Tuesday, 29 December 2015

[WardFive] Reid Temple AME DC - Watch Night Service at 7 pm.

 

 

I trust and pray all is well with you and your family.

  We are excited about all that God has done this year for Reid Temple AME Church and the launch of Reid Temple DC!!! 

We will celebrate together:

 Thursday December 31st at 7pm

Tivoli Theatre

3333 14th Street NW

Washington DC 20010

Discount parking next door – remember to have your parking ticket stamped.

 

WATCH NIGHT SERVICE 


 

Many of you who live or grew up in Black communities in the United States have probably heard of "Watch Night Services," the gathering of the faithful in church on New Year's Eve. The service usually begins anywhere from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. and ends at midnight with the entrance of the New Year.   Some folks come to church first, before going out to celebrate. For others, church is the only New Year's Eve event. Like many others, I always assumed that Watch Night was a fairly standard Christian religious service made a bit more Afro centric because that's what happens when elements of Christianity become linked with the Black Church.  

 
Still, it seemed that predominately White Christian churches did not include Watch Night services on their calendars, but focused instead on Christmas Eve programs. In fact, there were instances where clergy in mainline denominations wondered aloud about the propriety of linking religious services with a secular holiday like New Year's Eve. However, there is a reason for the importance of New Year's Eve services in African American congregations. 
 

 The Watch Night Services in Black communities that we celebrate today can be traced back to gatherings on December 31, 1862, also known as "Freedom's Eve." On that night, Blacks came together in churches and private homes all across the nation, anxiously awaiting news that the Emancipation Proclamation actually had become law. Then, at the stroke of midnight, it was January 1, 1863, and all slaves in the Confederate States were declared legally free. When the news was received, there were prayers, shouts and songs of joy as people fell to their knees and thanked God.  Black folks have gathered in churches annually on New Year's Eve ever since, praising God for bringing us safely through another year. It's been 153 years since that first Freedom's Eve and many of us were never taught the African American history of Watch Night, but tradition still brings us together at this time every year to celebrate "how we got over."

 

 

 

Shirley Rivens Smith, President

US Africa Sister Cities Foundation, Inc.

DC-Dakar

2000 Upshur St., NE

Washington, DC 20018

202-635-3138

 

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