Don't Give up on the Evening Service

My whole life I've gone to church Sunday morning and Sunday evening. My parents took us to church and Sunday school on Sunday morning and they always took us back on Sunday evening. The crowd was much smaller, but there were always people eager to be there. Over the years, the evening service felt less like a "real" service. We'd watch a video for a month or combine with another church for the summer or try small groups. I have nothing against videos (in their proper place), joint services, or small groups. But at the time they all seemed like efforts to keep up the tradition of the evening service without putting forth much effort.


In college I went to a Baptist church with strong preaching. My friends and I went Sunday morning and came back hours later to their well-attended evening service. While at seminary, I attended an great OPC congregation. The attendance could be sparse on Sunday night, but I made a point to come (and even met my wife there).


My first pastoral charge was at a large church in Iowa. As the associate pastor I would often preach on Sunday evening. We had around 900 people in the morning and about half that in the evening. I was glad to be there for two services.


When I came University Reformed Church in 2004 the long-standing tradition of evening services had just about disappeared. I don't think the interim pastor had much interest in them and the attendance had dwindled to a few dozen. I told the search committee that I was committed trying to resurrect the evening service. Over the years, the service has grown to a strong core–around 125 during the school year, or about 1/4 of our Sunday morning attendance.


Every church I've ever been a part of has had a Sunday evening service. I've always gone. It's what I grew up with. It's part of my rhythm as a Christian and I am immensely grateful for it. I hope this brief blog post will encourage other Christians and other churches to consider making an evening service a part of your Christian walk and worship.


Saying Enough, But Not Too Much


Before I say anything else, let me make clear that I don't think Scripture absolutely requires an evening service, nor do I think a church member is necessarily disobedient if they don't attend their church's evening service. I know some good Reformed folks will argue that the evening service is a matter of biblical obedience. I just can't make the case that definitively. Some churches may be in cultures that make a second service on Sunday evening prohibitively difficult. Some congregations may be really committed to home groups on Sunday nights. Other congregations may have repeat services that stretch into the afternoon, or they may do the same Sunday morning service on Sunday evening. Many churches have never had an evening service. It's just not in their DNA. I sympathize with the difficulty they may have in even considering an evening service. Other churches may find it difficult to pull together a second quality service because their resources and personnel are stretched thin. Many smaller churches or church plants may be in this situation.


And then there are the individual church members who may have a hard time getting back to the evening service because they live an hour away. Or the person who has to work on Sunday evening or at 4am on Monday morning. Or the family with very young children that need to be in bed before the evening service will be over.


I know there are many reasons why having, starting, keeping, or going to the evening service may be difficult. I do not want to require more than Scripture requires.


What Is Still Worth Saying


Having said all that, let me give you several reasons why I'm thankful for our evening service and why I hope you'll consider keeping yours, going to yours, or even starting one at your church.


1. Fitting.


2. What we believe about the means of grace.


3. Lord's Day instead of the Lord's morning (even more of problem with same evening service, or a Saturday night service)


4. Hunger for the word – MLJ, get more of the Bible


5. More time in the word for your pastor, more opportunities for others to preach


6. Tradition of the church


Encourage you that it takes work. You must put forth effort. You have to give your pastor time to do it or allow other men to preach.


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Published on January 29, 2012 02:26
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