Thursday, December 31, 2020

A Fool-Proof Guide to the Evangelical Church Calendar

We’re about to ring in the new year, which will prompt a host of new diets, exercise plans, and decisions to bring the family to church (or at least tune in online!). Trying to decide which church to attend can be confusing if you don’t know how to tell one from the other. So here’s a handy-dandy visitor’s guide to your typical neighborhood evangelical church (that would include Baptist, non-denominational, “community” churches, anything with “evangelical” in the title, and pretty much any other church that lacks stained glass windows). 

Photo by John Price on Unsplash
Be encouraged -- being an evangelical is much easier than being Catholic, Anglican, or even Reformed. Our religious calendar is simple, with very few holidays to worry about. We promise not to bother you with obscure holidays such as Epiphany, Ash Wednesday, Maundy Thursday, Ascension Day, or Pentecost – whatever those are. For the majority of the year, you can simply check the entryway to Walmart and take your cues from there about any upcoming celebrations. We basically follow the secular calendar, and our décor will shift to match the seasons you already know by heart – winter, spring, summer, and fall.

So here’s what you need to know:

January 1 – Today’s the day to begin a new Bible read-through. Most evangelicals will burn out in mid-February when they get to Leviticus, but the truly devoted will finish the entire Bible a few days before the end of December.

Lent – This one is totally optional. The start date is rather mysterious, and you won’t hear about it at all in church, but if you follow the hipster Christians on Twitter, they'll let you know when they are signing off for lent and you can follow suit. The main idea is that you give up something you like until Easter (say, chocolate, or at least afternoon chocolate or whichever social media you can survive without). 

Palm Sunday – We recently decided to retire this one because it’s too difficult to corral the preschoolers around the sanctuary while they whack each other in the head with palm branches. You're welcome.

Good Friday – You can expect dim lighting and sad songs about Jesus’ death. But since we wouldn’t want anyone to feel depressed, we’ll throw in some upbeat songs at the end about how Jesus rose from the dead. You are guaranteed to leave encouraged.

Easter – This is when we celebrate Jesus’ resurrection. Ladies, if you are joining us in person, fancy hats and white shoes are no longer necessary, but if you are ever going to wear a dress, this is the time. Gentlemen, now is your chance to wear a tie without getting snide comments about “dressing up.” Kids can look forward to an Easter Egg Hunt in Sunday School.

Mother’s Day and Father’s Day – These are not in the Bible, but we are all about family, so we’ll hand out flowers to the moms and snack mix to the dads. If you don’t fit easily in either category, feel free to skip these Sundays.

Summer – Summer is the youth group's time to party. Bible studies are replaced by bonfires and barbecues. Ambitious churches will throw in a two-week mission trip to Mexico. Sunday sermons will be stand-alone, rather than part of a series, so that you can easily go on vacation without missing anything. Please make sure you’re in town for Vacation Bible School, because we’ll need all the help we can get herding kids from one station to another where they can eat Bible-inspired snacks and make crafts to clutter your refrigerator. There’s also likely to be an outdoor baptism service at a nearby lake, river, or pool.

In early July you can expect to see our national flag on stage, and the worship team will feature patriotic songs. This will ensure that the lines between patriotism and piety are sufficiently blurred so that you will never forget that God loves our country the most. 

September – Back-to-school Bible studies will start up again. Some of these will be on Zoom this year. If you are a working mom, you might be out of luck (no evening meetings for women), and if you’re a single dad or dual-career family, you’ll have to find your own childcare.

October - Don’t forget pastor appreciation month! You may give online or in person. On the 31st, since we’re committed to engaging with our community, we will sponsor a “harvest party” or “trunk or treat” for the neighborhood. We don’t want anyone to feel weird (like we’re “religious” or anything), so we’ll decorate with spider webs and skeletons and have friendly witches hand out candy. 

November – A few weeks prior to the national election we’ll provide voters’ guides so that you don’t have to think too deeply about politics. Someone else has done the dirty work, so you can easily choose the candidates who side with your pastor on hot-button issues.

Thanksgiving – Thanksgiving is pretty low key. We won’t hold a church service so that you can spend your day preparing your big meal and watching football. You can easily redeem this holiday by reading Psalm 100 and saying what you are thankful for before you stuff yourself.

Photo by Rodion Kutsaev on Unsplash
Advent
– Beginning the last Sunday in November, serious evangelicals begin reading a daily Christmas-themed devotional. At the very least, you should buy one of those cardboard calendars at Walmart with a little chocolate for each day until Christmas. To avoid a family feud, buy one for each child in your home. We’ll decorate the sanctuary with lighted Christmas trees to get everyone in the holiday spirit.

Christmas Eve – We’ll offer several candlelight services to accommodate all the families that show up out of the woodwork. Just to make everyone feel right at home, Santa Claus will likely join the festivities. Please talk with your little ones about fire safety before you come because we’ll be handing them real candles to light during “Silent Night.” You won’t hear much about Mary (that’s a Catholic thing), but we will sing “Mary Did You Know?” (even though she did). 

Christmas Day – Evangelical churches don’t actually hold services on Christmas Day any more because families will be busy opening presents. But don’t worry! Reading Luke 2 before you tear into the pile under the Christmas tree will remind everyone of the reason for the season.

And that’s all there is to it! Didn’t I tell you this would be easy? You have a few days before January 1 to binge read the rest of the Bible so you can finish on time. Next year, you can change things up a bit by using a different Bible read-through plan.

The best thing about being an evangelical is that we won’t require much from you during our services -- no kneeling or responsive reading or awkward confessions or drinking out of a common cup (hello, germs!). If you’re inspired during the music, feel free to raise a hand or two in the air (the chorus is usually a good time to do that). Think of the worship time like a concert and the sermon like a TED talk. We’ll provide the coffee. If you’d rather watch the service from home in your pj’s, you won’t miss much (except childcare). You can send your donation through the church website. 

So glad to have you join us!


32 comments:

  1. Replies
    1. Thanks for reading and commenting!

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  2. Carmen,
    Best yet. It will definitely get you the "Writer of the year award." Now we can understand your profound writings :)
    Well done... and Happy New Year. Aquinos sent midnight greetings with all the firecracker noise in the background. Happy New Year! P&J

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    1. Thanks, Phil and Julie! They sent me a video as well. Fun to see!

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  3. Oh so sad, but so true. I can hear John now, ‘you brood of fickle pussy cats, who warned you of the wrath to come?! Bear fruits in keeping with repentance!’

    I wonder if we confess our complicity in shallow commitments, if we can still be saved?

    Thanks Carmen! I enjoy your blogs
    HAPPY NEW YEAR1

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    1. Thanks for you comment! I do think we need a reckoning, and the pandemic has given us the prime opportunity to clear the calendar and start over again more intentionally.

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  4. A great use of humor to share valid concerns! Thanks for this.

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    1. Thanks for your comment, Laura! We need to learn to tell a better story . . .

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  5. You forgot Sanctity of Human Life Sunday on the third Sunday of January. This usually coincides with the Martin Luther King's birthday holiday but since equality for black people is a liberal church thing we don't do that. In fact, if you go to an evangelical church on this Sunday we will tell you why abortion is bad but we won't say anything about race and ethnicity because we don't want to "offend" anyone. And if you don't like that, you can go to the liberal church down the street where it is exactly the opposite.

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  6. Thanks for reading!

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  7. oh. my. i have been praying that God expose it all, and he sure is. may we get right with him and his word. quick!

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  8. "But don’t worry! Reading Luke 2 before you tear into the pile under the Christmas tree will remind everyone of the reason for the season." Finally someone said it! 😆

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    1. This was not the tradition I grew up with as a child. However, it is something I do now with my own family. To me, this simple act is quite meaningful and something I hope will be meaningful to my kids as well.

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    2. Indeed! It's wonderful to read the Christmas story together as a family. I'm not advocating that we do away with it. But it can be just a thin veil over our consumer-driven culture. Perhaps we need to re-think the way we do Christmas on a larger scale.

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    3. I think I understand the point you're trying to get at. However, I think you could have phrased it differently (more effectively even) without tarnishing the value of reading that Scripture passage before opening gifts.

      What are some of your ideas you'd have people "re-think" about Christmas?

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    4. Traditionally, advent is a dark time that expresses longing for the coming of Christ, followed by 12 days of celebration culminating in Epiphany. A church service on Christmas morning used to be the norm. If I had it to do over with my own children, I'd move Christmas presents to Dec 5/6 (St. Nicholas Day) or Jan 6 (Epiphany), so that Christmas Day could be devoted to celebrating the arrival of our king. Gifts are not a huge thing at our house. We give each child one (or maybe two) things. PILES of presents and wish-list making seems to me to cultivate consumers rather than grateful people. What ideas do you have?

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    5. We also express that longing by lighting a different Advent candle each week at church. (When my kids were little, we also did it at home to reinforce those thoughts and ideas. It gets tougher when they grow up and have differing schedules.)

      We don't have piles of presents either. (Those come from the grandparents, which we celebrate typically before Christmas day.) We don't even do stockings, which I hope to change next year, :) with some simple sweets and treats. We do our very best to live within our financial means, so gifts have never been the focus. (Which honestly is hard for me because I grew up with piles of gifts. I hope that the pendulum hasn't swung too far the other way with my kids.)

      One thing we've never really made a big deal of is Santa Claus. That was a big deal for my mom in my childhood but my wife and I never wanted to confuse our kids with Santa vs. Jesus. (Much to my mother's sorrow, as it was always her wish to have grandchildren pics with Santa.)

      As for attending Church on Christmas, I think that is up to individuals to decide if that is how they want to worship on that day. We have a candlelight Christmas Eve service which always meaningful.

      We did purposely have church back in 2016 when Christmas landed on a Sunday. Lots of people chose not to attend but we still had our service for those who wanted to attend.

      I think the thing which makes reinventing how people celebrate Christmas is that people are so unique with traditions and beliefs they were raised with and then have to decide what and how they'll pass on to their children.

      One thing which my wife has done is pass out cookies to our neighbors and friends. This action bestows not only a blessing but also good favor amongst people, which I believe was accomplished by Christ's advent here on Earth. It's not so much what you do but why you do it. I don't begrudge families spoiling their children. I'm a little envious but they've been blessed with resources and why shouldn't they lovingly give gifts to their children. Hopefully, their generosity is shared with others (who have a great need such as those in a Union Gospel Mission or homeless individuals) as well as their own family.

      My ultimate hope is that I've raised my kids to know why we do what we do, and not to get caught up in what others do what they do. We've been blessed to be adopted into a family from church. My own children have been adopted enough to receive a small treat of a gift. How wonderful for them to know that love doesn't have to stay within a family but it can reach out to those outside of immediate relation.

      Sorry for the wall of text. But you asked. :)

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    6. Thanks for sharing, Bobby!

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  9. Pastors promote this calendar. People love this calendar. Finally, a prophet challenges this calendar.

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    1. May we learn to tell a better story!

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  10. I love your creative writing Carmen!

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  11. I love your writing Carmen! So spot on!

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  12. I agree with and support Every. Single. Word. of this satire. Hopefully, people will stop and examine why they do what they do after reading this and make changes accordingly.

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    1. I do hope that it spurs some deeper thinking about how our rhythms shape us as a community!

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  13. Ha this seems pretty true of my Baptist church except we also do Sanctity of Life Sunday and National Day of Prayer. But they'd never have frindly witches at Trunk or Treat. Too satanic!

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    1. Thanks for your comment, Sally! Glad your church wouldn't have witches.

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  14. So glad I'm an Anglican. Enjoy the rest of Epiphany!
    Grant LeMarquand

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