updated April, 2025
Last year three pastors of neighboring churches wanted to help our congregations celebrate Ascension Day as a high point of the Christian year. We decided to hold a combined service the Sunday before Ascension Day (Ascension Day is May 25 in 2006), and publicized it as a coronation service. The service featured lots of participation: 54 kids from our three congregations formed a choir to sing a song (“Love Jive”), 50 instrumentalists participated in a sanctuary band, and over a hundred kids joined a procession and “coronation” joined by elders and pastors. Congregational participation included singing praise choruses and familiar hymns and also responsive and unison Scripture readings. The service ended with over a hundred singers coming forward to lead the congregation in the “Hallelujah Chorus.”
Setting the Stage
The introductory part of the service set the stage for an energetic and enthusiastic celebration. We reminded the congregation of their loud expressiveness at sports events and challenged them to make this too an energetic celebration. As the sanctuary band played “Crown Him with Many Crowns,” the congregation remained seated while the children, wearing beautiful, multicolored holographic crowns (purchased through the web for a quarter each) and waving palm branches and multi-colored streamers, marched up the center aisle and then parted to circle the congregation twice. After the procession the congregation rose to receive the greeting of their King.
Responsive readings, with appropriate transitional words and songs, moved from prophecies about Jesus as King to his exaltation in heaven. This time of praise led up to the reading of Revelation 4:10 and the “coronation.” As the congregation sang “All Hail the Power of Jesus’ Name,” over 130 children, elders and pastors came forward and placed their crowns on a raised “throne” in the center of the stage—a pulpit chair draped with gold embroidered cloth, set on a raised platform. (Elders and pastors had received gold crowns before the service; we assured kids that they could come back after the service and take their crown home!). The spotlights shone on all the crowns and made for a blazing spectacle!
With special attention to youth, the sermon, based on Mark 14:61-62 and Acts 1:8-11, emphasized that even though things in life are often difficult and confusing, God is loving and sovereign, and Jesus is on the throne of the universe. From that we derive comfort and strength.