Part nightclub and part Bible study, the Sunday morning jazz service at Minnetonka United Methodist Church is all about tapping toes and saving souls.
The service, begun last fall, is conducted cabaret-style: Worshipers sit around tables and sip coffee while the Rev. Ken Ehrman wends his way through the crowd like a lounge singer.
"Let me tell you our ground rules," he announces to worshipers, 20 percent of whom on an average Sunday are first-time visitors to the church. "If you need coffee, get up and get it. Don't worry that we're right in the middle of something, because we're always right in the middle of something."
The 45-minute service is the only one of its kind in the area, according to the leader of the five-piece combo that provides the music. And if anyone would know, he would. He's the Rev. Fritz Sauer, an avid jazz trumpeter who recently retired after 15 years at Advent United Methodist Church in Eagan. He knows everything that's going on in the local jazz world and most of what's happening on the church scene.
The service contains everything you'd find in a traditional one: hymns, Bible readings, prayers, a message, a tip jar ... ah, offering basket. It's just done to a slightly different beat. Take the opening hymn on a recent Sunday, for instance. The words were from the church's hymnal but the tune was cooked up by the band.
"You'll know this," Ehrman promised as he activated a PowerPoint projection of the words, "and we'll just see what kind of a beat we get."
Jazz service 'felt right'
Tim and Amy Texley and their two children were officially joining the church. They could have attended a similar ceremony at that morning's traditional service, but they chose the jazz service because it's the reason they were interested in the church in the first place.