Plan Your Visit

Welcome to Croswell FMC! Here are some answers to questions you might have as you get started.

What time are the Sunday services?

Our Sunday service starts at 10:00 AM.

What is worship like?

At Croswell FMC we practice a more traditional style of worship with liturgy, traditional hymns, newer worship choruses, sermon & regular communion. We believe that utilizing the ancient practices of the Church help keep us grounded and alive in our world today.

What should I wear to services?

Come as you are! We welcome casual attire, but feel free to dress up if you prefer.

How do I become a member?

Attend our membership class held every first Sunday of the month to learn more.

What are the church's core beliefs?

Croswell FMC is apart of the Free Methodist Church, and is part of the broader Wesleyan tradition. You can find out more about what we beleive HERE.

Our Worship Service

Music

Throughout our service we sing songs of worship about and to Jesus. Music enable all of us to come together around the truth of the Gospel and to prepare our hearts to hear the Word.

Word

Between the various readings from Scripture, and the sermon, we know that God’s Word transforms and renews our minds to be His ambassadors in the world.

Sacrament

The high point of our service is coming to the table to receive Communion. We believe that as we partake in faith, we are strengthened and enabled to live in the holiness we are called to.

Worship with us!

 At Croswell FMC we practice a traditional liturgical style of worship. Each week we follow the order of service from our service book (adapted from the 2019 Book of Common Prayer).

Our liturgy every Sunday is about Jesus – we sing about Jesus, we read about Jesus in Holy Scripture (we have an Old Testament reading, a psalm, a New Testament reading, and a Gospel reading every Sunday), and we preach Jesus – He is the Word we need. And climactically, every Sunday, we receive the Word in the Sacrament of the Lord’s Supper.

A physical copy can be found in your pew or, you can download the digital one below.

“Christians don’t go to church to be entertained… They go to use the service, or, if you prefer, to enact it… [liturgy] works best – when, through long familiarity, we don’t have to think about it… The perfect church service would be one we were almost unaware of; our attention would have been on God… thinking about worship is a different thing from worshipping.”

C. S. Lewis, Letters to Malcolm Chiefly on Prayer