What Does Vespers Mean to Bethel Students?
For more than 30 years, Vespers has made a profound impact at Bethel and beyond. The weekly, student-led worship service offers a space for students, alumni, and community members to gather in music-based worship and intentionally focus on God. And Vespers encapsulates Bethel's commitment to community, outreach, faith, and students.
By Jason Schoonover '09, senior web content specialist
December 13, 2023 | 9 a.m.
Every Sunday night at 9 p.m., Benson Great Hall dims as calm, purple light illuminates the stage. Atmospheric music begins as a student opens in prayer before the band invites hundreds of people to join them. The music begins. And hundreds of voices join together in worship.
For over 30 years, Vespers has been a staple of worship at Bethel. "Vespers serves as a place for people to gather as one in worship and dwell in His presence," says Elvira Obada ’24, who serves on United Worship Ministries, the team that leads music at Chapel and Vespers.
Here, we explore Vespers and what it means to our students and the Bethel community:
What is Vespers?
Vespers is a weekly musical worship service formed by students in the 1980s. The hour-long worship is centered entirely around music. It presents an opportunity for people to gather and worship through music, find support in their peers, and, if they choose, seek out prayer. While the selected songs often center on a theme, speakers, sermons, and sharing time are not included.
Vespers holds a very special place in my heart because I love being able to unwind after a long week of classes and spend some time in worship with my friends!
Elvira Obada ’24United Worship Ministries
Vespers is a beautiful thing. It is many people coming together to form one body of Christ in worship.
Daniel Carlson ’25United Worship Ministries
It provides a space to be able to musically worship, find support in your peers, and get prayed for. It's a space where people can come where they are and be fully accepted.
Tracee De Haan ’24United Worship Ministries
It’s all musical worship and always student-led—that’s a hallmark of Vespers, a hallmark of ministry at Bethel.
Matt Runion S’03Campus Pastor for Spiritual Formation and Care
Who leads Vespers?
Since its inception, students have run Vespers. Each week, a different student worship band leads Vespers with more than 50 student musicians volunteering across four teams through United Worship Ministries. Along with Vespers, these bands also perform at Chapel. Eight band leaders—two from each band—also make up a fifth band that plays each year during Welcome Week, the first week of Vespers and Chapel, and the final week of each semester.
Campus Pastor for Spiritual Formation and Care Matt Runion S’03 commends the student leaders for the humility they show leading Vespers. And all the students on the worship teams are volunteers.
They bring such value; they bring such talent and heart and ministry—meaningful ministry.
Matt Runion S’03Campus Pastor for Spiritual Formation and Care
I think that there is something so beautiful about how the United teams give up their Sunday and so much other time in order to serve their peers in this way and it always feels so authentic
Kassidy Rouse ’25Student Leader, Pray First student leader
What makes Vespers unique?
Chapel and musical worship are common at many—if not most—Christian colleges, but there’s a lot that sets Bethel’s Vespers services apart:
- The focus is on God. At Vespers, you’ll see more limited lighting and effects than at some other worship gatherings. This is intentional. The goal is to focus on worship, not the worshippers. Runion hails the students for remaining humble and deflecting the focus. “They are truly there to point people to Jesus,” Runion says.
- Prayer is a key component. While there are no sermons, Vespers has partnered with Pray First, Bethel’s student-run prayer ministry group, since 2009. At each service, a few Pray First leaders stay in the hallway outside Benson and are available to pray with students and attendees. Kassidy Rouse ’25 leads Pray First, a Bethel prayer group that has a few people attend Vespers each week. Rouse and her team set up a prayer area and pray with anyone who comes out asking for prayer.
- It’s open and free to anyone who wants to attend. Though run by Bethel musicians, many students come each week from other nearby universities along with alumni, high school students, and community members. To Runion, it shows Bethel students ministering to others. “It is one great example of how Bethel is serving the church and the greater community around us,” he says.
- Vespers provides students with opportunities to pursue their passions. While some United Worship musicians are majoring in music, most come from a diverse swath of majors—physics, business, biology, nursing, psychology, and more. To Runion, that makes Vespers—and Bethel—unique: Students with a heart for ministry can explore their love of music while they pursue whatever career God planned for them.
I love that Bethel’s able to serve our community and even the other Christian schools whose students come.
Matt Runion S’03Campus Pastor for Spiritual Formation and Care
It's so special to see the Bethel community gathered in one place all worshiping the Lord. Vespers is a safe place to be vulnerable, it doesn't matter where you are because we are all worshiping the one who is worthy of our worship!
Elvira Obada ’24United Worship Ministries
Vespers provides an opportunity to gather with my friends and peers in musical worship. It's a space where I can come, in whatever state I am, and just enter into the presence of God with the support of my friends around me.
Tracee DeHaan ’24United Worship Ministries
All of our worship is for God. It’s not about making Bethel look good. It’s not about showing our musical gifts. It is about lifting our worship to Christ. It’s about delighting in Him.
Daniel Carlson ’25United Worship Ministries
Why go to Vespers?
To DeHaan, Vespers represents a moment of unity and intentionality for the Bethel community and others to come together and worship and praise God.
Vespers presents opportunities for those attending to encounter God in unique ways. For many, it’s a chance to gather and be together in God’s presence. “I find great value in that sense of community,” says Daniel Carlson ‘25, a physics and applied physics: optics major who is a student-musician at Vespers. Many of the student leaders like Carlson and Tracee DeHaan ‘24 also attend on other weeks. They love being able to direct themselves toward the Lord as they prepare for the week. That being said, DeHaan cautions that you need to come prepared for worship. “People get out of Vespers what they put in,” says DeHaan, a nursing major. “If you haven't prepared your heart for worship or your mind, it's hard to get anything out of it.”
Runion remembers his own formative experience at Vespers while attending Bethel Seminary. He remembers frequently attending Vespers and being able to quietly worship in the back. The student leaders never knew they were helping him through a challenging year.
Vespers is a time when the community gets to spend time in worship. Everybody will get something different out of it depending on what the Lord intends to happen in that space. Come with an open mind and an open heart.
Elvira Obada ’24United Worship Ministries
I always sit in the same spot, and over time, my friends have come to join me consistently, and now every Sunday—aside from when I lead—we start the week by worshiping together.
Daniel Carlson ’25United Worship Ministries
People should participate in Vespers to encounter God in a different way than maybe how they have experienced before. I personally connect with God the most during musical worship, and I think people should participate in Vespers to potentially have that same experience.
Tracee DeHaan ’24United Worship Ministries
How can you attend?
Anyone can attend Vespers at 9 p.m. Sunday nights in Bethel’s Benson Great Hall. Campus is open during that time, and parking is readily available. Every week, United Ministry creates a Spotify playlist of the worship set.
People are coming in droves to worship every Sunday night, not only from Bethel, but across the Twin Cities.
Daniel Carlson ’25United Worship Ministries
What does Vespers say about Bethel?
Vespers serves as an example of Bethel's commitment to community and church outreach, showcasing servant leadership and encouraging students to pursue their gifts. To Runion and the students leading worship each week, Vespers shows that there is a heart for God, worship, and community at Bethel. “It is one great example of how Bethel is serving the church and the greater community around us,” Runion says.
Something very special about Vespers is that it is one of the core ways Bethel incorporates their demonstration of faith. Vespers is not necessarily restricted to musical worship, but rather serves as a place for people to gather as one in worship and dwell in His presence.
Elvira Obada ’24United Worship Ministries
Bethel is hungry to know God and draw near to Him. The culture at Bethel is defined first and foremost by the heart of the student body, and the constant participation in worship is evidence that our student body desires to know God.
Daniel Carlson ’25United Worship Ministries
I think that it says that Bethel is a place that is intentional about encouraging the building of your personal relationship with Jesus. I also think that it says that Bethel prioritizes community and the gathering of people.
Tracee DeHaan ’24United Worship Ministries
Worship and study at Bethel.
From the classroom to your dorm room, you'll find faith infused in everything you do at Bethel. In a community where you belong, you'll be challenged to grow academically and spiritually as you pursue your interests to become who you're meant to be.