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News
from Around the City
Posted 09.01.09
Also: Read
our first Newsletter
So,
what does it take to pick up your young wife and little kids, move to
a new place and set up Kingdom shop in the center of the
city? Increasingly, we are hearing from young pastors in the Heart of
North America (HONA) who want to do just that. Rev. Ryan Hofacre has
just moved from Chicago to Columbus, OH where he is in the first
stages of the new Columbus Anglican Church which is planning to launch
next year. Rev. William Shontz and a group of Steeler fans are camped
out in the heart of the city of Erie, PA and Rev. Rick Leone has
recently begun growing a multi-racial work in Fort Wayne, IN. These
intrepid city-planters are a part of a vibrant movement which is
carrying the Church of Jesus Christ back into the inner-cities.
The need for new churches in our cities is
obvious, the statistics overwhelming, and retaking our downtowns is
something very much in the heart of the Anglican Mission’s church
planting efforts. But this is a very difficult calling to follow; it
takes a strong faith and a tireless determination. New works in the
city usually begin quite small, sometimes with just a husband and his
wife. There is only the smallest budget to help planters, and then
there’s, well, the city. The vibrancy of traffic and the glimmering of
lights in the towering office buildings belie the inherent loneliness,
poverty, and pain of many who call the inner city their home. This is
not a ministry for the weak of heart…but if you talk with HONA’s Dean
Simmer and Chris Peterson, you might just begin to believe that it is
the most rewarding.
After
relocating in June of this year to the Detroit neighborhood of
Corktown, AM Lay Pastor Dean Simmer and his wife Giles spent the
summer months getting to know their neighbors and spending time
getting their hands dirty in the community. Under the leadership of
other community leaders, they worked to revitalize a city park, clean
up the Michigan Central Depot building, and police the neighborhood in
the late night hours.
Why the
city; why serve in such a challenging manner? Dean told us that it
started on Maundy Thursday. I had to work at Starbucks instead of
attending the service at our former Episcopal Church in central
Michigan, which, if you're unfamiliar, has the symbolic washing of
feet and stripping of the altar to reflect Christ's evening with his
disciples and arrest. I was annoyed that I couldn't attend the
service, but a priest reminded me that rather than having my own feet
washed at church, perhaps Christ was giving me the opportunity to wash
someone else's feet. So the Simmer’s picked a spot that really
needed washing and with little more than prayer support made the move
downtown.
Starting
in August, Dean began the process of securing property to build a
community garden. When operational, this garden will supply
neighborhood homeless meal programs and will serve as a healthy
educational tool for youth and families and in the neighborhood. A
non-profit was formed to oversee the garden and planting is scheduled
for the spring.
November will kick off a weekly coffee and tea night at their home
featuring Rwandan coffee from The Land of 1000 Hills. The
Simmers will be throwing their home open to their neighbors and nearby
friends to relax, build relationships and share conversation over
coffee with a missional purpose. In the winter, they plan to begin a
Bible study using the local pubs and restaurants of the historic Irish
Corktown neighborhood.
The
Simmer’s are committed, and their work is paying off in new
relationships with people who are truly making Christ known in the
inner city.
Five
months later and almost 300 miles away, Rev. Chris Peterson, his wife
Miriam and their young family moved to Northern Kentucky to start an
Anglican church in the large river-city of Covington. (Just across the
river from Cincinnati) They had no idea how that was going to
happen. They envisioned a church with the character of Saint
Barnabas—a man with a reputation for loving and encouraging people
nobody else wanted. They prayed for a church where the Spirit would
make Jesus’ presence so potent, that the world would see him in their
midst and be drawn. How that would happen was uncertain.
Since
then, God has drawn 17 adults and children while several more are
visiting. He brought them from a variety of places. The first member
found the Peterson's by calling the AMiA. Some are family of people in
Anglican churches in Kentucky and Minnesota. Others moved to Northern
Kentucky and were looking for an Anglican church. Still others came
after being invited by another member. Watching new people come has
been a blessing to this little church.
The
church, now named Saint Barnabas, is built upon one core conviction:
that God sent Jesus to embrace the world and that by his Spirit,
Jesus does this through his church. St. B’s seeks to find Christ
in his Body and experience Christ in participation with his mission
(Eph 4:4-16). So St. B’s has 4 values—worship, prayer, children and
outreach—and 1 universal practice—hospitality. Since they began
meeting in June, they’ve been gathering to worship and pray in the
Peterson home around a common meal. The whole community embraces the
children, and all are finding Christ there. Now, they’re building on
that base. Smaller Prayer Communities within the church are forming.
They’re looking toward developing a toddler church during their
teaching times. They’re also turning their attention to mission. In
October, St. B’s held a food drive to support a Women’s and Children’s
shelter in Covington. Five members gathered three car-loads of food &
clothes, and two neighbors expressed curiosity about the church. We
found Christ in the work, says Peterson. We’re also praying
toward hosting Theology on Tap starting this January in an effort to
embrace those who wouldn’t normally visit a church.
St.
B’s member Matthew Joyner has been leading worship at the house
meetings in Covington. St. Barnabas Church and Fr. Chris have been
an unbelievable blessing to me and I thank God for our little
congregation every day. It is amazing to see the way that God
sometimes draws people together and makes them a community. He has
definitely done so in the case of St. B's. Each person that comes in
the door comes expecting to meet Christ, but also to give of
themselves to Christ and each other in true Christian love. We are
truly blessed to have St. Barnabas Church and to have Fr. Chris
leading us in the service of Christ!
Saint
Barnabas Church belongs to Jesus. According to Peterson, It’s his
Table we join, his prayers we pray, his children we embrace and his
world we love. Our prayer has been that he would be the one people
find when they come. So far, he’s answered that prayer. Now we’re
praying he will draw in more of the city of Covington.
You can read more about these two city ministries at:
St. Barnabas web
http://www.kentuckyanglican.com/
New Way Corktown web
http://newwaycorktown.org/ |