Let me tell you something about Wednesday and Friday evenings in Ho, Ghana that most people completely overlook. You probably think of midweek services as just another church obligation — a quick stop between work and sleep, maybe a song or two, a sermon you'll forget by Thursday morning. But here's the thing: the real power happens when nobody's watching. And at Christ Embassy Loveworld Arena in Ho, those Wednesday and Friday evening services are serving something far more potent than just spiritual routine.
I've found that when you strip away the Sunday morning polish — the fancy outfits, the coordinated worship teams, the packed auditorium — what's left on a Wednesday night is raw, unadulterated hunger. And hunger, my friend, is the secret ingredient nobody talks about.
The Midweek Menu Nobody Orders But Everyone Needs
Let's be honest: most of us treat spiritual growth like we treat meal planning. Sunday is the big family dinner — everyone shows up, there's pressure to perform, you bring your best dishes. But Wednesday? Wednesday is that leftover stir-fry you throw together when the fridge looks empty. Except here's what most people miss: Wednesday and Friday are when the real nutrition happens.
I've attended these services at Christ Embassy Loveworld Arena in Ho multiple times, and I can tell you the energy is different. There's no pretense. The crowd is smaller, yes — maybe 200-300 people instead of the thousands on Sunday. But what they lack in numbers, they make up for in intensity. These are people who chose to be there. No social obligation, no family tradition dragging them in. Just pure, honest pursuit.
Here's what a typical Wednesday evening looks like:
- 6:30 PM — The arena starts filling. Not with a rush, but with a steady trickle of people who look like they've been thinking about this moment all day.
- 7:00 PM — Worship kicks off, and I mean kicks off. There's no warm-up period. The worship team goes straight into deep end.
- 7:30-8:15 PM — Teaching session that feels more like a conversation than a lecture. The pastor walks around, makes eye contact, calls people out by name.
- 8:15-8:45 PM — Ministry time. This is where things get unpredictable. Healings, breakthroughs, the kind of moments that make you forget you have work tomorrow.

Why the Food Analogy Works Better Than You Think
Here's a question that might make you uncomfortable: when was the last time you actually tasted your spiritual food?
I don't mean sitting through a service. I mean chewing on a scripture until it changes your bloodstream. I mean letting a worship song hit you so deep that you forget you're in a room with other people. That's what happens at these midweek services in Ho. The portion sizes are smaller, but the flavor is concentrated.
I've observed something fascinating about the teaching style at Christ Embassy Loveworld Arena during these services. The pastors don't try to cover everything. They pick one verse, sometimes one phrase from a verse, and they turn it over and over like a chef working a single ingredient. Last Wednesday, the speaker spent 40 minutes on Psalm 23:5 — "You prepare a table before me in the presence of my enemies."
Forty minutes. On one verse.
But here's what made it different: he connected it to food. He talked about how in ancient Middle Eastern culture, sharing a meal was a covenant of protection. How the table wasn't just about eating — it was about declaring peace in the middle of war. And by the time he was done, I looked at my dinner plate that night differently. Every meal became a testimony.
That's the kind of transformation these services create. They rewire your relationship with ordinary things — food, rest, work, relationships — by showing you the spiritual dimension underneath.
The Hidden Ingredient: Community at the Dinner Table
Let me share something personal. I've been to big churches where you can sit for months and nobody knows your name. The midweek services at Christ Embassy Loveworld Arena in Ho are the opposite. Because the crowd is smaller, the connections are deeper. It's like switching from a banquet hall to a family dinner table.
Here's what most people miss about community in midweek services: it's not just about fellowship. It's about accountability. When you show up on Wednesday night, people notice when you're missing. The lady who sits two rows behind you will text you Thursday morning asking if everything's okay. The worship leader will remember your prayer request from last week and ask about it.
I've watched this dynamic transform people's eating habits, believe it or not. One woman I met at a Friday service told me she used to stress-eat all week until she started coming to these gatherings. "The prayer time on Wednesday night," she said, "calms my spirit so much that I don't need food to medicate anymore."
That's the power of consistent midweek gathering — it doesn't just feed your spirit; it recalibrates your relationship with physical food too.

The Surprising Connection Between Prayer and Digestion
This is where I might lose some of you, but hear me out. There's actual science — yes, real science — that suggests spiritual practices affect how your body processes food. Studies on meditation and prayer show they reduce cortisol levels, improve gut health, and even change how your body metabolizes nutrients.
I'm not saying the Wednesday service at Loveworld Arena is a weight loss program. But I am saying that when your spirit is at peace, your body follows.
Think about it: how many times have you eaten a meal while stressed? The food sits heavy. You feel bloated, guilty, uncomfortable. Now imagine coming to a service where you release that stress before you even step into your kitchen. The worship, the teaching, the prayer — it's like a digestive enzyme for your soul.
The Friday evening services are especially potent for this. After a week of work, deadlines, and life pressures, you walk into that arena carrying tension in your shoulders and acid in your stomach. By the time you leave, something has shifted. You breathe deeper. Your jaw unclenches. And suddenly, that dinner you're about to eat? It becomes an act of worship rather than an act of coping.
How to Make the Most of Your Midweek Dining Experience
If you're reading this and thinking, "Okay, Ekaterina, you've convinced me. But how do I actually get the most out of these services?" — good question. Here's my practical guide:
- Come hungry. Not just spiritually hungry, but physically aware of your hunger. Don't eat a heavy meal right before service. Let your body and spirit synchronize in their anticipation.
- Arrive 15 minutes early. The pre-service atmosphere is where the appetizer happens. Conversations, greetings, the slow build of worship — it all matters.
- Sit in the front half of the arena. I know it's tempting to hide in the back, but proximity changes your experience. You'll stay more focused, catch more details, and feel more engaged.
- Take notes on what you learn about food and rest. The teaching often reveals connections between spiritual principles and practical living. Write them down.
- Stay for the after-service connections. Some of the best conversations happen in the parking lot or the foyer. Don't rush out. Give yourself time to digest what you've received.
- Apply one thing from the service to your next meal. Maybe it's praying differently over your food. Maybe it's eating with greater gratitude. Maybe it's sharing a meal with someone you met at the service. Whatever it is, make it concrete.

The Friday Night Secret That Changes Everything
Here's something I've noticed that most visitors miss: Friday evenings at Christ Embassy Loveworld Arena have a distinctly different flavor than Wednesdays. Wednesday is about digging deep, getting your roots established, fixing what's broken. Friday is about celebration, anticipation, and preparation for the weekend.
The Friday service is shorter — usually ends by 8 PM — but it's more energetic. The worship is louder. The prayers are more declarative. And here's the food connection: Friday night dinner after service becomes a celebration. People gather in small groups, go to local restaurants, or host each other at home. The service creates a community meal culture that extends beyond the arena walls.
I've been invited to more Friday night dinners from people I met at Loveworld Arena than anywhere else in Ho. It's like the service primes you for connection, and then the food seals it.
The Truth About Spiritual Nutrition
Let me end with something raw: most Christians are spiritually malnourished because they only eat once a week. Sunday morning is like Sunday brunch — heavy, filling, but not sustainable. You need daily bread. You need midweek snacks. You need the kind of consistent, small-portioned spiritual feeding that Wednesday and Friday services provide.
At Christ Embassy Loveworld Arena in Ho, they understand this. The midweek services aren't an afterthought — they're the main course disguised as a side dish. The people who show up consistently are the ones who thrive. They don't just survive the week; they flourish in it. They make better decisions, have healthier relationships, and yes — they even eat better.
So here's my question for you: what are you hungry for right now? Because that Wednesday evening service is waiting. That Friday gathering is calling. And the table is already prepared.
Come hungry. Leave full. And don't be surprised if you find yourself craving more than just spiritual food — you might just discover a new relationship with the food on your plate too.
