Four To Flourish Part 2

Last week, I pointed out that the various service times have a distinct purpose in a church. One is not necessarily more important than the others, but each have their distinction. Rather than view the service times as slots that we can choose that best fit our schedule, I encourage you to adopt the “Four to Flourish” mentality and commit yourself to being faithful to God’s house at every opportunity available.
Here are the purposes for our four regular services at our church:
Sunday School – educating (discussed in last post)
Sunday Morning – evangelizing (discussed in last post)
Sunday Evening – edifying
My pastor taught me early on to love and to be very purposeful with Sunday evening services. Though I am big on having classes for different age groups (especially children), I am also big on having everyone in the main auditorium once a week. Aside from our nursery workers, this is the one time a week that I have with our teachers, volunteers, and young people. If I could describe it this way, I would call this service our Church Family Time. If we have business to discuss, this is the time to do it. If we have new members joining the family, this is the time we recognize them. If there are problems to address, whether by preaching or by a separate discussion, this is the time I’ll do it. I am the least concerned with the clock in this service because there are no other classes to coordinate our exit with. The focus is the building up of God’s people. This is where preaching hits more of the “rubber meets the road” kind of mark. If I could describe if more from my perspective, this is the time that I look to be a shepherd and to sense the need and to address the needs of the flock that God has placed me over. I’m here to tell you this – if you’re missing Sunday nights, then you’re missing out. While we have seen our biggest days on Sunday mornings, we have had our most special, soul-stirring services on Sunday nights.
Midweek – educating, edifying & exhorting
Too much can happen in a week’s time. Monday comes and the Monday blues drown out quickly what God did in your heart the day before. This may be a negative approach, but I know that the vast majority of our people work with lost, carnal, and wicked people. There is a great need for us to reconnect during the week. We moved our service times to Thursday a few years ago, but many hold to the Wednesday service time. Whatever day it is, there is a day to reconnect. I put three traits here, because all three can apply. A seasoned preacher that I respect greatly, Pastor Jerry Ross, encouraged me before my first year of pastoring to preach through Bible books. While I was hesitant, I have spent the greater part of my time during our midweek service to preach through Bible books. Sometimes, it’s more teachy. Other times, it’s very practical. Whatever I’m going through, he encouraged me to always focus on at least “one great truth” (the inspiration for the title for the devotionals that I’ve written). The midweek service is not a marathon for us. We have other classes. We don’t have choir. We have a special and an offering still. Less dress up for this service than any other (that doesn’t bother me, but rather encourages me because many are hurrying in from work). The week is just too long to leave the church on the sidelines from Sunday to the next Sunday.
Does church deserve our best? Do we really think that giving God one hour per week only to rush out to lunch and a ball game afterwards is the kind of Christianity that will change lives and change the world? If you’re not used to the “Four to Flourish” schedule, let me encourage you to add ONE MORE service per week. Sunday School is easy because you just have to come one hour earlier in most churches. I want to encourage you to attend Sunday evening, or the Midweek service if you already attend all day Sunday. What you get out of church will be determined by what you put in to the church.









