Coffee

Alan Cresswell Alan Cresswell Admin, 8th Day Host
Something that came up in a discussion this evening, and I think it probably fits best in this forum.

We were discussing how worship leaders can bring the experiences of the congregation during the week into worship. This sometimes happens during intercessions, especially if the congregation are invited to share their concerns or offer their own prayers but more often a generic "we bring our personal prayers in silence" - but, usually problems rather than sharing the good things. It was noted that the time when the congregation gathers where what has happened during the week is during tea/coffee time. Which is, usually, outwith the formal time set for worship between the call to worship and benediction.

When we gather together to worship, how do we bring all our lives, including the events of the week? Are there other options for doing this during the formal time set for worship? Or, how do we recognise that the gathering of the people of God within a particular place starts as people arrive before the call to worship and continues after the benediction, including through coffee time? Do we have a fuzzy edge to our time of worship that in some sense extends beyond the formal bounds into the fellowship time surrounding a set time of worship?

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Comments

  • LatchKeyKidLatchKeyKid Shipmate
    From time to time I have suggested coffee time to be held mid-service, but this has rarely been considered seriously, and sometimes not responded to.

    Congregations often only exist in the service.
    I think that the people in volunteer groups for the Op Shop and Playgroup, that may not attend a service, are more interconnected than the people who attend a worship service.
  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    From time to time I have suggested coffee time to be held mid-service, but this has rarely been considered seriously, and sometimes not responded to.

    I believe I have mentioned before on the Ship that this was the pattern in the church where I grew up, with the interval between the Ministry of the Word and the Ministry of the Sacrament.
  • BroJamesBroJames Purgatory Host
    From time to time I have suggested coffee time to be held mid-service, but this has rarely been considered seriously, and sometimes not responded to.

    I believe I have mentioned before on the Ship that this was the pattern in the church where I grew up, with the interval between the Ministry of the Word and the Ministry of the Sacrament.
    One of the churches in the parish where I was a curate had that pattern.
  • KarlLBKarlLB Shipmate
    I find these tea/coffee times hard enough as it is without them being scripted into the service and unescapable.
  • One thing I have noticed in my change from Anglican to Catholic is the importance of the tea/beer afterwards. The refreshments are a short walk from the church in the Parish Rooms and you get swept up and chivvied along to the decision gate where you either go for tea with the ladies and families or you walk over the road to the pub with the older chaps. Non participation is met with scorn unless you have a good excuse. There is no way you could break the Mass for coffee but the sense of community is very comforting and I rarely say no to a lunchtime pint.
  • KarlLBKarlLB Shipmate
    Pub sounds a lot better. But what you describe wouldn't work for us. For one thing Mrs KarlLB would have things to say about being expected to do the tea with ladies and families while I "got" to go to the pub! How would it go down if one of the women did indeed say "feck that - I'm going to the pub!"
  • The pub group is very strictly for older men without spouse or family so you would be in the parish hall with a cup of tea.
  • KarlLBKarlLB Shipmate
    The pub group is very strictly for older men without spouse or family so you would be in the parish hall with a cup of tea.

    Ah. No, we wouldn't be a good fit for a regime like that. Being told what I can and can't do like that really rubs my fur wrong.
  • ChastMastrChastMastr Shipmate
    KarlLB wrote: »
    I find these tea/coffee times hard enough as it is without them being scripted into the service and unescapable.

    This.
    KarlLB wrote: »
    The pub group is very strictly for older men without spouse or family so you would be in the parish hall with a cup of tea.

    Ah. No, we wouldn't be a good fit for a regime like that. Being told what I can and can't do like that really rubs my fur wrong.

    Also this.
  • ChastMastr wrote: »
    KarlLB wrote: »
    I find these tea/coffee times hard enough as it is without them being scripted into the service and unescapable.

    This.
    KarlLB wrote: »
    The pub group is very strictly for older men without spouse or family so you would be in the parish hall with a cup of tea.

    Ah. No, we wouldn't be a good fit for a regime like that. Being told what I can and can't do like that really rubs my fur wrong.

    Also this.

    This, too.

    Coffee time at Our Place is in the Hall, which has the most awful acoustics for those who (like me) easily suffer aural overload. The PCC is contemplating the installation of a suspended ceiling - not before time, but it will be expensive...

    At one time, most of the congregation used to stay for coffee/tea, but this is no longer the case, so I am told. This may be partly due to people simply having other - and, to them, more important - things to do at Sunday lunch-time!
  • The_RivThe_Riv Shipmate
    I think the most successful coffee/fellowship time I've encountered was an interval of about 30 minutes between the end of the Sunday School hour and start of the later AM Eucharist. It enjoyed a mixture of people both coming and going, which was lovely. Of course, as a parish musician, I rarely got to take part b/c of warming up singers for the next service, but on the occasions I was able to participate it was very nice.
  • Jengie JonJengie Jon Shipmate
    Actually, I believe that coffee/tea time historically in the Nonconformist churches actually did happen sort of mid-service at least once a month. The rubric was:
    Service of the Word
    Coffee/Tea*
    Communion

    Unfortunately as communion was at best monthly many forgot that the service was not finished on communion Sunday and went home after tea/coffee. Then came the Family Church Movement and the idea everyone should be in for communion and this changed the order with communion before coffee/tea except....

    Some Churches of Christ, who had communion weekly and a much higher emphasis on it, kept it at least until the 1980s, which is when I came across one congregation practicing it.

    *Actually it was always tea back then but for coherence put as coffee/tea.
  • I used to belong to a Baptist church which had a mid-service break for coffee and doughnuts.

    It sort of worked but I always felt it interrupted the flow but context is everything.

    Now I'm Orthodox we fast until we've received communion. There are generally some Eastern European goodies alongside the coffee afterwards - or kolyva if there's been a 'menorial'.

    As for bringing our concerns into the intercessions etc we tend to use a litany so there isn't much scope for introducing anything that isn't in the script as it were.

    'Again and again in peace, let us pray to the Lord!'
    'Lord have mercy!'
  • LatchKeyKidLatchKeyKid Shipmate
    The shared meal/service worked well in the house churches I have been in.
    When I have been to a Sikh service at a Gurdwara a vegetarian meal has been served.

    I think the practice of sharing a meal together well reflects the gregarious nature of humanity. In the bible, the shared table symbolises this. I think this practice is sadly missing in the hurly-burly of modern life.
  • By and large, our liturgies are adaptations or straight lifts from 3rdC St John Chrysostom. Like >1600 years ago. Now if Tradition is one of the legs of your belief system stool, that's cool, but is it becoming a bit too long and unbalanced for the other two legs of scripture and reason?
    I can't imagine taking a coffee break in traditional services: That might be a failure of imagination on my part. But post-retirement, I take an ecumenical communion service in a small mountaintop community not served by any church, in the Community Hall, which of course has a bar. The bar is open during services. When I first started doing this, my predecessor insisted that the bar be closed, when it wasn't, she stopped doing services. So word got out that Revd Foaming Draught might be amenable to services which co-featured an open bar. This coincided with me taking a closer interest in Eastern Orthodox eucharists, spurred by @Climacus being drafted to that team. I observed that in a two or more hour service, the faithful would come and go, kissing an ikon here, popping out for a smoke there, and then rush in for eucharist.
    So I wondered, how might that translate to my mountaintop community? It translates well, let me tell you, if maximising the soul to gospel ratio is one of your KPIs. Community dwellers who might never darken the door of a church, because it's too far from the city, they've been burned in personal history stories, they count themselves agnostic/wiccan/buddhist (we have all of those in a 300 person hamlet) abandon the bar when they hear "In the night when He was betrayed". St Paul might say that they aren't prepared, they're not discerning Our Lord's body, but they're there to hear that Jesus died for them.
  • LatchKeyKidLatchKeyKid Shipmate
    That sounds great @Foaming Draught .
    Good for you and good for them.
  • Well, I don't smoke so I don't bob out for a whiff during services. I don't do the random wandering around kissing icons thing either but know people who do when they get bored.

    I tend to position myself so I can hear the choir and follow along as best I can. I was in the choir for a short time before our priest booted me off. Probably very wisely on his part.

    Whatever the case, I really can't imagine us stopping for coffee part way through. I'm not sure that's purely a failure of imagination on my part but as I keep saying these days, context is everything.

    Did St John Chrysostom really write or collate the Liturgy which bears his name?

    Discuss.
  • RuthRuth Shipmate
    So word got out that Revd Foaming Draught might be amenable to services which co-featured an open bar.

    With a handle like Foaming Draught, how could you do otherwise?!
  • Ex_OrganistEx_Organist Shipmate

    As for bringing our concerns into the intercessions etc we tend to use a litany so there isn't much scope for introducing anything that isn't in the script as it were.

    'Again and again in peace, let us pray to the Lord!'
    'Lord have mercy!'

    There is space in the Litany following the Gospel for the inclusion of individual names. That depends on people making a request to the priest in advance for such prayers. I have, I think, only come across one Orthodox parish in UK where this is done on a regular basis.
  • I've come across priests adding things - NHS workers etc - but not individual names.
  • LatchKeyKidLatchKeyKid Shipmate
    I took the view that the idea behind the thread was a way to promote communality in a congregation.

    I have the impression that communality has suffered with the increasing fragmentation of people's lives.
    Is this the view of others?

    Are there successes in improving communality in your experience?
  • Alan Cresswell Alan Cresswell Admin, 8th Day Host
    Yes, I was thinking of how we often talk of the church as a community, but we rarely bring that into our worship. Tea/coffee after the service is often the only place that we express our community - it's where we hear about someone's recent holiday, find out someone had a very busy week at work, hear about how someone's great-granddaughter is doing etc. Within our services, if there's any sort of communality it's very often restricted to intercessions for the member with cancer or a child who been in an accident.
  • HeavenlyannieHeavenlyannie Shipmate
    edited April 5
    But a lot of this is down to style of worship, especially the formality. In my charismatic church it is normal to have communal things going on during the service, whether it is individuals spontaneously sharing their stories or bringing words to the congregation, or people praying for each other and/or the wider world, or people choosing to huddle into groups for communion rather than take it individually (we take our bread and wine back to our seats). A few weeks ago we had a series of interviews with members of the church about their lives instead of a sermon each week. But our service is meant to be very informal and interactive, and, as we know from previous discussions, many people in other churches don’t want this kind of interaction with others during a service.
    We could easily cope with a meal during a service; when our church returned after the pandemic, they were seated around tables instead of in rows of chairs for the morning service to help re-build community.
  • I’m afraid that if we introduced full meals to our own (Vietnamese) worship, we’d soon never get to the worshiping! As it is, we try to confine that stuff to Maundy Thursday worship and to after worship Bible study on other dates. It is clearly much easier for us than for most churches to do the meal thing, given our small size.
  • RuthRuth Shipmate
    But a lot of this is down to style of worship, especially the formality.

    What strikes me is that formal liturgies are stylized meals - bread and cup - that don't feel at all like a meal with loved ones, at least not to me. I loved liturgical services, when I was attending church, but I never felt (and probably never really understood) the whole thing about communion with other people.
  • LatchKeyKidLatchKeyKid Shipmate
    Formal liturgies don't give me the sense that there is much, if any, communing. It's just several persons "communing" in isolation.
  • For me it's quite the opposite, I don't know why. I think a lot of it is that all of us up there at once are there for the same reason, for Christ--and being deeply in love with him, we are set right with regards to one another. Even the incredibly annoying ones. At the altar, whether it's on our knees or our feet--or running down the aisle and up the staircase to take the place of someone in the organ loft so they can commune, too--that sense of being one is underlined. Nobody gets left behind.
  • Gramps49Gramps49 Shipmate
    Last week, our pastor relayed an experience he had with the confirmation students. They had been talking about church as community. He asked the kids when they experienced the community of the church most. He had been expecting them to say when they had communion--we have it weekly. But, to a person, the kids all said it was during the pot lucks which we have probably every six weeks. He asked them how so. They replied they felt it was most like community because when they would get their plates and move to a table, there would often be some adults they did not know who would come over to eat with them. The kids said they have gotten to the point where these meals told them they were part of a larger family.

    We are in the middle of a transition. Our current pastor is going to retire at the end of the month. We expect to have a short interim, and a new minister will be installed probably by fall. I would hope we could build on what the kids shared with the new minister coming on board.
  • Formal liturgies don't give me the sense that there is much, if any, communing. It's just several persons "communing" in isolation.

    I think there is a sense in which a formal liturgy is akin to a dance, or perhaps a drill team if you prefer. There are a lot of dancers, we all know our parts, and we dance together. It is absolutely a communal effort.

    There might not be very much free-flowing interaction going back and forth, but I don't think that's necessary for us to be united in common purpose.
  • LatchKeyKidLatchKeyKid Shipmate
    Dancing together can achieve the performance of a dance, but doesn't mean the dance troupe is a community otherwise.
  • ThunderBunkThunderBunk Shipmate
    No community exists spontaneously. It is formed by what it does and experiences together. If that's only the liturgical dance it becomes a liturgical dance troupe. If it's primarily the sociability of coffee hour, it's a species of social club. And of course an apparently unified congregation can have different manifestations at different times. And any of these things can be sacramental.
  • PuzzlerPuzzler Shipmate
    Yes, our church choir is very much a community within a community. We only practise fortnightly, but have our own Whatsapp group, may meet up in twos and threes, and most of us are also in other choirs too. However, we might justifiably be thought to be a bit cliquey, because of the time we spend in the choir vestry before and after the service, getting changed and making arrangements. By the time we emerge, the tea is stewed, people have family commitments, so few of us stay. I realise that this is the main time that people chat, so I have resolved to stay more often.

    Our Lenten Celtic Communion services were an occasion to feel a sense of belonging, especially the final one, where we all joined in singing with the recorded music, then chatted afterwards about experiences of visits to the Holy Land, and our Vicar’s gifts of albums of photos and memorabilia from the classes at the church school which she visits weekly. ( She is retiring after Easter). Such occasions are rare, but will be all the more important during the forthcoming interregnum.
  • Recorded music ...?! Is outrage!

    More seriously, as my new mantra has it, 'context is everything.'

    Just when you thought you'd had enough 'both/and' Gamaliel introduces a new and even more persistent aphorism.

    It all depends what you are used to.

    The sort of interactive activity that @Heavenlyannie describes certainly does build a sense of community. But I also get that impression watching people queueing for communion in my parish as the choir sings, 'Receive the Body of Christ, taste the fountain of immortality ...'

    @LatchKeyKid probably wouldn't and would prefer something more informal.

    I suspect that whatever style of worship we adopt it's unrealistic to expect church services in and of themselves to create a sense of community. That comes, I think, from shared activity both within and beyond the gathering for worship. Our parish is ethnically diverse, like many Orthodox parishes and the sense of community takes time to develop beyond the ethnic groups represented there. I'm only gradually getting to know some of the Romanians for instance and find it's worth making the effort.

    I've heard it said that some cathedrals are finding that worshippers there are building a stronger sense of community than one might expect, given that some people attend cathedral services precisely because they aren't all interactive and overtly communal.

    It's easy to make value judgements about other traditions or churches which do things differently to how we do them ourselves. We don't know what's going on beneath the surface.

    Some forms of Christian fellowship are almost claustrophobic in their intensity. Others run to the opposite extreme and have very loose levels of engagement and community.

    There's some kind of balance somewhere between those two polar opposites.
  • PuzzlerPuzzler Shipmate
    We rely on a rota of organists for main services. Celtic communion is not on the list. Joining in singing was spontaneous and the only time over the four weeks that it happened.
  • betjemaniacbetjemaniac Shipmate
    Puzzler wrote: »
    We rely on a rota of organists for main services.

    We rely on a rota of people to operate the recorded music box.

  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    We organists are a dying breed. Actually since music was squeezed off school timetables and all school instrumental provision must be paid for there has been a sharp decline in young people learning traditional instruments.
  • KarlLBKarlLB Shipmate
    I am not aware of a time when individual instrumental instruction was anything but paid for. I think there's much wider societal issues at play underlying the decline that what schools may or may not offer.
  • Recorded music ...?! Is outrage!

    Feel free to send us an organist by next post (actually, any musician who can carry the melody line would probably suffice).

    Organist? Is outrage!

    Church music should be a capella...

    😉

    But no, @Arethosemyfeet, I feel your pain.

    We have an equal issue in the dearth of trained cantors.

    Some parishes have choirs that can lift you to the heavenly places.

    Others have wheezy chant that can drag you down to the depths of Hell.

    But thanks be to God through Christ Jesus our Lord ...
  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    Puzzler wrote: »
    We rely on a rota of organists for main services. Celtic communion is not on the list. Joining in singing was spontaneous and the only time over the four weeks that it happened.
    Puzzler wrote: »
    We rely on a rota of organists for main services.

    We rely on a rota of people to operate the recorded music box.

    Rotas? LUXURY! Here the "rota" consists of me, myself, and I. When I'm away I have to set everything up in advance and hope that whoever is there can manage to press "play".
  • 1 Kings 19:10.

    'They have torn down your altars and killed all your prophets. And now ...'
  • We sing a cappella and we’re pretty crappy. But we do sing out! I used to be the pitch pipe for our group, when we still had folks capable of carrying a tune…
  • Recorded music ...?! Is outrage!

    Feel free to send us an organist by next post (actually, any musician who can carry the melody line would probably suffice).

    Preferably a slim one who'd fit through the letter box.
  • Baptist TrainfanBaptist Trainfan Shipmate
    edited April 7
    Puzzler wrote: »
    We rely on a rota of organists for main services.

    We rely on a rota of people to operate the recorded music box.

    We rely on me to set up the music on the laptop. Occasionally (and usually unintentionally) we sing a capella, and I'm not too bad at being a cantor.
  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    Recorded music ...?! Is outrage!

    Feel free to send us an organist by next post (actually, any musician who can carry the melody line would probably suffice).

    Preferably a slim one who'd fit through the letter box.

    That bit doesn't matter for us (no-one locks doors and letter boxes let the wind in). But it's helpful if they're lighter because then they come by plane and get here faster.
  • @Lamb Chopped and @Baptist Trainfan - in which case, neither of you are far from the Kingdom of God. ;)

    (Heavy smilies)

    I jest, of course. You are both far further into the Kingdom than I am.
  • Heh. Yeah, right.

    We sing a cappella because we have no musicians bar my son, who is being shy about his skills--and has now gotten himself committed to other stuff during that time frame, so there you go. It doesn't seem to hurt anybody's enthusiasm. Ear drums, well...
  • A capella works if you know the tune; it most certainly doesn't work for unknown worship songs which rely heavily on rhythm. The other Sunday we were about the sing "Cwm Rhondda" (yes, really!) but due to a mistake I'd made in setting up the computer, the music came to an abrupt halt at the end of the introduction. No matter - our 50 or so folk may not have been quite as rousing as 50,000 rugby supporters down the road at the Principality Stadium - but we didn't do badly!
  • betjemaniacbetjemaniac Shipmate
    Puzzler wrote: »
    We rely on a rota of organists for main services.

    We rely on a rota of people to operate the recorded music box.

    We rely on me to set up the music on the laptop. Occasionally (and usually unintentionally) we sing a capella, and I'm not too bad at being a cantor.

    we've got rather a good device which has all the hymns for a variety of hymnals pre-loaded, and you dial up the hymnal you use (or set it, given that no church in it's right mind is chopping and changing hymnal week to week... but this is SoF and I'm sure someone will be along shortly...) then you can vary the number of verses, the speed it plays at, and how many stops etc you want out. If you hide a decent speaker behind/under the organ, no one's any the wiser.

    It's not great not to have an organist, but somewhere along the line we've acquired what amounts to the next best thing.
  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    Sounds like the sort of thing you pay for. ;) All our tech is run on free software (Musescore and Audacity for the audio, Inkscapes to svg the lyrics, OpenShot to render videos with the lyrics changing in the right places).
  • I'm sure your rendition of Cwm Rhondda sounded 'tidy', @Baptist Trainfan.

    The only experience I've had of recorded backing track music was during a visit to my former charismatic evangelical 'new church' - now defunct and its members scattered elsewhere.

    To my surprise and horror they were using a banking track that made it sound like they were raving it up and a large charismatic rally rather than there being about 35 adults and quite a few children.

    It wasn't just an instrumental backing track, it was full on voices and so on.

    A rather unsettling experience.

    I'm sure the backing music you all use, those who do so, isn't at all like that.

    I did visit a URC church once, thinking about it, where the minister played a jolly track on a CD part-way through the service to make some point or other. He did an embarrassing little jig to it, bless him, but nobody else joined in.

    It was some kind of souped up version of 'Lord of the Dance' or something similarly egregious if I remember rightly, but I've erased the spectacle from my memory banks.

    Bless him. I'd give him 10/10 for sincerity.
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