Why Evening Worship?

From this coming Lord’s Day we will be bringing our evening service time forward an hour to the new time of 5:30pm. This was agreed in March, after consultation with the congregation, but we have been unable to implement it till now as Public Worship had been cancelled due to the coronavirus pandemic.

As stated at the time:

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Given our conviction that God is ‘worthy to be praised’ (Psalm 18:3), that public worship is to be preferred before private (Psalm 87:1), that ‘it is good…to declare your steadfast love in the morning, and your faithfulness by night’ (Psalm 92:2 – ‘A song for the Sabbath’) and that the whole of the Lord’s Day is to be kept holy (Exodus 20:8; Revelation 1:9), as well as the fact that the risen Lord Jesus is present in a special way when his word is preached (Romans 10:14; Ephesians 2:17; 2 Corinthians 5:20; 1 Thessalonians 2:13), that he repeatedly appeared to his disciples on the evening of the first day of the week (Luke 24:28-29; John 20:19, 26), and following the example of the early Christians who met on Lord’s Day evenings (Acts 20:7), we want to hold our Sunday services at times that everyone can attend, from the youngest through to the oldest.

In a day when many base the worship of God around their busy lives, we urge people to do the opposite - to base their lives around the worship of God.

Some helpful resources on the question of ‘Why evening worship?’ are below:

“When you come into a half-empty sanctuary on a rainy Sunday evening, be encouraged! The gathering may look small and insignificant; in reality, it’s filled with those who sinlessly and ceaselessly worship God before his face.” - Megan Hill

Updated with articles from 2020:

2021 updates: