Our Worship Service

We affirm that God relates to his people through covenants. And each week we seek to renew this covenant with God and one another, through our liturgy.

Covenant Renewal Worship

Our worship follows the biblical pattern of confession, consecration, and communion, modeled after the Old Testament sacrifices fulfilled in Christ. Each Lord’s Day, God calls us into His presence to renew our covenant with Him. We confess our sins and receive pardon, dedicate ourselves through the Word, and commune with Him at His Table. Worship begins with God’s call and ends with His benediction, sending us out renewed to serve Him in the world.

Family-Integrated Worship

We worship together as families – parents, children, and all generations gathered before the Lord. Children are active participants in the service, learning to sing, confess, and pray alongside their parents. Because the Lord’s Table is a profession of faith, not merely a reward for it, we welcome baptized children to commune with the body each week. We believe worship shapes faith, and our children learn to love Christ by worshiping with His people from their earliest days.

The Lord's Supper

The Lord’s Supper is the weekly culmination of our covenant renewal service, the high point where God feeds His people. We partake of bread and wine, as instituted by Christ, celebrating communion with Him and with one another. The Supper completes the sermon, as hearing the Word naturally leads to eating and drinking in faith. This joyful feast nourishes the body of Christ and strengthens us for life in the world. For families, a family representative comes forward to receive the elements and distribute them to the family. We all partake of the elements together at the minister’s prompting.

Congregational Singing

Our music is corporate, reverent, and robustly biblical. We sing psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs – with psalms forming the backbone of our worship. We aim for skillful, joyful excellence, learning to sing in harmony as an expression of Trinitarian unity: many voices joined as one. Music sets the tone for reverent worship – not entertainment, but adoration offered with understanding and strength.