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Sacrament meeting is the main meeting of the day. Everyone goes to this together and usually sits as a family.
As you enter the members sit in the rows facing the front. The Bishopric sits on an elevated stage and faces the congregation. Next to him sits a young man 12 - 14 years old. He's called the 'Bishop's Messenger' and the position rotates each week. His job is to relay messages back and forth from the bishop to whoever while services are in progress. The speakers also sit on the stage plus any choir/musical people.
The meeting opens with the bishop addressing the membership, and recognizing any guests from outside the ward who will be a speaker (Stake President, High Council member, etc.) Next he announces what hymn will be sung to open up the meeting and who will give the opening prayer. Depending on the bishop, the person giving the prayer might be told beforehand, but not always.
After the opening hymn, the person chosen to give the opening prayer will get up from his/her seat and walk up the stage to the podium, this is done is silence. If you notice during the walk young men closing the doors to the room and standing there, it's to prevent anyone from entering during the prayer.
After the prayer the doors are reopened and the bishop speaks again. Any ward business is announced, who's sick, etc. The congregation will be asked if there are any visitors here today, and if so to stand and introduce themselves. Then he reads who will be the speakers, and usually the sacrament is announced to begin.
In front of the stage behind a table will be 2 - 3 Priests, facing the membership. When the sacrament song begins, they'll rise and remove a covering off the top of the table. Underneath is the bread and water used for the passing of the sacrament. The water is already filled and the Priests take bread from under the table and tear it into small pieces and place them in trays. The bread has had the crust taken off. After they're finished they'll sit back down.
The doors will again be closed and the Priests will knell down behind the table. Mormons have a set prayer for the sacrament and it's taken from the Book of Mormon.
After the bread prayer is done the Priests stand and so does the entire first row. This is where the 'Deacons' sit during the meeting. They all stand at the same time and approach the table. The Priests hand them a bread tray and they go out among the congregation. They've been briefed beforehand in priesthood class as to which section each one is responsible for, kinda like waitresses knowing what table is theirs. After getting in position they look at the bishop. After the reigning authority partakes, the Priests are free to continue. They stand at the end of a row and hand the first person the tray. They take it and after partaking, pass it along the row. The Deacon then steps back one row and waits for the Deacon's tray on the other side to reach him. This is done until everyone has had served. One Deacon will even go out of the meeting room to give the sacrament to anyone in the corridor (usually mothers with crying kids).
When the bread is done the Deacons return the trays to the Priests and sit down. The water prayer is recited and the whole ritual is repeated.
After the sacrament, the doors are again reopened and the bishop introduces the first speaker.
Mormonism is different in the respect that all the talks given are by the members themselves. The bishop will schedule the meeting a few weeks in advance and assign various topics to different members. This is done for all ages, although for children the talk only lasts for 2 1/2 minutes. This is one of the reasons why Mormons aren't shy and can talk with confidence, they're exposed to public speaking from an early age.
After each speaker is finished the bishop gets up, thanks him/her and introduces the next one. This is done without clapping, or any interaction from the congregation except for a communal 'amen' at the end of each talk.
There's usually a musical piece at each meeting, either solo singing or instrumental.
At the end of the meeting the bishop closes with some remarks and then he announces what hymn will be sung to close the meeting and who will give the closing prayer.
This is a typical Sunday service, but there's also several special formats.