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Therefore encourage one another and build each other up, just as in fact you are doing.

1 Thessalonians 5:11

Saturation Sunday Morning Prayer
Sundays at 9:00 am CST
Thursday Night Thrive Bible Study
Thursdays at 6:30 pm CST

Huntsville, AL 35814

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Life in the Word Church

Address: P.O. Box 22314, Huntsville, AL 35814
Email: vinitajohnsonministries@gmail.com

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What We Believe

We believe Jesus Christ is the Son of the living God.

We believe Jesus Christ died for our sins and on the third morning He rose for our Justification.

According to scripture, accepting Christ as your Savior is the only way to heaven.

Service Times

In-Person Services

Sundays at 9AM + 11AM

We’d love to see you on Sundays.

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Sundays at 11AM

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We’re located at 18909 S. Miles Road, Warrensville Heights, OH 44128

Our Pastor & First Lady

Dr. R.A. Vernon

R.A. Vernon, D.Min. is the founder and senior pastor of The Word Church, one of the fastest- growing churches in the history of Cleveland with campuses and daughter churches throughout Northeast Ohio.

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Dr. Victory Vernon

Victory Rose Vernon, D.Min. has been the loving Leading Lady of The Word Church for two decades.

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Our Worship Style

The Word Church is a non-traditional church with a very free style of worship. We believe in letting people express themselves to God in whatever way they feel comfortable.

FAQs

Find the most asked questions and their answers right here.

  • Feel free to wear whatever you like as long as it’s respectful. The women of The Word never wear anything tight or short to church because they are “Kingdom Women.” Under no circumstances do we wear shorts to church unless we are participating in gymnasium activities.

  • During our time of Praise and Worship, those who are physically able, should stand in honor of God, He’s worthy! Open your mind and heart to the singing done by the Choir and/or Praise Team and join in by singing, clapping your hands or lifting your hands in worship! Allow yourself to be moved by the spirit in your own way…He IS worthy!

  • n honor of God and to focus on the preached word, no food or drink should ever be brought into the sanctuary. Once the formal service has begun, if you must leave the sanctuary, for any reason, you will not be permitted to return to your seat if you were seated within the first 18 rows from the Altar. We try to eliminate all distractions once the preached word is going forth.

  • Yes. We offer Wednesday Word at 12 noon. They are designed for Christians to grow stronger in their walk with the Lord. Dr. Vernon believes that all serious Saints will attend Wednesday Word and Power Services at the time and location of their choice.

  • We embrace “order and excellence” and ALWAYS start all services, at all locations, on time.

  • Kidz In The Word is for all children from birth to 6th grade for all regularly scheduled services.

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What about my kids?

Don’t worry, we’ve got this. There’s lots of fun to be had at Kidz In The Word where every week, our leaders pour into the next generation – raising up world-changers who love God and his house!

If your church has one service at 11:00 am on Sunday mornings, it is likely in the minority. In a recent reader survey we conducted with 1,649 responses, slightly over half of the congregations had only one worship service on Sunday morning, and the times of that single service varied.

The “sacred hour” of 11:00 am is no longer the worship time for a majority of churches.

Though we don’t have definitive information on the origin of the 11:00 am worship time, it appears to be related to an agrarian society. We started our services late in the morning so the farmers could milk the cows and do necessary farm chores.

So what are the trends in worship service times? Our information is based upon the survey we noted above as well as anecdotal data derived from our interaction with thousands of churches.

  1. Churches with multiple Sunday morning services will soon be in the majority. This trend, once more common with larger churches, is now taking hold in congregations of all sizes.
  2. The 11:00 am worship service is no longer the designated time for a majority of churches. The so-called sacred hour of worship is not sacred in most churches. This change started slowly, but it is pervasive now.
  3. Earlier Sunday morning services are gaining in popularity. Worship services with start times from 7:00 am to 8:30 am are growing in many churches. This trend seems to be related to the growth of empty-nest boomers.
  4. The growth in the number of non-Sunday primary services is steady but slow. There has not been a huge upsurge in the number of primary services on a day other than Sunday. The steady growth, however, is an indication that this approach will soon be common in many churches.
  5. The number of churches with concurrent worship service times is small, but will continue to increase. Concurrent services require either a video feed or different preaching/teaching pastors. As the trend in multi-site churches continues to grow, so will these service times.
  6. The most popular worship times start between 9:30 am to 10:30 am. This mid-morning worship time attracts attendees in churches with both single and multiple worship services. As I noted in number three above, I anticipate a shift in popularity to even earlier services.
  7. Worship wars over service times will continue to wane. Though the worship wars have largely been about music style, there have been many wars over worship times as well. We will see fewer of these battles as more churches adopt varieties of worship times.

What are your church’s worship times for its primary weekly services? Has your church made any major changes lately? What have been the results? Let me hear from you

Posted on May 25, 2015


With nearly 40 years of ministry experience, Thom Rainer has spent a lifetime committed to the growth and health of local churches across North America.
More from Thom

Resource Sections

  • Resource Section Themes
  • A Gathering and Greeting
  • B Penitence
  • C Liturgy of the Word
  • D Psalms and Canticles
  • E Creeds and Authorized Affirmations of Faith
  • F Prayers
  • G Praise and Thanksgiving
  • H The Peace
  • I Action and Movement
  • J Conclusion

Sample Services

  • All Creation Worships (Holy Communion)
  • Introduction
  • 1. Morning Praise
  • 2. For all the Church Family
  • 3. An Evening Service of the Word
  • 4. Christ is our Peace
  • 5. The Lord is Here
  • 6. This is our Story
  • 7. Believe and Trust: Holy Communion with Baptism
  • 8. Come, Lord Jesus: Holy Communion in Advent
  • 9. Peace to God’s People: Holy Communion during the Christmas Season
  • 10. Light to the Word: Holy Communion in Epiphany
  • 11. In Penitence and Faith: a Service in Lent
  • 12. Christ is Risen: a Service in Easter
  • Special Days and Occasions

«Sunday service» redirects here. For the Gospel-rap group, see Sunday Service Choir.

A church service (or a service of worship) is a formalized period of Christian communal worship, often held in a church building. It often but not exclusively occurs on Sunday, or Saturday in the case of those churches practicing seventh-day Sabbatarianism. The church service is the gathering together of Christians to be taught the «Word of God» (the Christian Bible) and encouraged in their faith. Technically, the «church» in «church service» refers to the gathering of the faithful rather than to the building in which it takes place. In most Christian traditions, services are presided over by clergy wherever possible. Styles of service vary greatly, from the Anglican, Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox, Presbyterian, Roman Catholic, and Lutheran traditions of liturgical worship to the evangelical Protestant style, that often combines worship with teaching for the believers, which may also have an evangelistic component appealing to the non-Christians or skeptics in the congregation. Quakers and some other groups have no formal outline to their services, but allow the worship to develop as the participants present feel moved. The majority of Christian denominations hold church services on the Lord’s Day (with many offering Sunday morning and Sunday evening services); a number of traditions have mid-week Wednesday evening services as well.[A][2] In some Christian denominations, church services are held daily, with these including those in which the canonical hours are prayed, as well as the offering of the Mass, among other forms of worship.[3] In addition to this, many Christians attend services on holy days such as Christmas, Ash Wednesday, Good Friday, Ascension Thursday, among others depending on the Christian denomination.[4]

A Catholic Mass at St. Maria Church, Sehnde, Germany

HistoryEdit

The worship service is a practice of Christian life that has its origins in the Jewish worship.[5] Jesus Christ and Paul of Tarsus taught a new form of worship of God.[6] As recorded in the gospels, Jesus met together with His disciples to share teachings, discuss topics,[7] pray, and sing hymns.[8] The holding of church services pertains to the observance of the Lord’s Day in Christianity.[9]

The Bible has a precedent for a pattern of morning and evening worship that has given rise to Sunday morning and Sunday evening services of worship held in the churches of many Christian denominations today, a «structure to help families sanctify the Lord’s Day.»[9] In Numbers 28:1–10 and Exodus 29:38–39, «God commanded the daily offerings in the tabernacle to be made once in the morning and then again at twilight».[9] In Psalm 92, which is a prayer concerning the observance of the Sabbath, the prophet David writes «It is good to give thanks to the Lord, to sing praises to your name, O Most High; to declare your steadfast love in the morning, and your faithfulness by night» (cf. Psalm 134:1).[9] Church father Eusebius of Caesarea thus declared: «For it is surely no small sign of God’s power that throughout the whole world in the churches of God at the morning rising of the sun and at the evening hours, hymns, praises, and truly divine delights are offered to God. God’s delights are indeed the hymns sent up everywhere on earth in his Church at the times of morning and evening.»[9]

The first miracle of the Apostles, the healing of the crippled man on the temple steps, occurred because Peter and John went to the Temple to pray (Acts 3:1). Since the Apostles were originally Jews, see Jewish Christians, the concept of fixed prayer times, as well as services therefore which differed from weekday to Sabbath to holy day, were familiar to them. Pliny the Younger (63 — ca. 113), who was not a Christian himself, mentions not only fixed prayer times by believers, but also specific services—other than the Eucharist—assigned to those times: «They met on a stated day before it was light, and addressed a form of prayer to Christ, as to a divinity … after which it was their custom to separate, and then reassemble, to eat in common a harmless meal.»[10]

The real evolution of the Christian service in the first century is shrouded in mystery. By the second and third centuries, such Church Fathers as Clement of Alexandria, Origen, and Tertullian wrote of formalised, regular services: the practice of Morning and Evening Prayer, and prayers at the third hour of the day (terce), the sixth hour of the day (sext), and the ninth hour of the day (none). With reference to the Jewish practices, it is surely no coincidence that these major hours of prayer correspond to the first and last hour of the conventional day, and that on Sundays (corresponding to the Sabbath in Christianity), the services are more complex and longer (involving twice as many services if one counts the Eucharist and the afternoon service). Similarly, the liturgical year from Christmas via Easter to Pentecost covers roughly five months, the other seven having no major services linked to the work of Christ. However, this is not to say that the Jewish services were copied or deliberately substituted (see Supersessionism).

Contemporary church servicesEdit

Contemporary worship services have their origins in the Jesus Movement of the 1960s.[11] In the 1980s and 1990s, contemporary Christian music, comprising a variety of musical styles, such as Christian rock and Christian hip-hop was adopted by evangelical churches.[12][13][14] Over the years, the organs have been replaced by pianos, electric guitars and drums.[15][16] These contemporary worship services feature a sermon based on the Bible. Worship service in Evangelical churches is seen as an act of God’s worship.[17][18] It is usually run by a Christian pastor. It usually contains two main parts, the praise (Christian music) and the sermon, with periodically the Lord’s Supper.[19][20][21][22] During worship there is usually a nursery for babies.[23] Prior to the worship service, adults, children and young people receive an adapted education, Sunday school, in a separate room.[24] With the 1960s’ charismatic movement, a new conception of praise in worship, such as clapping and raising hands as a sign of worship, took place in many evangelical denominations.[25] In the 1980s and 1990s, contemporary Christian music, including a wide variety of musical styles, such as Christian Rock and Christian Hip Hop, appeared in the praise.[12][13][14] In the 2000s and 2010s, digital technologies were integrated into worship services, such as the video projectors for broadcasting praise lyrics or video, on big screens.[26][27] The use of social media such as YouTube and Facebook to retransmit live or delayed worship services, by Internet, has also spread.[28] The offering via Internet has become a common practice in several churches.[29][30] In some churches, a special moment is reserved for faith healing with laying on of hands during worship services.[31] Faith healing or divine healing is considered a legacy of Jesus acquired by his death and resurrection.[32] The taking up of tithes and offerings (gifts made beyond the tithe) is a normative part of the worship services.[33] The main Christian feasts celebrated by the Evangelicals are Christmas, Pentecost, and Easter for all believers, among others depending on Christian denominations (cf. evangelical feasts).[34][35][36]

Quaker meeting for worshipEdit

Quakers (the Religious Society of Friends), like other Nonconformist Protestant denominations, distinguish between a church, which is a body of people who believe in Christ, and a ‘meeting house’ or ‘chapel’, which is a building where the church meets.[37][38] Quakers have both unprogrammed and programmed meetings for worship. Unprogrammed worship is based on waiting in silence and inward listening to the Spirit, from which any participant may share a message. In unprogrammed meetings for worship, someone speaks when that person feels that God/Spirit/the universe has given them a message for others. Programmed worship includes many elements similar to Protestant services, such as a sermon and hymns. Many programmed meetings also include a time during the service for silent, expectant waiting and messages from the participants.

Common featuresEdit

Vocal music is traditionally sung by a choir or the congregation (or a mixture of the two), usually accompanied by an organ.[39][40] Sometimes other instruments such as piano, classical instruments, or modern band instruments may be part of the service, especially in churches influenced by the contemporary worship movement. Some churches are equipped with state-of-the-art multi-media equipment to add to the worship experience. The congregation may sing along in hymnals or words to hymns and worship songs may be displayed on a screen. More liturgical denominations may have the words to specific prayers written in a missalette or prayer book, which the congregation follows. Though the majority of services are still conducted in church buildings designed specifically for that purpose, some services take place in «store front» or temporary settings.[41][42]

For those unable to attend a service in a church building a burgeoning televangelism and radio ministry provides broadcasts of services.[43] A number of websites have been set up as «cyber-churches» to provide a virtual worship space free to anyone on the internet. Church services are often planned and led by a single minister (pastor) or a small group of elders or may follow a format laid out by the dictates of the denomination.

Some churches are «lay led» with members of the congregation taking turns guiding the service or simply following format that has evolved over time between the active members. More commonly, an ordained minister will preach a sermon (which may cover a specific topic, or as part of a book of the Bible which is being covered over a period of time). Depending on the church, a public invitation follows whereby people are encouraged to become Christians, present themselves as candidates for baptism or to join the congregation (if members elsewhere), or for other purposes. A few begin their church services with the ringing of a bell (or a number of bells); a current trend is to have an introductory video which serves as a «countdown» to the beginning of the service. The service usually involves the singing of hymns, reading of scripture verses and possibly a psalm. If the church follows a lectionary, the sermon will often be about the scripture lections assigned to that day. Eucharistic churches have usually Holy Communion either every Sunday or several Sundays a month. Less liturgical congregations tend to place a greater emphasis on the sermon. Many churches will take up a collection of money (offertory) during the service. The rationale for this is taken from 1 Corinthians 16:1–2, 1 Corinthians 9:9–11, and 1 Timothy 5:16–18. But some churches eschew this practice in favor of voluntary anonymous donations for which a box or plate may be set up by the entrance, or return-address envelopes may be provided that worshippers may take with them. Offering through the Internet has become a common practice in many evangelical churches.[29][30] On occasion, some churches will also arrange a second collection, typically occurring after Communion, for a specific good cause or purpose.[44]

Some churches offer Sunday school classes.[45][24][23] These will often be for younger children, and may take place during the whole of the service (while the adults are in church), or the children may be present for the beginning of the service and at a prearranged point leave the service to go to Sunday school. Some churches have adult Sunday school either before or after the main worship service. Following the service, there will often be an opportunity for fellowship in the church hall or other convenient place. This provides the members of the congregation a chance to socialize with each other and to greet visitors or new members. Coffee or other refreshments may be served.

Types of church serviceEdit

Church services take many forms, and set liturgies may have different names. Services typically include:

  • Regular Sunday services. These are a part of most traditions. Holy Communion may be celebrated at some or all of these; often it is included either once a month or once a quarter. A few denominations have their main weekly services on Saturday rather than Sunday. Larger churches often tend to have several services each Sunday; often two or three in the morning and one or two in the late afternoon or evening, as well as on Saturdays. Some churches have begun to provide religious services conducted through internet technology, for benefit of those who cannot attend for health or other reasons, or who may want to preview the church before attending in person.
  • Midweek services. Again, Holy Communion can be part of these, either on every occasion or on a regular basis.
  • Holiday services. Treated like a regular Sunday service, but made more specific for the day.
  • Weddings. These are normally separate services, rather than being incorporated into a regular service, but may be either.
  • Funerals. These are always separate services.
  • Baptisms. These may be incorporated into a regular service, or separate.
  • Confirmation. This is normally incorporated into a regular Sunday service, which will also include communion. It was traditionally the first Communion of the confirmee, but more recently, children are invited to communion in some denominations, whether confirmed or not.
  • Ordination of clergy. New bishops, elders, priests and deacons are usually ordained or installed generally in a solemn but celebratory ceremony on Saturday or Sunday generally open to the public either by their own superior or another approved senior minister with ordination powers either at the area headquarters church or the cathedral or another church agreed upon by those to be ordained and the ordaining ministers. Ordination of bishops or elders may require consecration by more than one individual and have a more limited audience.
  • First Communion. Children may celebrate Communion for the first time.
  • Opening of new churches or church buildings.
  • Dedication of new missionaries or those about to be sent on new missions.

Places of worshipEdit

Places of worship are usually called «churches» or «chapels».[46][47][48] Some services take place in theaters, schools or multipurpose rooms, rented for Sunday only.[49][41][42]

AttireEdit

With respect to attire worn at church services, Christians have historically tended to wear modest clothes (cf. 1 Timothy 2:9–10).[51] Men have traditionally removed their caps while praying and worshipping, while women have traditionally worn a headcovering while praying and worshipping (cf. 1 Corinthians 11:1–11).[52][53][50] These practices continue to be normative in certain churches, congregations, and denominations, as well as in particular parts of the world, such as in Eastern Europe and in the Indian subcontinent, while in the West, attention to these observances has waned generally (apart from those denominations that continue to require them, such as Conservative Anabaptist churches).[53][54][50] In many nondenominational Christian churches, it may be customary, depending on the locality, for people to be dressed casually.[55]

See alsoEdit

  • Church attendance
  • Church membership
  • Christian liturgy
  • Canonical hours
    • Compline
  • Divine Liturgy
  • Divine Service (Lutheran)
  • Evening Prayer (Anglican)
  • Easter Vigil
  • Mass (liturgy)
  • Morning Prayer (Anglican)
  • Carol service

ReferencesEdit

NotesEdit

  1. ^ The majority of Christian denominations teach that Sunday is the Lord’s Day on which all the faithful must assemble to offer worship to God (cf. first-day Sabbatarianism). A minority of Christian denominations that follow seventh-day Sabbatarianism organize worship on Saturdays.[1]

CitationsEdit

  1. ^ Hughes, James R. (2006). «The Sabbath: A Universal and Enduring Ordinance of God» (PDF). Reformed Presbyterian Church. Retrieved 6 October 2020.
  2. ^ The Korean Repository, Volume 3. Trilingual Press. 21 August 1896. p. 361. The Sunday morning service has been well attended, as have also the Sunday evening and Wednesday evening services.
  3. ^ «Times of Worship». Saint Paul’s Free Methodist Church. Retrieved 5 August 2021.
  4. ^ Morgan, Bonnie (19 December 2019). Ordinary Saints: Women, Work, and Faith in Newfoundland. McGill-Queen’s Press. ISBN 978-0-2280-0028-0. Starting with Shroe Tuesday (locall known as Pancake Day), and proceeding through Ash Wednesday to Good Friday, families increased their church attendance and, especially, engaged in the embodies practices of fasting and/or «giving up something for Lent.»
  5. ^ BBC, Christian worship, bbc.co.uk, UK, June 23, 2009
  6. ^ Geoffrey Wainwright, The Oxford History of Christian Worship, Oxford University Press , USA, 2006, p. 465
  7. ^ Amy-Jill Levine, Dale C. Allison Jr., John Dominic Crossan, The Historical Jesus in Context, Princeton University Press, USA, 2009, p. 2
  8. ^ Mark 14.26, Matthew 26.30; see John J. Pilch, «A Cultural Handbook to the Bible», Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, USA, 2012, p. 263
  9. ^ a b c d e «Why an Evening Worship Service?». Christ United Reformed Church. 8 December 2010. Retrieved 6 October 2020.
  10. ^ Pliny the Younger, Epistulae, Book X, Letter xcvii.
  11. ^ Don Cusic, Encyclopedia of Contemporary Christian Music: Pop, Rock, and Worship: Pop, Rock, and Worship, ABC-CLIO, USA, 2009, p. 79
  12. ^ a b Suzel Ana Reily, Jonathan M. Dueck, The Oxford Handbook of Music and World Christianities, Oxford University Press, USA, 2016, p. 443
  13. ^ a b Mathew Guest, Evangelical Identity and Contemporary Culture: A Congregational Study in Innovation, Wipf and Stock Publishers, USA, 2007, p. 42
  14. ^ a b Don Cusic, Encyclopedia of Contemporary Christian Music: Pop, Rock, and Worship: Pop, Rock, and Worship, ABC-CLIO, USA, 2009, p. 85-86
  15. ^ Monique M. Ingalls, Singing the Congregation: How Contemporary Worship Music Forms Evangelical Community, Oxford University Press, USA, 2018, p. 7
  16. ^ William H. Brackney, Historical Dictionary of the Baptists, Scarecrow Press, USA, 2009, p. 403
  17. ^ Gerald R. McDermott, The Oxford Handbook of Evangelical Theology, Oxford University Press, UK, 2013, p. 311
  18. ^ Roger E. Olson, The Westminster Handbook to Evangelical Theology, Westminster John Knox Press, UK, 2004, p. 284
  19. ^ Bruce E. Shields, David Alan Butzu, Generations of Praise: The History of Worship, College Press, USA, 2006, p. 307-308
  20. ^ Robert Dusek, Facing the Music, Xulon Press, USA, 2008, p. 65
  21. ^ Gaspard Dhellemmes,
    Spectaculaire poussée des évangéliques en Île-de-France, lejdd.fr, France, June 7, 2015
  22. ^ Michael Lee, The Diffusion and Influence of Contemporary Worship, christianitytoday.com, USA, March 18, 2017
  23. ^ a b Greg Dickinson, Suburban Dreams: Imagining and Building the Good Life, University of Alabama Press, USA, 2015, p. 144
  24. ^ a b Jeanne Halgren Kilde, When Church Became Theatre: The Transformation of Evangelical Architecture and Worship in Nineteenth-century America, Oxford University Press, USA, 2005, p. 159, 170, 188
  25. ^ Robert H. Krapohl, Charles H. Lippy, The Evangelicals: A Historical, Thematic, and Biographical Guide, Greenwood Publishing Group, USA, 1999, p. 171
  26. ^ Christina L. Baade, James Andrew Deaville, Music and the Broadcast Experience: Performance, Production, and Audience, Oxford University Press, USA, 2016, p. 300
  27. ^ AARON RANDLE, Bucking a trend, these churches figured out how to bring millennials back to worship, kansascity.com, USA, December 10, 2017
  28. ^ Mark Ward Sr., The Electronic Church in the Digital Age: Cultural Impacts of Evangelical Mass, ABC-CLIO, USA, 2015, p. 78
  29. ^ a b Michael Gryboski, Millennial-Majority Churches Detail Challenges, Success Stories in Growth and Finances, christianpost.com, USA, June 18, 2018
  30. ^ a b Ghana News Agency, Asoriba launches church management software, businessghana.com, Ghana, February 3, 2017
  31. ^ Cecil M. Robeck, Jr, Amos Yong, The Cambridge Companion to Pentecostalism, Cambridge University Press, UK, 2014, p. 138
  32. ^ Randall Herbert Balmer, Encyclopedia of Evangelicalism: Revised and expanded edition, Baylor University Press, USA, 2004, p. 212
  33. ^ «Are ‘Offerings’ Above and Beyond My Tithe?». Saint Peter Lutheran Church. Retrieved 4 December 2022. Historically, at least in our country, tithing is the practice of giving 10% of one’s income to one’s church. Offerings are gifts given above and beyond the tithe, either to the church or to other Christian ministries.
  34. ^ William H. Brackney, Historical Dictionary of the Baptists, Scarecrow Press, USA, 2009, p. 402
  35. ^ Daniel E. Albrecht, Rites in the Spirit: A Ritual Approach to Pentecostal/Charismatic Spirituality, A&C Black, UK, 1999, p. 124
  36. ^ Walter A. Elwell, Evangelical Dictionary of Theology, Baker Academic, USA, 2001, p. 236-239
  37. ^ Wakeling, Christopher (August 2016). «Nonconformist Places of Worship: Introductions to Heritage Assets». Historic England. Archived from the original on 28 March 2017. Retrieved 28 March 2017.
  38. ^ Jones, Anthony (1996). Welsh Chapels. National Museum Wales. ISBN 9780750911627. Retrieved 28 March 2017.
  39. ^ William J. Collinge, Historical Dictionary of Catholicism, Scarecrow Press, USA, 2012, p. 280
  40. ^ J. Gordon Melton, Encyclopedia of Protestantism, Infobase Publishing, USA, 2005, p. 345
  41. ^ a b Helmuth Berking, Silke Steets, Jochen Schwenk, Religious Pluralism and the City: Inquiries into Postsecular Urbanism, Bloomsbury Publishing, UK, 2018, p. 78
  42. ^ a b George Thomas Kurian, Mark A. Lamport, Encyclopedia of Christianity in the United States, Volume 5, Rowman & Littlefield, USA, 2016, p. 1359
  43. ^ George Thomas Kurian, Mark A. Lamport, Encyclopedia of Christianity in the United States, Volume 5, Rowman & Littlefield, USA, 2016, p. 2275-2276
  44. ^ Zech, C., The Problem of the Second Collection, America Magazine, published 5 November 2001, accessed 29 May 2021
  45. ^ George Thomas Kurian, Mark A. Lamport, Encyclopedia of Christian Education, Volume 3, Rowman & Littlefield, USA, 2015, p. 229
  46. ^ D. A. Carson, Worship: Adoration and Action: Adoration and Action, Wipf and Stock Publishers, USA, 2002, p. 161
  47. ^ Jeanne Halgren Kilde, Sacred Power, Sacred Space: An Introduction to Christian Architecture and Worship, Oxford University Press, USA, 2008, p. 193
  48. ^ Harold W. Turner, From Temple to Meeting House: The Phenomenology and Theology of Places of Worship, Walter de Gruyter, Germany, 1979, p.258
  49. ^ Annabelle Caillou, Vivre grâce aux dons et au bénévolat, ledevoir.com, Canada, November 10, 2018
  50. ^ a b c Yegorov, Oleg (11 December 2019). «Why do women cover their heads in Orthodox churches?». Russia Beyond. In the Orthodox tradition, this is a big no-no. Of course, no one would kick a bareheaded woman out of an Orthodox church, should she walk in, but she is very likely to face some disapproving and judging looks, especially from the local babushkas (you’ll always find a few babushkas inside an Orthodox church in Russia). The reason is simple: in an Orthodox church, a woman should wear a headscarf.
  51. ^ Wilke, Richard B. (1 September 2010). Disciple III Remember Who You Are: Study Manual: The Prophets — The Letters of Paul. Abingdon Press. ISBN 978-1-4267-2788-7.
  52. ^ Gordon, Greg (31 August 2015). «Are Head Coverings Really for Today?». Evangelical Focus. Retrieved 2 May 2022. Hippolytus an early Church Father wrote, «Let all the women have their heads covered.» Others who taught this practice in the Church were, John Calvin [father of the Reformed tradition], Martin Luther [father of the Lutheran tradition], Early Church Fathers, John Wesley [father of the Methodist tradition], Matthew Henry [Presbyterian theologian] to name just a few. We must remind ourselves that until the twentieth century, virtually all Christian women wore head coverings.
  53. ^ a b Anderson, Cory; Anderson, Jennifer (2019). Fitted to Holiness: How Modesty is Achieved and Compromised among the Plain People. Millersburg: Acorn Publishing. p. 129.
  54. ^ Gordon, Greg (31 August 2015). «Are Head Coverings Really for Today?». Evangelical Focus. Retrieved 2 May 2022. One of the most questioned practices in the New Testament in the modern day Western Church is the practice of Head Coverings for women. Yet to get perspective we need to look over the panoply of God’s Church for 2000 years and see that this is not something new but old—and has been practiced diligently over the ages. It is hard to imagine but since the 1960s the Church almost entirely practiced this tradition. The influence of secular reasoning, feminism and liberal theology have led to the questioning and, ultimately, the casting aside of this practice in the Church at large in the evangelical world.
  55. ^ Gorny, Nicki (30 January 2022). «Sunday style: Churches go for a more relaxed dress code». The Blade. Retrieved 4 December 2022. At Five Lakes Church in Sylvania, where a non-denominational and multi-generational congregation sports everything from that suit and tie to summertime shorts and flip-flops, Pastor Micah Sutton offered a similar take. He hopes the casual-to-formal range signals to visitors that they’re welcome in the congregation, and that they belong there, regardless of how they style themselves.

External linksEdit

  • «Liturgy Archive». Archived from the original on April 10, 2004. Retrieved July 3, 2019.
  • «Liturgy, in the «Catholic Encyclopedia»«. Archived from the original on August 16, 2000.
  • «Orthodox Tradition and the Liturgy». Archived from the original on 2011-01-19.
  • Church Service: Nowadays Practice vs. First Century’s Practice

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We spend more time at cinemas, theaters, art galleries and theme parks than we do at churches, and they have become our new cathedrals. We can spend hours at any of these places of entertainment but if church service goes on too long we get impatient.

Michael Huffington

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PRONUNCIATION OF CHURCH SERVICE

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GRAMMATICAL CATEGORY OF CHURCH SERVICE

Church service is a noun.

A noun is a type of word the meaning of which determines reality. Nouns provide the names for all things: people, objects, sensations, feelings, etc.

WHAT DOES CHURCH SERVICE MEAN IN ENGLISH?

church service

Church service

In Christianity, a church service is a formalized period of communal worship, often but not exclusively occurring on Sunday, or Saturday in the case of those churches practicing seventh-day Sabbatarianism. The church service is the gathering together of Christians to be taught the «Word of God» and encouraged in their faith. Technically, the «church» in «church service» refers to the gathering of the faithful rather than to the building in which it takes place. Styles of service vary greatly, from the Anglican, Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox, Roman Catholic, and Lutheran traditions of liturgical worship to the evangelical Protestant style, that often combines worship with teaching for the believers, which may also have an evangelistic component appealing to the non-Christians and/or skeptics in the congregation. Quakers and some other groups have no formal outline to their services, but allow the worship to develop as the participants present feel moved.


Definition of church service in the English dictionary

The definition of church service in the dictionary is an instance of a religious service in a church.

WORDS THAT RHYME WITH CHURCH SERVICE

Synonyms and antonyms of church service in the English dictionary of synonyms

Translation of «church service» into 25 languages

online translator

TRANSLATION OF CHURCH SERVICE

Find out the translation of church service to 25 languages with our English multilingual translator.

The translations of church service from English to other languages presented in this section have been obtained through automatic statistical translation; where the essential translation unit is the word «church service» in English.

Translator English — Chinese


教会服务

1,325 millions of speakers

Translator English — Spanish


servicio de la iglesia

570 millions of speakers

Translator English — Hindi


चर्च सेवा

380 millions of speakers

Translator English — Arabic


خدمة الكنيسة

280 millions of speakers

Translator English — Russian


церковная служба

278 millions of speakers

Translator English — Portuguese


culto na igreja

270 millions of speakers

Translator English — Bengali


গির্জায় উপাসনা

260 millions of speakers

Translator English — French


service de l´église

220 millions of speakers

Translator English — Malay


Perkhidmatan gereja

190 millions of speakers

Translator English — German


Gottesdienst

180 millions of speakers

Translator English — Japanese


礼拝

130 millions of speakers

Translator English — Korean


교회 예배

85 millions of speakers

Translator English — Javanese


Layanan pasamuan

85 millions of speakers

Translator English — Vietnamese


dịch vụ nhà thờ

80 millions of speakers

Translator English — Tamil


தேவாலய சேவை

75 millions of speakers

Translator English — Marathi


चर्च सेवा

75 millions of speakers

Translator English — Turkish


kilise Servisi

70 millions of speakers

Translator English — Italian


servizio di chiesa

65 millions of speakers

Translator English — Polish


Nabożeństwo

50 millions of speakers

Translator English — Ukrainian


церковна служба

40 millions of speakers

Translator English — Romanian


serviciu divin

30 millions of speakers

Translator English — Greek


υπηρεσία εκκλησία

15 millions of speakers

Translator English — Afrikaans


kerkdiens

14 millions of speakers

Translator English — Swedish


gudstjänst

10 millions of speakers

Translator English — Norwegian


gudstjeneste

5 millions of speakers

Trends of use of church service

TENDENCIES OF USE OF THE TERM «CHURCH SERVICE»

The term «church service» is regularly used and occupies the 58.889 position in our list of most widely used terms in the English dictionary.

Trends

The map shown above gives the frequency of use of the term «church service» in the different countries.

Principal search tendencies and common uses of church service

List of principal searches undertaken by users to access our English online dictionary and most widely used expressions with the word «church service».

FREQUENCY OF USE OF THE TERM «CHURCH SERVICE» OVER TIME

The graph expresses the annual evolution of the frequency of use of the word «church service» during the past 500 years. Its implementation is based on analysing how often the term «church service» appears in digitalised printed sources in English between the year 1500 and the present day.

Examples of use in the English literature, quotes and news about church service

3 QUOTES WITH «CHURCH SERVICE»

Famous quotes and sentences with the word church service.

Being around a church culture, even leading a gathering of believers, I’ve gotten pretty good at predicting what’s going to happen in a church service.

We spend more time at cinemas, theaters, art galleries and theme parks than we do at churches, and they have become our new cathedrals. We can spend hours at any of these places of entertainment but if church service goes on too long we get impatient.

Sunday morning church service is not an enormous priority; spending time with other believers is.

10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «CHURCH SERVICE»

Discover the use of church service in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to church service and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.

1

The Source for Effective Church Service Planning: Unleashing …

A comprehensive listing of service-tested programming material designed to supplement a church’s creative process of service planning. Second edition.

2

How to Start a New Service: Your Church Can Reach New People

Why, when, and how to start a new church service, encourage attendance, evaluate the service, and more. Foreword by Leith Anderson.

3

The Child’s Church Service

This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923.

4

The Letters to the Corinthians

It may well be that we set far too much store by dignity and order nowadays, and
have become the slaves of orders of service. The really notable thing about an
early church service must have been that almost everyone came feeling both the
 …

5

Conversations on the church service; being an examination of …

Robert DRUITT. B. I find in the Prayer Book the words read and say. You say that
they may mean musical reading and saying; or, at all events, that they do not pro
— hibit musical reading, and that chanting was called musical reading in 17 23.

6

Conversations on the Church Service. By the author of Easy …

S. M I ought to tell you that as the Communion Service is the principal one, the
name of Liturgy was used for that chiefly. Now does anybody remember when we
hear of a form of Prayer being first used in England ? Mary. When the first …

7

Home Prayers, Suspiria Domestica, by Members of the Church

There are no illustrations or indexes. When you buy the General Books edition of this book you get free trial access to Million-Books.com where you can select from more than a million books for free. You can also preview the book there.

Church Service Society, 2009

8

Serving as a Church Usher

Originally published: The usher’s manual. Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1970.

9

Selected Readings for the Church Service, with Choir Responses

This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923.

James Meeker Ludlow, Samuel P. Warren, 2012

10

Remarks on the Public Service of the Church: With Some …

… was to the man sick of the palsy, » be » of good cheer, thy sins be forgiven thee.»
Matt. ix. i. , In .order, to set the devout worsliipper right, with respect to the
difference of expression in the three forms of absolution tact with in the church
service, …

Clergyman of the Church of England, 1768

10 NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «CHURCH SERVICE»

Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term church service is used in the context of the following news items.

Female suicide bomber kills five at church service

A female suicide bomber blew herself up in the midst of a crowded evangelical Christian church service in northeast Nigeria yesterday, killing … «Irish Independent, Jul 15»

Man threatens pastor during Daytona Beach church service

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Members of a Daytona Beach church got a scare when a man threatened their pastor during Sunday services. «Naples Daily News, Jul 15»

Princess Charlotte christened in private church service

Their first public outing as a family of four marks another special day for the Cambridges, as the Duke and Duchess along with their son George … «BT.com, Jul 15»

Animals are blessed at outdoor church service in Eugene

When Beverly Henderson headed to church on Sunday morning, she didn’t go downtown to First Christian’s ornate building on Oak Street. «The Register-Guard, Jul 15»

Veterans Honored at Cleveland Church Service

Veterans Honored at Cleveland Church Service. A special group of veterans was honored during a service at Shenandoah Baptist Church in … «WTVC, Jul 15»

Kano denies ban on Sunday church service

Nigeria’s Kano state government has debunked reports it had banned Christians in the state from going to church on Sundays following the … «StarAfrica.com, Jul 15»

Mount Zion AME church plans to rebuild following church fire

GREELEYVILLE, S.C. (WBTW) – Rising from the ashes was the message Pastor John Taylor gave to those who attended church service at … «WBTW — Myrtle Beach and Florence SC, Jul 15»

Founder says Church of Cannabis won’t use pot at service — WHAS

… the leaders of the First Church of Cannabis made public statements indicating their intention to use marijuana during their church service. «iFreePress.com, Jul 15»

Lakewood Church Is Not ‘True Religion,’ Claim Six Men From …

… South Carolina, affected by the murder of 9 people at Emanuel AME Church by Dylann Storm Roof, during a June 21, 2015, church service. «Christian Post, Jul 15»

In Sudan: 12 Christian girls leaving church service arrested, forced …

South Sudanese Christians living in the North gather to attend Christmas day celebrations at a Catholic church in the Umbada locality of … «Pulse Nigeria, Jul 15»

REFERENCE

« EDUCALINGO. Church service [online]. Available <https://educalingo.com/en/dic-en/church-service>. Apr 2023 ».

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