Last Sunday we canceled our Sunday gathering. We did not have inclement weather. The preaching pastor was not ill. The roads were not blocked. We canceled our service deliberately to take part in Austin’s annual Capitol 10K run and fun run. Over 18,000 people turned out this year.
The run benefits a local charity each year. This year it was Meals on Wheels, a non-profit that delivers groceries and provides services to the home bound and elderly. Our City Groups work with Meals on Wheels so it was a natural cause for us to support. We mobilized our church to participate in the 10K and had a big cookout afterward. In retrospect and in prospect, here are four reasons to cancel your Sunday service.
- It enables us to corporately Serve the City, Know the City. By canceling an age-old tradition of Sunday church services, Austin City Life church went public with their commitment to being a church that is genuinely for the city. Instead of gathering in our downtown venue while thousands of runners streamed by, we decided to join our city in a great cause of feeding the needy. We rubbed shoulders with people who need Jesus. We gained a unique perspective of the city. Approaching the capitol with a throng of people, we made our way up Congress St running right to the edge of the capitol building. I poured out prayers for our government and kept running. We saw neighborhoods up close, house after house of people who don’t know Jesus and prayed. We saw the unique architecture and marveled. Heard the great bands and cheered. Laughed at the ridiculous costumes and had a great time with our city. Cancel your service to serve and know the city.
- It reinforces how important it is to Be the Church. By canceling our Sunday gathering, we reinforced our belief that church is not merely what we do; it is who we are. Weekend services have actually replaced the church in America. Our landscape is dotted with churchless Christianity. As a new believer said to me recently, it doesn’t matter if I miss a few Sundays because I am with the church throughout the week. Canceling the event and spending time running, cooking, eating, and hanging out was a wonderful reminder that we are the church and that we need one another.
- It offers Sabbath rest for a driven society. When we canceled our service, we created much needed rest for many volunteers, deacons, leaders, and pastors. We also created the opportunity for the church to rest in a society that is driven and too busy. We had quite a few people that did not participate in the race. They took the opportunity to relax and enjoy a wonderful day without the demands of work or service attendance. Many of us remarked how nice it was to not be in the service. Is this because we don’t want to worship God, because we don’t love the Word of God, because we are slovenly and indifferent to the gospel? Not at all…but it could also be that it…
- Serves as a reminder that very often we are too busy for church. That Sunday “off” came as with unexpected level of refreshment for many? Why? Because very often we are too busy for church. We get so exhausted from our busy lives, that Sunday gatherings of the church are something we discipline ourselves to go to. We work so late that we don’t go to our City Group meetings. We are so exhausted from taking the kids here and there that we can’t imagine having the energy to have people over for dinner to share life with. Unexpectedly, canceling a service can lead people to repentance over sinful busyness and faith in the Sovereign supplier of all things.





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April 3, 2009 at 1:09 pm
4 Reasons to Cancel Sunday Service « My Church Launch Journey
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April 6, 2009 at 6:22 pm
» Great thoughts from a TX church planter … Downtown KC “Loop”
[...] thoughts from a TX church planter on why canceling a service may be a good idea. http://churchplantingnovice.wordpress.com/2009/04/02/4-reasons-to-cancel-sunday-service/ [...]
April 7, 2009 at 2:04 pm
4 Reasons to Cancel Sunday Service « fresh expressions…
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April 7, 2009 at 5:32 pm
Denise Charles
Love this idea! It’s not about doing your city a favor or bemoaning the fact that there are so any other things happening on Sunday that there’s no more time for church. You took the bull by the horns as it were and engaged in an act of giving. You actively showed that church is not a place we go to; I don’t think that idea has sunk in yet.I’m sure there were many people you had a chance to interface with who might never darken your church door. It would have also been a great opportunity for active on-the-job intercession. Who ever said we must pray with our eyes closed? And what a great way to forge relationships.
May 29, 2009 at 3:35 am
brandonhatmaker
Glad you mentioned this post to me today JD. I enjoyed reading it and the replies. I guess I’ll add my two cents on how we “use” a Sunday off from traditional worship each 5th Sunday.
There is one KEY reason: We use it as an opportunity to express to our church family as well as our city that “being” the church is as significant to us as is “going” to church.
In this, I’m constantly intrigued by two things: (a) how many people are amazed that we actually cancel our service to serve… it breaks down preconceived ideas and misconceptions and (b) how many skeptics, atheists, jaded, and even just normal neighbors will visit us for “serve austin sunday” that never would “visit” us as a first contact at Sunday worship. (and yes, we’ve seen fruit from this).
Keep pressing Jonathan. BH
October 31, 2009 at 5:39 am
Orion
I totally agree with all of these! We cancel Sunday services for Mission: Ignition weekends. Where we go serve our community, love on friends and neighbors, help single Moms, rake leaves, support neighborhood revitalization, feed the hungry. We have done this 5 times a year since planting the church and it’s just a part of our culture. We did it for the reasons you listed. It helps us be who we want to be, the church!
We did/maybe still wonder if this makes us less stable financially. In the end we aren’t a stock, we are a movement and we believe this helps facilitate community, mission and an environment of gospel community.