Worship Piano for Beginners: A Step-by-Step Guide [with Video Tutorials]

 
 

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As worship pianists, we typically do not play from sheet music (as classical musicians do). Instead, we usually play from chord charts. A chord chart shows the lyrics (words) of the song along with chords written above them. This is what a chord chart looks like for the traditional chorus “Alleluia”:

As worship pianists, we also do not usually play the melody. This is because the congregation typically knows the melody, and the worship leader is already singing the melody. So our job is to play chords and interesting fill-ins, much like a guitar would.

The Right Hand

This means that we need to know our chords! For the traditional chorus "Alleluia" (see the chord chart above), we need to know how to play a C chord, an F chord, and a G chord. This is how we play these chords:

Play each chord with the right hand, using fingers 1-3-5 (thumb, middle finger, pinky finger). The left hand will play something else shortly.

To play the song "Alleluia," we play each chord 4 times before changing to the next chord. For step-by-step guidance on how to play the right hand for this song, watch this excerpt from my Worship Essentials courses:

The Left Hand

Now it is time to add the left hand! While the right hand is playing chords, the left hand plays a single note. If the right hand is playing a C chord, the left hand plays a C single note. If the right hand is playing an F chord, the left hand plays an F note. You get the picture.

Watch this video excerpt from Worship Essentials to learn how to add the left hand:

The Pedal

Finally, we add the pedal. Pedal with the ball of your right foot. Hold the pedal down when you start playing a chord, and then change the pedal (lift and put it back down) when the chord changes. So hold the pedal down for the entire time that you are playing a C chord, and then change the pedal when you get to the F chord. And voila... you're playing worship music!

This is what “Alleluia” should sound like:

The right hand, left hand, and pedal... these are the basics of playing worship piano! From here, you can learn skills to make your playing sound more interesting by using chord inversions, learning creative chords like 7ths and suspended chords, improvising, trying new accompaniment patterns, and more!

Ready to go further?

The Membership gives you a structured, step-by-step pathway from basics to real worship-ready playing—covering chords, progressions, patterns, and full song application so you can play with confidence.

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The Purpose of Worship: To Know Him

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Ministering to the Heart of Jesus through Worship