magazine

Image Credit: Portland Adventist Academy

PAA Develops Worship Leaders

By U'Lee Brown, Febrero 05, 2026

Nearly 30 years ago, staff members at Portland Adventist Academy began noticing a troubling pattern: some students felt disconnected from their local churches. While present in the pews, many didn’t feel seen, needed or confident that they had something meaningful to offer.

PAA educators asked an important question: What if students didn’t just attend church, but helped lead it?

That question sparked a vision — one rooted in helping students find a sense of belonging, relevance and ownership in their faith communities. Led by Tim Ellis, with the help of Bob Johnson, a music studio was built on campus. For more than 20 years, Ellis taught students not only how to play guitar, but also how to perform, collaborate and lead worship with confidence and purpose. Students also learned the behind-the-scenes skills of sound, production and technical support — roles just as vital to worship as those on stage.

From the beginning, the goal was never simply growing musical skill. PAA wanted students to understand why they lead worship and how their gifts can point others to Christ. Learning an instrument was the starting point; learning to serve was the heart of the program.

The results have been powerful. Over the years, countless students have discovered their place in church life — developing into skilled worship leaders, singing, playing instruments and serving on production teams in their local congregations. That early vision has become a legacy. Following Ellis’ passing 10 years ago, Ellis’ former students stepped forward to continue mentoring and teaching another generation, modeling faithfulness, service and leadership.

Today, PAA has 10 student praise teams that rotate leading worship during chapels and vespers. Each service is an opportunity for students to grow musically, spiritually and personally. Walk into a Portland area church on Sabbath, and chances are you’ll find a PAA student or alumnus singing, playing, running sound or serving faithfully behind the scenes.

At PAA, education goes beyond academics. The mission includes helping students discover their gifts, deepen their faith and actively engage in their churches — both now and long after graduation. By empowering students to lead worship, PAA is partnering with churches to help shape confident young leaders who know they belong, have something to contribute and are ready to serve wherever God calls them.

Image

PAA students regularly help lead church services in the Portland area.

Credit
Portland Adventist Academy
Image

Students learn how their gifts can point others to Christ.

Credit
Portland Adventist Academy
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Featured in: March/April 2026

Author

U'Lee Brown

Portland Adventist Academy communication and development director
Section
Oregon Conference
Tags
Education

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The Gleaner is a gathering place with news and inspiration for Seventh-day Adventist members and friends throughout the northwestern United States. It is an important communication channel for the North Pacific Union Conference — the regional church support headquarters for Adventist ministry throughout Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon and Washington. The original printed Gleaner was first published in 1906, and has since expanded to a full magazine with a monthly circulation of more than 40,000. Through its extended online and social media presence, the Gleaner also provides valuable content and connections for interested individuals around the world.

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