Christmas is on Sunday this year. What is your church doing?
Poll Results
Christmas is on Sunday this year. What is your church doing?
We have a special program and are doing MORE than we usually do most Sundays Votes: 1
We are maintaining our normal schedule Votes: 3
We are having a service (or more), but paring down our schedule Votes: 23
We have cancelled our services that day Votes: 3
We have not decided Votes: 0
We are doing something DIFFERENT (e.g., meeting offsite, shorter praise time, etc.) but still something Votes: 0
Other Votes: 0
Bah humbug. We’re ignoring the whole thing. Votes: 0
- 9 views
We typically (and will once again) have a Christmas Eve service, but when Christmas falls on a Sunday it usually means “desertion time.” The troops are occupied on other fronts. This year, we have eliminated all but our main 10:30 service.
What is your church doing? What are your experiences?
"The Midrash Detective"
Pared down: AM worship service only (no SS). A good very good plan
Romania this week. Do you know what these strange people do? They go to church Christmas Eve and Christmas Day and the day after Christmas. Even if none of these days are a Sunday! Talk about fanatics! They should do what we do and that is spend as little time in the Lord’s House as possible! It’s our day to have presents! Not go to church!
Jeff Straub
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.
Praise God for what they do in Romania! I would love to be a part of that.
Midweek - 2 hours also more prayer. Too much of a good thing?
Now maybe this is just “tradition” but they do actually pray in Romanian churches. I cannot remember the last real prayer meeting I have been in - in US or Canada that is.
The good news is, the more they become like American churches—CCM, and the like, the less they need to pray. Now that’s progress!
Jeff Straub
For Christmas, I am asking a worship leader to help me develop the service. It will be at our normal 10:30 time slot (No Sunday School) and will focus upon helping us appreciate the great gift God has given us. In past years, we have often had visitors to this service also.
I don’t think adjusting the services for the day is necessarily “caving in” to the society, but it trying to relate eternal truths to this secular world in which I find myself. If I were in Romania, I would delight to participate in all the services. My Hispanic family comes to the Christmas Eve service, then has a large family gathering and meal. They have been able to put one foot in each culture.
Dick Dayton
[Jeff Straub] Sunday - 9AM Prayer Meeting - Really!; 10 AM SS; 11 AM Service; Sunday night 6 PM Prayer meeting … what again!?! 7 PM Service … on a normal Sunday. Other Sundays might be longerThis may give rise to a new variation on an old saying, “When in Romania, do as the Romanians do!” In this case, it would be amazing.
Midweek - 2 hours also more prayer.
"The Midrash Detective"
The good news is, the more they become like American churches—CCM, and the like, the less they need to pray. Now that’s progress!Jeff, can you explain this a little more? What specifically does “CCM, and the like” mean?
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 wanted to fight over prayer…. :bigsmile:
When I began attending an IFCA Bible Church, one of the first things I noticed was that Christmas was all but non-existent. No Christmas Eve service, maybe a few carols on the Sunday before, but they didn’t want to go overboard or anything. :cry: I believe there may have even been a small contingent that was opposed to celebrating holidays.
In the first church I pastored, I learned quickly that, try as I might to institute Christmas — while the denominational churches in town were setting up extra chairs, us “funny”-mental Baptists would gather as a humble group with those few who did not head “home for the holidays.”
So there you have it — let’s put on our bathrobes (shepherds’ cosutmes) and have us a Christmas play! :p
Church Ministries Representative, serving in the Midwest, for The Friends of Israel Gospel Ministry
We are, however, commanded to memorialize His death. If a church goes full monty on Christmas but not on the Lord’s Supper, I think they’ve got their priorities out of whack. We certainly don’t fuss about a church not celebrating other holidays, so I don’t see why Christmas should be made some kind of Christian imperative. Christians didn’t invent Christmas, I don’t see why we are supposed to preserve it.
The church we are visiting is sticking with the normal schedule, as far as I know, and having a cantata. It’s our first Christmas there, so we don’t know what their tradition is just yet.
In my own limited mind, I would compare Christmas to Easter, and would agree that it is out of balance to plan/prepare/practice and celebrate Christmas for nearly a quarter of the year, then spend one day (Easter Sunday) on the passion of Christ — and even then celebrating His resurrection without putting that in context, such as even telling us that He ever died first!
For all of its weaknesses, the church year calendar has some real strengths, and it corrects the above abuses. For those who err on the side of overdoing Christmas, I think that basically springs out of mimicking the culture’s commercialization of it.
As far as the Lord’s Supper, I think a better way of judging would be to compare how various churches and traditions practice that ordinance. I think there has been some real progress here in fundamental Baptist churches. For those that still have Sunday night services, often now the first Sunday night of the month fully revolves around communion. In the church we currently attend, we have it in the morning, but then have a meal and no Sunday evening service that week.
These are big improvements from the days when it was tacked on after the invitation, 20 minutes after most people were already ready to leave. :~
Church Ministries Representative, serving in the Midwest, for The Friends of Israel Gospel Ministry
I understand that there is often a combative spirit between those who choose to celebrate Christmas vs those who don’t, and that is unfortunate, to say the least.
I guess personally, I would not commonly think of saying of a church, “They don’t do anything for Christmas, but boy-oh-boy do they do a great job with the Lord’s Supper!” I guess to me that is comparing apples and tomcats. Not, of course, that the two have no relation whatsoever, but that would be a curious combination to compare to my mind.
Yes, as you say, the Lord’s Supper is Biblically mandated.
The celebration of Christmas on Dec. 25 is not. I wonder, however, if we did not celebrate Christmas, how often we would look at passages like Isa. 7, Matt. 1 and Luke 3, or how often we would stop for a Sunday School lesson on the Nicene Creed. I know that my life would be much the poorer for taking out Christmas!
Allowing four Sundays to celebrate Christmas and four to prepare for Easter, that leaves 44 other Sundays in the year. If you have Sunday morning and Sunday night, that is 88 “regular” Sunday services to plan, prepare for and fill. I see no harm in taking the opportunity to celebrate the holidays and use them as a teaching tool.
Church Ministries Representative, serving in the Midwest, for The Friends of Israel Gospel Ministry
[Paul J. Scharf] OK Susan!You are trying to read too much into what I wrote. It’s not a comparison of The Lord’s Supper vs Christmas, but a Biblically mandated memorial vs one that is not. I also did not imply, as far as I can see, that there was harm in taking the opportunity to celebrate a holiday. The harm is in giving spiritual weight to things that the Bible doesn’t.
I guess personally, I would not commonly think of saying of a church, “They don’t do anything for Christmas, but boy-oh-boy do they do a great job with the Lord’s Supper!” I guess to me that is comparing apples and tomcats. Not, of course, that the two have no relation whatsoever, but that would be a curious combination to compare to my mind.
Yes, as you say, the Lord’s Supper is Biblically mandated.
The celebration of Christmas on Dec. 25 is not. I wonder, however, if we did not celebrate Christmas, how often we would look at passages like Isa. 7, Matt. 1 and Luke 3, or how often we would stop for a Sunday School lesson on the Nicene Creed. I know that my life would be much the poorer for taking out Christmas!
Allowing four Sundays to celebrate Christmas and four to prepare for Easter, that leaves 44 other Sundays in the year. If you have Sunday morning and Sunday night, that is 88 “regular” Sunday services to plan, prepare for and fill. I see no harm in taking the opportunity to celebrate the holidays and use them as a teaching tool.
As a family we are aware that we should consistently study the Scriptures, and we do not need a holiday to help us appreciate God’s miraculous grace. Christmas as we know it is not an ancient celebration, but came as a result of the embracing of Dickens’ idea of ‘peace on earth good will toward men’. I don’t think Christianity suffered hundreds of years of spiritual famine without this particular holiday.
I would agree that these are sub-par reasons for a church to hold a particular type of Christmas observance, and if they do so in that fashion, their observance may be big, but it is probably not going to be very spiritual — just an attempt to cater to the culture. In that case, it MIGHT even be better to skip it. I would put alot of the seeker-type churches in this group.
On the other hand, there were very profound celebrations of Christmas long before Dickens came around, such as in the Lutheran tradition, where it was always a major part of the church year since the Reformation. It is possible for a church to make a big deal of Christmas and do it in a very Biblical, spiritual, traditional, historically Christian way.
There is actually lots of interesting history in the church as to who did celebrate Christmas, who didn’t and why. Yes, much of what we know today in our culture regarding Christmas stems from the implementation of Dickens’ ideal, but it does not have to be that way for a particular church or individual. Perhaps the reason we as Baptists would feel that our celebration of Christmas is rooted in the culture is because we are often so disconnected from church history (sometimes purposefully so), and thus the current culture is all we are left to draw from.
Lots of food for thought here…
Church Ministries Representative, serving in the Midwest, for The Friends of Israel Gospel Ministry
If you need a picture of your kid in his bathrobe and towel (Baptist shepherd’s costume), could you please take it at home before you come to church, not walk up to the front row and start shooting your camera during the service?
We are supposed to be celebrating the birth of Christ here — this isn’t Dancing With the Stars!
Church Ministries Representative, serving in the Midwest, for The Friends of Israel Gospel Ministry
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