Most speaking on worship produces inspiration. What Bruno Miranda brings is something harder to find: a theological framework that worship leaders, pastors, and church teams can actually use on Monday morning — built on two decades of ministry practice across every continent and grounded in what Scripture actually says about congregational praise.
The invitation to speak is always an invitation to speak clearly. That means not softening what the text says to make it more palatable, and not pretending the contemporary worship landscape is healthier than it is. But it also means bringing the constructive framework alongside the honest diagnosis — so that the people in the room leave with more than a conviction. They leave with a direction.
Speaking invitations are welcomed from conferences, churches, seminaries, ministry training programs, and academic institutions. International engagements are routine.
Berklee College of Music
Music Production & Engineering · Graduate
Indiana University
Master of Science — Music Technology
Liberty University
Doctoral Studies in Theology · Faculty — Commercial Music
Ordained Minister of the Gospel
First Baptist Church of Mount Dora, Florida · 2023
Latin Grammy Nominated
Artist, Composer & Audio Engineer · Mosaico, 2016
What does Scripture actually say about congregational song? This session introduces a systematic framework for evaluating worship — not by style, but by what the text requires. Drawn from Bruno's forthcoming book of the same name.
A practical theological framework for worship leaders and songwriters — Scripture-driven, congregationally accountable, and applicable in the room where set lists get built. Available in keynote or full-day workshop format.
The person at the microphone is not necessarily the worship leader. This session addresses the pastoral theology of worship authority, what Scripture assigns to eldership, and why the confusion between the two is hurting congregations.
How does musical style carry cultural meaning, and what does that require of worship leaders in cross-cultural contexts? Drawn from ministry experience across Africa, Asia, Latin America, Eastern Europe, and the Middle East.
God is not primarily looking for musicians. He is forming theologians. This session reframes the identity of the worship leader as a pastoral figure whose primary accountability is theological, not musical.
Jesus named Mammon as a rival lord. This session examines how Mammon operates inside prosperity theology, Christian consumerism, and economic assumptions most Christians have never examined. Direct. Evidence-based. Pastoral.
| Keynote Address Single session for conference main stage or opening night. Full content presentation with optional Q&A. Adapted to your event theme and audience. | 45 – 90 min | |
| Workshop Interactive session for worship teams, pastors, or ministry students. Teaching, application exercises, and team discussion. Half-day or full-day available. | Half or Full Day | |
| Seminar Series Multi-session engagement for a church, seminary, or ministry school — typically three to five sessions across one or two days covering a coherent curriculum arc. | 3 – 5 Sessions | |
| Academic Lecture Formal lecture for seminary, university, or graduate theology contexts. Footnoted lecture notes available. Peer-level engagement and departmental colloquium formats accommodated. | 60 – 75 min | |
| Preaching & Worship Night Pastoral preaching engagement for local churches. Available as guest preacher, worship night speaker, or both. Ordained minister of the Gospel, First Baptist Mount Dora, 2023. | Service Length |
Submit a speaking invitation through the contact form — select "Speaking / Conference" as the nature of your inquiry. Include the event name, date, city, expected audience size, and the format you have in mind. International invitations welcome. Response within five business days.