Intermediate

Christianity: Worship and the Church

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·AQA GCSE Religious Studies·AQA 8062·11 min
3.1.2.2 Practices

Forms of Christian Worship

Christian worship varies widely across denominations. The spec identifies three main forms:

FormDescriptionExample denominations
LiturgicalFollows a fixed, written order of service; uses set prayers, creeds, and scripture readingsCatholic, Church of England (Anglican), Orthodox
Non-liturgicalNo fixed order; may include preaching, hymns, music — but planned in advanceBaptist, Methodist
InformalSpontaneous; open to movement, prophecy, speaking in tongues; led by the Spirit rather than a scriptPentecostal, Charismatic

All three use the Bible: liturgical worship incorporates set lectionary readings; non-liturgical worship centres on Bible exposition through preaching; informal worship uses scripture as inspiration and testing-point for spiritual experiences.

Private worship includes personal prayer, Bible reading, meditation on scripture, journalling, and devotional practices done outside communal services. Many Christians regard daily private worship as more foundational than attending a service — it sustains the relationship with God through the week.

The distinction between liturgical and non-liturgical does not map simply onto formal/informal. A Baptist service may be carefully planned (non-liturgical but structured); a charismatic service may appear informal but follows its own spiritual norms.

Prayer — Lord's Prayer, Set Prayers and Informal Prayer

Prayer is communication with God — speaking and listening. Christians believe God hears prayer and responds, though the response may differ from what was asked.

The Lord's Prayer (Matthew 6:9–13) is the prayer Jesus taught his disciples, used across virtually all Christian traditions:

"Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name, your kingdom come, your will be done on earth as in heaven. Give us today our daily bread. Forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors. Lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil."

The Lord's Prayer functions as a template for all prayer: adoration ("hallowed be your name"), submission ("your will be done"), petition ("give us our daily bread"), confession ("forgive us") and protection ("deliver us from evil").

Set prayers are written prayers used regularly in liturgical worship — for example, the Collect of the Day in Anglican services, or prayers before meals. They provide a shared language and ensure theological depth even when personal words fail.

Informal prayer is spontaneous, personal and conversational — Christians speak to God as to a parent or friend, using their own words. Many Evangelicals and Charismatics emphasise this form as most authentic and relational.

Contrasting views: some Christians value set prayers as tested and doctrinally reliable; others believe informal prayer is more heartfelt and relational. Both have biblical support.

Sacraments — Baptism and Eucharist

A sacrament is an outward, physical sign of an inward, spiritual grace — "an outward and visible sign of an inward and spiritual grace" (Book of Common Prayer). The Catholic Church recognises seven sacraments; most Protestant churches recognise two (baptism and Holy Communion).

Baptism

Baptism marks entry into the Christian community and signifies forgiveness of sins, new life in Christ, and membership of the Church.

TypePracticeWhoTheological basis
Infant baptismSprinkling of water on an infant's headCatholic, Anglican, MethodistGod's grace is given before faith; the child is welcomed into the covenant community
Believers' baptismFull immersion of an adult or older child who professes faithBaptist, PentecostalBaptism should follow personal, conscious faith; Matthew 28:19 — "go and make disciples... baptising them"

Contrasting views on infant baptism: supporters argue it reflects God's prevenient grace and parallels circumcision in the Old Covenant; opponents argue it is meaningless without prior personal faith and is not taught in the New Testament.

Holy Communion / Eucharist

The Eucharist re-enacts or re-presents the Last Supper (1 Corinthians 11:23–26). Contrasting interpretations:

InterpretationMeaningWho holds it
TransubstantiationThe bread and wine become the actual body and blood of Christ (though the appearance remains)Catholic Church
Real presenceChrist is truly present "in, with and under" the bread and wineLutheran
Spiritual presenceChrist is spiritually present to believers as they receive in faithAnglican/Reformed
MemorialThe Eucharist is a commemoration — a reminder of Christ's death, not a re-enactmentBaptist, many Evangelical churches

Christian Pilgrimage — Lourdes and Iona

Pilgrimage is a journey to a sacred place undertaken for devotional, penitential, or spiritual reasons. Two contrasting examples illustrate why Christians make pilgrimages today.

Lourdes, France

In 1858, a 14-year-old girl, Bernadette Soubirous, reported 18 apparitions of the Virgin Mary at a grotto in Lourdes. Mary reportedly identified herself as "the Immaculate Conception." A spring emerged at the site, and many visitors have since reported miraculous healings. Lourdes is now the most visited Marian shrine in the world, attracting approximately 5 million pilgrims per year (though visitor numbers vary annually). Pilgrims come to pray, bathe in the spring water, attend Mass, and seek healing or spiritual renewal. It is strongly associated with Catholic devotion to Mary.

Iona, Scotland

The island of Iona off the west coast of Scotland was where the Irish monk Columba founded a monastery in 563 CE. The Iona Community — founded in 1938 by George MacLeod — revived the island as a centre of Christian community, social justice, and liturgical renewal. Pilgrims come for ecumenical worship, prayer, walking the island's ancient routes, and community living. Iona is not associated with miraculous healings but with spiritual refreshment, Celtic Christian spirituality, and active engagement with issues of peace and justice.

Contrast: Lourdes is predominantly Catholic, associated with Marian devotion and miraculous healing; Iona is ecumenical, associated with community, justice, and spiritual renewal. Both demonstrate why pilgrimage matters to Christians in Great Britain today.

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Christmas and Easter — Festivals in Britain Today

Christmas

Christmas (25 December) celebrates the Incarnation — God becoming human in Jesus. The Nativity accounts in Matthew and Luke are the scriptural basis. Christian celebrations include Advent (preparation), Midnight Mass, carol services, crib scenes (nativity displays), and giving of gifts (recalling the Magi's gifts and God's gift of his Son). In Great Britain, Christmas is culturally pervasive — even largely secular celebrations carry echoes of the theological claim that God entered human history. For Christians, it is a time of joy, worship and family, centred on the message that "the Word became flesh."

Easter

Easter (date varies — first Sunday after the first full moon after the spring equinox) celebrates the resurrection of Jesus. It is the most important festival in the Christian calendar.

The Easter journey includes: Ash Wednesday (40 days before Easter — Lent begins, a season of fasting and penitence); Palm Sunday (Jesus' entry into Jerusalem); Maundy Thursday (the Last Supper); Good Friday (the crucifixion); Easter Sunday (the resurrection). Christians attend services, hold Easter vigils (lighting the Paschal candle from darkness), exchange eggs as symbols of new life. In Great Britain, Easter bank holidays retain their connection to the Christian story even as society has become more secular.

For many Christians, Easter is more theologically significant than Christmas: without the resurrection, Christmas has no ultimate meaning.

The Church in the Local and Worldwide Community

Local community

Churches engage their local communities in practical ways:

  • Food banks: many churches (often in partnership with Trussell Trust) operate food banks, distributing emergency food parcels to those in crisis. This is motivated by Matthew 25 — feeding the hungry is serving Christ. Food banks have become a major form of Christian social action in Britain since the 2010s.
  • Street pastors: trained Christian volunteers who go out on Friday and Saturday nights in town centres — picking up broken glass, offering flip-flops to barefoot revellers, sitting with distressed individuals, liaising with police and ambulance services. The Street Pastors movement began in Brixton in 2003 and now operates in hundreds of towns and cities in the UK.

Mission and evangelism

Mission is the Church's calling to serve and transform the world; evangelism is specifically sharing the Christian message so others can respond. Church growth is understood as a sign of God's activity. Most churches engage in some form of outreach — Alpha courses, community events, social media ministry.

The worldwide Church

  • Reconciliation: churches work to heal divided communities — for example, the work of Coventry Cathedral's reconciliation ministry, which grew from the cathedral's destruction in WWII, and international partnerships across conflict zones.
  • Responding to persecution: Christians are the most persecuted religious group globally (Open Doors estimates). The worldwide Church supports persecuted Christians through advocacy, prayer, legal aid and evacuation where possible.

CAFOD — Catholic Agency for Overseas Development

CAFOD is the official overseas development and relief agency of the Catholic Church in England and Wales. It works in over 40 countries, funding development projects (clean water, healthcare, education), responding to disasters, and campaigning for systemic change to address root causes of poverty. CAFOD is motivated by Catholic Social Teaching, particularly the option for the poor. Its Fast Day fundraiser and school programmes make it visible across Catholic communities in England and Wales. CAFOD works in partnership with local organisations rather than imposing external solutions, reflecting the Catholic principle of subsidiarity.

Common Exam Mistakes

1. Treating liturgical worship as Catholic-only

Anglican (Church of England), Orthodox and some Lutheran services are also liturgical. "Liturgical" means following a fixed order of service — it is not synonymous with "Catholic."

2. Describing baptism without specifying which type

There is no single Christian practice of baptism. An answer that describes only infant baptism or only believers' baptism and presents it as "what Christians do" misses the required contrasting views.

3. Confusing Lourdes and Iona as similar examples

The spec asks for two contrasting examples. Describing them as both "places Christians go to pray" misses the contrast — Lourdes (Catholic, Marian, miraculous healing) versus Iona (ecumenical, Celtic, justice-centred) is the required contrast.

4. Treating the Eucharist as universally the same

Transubstantiation, real presence, spiritual presence and memorial are four distinct positions. An evaluation question on the Eucharist expects engagement with at least two contrasting interpretations.

5. Naming CAFOD without substance

On a 6-mark or 12-mark question, naming an agency is worth one mark at most. The answer must describe what it actually does — countries of work, types of project, theological motivation — to earn developed-point credit.

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