How We Worshipped One Sunday in April 2024

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Churches worship in a variety of ways—some good, others … not so good. The “right way to worship” question often ends up at a discussion of the regulative vs. normative principles. Here, I’ll do something different. I’ll simply describe how our congregation worshipped one Sunday in April 2024. Perhaps it will help you. Perhaps it will encourage you. Maybe it will give you some ideas. Maybe it’ll let you know what not to do! But here it is.

This is our service order:

Call to worship

Pastor

  • Old Testament lectionary reading

  • Psalm lectionary reading

  • Gospel connection

  • Prayer of adoration

Scripture reading

Congregation

  • New Testament lectionary reading

  • Gospel lectionary reading

Song of worship (x2)

Congregation

Prayers

Pastor

  • Prayer for church family member of the week

  • Prayer for missionary of the week

  • Prayer of confession from scripture

Offering

Congregation

Announcements

Pastor

Songs of worship (x2)

Congregation

Catechism

Pastor

  • Question exposition

  • Answer exposition

Sermon

Pastor

Song of worship

Congregation

Table 1

What follows is a description of each component.

Part 1—Call to Worship

Call to worship

Pastor

  • Old Testament lectionary reading

  • Psalm lectionary reading

  • Gospel connection

  • Prayer of adoration

Table 2

The call to worship is the formal trigger which begins the worship service. It calls people to begin the dialogue with God as a congregation of believers. I do not step to the pulpit cold and begin the lectionary reading. I greet the people, welcome them to worship, and say something like: “We’ll begin our worship service by hearing God speak to us from scripture!” I then read the Old Testament and Psalm lectionary readings.

We’re commanded to read scripture publicly when we gather (1 Tim 4:13). This is the practice we see during Jesus’ ministry and afterwards (Lk 4:16; Acts 13:14–16; Col 4:16; 1 Thess 5:27). Rather than re-invent the wheel, I simply use the Revised Common Lectionary’s readings. If you prefer an alternative, your hymnal likely has themed scripture reading suggestions in an appendix at the back—check them out.

In a perfect world, the scripture readings, the songs, and the sermon would have the same key theme and blend together nicely. In reality, I’m a bi-vocational pastor and I don’t have time to make this dream a reality. So, while the selections do not always tie neatly into the theme of the sermon, that isn’t my goal. I want to read scripture and connect these readings to the Gospel to begin our worship service.

I display the readings on the screen like so:


Figure 1

I always key the “Gospel connection” to the readings. This past Sunday, the first two readings were Acts 3:12-19 and Psalm 4. I spoke for 30 seconds about how Jesus was the author of life who offered to wash away the sins of anyone who repents (Acts 3:15, 19). I reminded them that the Lord alone can make us dwell in safety (Ps 4:8). The object is to show how God’s words in the readings connect to the larger Christian story, centered in Jesus’ life + death + resurrection + ascension, and culminating in the new tomorrow at Revelation 22. This is a refreshing way to begin every worship service.

I then pivot to the prayer of adoration, which is keyed to the first two lectionary readings. I always pattern my public prayers in the manner of a “collect.” This is a term with a tortured etymology,1 but it’s easy to understand. It’s a short prayer which follows a simple five-fold structure:

  1. Invocation. This means you call on God by name (e.g., “Dear Lord …,” etc.).

  2. Acknowledgment. This is the fact or quality of God that you’re relying on as you make your petition. In short, I briefly “acknowledge” the sum of what reading has just taught us.

  3. Petition. What you’re asking—the point of the prayer.

  4. Aspiration. Why you’re asking for the petition, usually transitioned to with the phrase “so that.”

  5. Pleading. The basis for your appeal to God is the grace of Jesus. You can altar the wording, of course, but you basically note this.

These prayers are short, punchy, and won’t put anyone to sleep. This structure gives you more “bang for your buck” than most rambling, unplanned prayers. I write them out beforehand. Here is what the prayer this past Sunday looked like, keyed to the two lectionary readings in Figure 1, above:

Invocation

Dear Lord,

Acknowledgment

Your word tells us:

  • that Jesus is the author of life,
  • that He washes away the sins of everyone who repents,
  • and that He alone can make us lie down in safety and peace

Petition

Give us assurance of peace, pardon from all our sins, and a new sense of love for you

Aspiration

So that we’d be joyful sons and daughters for you, filled with life and love for your Son’s message

Pleading

We ask this in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—one God, now and forever, amen!

Table 3

Part 2—Scripture reading

Scripture reading

Congregation

  • New Testament lectionary reading

  • Gospel lectionary reading

Table 4

The congregation does these readings. We alternate between (a) having a designated person come up to do the readings, and (b) having the pastor lead the congregation in a responsive reading. This means I read a sentence or two, then we all read the following sentence or two, and we switch back and forth until the readings are completed.

Anyone in the congregation can volunteer to do a reading, and we rotate through the list. We don’t care about how “good” the person sounds. We also don’t care what translation the person uses.

The secretary decides where to split the responsive readings. We print them in the bulletin in full. The bolded sections are where we read as a congregation, and the unbolded sections are what I read.


Figure 2

Part 3—Songs of Worship

We have two teams of musicians which alternate. One of vocal + box drum + guitar or piano, and the other is vocal + piano. I let them choose the songs and provide minimal input. All I do is provide the sermon schedule which shows the passages for their assigned week. Sometimes they choose songs which loosely fit with the theme, other times not.

Some pastors have concerns about women leading worship in song. I am not one of them. One of our musician teams is composed of two women.

If the song is from our hymnal, we just display the hymnal number on the screen. If it isn’t in the hymnal, we display the lyrics on screen. This past Sunday, the vocal + piano duo of ladies led worship in song, and these songs were: (a) “God of Wonders” by Marc Byrd, Steve Hindalong, and (b) “Indescribable” by Ben Fielding and Brooke Ligertwood (Hillsong). Two other songs follow later in the service, but there’s no need to discuss them further.

Part 4—Prayers

Prayers

Pastor

  • Prayer for church family member of the week

  • Prayer for missionary of the week

  • Prayer of confession from scripture

Table 4

We spotlight both a church attender and a missionary each week. I don’t restrict this “highlight” to only church members—if you’re a regular attender who gives evidence of saving faith, then you’re out into the “spotlight” rotation.

Each week, the secretary gathers prayer requests and praises from both the church family member and the missionary of the week. I read them to the congregation, and I announce that we will pray for these requests. The secretary also emails these requests to the church on Mondays and Fridays following the Sunday at which I announce the “people of the week.”

We do all this to foster a “family ethos” in the church, let people know one another, and to follow the biblical pattern of prayer for each other.

The prayer of confession changes weekly. I display a verse or a passage about repentance and confession of sin. I speak for perhaps one minute on the need to specifically name our sins, confess and forsake them (Prov 28:13), and to ask for God’s help to keep us on the path to Christlikeness.

You can find appropriate scriptures for this in: (a) Kenneth Boa, Handbook to Prayer, and (b) Christopher J. Ellis and Myra Blyth, Gathering for Worship: Patterns and Prayers for the Community of Disciples, and (c) Carrie Steenwyck and John Witvliet (eds.), The Worship Sourcebook, 2nd ed., and (d) Patrick Curles (ed.) Book of Common Worship.

I display the prayer of confession passage on the screen in two parts; the first as I read and explain it, and the second as I challenge the congregation to personalize the text for their own life:


Figure 3

Parts 5 and 6—Offerings and Announcements

We allow any regular believing attender to participate in taking the offering—man, woman, boy, or girl. We pass plates down each row.

We try to keep announcements to a minimum, but like death and taxes, they will never go away. Robert Rayburn suggests putting them at the very beginning of the service so the dialogue between us and God is not disrupted,2 but I think it is very strange and flippant to begin a worship service with announcements. Nor do I think it’s appropriate to end a service with announcements. So, we insert them briefly during the service and move on. In effect, we bury them.

Part 7—Catechism

Catechism

Pastor

  • Question exposition

  • Answer exposition

We’ve been doing this for about 14 months. We began with the New City Catechism, which has 52 questions and answers. I thought it was decent. But, I wanted something more Baptistic. I settled on Hercules Collins’ Orthodox Catechism (ca. 1680), which is based on the Heidelberg Catechism. I think it is important to provide a steady diet of Christian doctrine in a systematic way. Some folks may never attend a church meeting apart from the Sunday worship service and will therefore miss doctrinal teaching. Inserting a catechism question and answer into this service will provide something to these people.

I have toyed with making the “answer” responsive—that is, asking the congregation to read the answer together with me. I usually just read it myself, but I may lean more into the responsive method. I always remind the congregation of last week’s question and answer, explain why this week’s question matters, and briefly expound on the answer. I display the question and answer on the screen in separate slides:


Table 5

Part 8—Sermon

The sermon is usually 35 minutes long. I believe a sermon over 40 minutes could have been better edited. My sermon two Sundays ago was 39 minutes long. My sermon this past Sunday was 42 minutes. However, I was preaching a massive section (Rom 14:1 to 15:13), so it wasn’t an easy task! I will not speak about philosophy of sermon preparation and delivery here—perhaps some other time.

I believe this service order is sound. I would like to engage the congregation more with prayer, but haven’t yet figured out a way to do it. The lectionary readings, the catechism, and the prayers of confession and repentance are my favorites. They’re fairly uncommon in churches without a liturgical background, but our method is low-key enough that these “high church” components are not stuffy or rote. I believe they greatly enhance our worship.

Notes

1 Oxford English Dictionary, s.v. “collect (n.), sense 3,” July 2023, https://doi.org/10.1093/OED/3438532946.

2 Robert Rayburn, O Come, Let us Worship: Corporate Worship in the Evangelical Church (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1980), pp. 169-170.

Discussion

I like it. There’s a lot of respect here for the “shape” we know worship took for centuries in Christian churches—with some thoughtful departures.

I love the idea of including a bit of catechism. As much as we’d like to funnel everyone into Sunday School/Adult Bible Study for systematic teaching of Christian doctrine, the reality is that many are not going to attend—or not regularly. So if you work through a catechism in Sunday worship, you can close a lot of doctrinal understanding gaps over time—especially if you include a little review now and then.

Lectionary seems like a great idea, too. We tend to forget that a major part of the reason lectionaries and liturgical calendars were invented was for teaching the faith to people who were mostly illiterate. But what if you’re in a setting where people can read but they just don’t? Maybe the same solution is a good fit?

Questions for Tyler:

  • Do you do this order of service every Sunday or vary it/in what ways do you vary it?
  • Have you considered including communion? (How do you incorporate it when you observe it?)

I think this is great for church life…

Anyone in the congregation can volunteer to do a reading, and we rotate through the list.

One of the things I’ve enjoyed and benefited much from at my church is the variety of people who participate in prayers and readings—as well as music. We could use a few more in the rotation, but having “laymen” participate in these ways adds so much to the sense of being a body.

Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.

We observe the Lord’s Supper on the first Sunday of each month. We place it directly before the sermon, after the catechism. The order otherwise stays the same each week. The readings, prayers, and catechism always changes, but the order is the same. So, on Lord’s Supper days, our service is about 10 or 15 minutes longer than normal. Our service yesterday, without the Lord’s Supper, was 83 mins.

Tyler is a pastor in Olympia, WA and works in State government.

I would like to try something like this some time. I think I would probably want something structures A, B, C, and D and change them once a quarter, or every other Sunday or something like that.

You decided not to use a creed at all, looks like—what went into that decision?

Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.

We used to recite a creed responsively every six weeks (Apostles, Nicene, and a newer one from our hymnal). I decided to drop it in favor of responsive lectionary readings. I could still mix creeds back in, I suppose, but I never felt entirely comfortable reciting a creed. I’d prefer to recite scripture. But, I feel a pull towards mixing a creed back in. I’ve thought about it.

Your idea about a rotating structure is interesting!

Tyler is a pastor in Olympia, WA and works in State government.

This looks much like a Reformed Baptist Church service. More of a liturgical model. I have spent years in churches that have this type of flow. Some will align Scripture reading with the sermon text. Almost always there is a reverse testament reference in the sermon text and a reference for Psalms. Some will also structure the singing a bit more like a Psalter, Song of Adoration....

Most will do announcements after the service as it doesn't flow with the structure of a service. Oftentimes they will have a formal doxology, where the teaching elder will read a doxology request, usually with a hand raised, as in blessing of the congregation and sending them off.

At the risk of impersonating Moses' father-in-law, it strikes me that a lot of those readings would be great opportunities for laymen to participate. I personally love readings, by the way. Grew up with them as a Methodist, and I joke that Episcopalians (it's the "Methodist Episcopal" church, after all) often ignore more Scripture in a typical service than we Baptists read.

(and yes, too often, Scripture that is read is ignored, but at least it's read)

Aspiring to be a stick in the mud.

I personally like benedictions at the close of services. We don’t use them generally at my church. We have a closing prayer, and it might say “benediction” on the program, but I think of “benediction” as a having a certain form, generally a blessing on the body in prayer form (with or without a hand raised, as dgszweda mentioned).

I don’t love them so much that I’d necessarily want it to happen every Sunday, but they have a beauty to them that I enjoy from time to time. It truly adds something, especially if it’s a Scripture quotation.

Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.

I tend to like a more liturgical church service that has some roots in historical church models.

Doxology

"The early church employed the practice of offering a doxology at the end of a service as a benediction, to leave things on a “high note” and give blessing to the congregation, and even more importantly, to orient members to have a heart of praise and thanks towards God and Jesus Christ as they left the meeting." - Scott Roberts

I like the high note and blessing that it leaves amongst the congregation, as well as a feeling of closure to the service. Instead of the last thing people here when leaving the service is something around needing nursery helpers, it is great to hear the blessing of God laid out over the hearts of the congregation. The early church as well as during the Reformation, always closed with a Doxology. My favorite is always 2 Peter 3:18 “Now to him who is able to keep you from stumbling and to present you blameless before the presence of his glory with great joy, to the only God, our Savior, through Jesus Christ our Lord, be glory, majesty, dominion, and authority, before all time and now and forever. Amen.”

Something feels good for me, when a pastor lays out his hand across the congregation, quotes something like 2 Peter 3:18, and the congregation responds with an Amen. And in the silence the pastor says, "You are dismissed", and then immediately the noise and bustle of the church breaks out.

Bert,

In Reformed Baptist Churches that I have been a part of, often men do stand up and read in the church service. And it is great. In my experience, the pastor reads the first reading and then 1 to 2 men stand up at other times to read subsequent passages as required. The men are chosen by the elders, and the readers are encouraged to read the passage throughout the week and even study it before presenting it before the church. The church stands and the reading is often ended with something like, "May the Lord bless the reading of His Word". It lays out a level of seriousness that should be taken in publicly reading the Word, as well as the importance in the role of reading.

I am in a reformed Baptist church and we follow fairly close to what dgszweda describes. We have a benediction every service as a way to let the gospel have the last word. We also do not have announcements during the service as we don’t believe it belongs there. I love Mark Minnick’s preaching but so often he will spend 15-20 minutes during the sermon doing announcements. Personally I think that should happen elsewhere.

I lean toward keeping announcements out of “worship.” We do ours at the beginning with a welcome, then follow with the Call to Worship, etc.

What I’ll concede to other approaches: Announcements are often about church-family life, and the main weekly gathering is a family gathering as well as a worship gathering. So I do think there is room for some family business in that time together. A counter is that we could have a different gathering where a family-business focus is more appropriate. But the reality is that most of the body is going to be there on Sunday morning, so… I understand the difficulty.

Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.

>>I lean toward keeping announcements out of “worship.” We do ours at the beginning with a welcome, then follow with the Call to Worship, etc.<<

I agree with this. What we did at our previous church was to run presentation slides on a rotating pattern with all the announcements before the church service. If there were any particular announcements that warranted special attention, they were announced in person before the call to worship. Of course, emails were also sent out to the congregation with each week’s announcements, but there was always someone who didn’t read those.

Dave Barnhart