Presbyterian Church Of Ghana Liturgy -
In conclusion, the liturgy of the Presbyterian Church of Ghana is a living, dynamic tradition that successfully bridges the Reformed theological heritage and the Ghanaian cultural soul. It resists the extremes of a rigid, foreign formalism on one hand and a rootless, emotional spontaneity on the other. Instead, it offers a via media where the cognitive depth of Calvinist preaching meets the kinetic joy of African drumming; where the quiet reflection of a Scottish psalm gives way to the call-and-response of a Twi chorus; where the altar is both a pulpit and a place for offering the first yams. For the Presbyterian of Ghana, liturgy is not a performance but a community’s deliberate, joyful, and orderly encounter with the living God—an encounter that is authentically Reformed and authentically Ghanaian.
The historical foundation of the PCG liturgy lies in the missionary work of the Basel Evangelical Missionary Society (1828-1917) and, subsequently, the Church of Scotland (1917 onwards). The early Basel missionaries, influenced by the Reformed tradition, introduced a liturgy centered on the primacy of preaching, the sacraments, and congregational singing. The Heidelberg Catechism and the Westminster Confession provided doctrinal anchors. Consequently, the classic PCG service is unmistakably Reformed: it opens with an invocation, continues with a prayer for illumination, features the reading of both Old and New Testament lessons, and culminates in an expository sermon. The sacraments—Baptism and the Lord’s Supper—are administered with solemnity, reserved for communicants who have received proper instruction. Until the liturgical revisions of the late 20th century, the order of service closely mirrored the Book of Common Order of the Church of Scotland, characterized by its linear, cognitive, and word-centric structure. presbyterian church of ghana liturgy
The liturgical calendar of the PCG, while observing the major Christian seasons of Advent, Christmas, Lent, Easter, and Pentecost, also includes distinctively Ghanaian observances. The annual Homowo (harvest) thanksgiving services, Ngmayem (festival of yams), and Aboakyer (deer-hunting) festivals are reinterpreted as occasions for Christian harvest thanksgiving, where members bring the first fruits of their labor—crops, fish, or money—to the altar. Similarly, the Odwira (purification) festival is often paralleled with the Reformed emphasis on covenant renewal and communal repentance. These events are not separate from the liturgy but often become the primary Sunday service, blending the fixed Reformed forms with variable, festive indigenous elements. The service may then include a procession of chiefs in traditional regalia, who are recognized and prayed for, followed by the standard order of prayers, Scripture, sermon, and Holy Communion. In conclusion, the liturgy of the Presbyterian Church
