Christ Reformed Fellowship
Family-Integrated Worship
Children are not a distraction from worship — they are covenant participants in it. At CRF, families worship together, as God has always intended for His covenant people.
"And these words that I command you today shall be on your heart. You shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, and when you walk by the way, and when you lie down, and when you rise."
Deuteronomy 6:6–7The Parental Mandate
God has called parents — not the church — to raise their children.
The responsibility for the Christian formation of children belongs first and finally to their parents — and above all to fathers. The church equips and supports, but she does not replace the father at the head of his household.
Deuteronomy 6 charges fathers to teach the law of God to their children constantly — when they sit, walk, lie down, and rise. Ephesians 6 commands fathers to bring their children up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord. These are not suggestions given to Sunday school teachers. They are commands given to parents.
Raising children as Christians is not merely a cultural aspiration — it is the explicit call of God placed on every believing household. The question is not whether we will disciple our children. The question is whether we will do it faithfully or by neglect.
Your children are holy. They belong to God.
The covenant is not a private transaction between God and isolated individuals. It runs through families. Scripture is explicit: the children of believing parents stand in a relation to the covenant community that is qualitatively different from the children of the world. This shapes everything about how we treat them in worship.
The Assembly of the Living God
When we gather, we ascend to Mount Zion together.
Hebrews 12 describes the Lord's Day assembly in extraordinary terms — we have not come to Mount Sinai, but to Mount Zion, to the city of the living God, to the heavenly Jerusalem, to innumerable angels in festal gathering, to the assembly of the firstborn enrolled in heaven.
This is what we are doing when we gather on the Lord's Day. We are not attending a program. We are ascending to the throne of God in corporate worship. The presence of God is in the assembly.
To remove the children from that assembly is to deprive them of something profound — the presence of God among His covenant people, the hearing of the Word, the sight of the Table, the song of the saints. It is to say, in effect, that worship is for adults. Scripture says no such thing.
Separating children from the service week after week is, however unintentionally, a failure to bring them to the one place Jesus said they belonged — in the gathered assembly, before the Lord.
"But you have come to Mount Zion and to the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem, and to innumerable angels in festal gathering, and to the assembly of the firstborn who are enrolled in heaven, and to God, the judge of all, and to the spirits of the righteous made perfect, and to Jesus, the mediator of a new covenant."
Hebrews 12:22–24This is what the Lord's Day gathering is. When the children are not there, they are absent from the assembly of the living God — not by their own choice, but by ours. That is not a small thing.
The Duty of Discipline
Disciplined children are a gift to the congregation.
God's call to bring children into the assembly comes with a corresponding call to form them. A covenant child who is trained, disciplined, and taught to sit under the Word is not merely better-behaved — he is being shaped for the assembly of the living God.
Scripture is not romantic about the nature of children. Folly is bound up in the heart of a child — not because they are wicked beyond other sinners, but because all of us are. Discipline is an act of love, not of harshness. The parent who will not discipline hates their child, says Proverbs. The parent who disciplines faithfully gives their child one of the greatest gifts of their childhood.
We do not expect children to be statues. We expect them to be children — present, growing, and being formed. But that formation requires the faithful, consistent, loving work of discipline at home and in the assembly alike.
What Proverbs says about discipline:
What to Expect at CRF
Our expectations for children in worship.
We want every family — from young children to grown saints — to feel genuinely welcomed in our assembly. These expectations exist not to burden parents but to help them disciple their children well, and to protect the reverence of the assembly for the whole congregation.
Recommended reading for parents: see our Resources page for books and articles on family-integrated worship and covenant parenting.
Browse Resources