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Getting to Church on Time


by Susan Elzey

Most families struggle with getting to Church on time at some point. Arriving on time can feel like a struggle against nature. But while you may feel this way, it is possible turn Sunday-morning stress into Sunday-morning success.

Which family is yours? Is everyone sitting in the pew before church starts, listening to the prelude music with combed hair, matching shoes, and scriptures in hand? Or, do you straggle in after the sacrament has been passed, dragging diaper bags and children, and stand at the back, scanning the congregation for a place to sit?


If the latter describes you best, don't despair - there is hope. It is possible for a family, whatever the size and in whatever initial state of disorganization, to enjoy all the benefits of getting to church on time every Sunday, which include more than just being saved the embarrassment of walking in late.


"Getting to church on time is an important task for families, especially families with many children and young children," says Shirley Klein, associate director of the School of Family Life at Brigham Young University. "The structure and order of a Sunday morning routine provides a sense of security and stability that promotes the well-being of individuals and family."


Structure? Order? If those words cannot typically be applied to your family's Sunday morning, it's time to give your Sunday mornings a makeover.


Simplifying the Basics
Essentially three tasks need to be accomplished on Sunday mornings to get to church on time: Everyone has to be fed. Everyone needs to get dressed. Everyone needs to find the belongings essential for Sunday morning success. Here's how to do it all:


Set the alarm clock. The tasks that need to be completed on Sunday morning involve movements that are as precise as those of the weekday ballet that gets everyone to work and school on time. Time does not expand to the tasks that need to be done just because it's the Sabbath. Commit to getting up early on Sunday just like the rest of the weekdays. (If moms and dads get up several minutes earlier than the children to get ready for their day, everything works better.)


Simplify Sunday breakfast. With seven kids to get out the door during my young married life, I tried many different ways to make Sunday breakfast easier. Finally, I found that the magic formula was Pop-Tarts! Since my children ate nutritious breakfasts the rest of the week, I decided that on Sunday mornings they could indulge in Pop-Tarts and a glass of milk. It was the perfect solution: Pop-Tarts could be served on a napkin, everyone liked them, and they were a treat that urged the kids out of bed.


Designate places for everything needed for Sunday worship. Keeping scriptures in a central location throughout the week not only helps on Sunday mornings, but also helps throughout the week for personal and family scripture studies and family home evening. A basket in the living room, a shelf on a bookcase, or any convenient place can serve as the Grand Central Station for everyone's scriptures. One family I know keeps them lined up between the banisters of the stairs, making them easy to grab either going upstairs, downstairs, or out the door to church. (Hint: Put the two-year-old in charge of putting any wandering scriptures away. Two-year-olds love everything to be in the proper place.)


Identify a few rules about Sunday clothes. Each week after church (and before Sunday lunch or dinner can be eaten), everyone should either hang their clothes up or put them in the laundry. That includes Sunday shirts, skirts, belts, and socks. These arrangements will make locating the necessary items much easier the next week. It takes only one lost black sock or belt on Sunday morning to take a house from calm to chaos.


Simplify Sunday meal preparation. To avoid having to put a meal together on Sunday morning, choose one of the following suggestions:


  1. Make a meal one day during the week that can be doubled and put in the freezer for Sunday.
  2. Pick three or four simple meals, like roast and potatoes in the slow cooker, which can be rotated throughout the month and prepared on Saturday.
  3. Depending on your meeting schedule, have sandwiches when you get home and prepare a simple, hot dinner later.
  4. Use shortcuts. Store-bought rolls and microwaveable vegetables will round out a casserole taken from the freezer. Put leftover spaghetti sauce on noodles and top with cheese for baked spaghetti.
  5. Expect less of Sunday meals. It doesn't have to be your grandma's Sunday dinner every week.

Make a schedule. Decide how long each Sunday morning activity will take and count backwards from the time you must be pulling out of the driveway to get to church on time. Let each family member know by what time they need to be finished with a particular task. Leave at least twenty minutes extra for minor emergencies like the baby spitting up on everything or a glass of milk spilled all over the floor.


Teach your family the importance of and process for being at church on time. Have a family home evening on Sunday morning preparation. Run drills in which everyone has to find their Sunday clothes and scriptures for a prize. Repeat as often as necessary. Cook part of the Sunday meal as a family and put it in the freezer. Let the one who is ready first on Sunday morning choose the flavor of Pop-Tarts for the next Sunday. That will keep expectations high! Be creative and repeat lessons as often as is needed. Plan a special reward when your family is in place before the meeting begins.


Prepare throughout the week for Sunday morning. Designate one day during the week to iron Sunday clothes and refuse to get the iron out at the last minute on Sunday. Truly use Saturdays as a "day we get ready for Sunday." Pack the diaper bag and other church bags on that day. Make sure everyone has a bath and shampoo Saturday night and has their clothes laid out. Clean up the kitchen Saturday night.


Prepare lessons and talks the Sunday before. This gives you time to review them throughout the week. Postponing talk and lesson preparations until Sunday is a disaster waiting to happen.


Successful Sunday morning routines can also spill over into weekday mornings, with their challenges of finding homework and packing lunches, and can eventually transform a frazzled family into an organized one.


"Whatever stage you are in, a regular routine will give family members a sense of predictability and order," Klein says. "Being on time is one outcome of a family routine that is working well."


However, don't be discouraged if it takes a few weeks to make your Sunday mornings more effective. Punctuality at church will probably not happen overnight, especially if being late has been your family's normal state for a while. Keep trying, and set the alarm clock fifteen minutes earlier each Sunday until you find your family in a pew, enjoying the prelude music.

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Read Comments Add Your Comment >>  

Janika in Boston

This article is very timely as we are switching from 8:30 a.m. church to 2 p.m. church. In some ways 8:30 was easier because we just woke up and got ready for church. Now, we really have to plan the day in order to get everyone ready and fed before church. We have also had great success with an "after church snack" that is eaten once we get out to the car after church. It encourages everyone to hurry to the car after church instead of playing/chatting/lingering so we can get home and eat lunch, etc. Fuller tummies definitely make for a more peaceful 20 minute ride home.

Getting to Church on Time - and with the Spirit

Darla in Lacey, WA

About a year before Elder Bednar became an Apostle, he spoke at our Stake Conference and challenged us to make our time in Church a revelatory experience. As I thought about how to implement his challenge, I remembered back when my children were small and my experience with getting anything at all out of Sunday meetings. As I reflected on those meetings I could remember as ones that truly fed my spirit, I realized that they coincided with those times we were there on time and without the usual stress filled, spirit killing chaos of nine people not prepared for Sunday. When I took the time on Saturday to ensure all was in readiness for Sunday, I was rewarded with arriving at Church in a better spirit and ready to receive the revelatory experience that Elder Bednar spoke of. It also allowed my family the opportunity for the same feelings. Even today, with no kids to get ready, if I make time on Saturday and even throughout the week, to prepare for Sunday, I arrive at Church on time, ready to be fed by the Spirit. Is it always easy? No. But it is always worth it. Thanks for the reminder and good luck and keep trying to all the moms reading this.

here's a tip

Diana in CA

One trick I learned almost too late (with the last of 5 children) was that if I got up and got dressed first, the kids knew I was serious. With the first 4, I stayed in my pjs while I focused on getting them ready, then scurried around and took care of myself. When I got up and got dressed first, I still had time to get them ready, and I was modeling the behavior I expected. Simple. I wish I had figured it out sooner.

Getting to Church on time

Melinda in Rexburg Idaho

My experience is that the most important thing to do is simply really try to be on time, be nice to your kids in the process and if you're late , pat yourself on the back for making the effort to be there.

Wonderful Tips!

Lea-Ann in Davenport, IA

These are tips I will certainly share. It is very annoying to be on time and try to keep children quiet while all of there little friends are scrambling in late, just before the Sacrament is passed. I have to disagree with the reader who commented that they should give themselves a pat on the back for just getting to church. We should all go to church. We should all be on time. Thanks for the article!

Jennifer in Virginia

I really enjoyed your article, I've found that for my three son's ages 9, 4 and 4 months, if we get to church on time we have a better experience in Sacrament. If we are running late I tend to rush them and myself out the door and no one has a good day. I want to be sure that my children always enjoy going to church and getting there on time so I strive every Sunday to leave at least 30 minutes early so everyone has time to get water and go to the bathroom. It makes for a quieter meeting and a happy mom!

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