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Saturday, July 7, 2007

Dreams Before Waking

Dreams Before Waking
Adrienne Rich

(From the persective of a window whose view is being blocked by a high rise; a poem for the city).

Despair falls:
the Shadow of a building
they are raising in the direct path
of your slender ray of sunlight
slowly the steel girders grow
the skeletal framework rises
yet the western light still filters
through it all
still glances off the plastic sheeting
they wrap around it
for dead of winter.

At the end of winter something changes
a faint subtraction
from consolations you expected
an innocent brilliance that does not come
through the flower shops set out
once again on the pavement
their pots of tight-budded sprays
the bunches of jonquils still with cold
and at such a price
though someone must buy them
you study those hues as if with hunger

Despair falls
like the day you come home
from work, a summer evening
transparent with rose-blue light
and see they are filling
the framework
the girders are rising
beyond your window
that seriously you live
in a different place
though you have never moved

and will not move, not yet
but will give away your potted plants to a friend
on the other side of town
along with the cut crystal
flashing in the window-frame
will forget the evenings
of watching the street, the sky
the planes in the feathered afterglow:
will learn to feel grateful simply for this foothold

where still you can manage
to go on paying rent
where still you can believe
it’s the old neighborhood:
even the woman who sleeps at night
in the barred doorway—wasn’t she always there?
and the man glancing, darting for food in the supermarket trash—
when did this hunger come to this?
what made the difference?
what will make it for you?

What will make it for you?
you don’t want to know the stages
and those who go through them don’t want to tell
You have your four locks on the door
your savings, your respectable past
your strangely querulous body, suffering
sicknesses of the city no one can name
Your have your pride, your bitterness
your memories of sunset
you think you can make it straight through
you don’t speak of despair.

What would it mean to live
in a city whose people were changing
each other’s despair into hope?—
You yourself must change it.—
what would it feel like to know your country was changing?—
You yourself must change it.—
Though your life felt arduous
new and unmapped and strange
what would it mean to stand on the first
page to the end of despair?

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Getting Connected to Blacksburg

As the hearts of a nation go out to the people of Blacksburg, I am reminded of Jeremiah’s words,“For I know the thoughts and plans I have for you,” declares the Lord, “plans to prosper and not to harm you, plans to give you a hope and a future” (Jeremiah 29:10-14).When Jeremiah spoke these words, the plans had changed. Israelites were deported. Invaders slaughtered innocent lives. Families were torn apart.The lessons from centuries ago still apply today. In the midst of tragedy, I think we find what it means to live by faith as the people of God. By reflecting on Jeremiah’s great words we understand that the people of God today should do three things.Expect God’s plan to be accomplished.Obviously, the exile wasn’t part of the Israelites plans; and neither were Cho Seung-Hui’s actions part of the plans for Blacksburg. But there is One whose plan transcends the deeds of gunmen, and that is the Living God. His plan is that we will have a hope and a future. God’s will was not that Cho Seung-Hui would carry out this heinous act, but neither did God step into human freedom and prevent the action. There are numerous examples in scripture to show paradoxically sovereignty and freedom work together. Even God did not stop Roman guards from crucifying his own Son. God does however work in the midst of the tragedy to secure a hope and future for everyone.Live God’s grace redemptively.If we have been the people who are expecting God’s plan to be accomplished, then we will live God’s grace redemptively. The nation will respond to this act in some way. As believers, we serve an even higher calling. We will be people who live righteously, stand for justice, and at the same time, exercise God’s grace among people.Our tendency is to cocoon ourselves safely into our homes, neighborhoods, and universities, fearing the outsiders or the mentally unstable. But Jeremiah reminds us in 29:5, “Build houses and settle down; plant gardens and eat what they produce.” Get connected because God calls us to live among all the people. In so doing, we find a chance to share that grace with others. We show them what true salt and light do—we enliven the world around us. As people of grace, learn to live with people and show them the good news of the grace of Jesus Christ. 3. Seek God individually.When we have expected God’s plan to work and lived out his grace, then we seek God individually. “Then you will call to me,” says Jeremiah, and “seek me and find me,” and the Lord promises, “I will be found by you.” Jeremiah tells us, in our times on the backside of Babylon, or a modern tragedy, we cry, weep, and mourn; but we also seek and pray to the God who has a plan. That plan is to come to us and bring us back. What God wants from us is a simple response—to seek God. The emphasis is not on figuring God out but obediently praying and seeking him wherever life takes you. “I will be found by you,” says the Lord in verse 14 because I have never left you. Notice that I have already come to you through believers on the scene and churches and communities of faith lovingly standing by the side of grieving loved ones. In 1999, 9 people died as American flight 1420 crash landed at the Little Rock Airport. You may remember that on board that plane were 25 members of the Ouachita Baptist University faculty and choir. I had a friend who was supposed to be on that flight but had to change flights at the last minute. Somehow in the middle of the tragedy, God used the survivors to help rescue the wounded and many others who were trapped in the burning plan preventing further things from happening. Others such as James Harrison died while trying to save others. On “Good Morning America” the next day, Diane Sawyer interviewed music professor Charles Fuller, and she asked him about the experience. Fuller declared, “There are times in life where your faith has to mean something. It can’t be something that you just talk about. It has to be something that empowers you to live life.” (Trennis Henderson, Baptist Standard, 6/9/99)Today, let your faith mean something. Your faith can be a part of God’s great plan.

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Holistic Ministry in Lincoln Village

Southwood Presbyerian Church in Huntsville, Alabama, offers a holistic ministry in the Lincoln Mill Neighborhood called Lincoln Village Ministries.

Lincoln Village Ministry
A Model of Holistic Community Care
centered around work in
the Public School and Collaboration with other Churches

Church Name:
Southwood PCA

Location:
Huntsville, AL

Web sites:
http://www.lincolnvillageministry.com/
http://www.southwood.org/

Compassion Ministry:
Lincoln Village Ministry

Church size:
Southwood PCA 1,200
Ten to fifteen churches of various sizes and denominations
have significant partnership and leadership in this ministry.

Key Audiences:
Suburban or Rural churches desiring significant community impact
Churches looking for spiritual development in members through service.
Churches wishing to engage in schools for significant transformation.
Churches interested in partnering with others to have community impact.


Key Lessons:
Cast vision through exposing extreme poverty.
Partnering with others extends the work further and faster.
Credibility and accountability are key to working with schools.
God-led endeavors and holistic solutions produce impressive results


From Internally Focused to Externally Focused:
Exposure is the word that best describes the catalyst that launched the staff and members of Southwood PCA into serving the poor and needy of their community. Mercy Ministry Director, Mark Stearns has a history of helping the needy, including years with Young Life, Prison Ministry work and Harvest, a farming ministry helping provide food for the poor. “The Harvest ministry was going well but was not challenging to me any more. I wanted to get back to ministry that forced me to depend of Christ to work. I was restless and wanted a real challenge.” Mark was searching for a new area to serve when he came across a neighborhood next to an old textile mill that had shut down. “It had suffered 30 years of neglect. I simply began walking around and it was evident problems existed.”
But nothing had quite prepared him for what he encountered during his first visit inside the homes of Lincoln Village. “One day I met a young lady and her daughter. As I talked with her she asked me to come into her house. When I went into her house I noticed holes in the walls, in the floors. The electricity didn’t work with any consistency and the plumbing had not worked for some time, but they continued to use the bathroom. My first thought. ‘Oh God, I can’t believe this child is living in a situation like this,” says Mark Stearns. The stench in the home was nauseating. Mark felt as though he had stepped into a third world country. “I cried and then drove straight to our pastor’s house,” says Mark.

Mark proceeded to put Senior Pastor, Mike Honeycutt in the car and take him to the house. “I could tell the smell was really bothering him and he began to sweat. After several minutes, Mike said ‘Mark, I’ve got to go’,” says Mark. Not knowing what the pastor’s reaction would be—one of anger or compassion—Mark had simply prayed that his pastor would suffer and that his heart would break like his own. After a breath of fresh air outside, Mike said to Mark, “This is where the Kingdom of God needs to be.” To which Mark simply asked, “Turn me loose over here.”

Southwood PCA did turn Mark loose and quickly learned that the problems of Lincoln Village were extensive and even beyond just what their church could handle alone. Four years later, the Lincoln Village Ministry and the Lincoln Village Restoration Project have grown deep roots of restoration and revival in the homes and school of this neighborhood. by engaging hundreds of volunteers from Southwood PCA, 12 area churches and numerous other professional and business partnerships. Together, they are engaged in physical restoration, tutoring, medical, legal, emotional and spiritual aid to this community. Southwood has established a food pantry and a clothes closet; has supported the Lincoln Elementary School through a student tutoring program and upgrading the school library and greenhouse. Other ministry tasks have included home repair and supporting a volunteer medical clinic.

Ministry Context:
Huntsville, Alabama is a mix of professional and working class people. It is home to extreme poverty due to textile mills closing their doors. At the same time the professional industry has boomed in this city that is home to The Boeing Company and NASA/Marshall Space Flight Center. There are 250,000 residents of Huntsville.
Southwood PCA is located in beautiful Jones Valley in Southeast Huntsville and is affiliated with the Presbyterian Church in America. Over 1,200 members worship together each Sunday morning during their one worship service. Just miles from the church and various upper class neighborhoods is the community of Lincoln Village, where families live in extreme poverty and inadequate living conditions. Many single mothers and widows are trapped in the cycle of poverty in this neighborhood with no way out. Some face legal troubles—sometimes for simple tickets. These scary legal troubles cause families to hide and not receive even proper medical and financial help, for fear of filing paperwork that would expose their legal fees and troubles.
Lincoln Village Ministries on Mission
Lincoln Village Ministry is the community service arm of Southwood PCA and is a non-profit organization established that engages in a holistic approach to ministry. The first stages of the ministry began in Lincoln Elementary School. They began to provide financial and personnel support to this school. A tutoring program was developed allowing church volunteers to come alongside the school and provide additional help in improving the state required standardized test scores and build relationships. “There are 170 students at Lincoln School and 50 in the head start program. We work with all these children and their families,” says Mark. When Lincoln Village Ministry first got involved, the school’s achievement overall was in the 11 percentile of all pubic schools in Alabama. Today, Lincoln Village has made improvements that are nothing short of miraculous. The school now performs in the 91 percentile in reading and 89 percentile in math. “The school has already hit the standard they needed to achieve by the year 2011 in the national No Child Left Behind Act,” says Mark.

Not only has LVM been instrumental in bringing test scores up, they are helping students connect with a future and to dream big with the completion of a state of the art science lab. They took an old building behind the school and transformed it through vision and partnerships. “Our local churches have engineers and scientists. We asked them to come alongside in this project,” says Mark. They also hired someone to teach in the lab four days a week and a local PetSmart donated animals, giving the lab life and hands-on learning and observation experiences. School principal Christy Jensen says, “If God hadn’t sent the support of Lincoln Village Ministry, I don’t think I would have lasted past the first year.”

After being involved with the students for a short time, they realized the need to expand their vision to include other areas of the community. They are now involved in as many areas of community life as possible, providing help with medical, dental, legal, clothing and nutritional needs of students and families. They helped bring a social service worker on site, developed a food pantry, clothes closet and a partnership with HEALS Health Clinic—also on site at the school.

Lincoln Village Restoration, the guiding non-profit entity for housing, has purchased approximately thirty-five housing units that are in the process of being renovated. Lincoln Village Restoration purchases the home and partnering groups provide labor and supplies. To date seven homes have been refurbished and re-inhabited: five by churches, one from the local Home Depot and employees and one from the local State Farm Insurance Company and employees.


Step One: Expose the Needs and Gain Support
Mark knew that to make a real difference, he would need his pastor’s and church’s support. So, as mentioned earlier, he began to expose people to the extreme conditions that existed in Lincoln Village. Senior Pastor, Mike Honeycutt played a vital role in the people at Southwood first stepping up to get involved. “Mike gave the first message and our church began to pour ourselves out as a drink offering. Mike is an advocate and he is still convicted that this is what our church should be about. He also keeps it in front of the session.” Mark Stearns also began talking and teaching Sunday school classes

Step Two: Go Get More Help!
“We began to see that the needs were way beyond our church’s ability. I started inviting others to come and see.” Mark spent a good deal of time during the first two years speaking to other churches and showing them that tutoring was a platform to get involved. “I saw and ocean of trouble and no one church could own this. Lincoln Village Ministry represents many different denominations all working together,” says Mark.

Mark’s team also got help from other fellow workers in ministry to the poor. “We brought consultants in from Desire Street Ministry, New Orleans to help assess and view ministry. The Lincoln Village team also went to their facility,” says Mark. They also visited ministries in Birmingham, Atlanta, Nashville, New Orleans and looked at various models. “We are always open to learn. We like to ‘glean’ from others,” he says.

Step Two: Assess the Needs and Gain Credibility
Visiting the school principal and the homes of people living in the neighborhood was the best assessment of all. One of the first assessments made was the church or another organization would have to own the homes in desperate need of repair. Almost all of the homes in need of repair were owned by three people. Lincoln Village Ministry would have to become landlords. “People were rooted there and we simply wanted to give them a safe, affordable environment to raise kids,” says Mark. The work of creating a board to raise money to buy the houses began and had eventually grown into its own non-profit.

Meeting the needs of the school children in the community was high on Mark’s personal priorities as well. “I suffered from not going to high school myself and I know how important it is for these kids to get and education and have a hope for the future,” admits Mark. In the first few weeks of Mark being “released” to go work in this neighborhood, he stopped in to visit with the school principal. “She gave me a tour and admitted that they were really struggling, but I could tell she was leery that I could really help. So, I think she tested me.” When Mark asked how he could help, she said that the school only had one working overhead projector. The very next week, Mark brought six new projectors to her and said, “OK, now what else do you really need?” That was the start of a great relationship between the school and the ministry. It didn’t take long for tutoring and room mothers to be enlisted as vital volunteers in the transformation of the school.

Sustaining the Outreach Arm:
They recruit volunteers through internal local church communications and staff use volunteer cards to promote opportunities, especially during speaking engagements about the ministry. Because of the relational connection people have to the children, tutors often bring their friends into volunteering with them. The ministry also has a quarterly newsletter.

To date, Lincoln Village Ministry has approximately 100 volunteers working every week (tutoring, room mothers, construction) in the school. Charlene Pinkey, who runs the tutorial program at the school, keeps a folder on each child and their struggles and study sheets for tutors to go over. “People are afraid, so we make it easy. Charlene gives tour of the school and neighborhood,” says Mark. The ministry also has an additional 500-600 volunteers annually who work in the school and in the Village with special projects and restoration. Lincoln village Ministry estimates that volunteer labor and donations have saved the ministry $750,000.
Partnerships with other churches is vital to the success as well as partnerships with local businesses and professionals. The ministry has doctors, lawyers, dentists of all kinds that offer their services to the ministry. Mark says, “Southwood PCA never planted our flag in Lincoln Village. This is a ministry that takes every one of us.”

The ministry operates on an annual budget of $110,000, which does not include some staff salaries. For instance, Mark Stearns salary is paid for through Southwood PCA. Funds come from various sources including special donations and general fund donations for participating churches. The only fundraising that is done is for the purchasing and refurbishing of homes. For example, they held a benefit concert in 2006 to help raise money for the Lincoln Village Restoration Project non-profit.

Challenges:
Mark admits that in ministry like this, one challenge is being patience. “Change is always much slower than you think.” One of the early challenges Mark faced was with volunteer retention. He could recruit volunteers, because people had a heart to help, but sometimes the shock of extreme poverty would cause them to back off and not fulfill their commitments long term. “People would come and volunteer and then be shocked by what they saw and not always come back. It made me angry. I realized they needed to learn how to stay composed in work with the poor.”

To help combat this problem of volunteer burn-out and check, Mark Stearns developed an 8-week class called Engaging the Enemy, where he helps individuals understand how Satan has attached people and helped them to be in their situation of poverty. He shows people the realities of extreme poverty and what it can be like to serve them. “It’s graphic, but my goal is to train them on how to fight to win,” says Mark. He teaches this course at Southwood and other churches.


Internal Benefits of an External Focus:
One of the benefits the church has seen is a renewed sense of purpose and calling for meeting the needs of the poor and living out Scripture. Southwood PCA will be expanding their ministry directly into the neighborhood they serve by planting a church in Lincoln Village in 2007.

The Lincoln Village Ministry has also produced a great sense of unity among believers in their city and in their own daily work as a staff. “(At Lincoln Village Ministry) we are loyal to the core. Problems are brought to our attention and the team work for each other. The enemy does not get a hold of our friendship and loyalty to this ministry,” says Mark.

Friday, April 6, 2007

Center City Churches in Fort Myers Build Together

Churches across denominational lines are building together in Fort Myers, Florida.

Trinity Village is both a concept and a dream.

The CONCEPT: Churches of different denominations share a common ground with separate worship facilities and common administration, education, social and parking space.

THE DREAM: The congregations of the First Baptist Church of Fort Myers, the First United Methodist Church of Fort Myers, and the First Presbyterian Church of Fort Myers will share approximately 5 acres in downtown Fort Myers where First Baptist and First Presbyterian are currently located across the street from each other with First Methodist to build a new sanctuary in between. The gym and commercial kitchen at First Baptist Church will be shared. Current aging buildings will be replaced. New construction may include: new dining hall (which could serve at a hurricane shelter for downtown Fort Myers), new education and office space to be shared by all three congregations, entry level and senior housing and a new parking garage

http://www.fbcfortmyers.org/trinity.htm

Youth in the City

Murrysville church's youths lend hands to homeless

By Maryann Gogniat Eidemiller
FOR THE PITTSBURGH TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Friday, February 23, 2007

When the nights turn bitter and it's too cold to sleep in doorways and abandoned buildings, some of the homeless people who live on the streets in downtown Pittsburgh check into the Severe Weather Emergency Shelter set up in the gym of the Smithfield United Methodist Church.
On many nights, they'll find that the hot food is dished out by a handful of volunteers from Mother of Sorrows Roman Catholic Church in Murrysville, who also distribute clothing to help them stay warm.
The church's ministry to the homeless began about two years ago as an offshoot of the parish's Mother Teresa Outreach when Santos Hernandez, past chairman of its financial committee, heard about the shelter's needs.
"Our pastor, Monsignor Richard Curci, wants us to get out there to serve, to do charitable works, and I'm focusing on trying to get our young people involved," he said.
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Hernandez is the group's chaperone. His son, Matthew, 18, is the teen coordinator of the volunteers who include his brother, Michael, 16, and several other teenagers from the parish. In addition to working at the shelter, the youths have an ongoing collection for warm clothing and hygiene products, which they pass out to the homeless. At the shelter, they also help to serve food donated by local food banks, churches and restaurants, and clean up the facility.
"They are a tremendous help to us," said program director Linda Sheets, who considers them one of their primary groups of volunteers.
The shelter, which is open on nights when the temperature dips below 20 degrees, is part of Operation Safety Net through the Pittsburgh Mercy Health System. The church gym has kitchen and shower facilities, and on-site medical and mental health clinics staffed by professionals who donate their time. The men sleep on the floor with blankets, and the women are sent to another location to sleep.
Up to 150 men and women of all ages seek refuge on the nights when the shelter is open. Otherwise, they may be sleeping in doorways, alleys, under bridges and in abandoned buildings. Some of them are turned away from other shelters that are open every night because those shelters are full, or the homeless have used up their allotted times there.
There are many reasons why people become homeless, Sheets said. They may be substance abusers, mentally ill or just unlucky, who for various reasons have lost everything and have no one to turn to.
"They kind of get lost," she said.
Chris Murawski, 19, a senior at Franklin Regional High School, noted that some of the homeless aren't much older than he is.
"It can happen to anybody," he said. "There are women who get beaten and raped, and men with such problems in life that they ended up on the street. You just can't look at them as just somebody who won't work."
Matt Hernandez, also a senior at Franklin Regional High School, was surprised that the homeless are so outgoing and eager to talk to them.
"I thought they would be kind of shy," he said, "but they are really nice people with needs just like you and me."
Michael Hernandez, a junior at the high school, took classmate Kari Lavellee to volunteer on a recent weekend.
"There are so many people in need in Pittsburgh, which is so close to us," he said. "We can really make a difference."
Santos Hernandez calls volunteering at the shelter "a reality check" for those who give their time. It's an opportunity, he said, to appreciate what you have.
"The homeless have to stay outside through the day, and sometimes they don't have anything until they get back into the shelter," he said. "I saw one guy go back for five helpings of food. They are just storing up. It's a tough situation."
Matthew and Michael Hernandez are in charge of collecting clothes and hygiene products to distribute at the shelter. Call them at 724-733-0614, or drop off donations at Mother of Sorrows Church, Old William Penn Highway, Murrysville. Among the items needed for men and women: shampoo, soap, toothbrushes, toothpaste, coats, hats, gloves, socks, boots, hooded sweatshirts and thermal underwear.

Creative Class- Christ Speaks in the City

In Boston......

News/Events
"Christ Speaks In the City" Series to Launch Spring Lectures Lunchtime Lectures for the Young Professionals in Boston

Brighton, MA - The "Christ Speaks In The City" Lunchtime Lecture Series for young professionals in Boston launches its Spring series this Thursday, March 1st at the Old State House, located in the financial district, from 12:00 noon - 1:00 p.m. Thursday's event, the second of four this year, is hosted by the Archdiocese of Boston Vocations Office.

"The first round of lectures was a huge success, drawing hundreds of young professionals of Boston to celebrate their faith and to seek answers to pressing questions they have about Christ and the Church," said Vocations Director Fr. Dan Hennessey.

"Just as we had in the Fall series, the next group of lecturers are exceptional speakers with a wide knowledge and love of the Church and the faith we live as Catholics," said Assistant Vocations Director Fr. Michael.

The "Christ Speaks In The City" Spring 2007 Lunchtime Lecture Series Schedule:
Thursday, March 1, 2007: Very Rev. Richard EriksonVicar General and Moderator of the Curia in the Archdiocese of BostonLt. Colonel in the United States Air ForceServed as a Military Chaplain in Iraq Catholic Author Topic: Following Christ Wherever He Leads: Reflections on Ministry on the Frontlines of Iraq and Boston
Thursday, March 22, 2007: Jo Tango Venture Capital Investor Yale, Harvard Business School Helped start Boston Catholic Men's Conference Topic: Making Time for God
Thursday, April 26, 2007:Kerri Marmol Married Mother of two children Member of the Community of San't Egidio Helped found a "School of Peace" for children in Jamaica Plain Helped found a "School of the Gospel" for adults in Allston Topic: "My Yoke is Easy": The Joy of living the Gospel in Prayer and Friendship with the Poor.
Thursday, May 24, 2007: Cardinal Seán P. O'Malley Topic: The Power of the Eucharist
PLACE: Old State House 206 Washington St. Boston, Ma. 02108 TIME: 12:00 - 1:00 p.m.
BACKGROUND: A light lunch will be provided. The "Christ Speaks in the City" Lecture Series is an event hosted by the Vocation Office of the Archdiocese of Boston in the heart of Downtown Boston's Financial Center.

The main goal is to invite people to ask the major questions for which Christ and His Church are the answer. The Lectures feature speakers who are recognized for their extraordinary witness to the faith. Lectures are free to the public. For more information Contact the Vocation Office 617-746-5949 www.vocationsboston.org

Church Expands Downtown Ministry

New Fellowship Missionary Baptist to launch $1.5M building downtown
The Macon Telegraph
March 30, 2007
At a time when some churches have left downtown Macon, New Fellowship Missionary Baptist Church isn't budging.
The church, an east Macon fixture for almost 30 years, will build a $1.5 million worship center and administration building on its campus near the Macon Coliseum.
'Everybody doesn't need to run off to the suburbs,' said the Rev. Ronald Terry, the church's pastor since its founding in 1978. 'Somebody needs to stay downtown.'
The church will break ground on the project at a ceremony Sunday at 3 p.m. on its property at 475 Church St. The featured speaker will be U.S. Sen. Saxby Chambliss.
The 19,000-square-foot construction will connect to the existing church building, which Terry said will house other ministries.
'This will give us room to increase what our young people do. We can expand our tutorial program, our dance ministry, and eventually we can get into arts ministry ... piano and voice,' said Terry, who is also an accomplished musician.
The existing sanctuary has been on the property since the early 1940s. Construction on the new building is expected to be finished in about a year. Terry said the site work and new worship center will help improve the sightline in east Macon.
'With a large cross extending toward the sky, it will add some new beauty,' he said.
New Fellowship's location puts it in position to serve downtown while benefitting from its proximity to destinations such as the Coliseum, the Coliseum Medical Centers and the nearby Georgia Sports and Music Halls of Fame.
If city officials have their way, there could also be a new hotel built in the area. Terry said he is a supporter of the hotel project.
'Hopefully, when people come to our city,' he said, 'this (church) will be one of the points of interest they will want to see.'
IF YOU GO
What: Groundbreaking at New Fellowship Missionary Baptist Church. U.S. Sen. Saxby Chambliss will speak.
Where: 475 Church St.
When: Ceremony at 3 p.m. Reception at 4 p.m.
Call: 473-8806
To contact Rodney Manley, call 744-4623




Church Expands Downtown
4/3/2007
Editor: Lindsay Crump

In the past few years many churches moved away from downtown Macon and headed to the suburbs, but one church is expanding its downtown ministry.Members of the New Fellowship Missionary Baptist Church broke ground on their new building on Church Street Sunday afternoon.Rev. Ronald Terry, the pastor, says the church started in east Macon nearly 30 years ago, and they plan to add a $1.5 million extension to their existing building.U.S. Senator Saxby Chambliss was the speaker at Sunday's groundbreaking ceremony.Reverend Terry says the new building will fill 19,000 square feet. He says the new building will also allow them to expand their youth ministry.

Food For Thought

Groups feed women's minds, spirits
Food for Thought and its sister program, Lunch Encounters, present thoughtful events that fit in with busy lives.

By H.M. Cauley

For the Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Published on: 03/29/07

Sometimes more really is better. Take the case of the monthly women's program Food for Thought. The third-Thursday lunchtime meeting brings business and executive women from around downtown and Midtown to North Avenue Presbyterian Church, where they spend an hour being inspired, motivated and stimulated by thought-provoking speakers.
The idea was such a good one, and so successful, that some of its participants decided Buckhead women needed the same kind of event. The result is the recently organized Lunch Encounters, held for one hour on the second Wednesday of the month at Second-Ponce de Leon Baptist church.
Organizers of the two programs agree that the meetings fill a need for women of all faiths from across the city.
"This is definitely a ministry to the community; it's not designed to be an on-ramp to the church," said Ann Carter McDonald, a 34-year member of North Avenue and the founding force behind Food for Thought. "We wanted this to be broad in its outreach, not just denominational, but a sort of a front porch to the church. It's a place to consider what it means to integrate faith into life without a denominational or liberal/conservative bent. It's also a wonderful way to bring women of different races together."
Since it started 10 years ago, Food for Thought has been faithful to its original goal, said Carter McDonald.
"In a low-key way, we wanted to expose people to ways to integrate their faith with their work and to be exposed to other Christians who were doing that," she said. "Then we saw there were many people out on our sidewalks at the noon hour —- many women in the workplace that the local churches had not paid a lot of attention to. We wanted to create a place of respite, a relaxing place and where people would be challenged; where they could find Christians engaged in thinking about the same things they were thinking about."
The organizers also knew the event had to be time-sensitive to fit into busy working women's schedules. And the speakers had to bring some insight or idea that would stay with them after they left the church. Among the many who have taken the podium are Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin; Chick-fil-A owner Truett Cathy; Georgia first lady Mary Perdue; and developer John Wieland and his wife, Sue. There's time before and after the talk for women to network and mingle and to sit down to a $6 boxed lunch from Panera Bread.
From an initial group of about 80, Food for Thought has drawn more than 200 on occasion. And it continues to grow.

Saturday, March 31, 2007

Our Story

More about First Baptist Knoxville from Knoxville Magazine.

It’s a Tough Job but Some Saints have got to do it:
Lead the Downtown Churches into the 21st Century, That Is!
By Margaret Pierce

Most ministers must walk more by faith than sight when it comes to finding new disciples in today’s secular society. And only the spiritually seasoned need apply to lead Knoxville’s downtown churches, where congregations are trying to maintain their regional appeal as well as respond to an emerging downtown mission field: an affluent, highly educated and professional crowd.

Ministers from three of Knoxville’s longtime downtown churches recently discussed the ways their churches are meeting the challenge.
“If a group of highly educated professional types are moving downtown, my guess is that all of our downtown churches may see some of those folks if they are in fact interested in working with issues that are peculiar to downtown,” says Dr. Paul Rader, associate pastor of First Presbyterian on State Street.

Those new residents may create a sense of urgency for Rader’s church if a “slight” membership loss spirals downward. And the mega-sized Church Street United Methodist on Henley Street, which church staff now describes as “stable,” may also eventually need to step up downtown outreach efforts.

Years of urban sprawl account for some membership losses as evidenced by the fact that many people have left downtown congregations to attend neighborhood churches. Even First Baptist of Knoxville, which has shown signs of recapturing its former “mega-church” status by rising to 1,700 members this past year, has been affected.

“We kind of had the perfect storm in the late 70s and early 80s. We had declining facilities, a rough transition with pastoral leadership; we had theological challenges…”says Dr. Bill Shiell, senior pastor.

But Shiell says the exodus that was occurring then is over now. “I don’t have someone coming up to me every Sunday and saying, ‘I’m leaving because I have to be somewhere in the burbs.’ But when someone moves to town and they see our advertisements or watch us on television, they have to decide if they want to drive 20 to 30 minutes,” he says.

With the majority of downtown church members still living on the outskirts of town, one must wonder if suburban growth and increased traffic will eventually influence their commitment, particularly on mid-week meeting nights in the height of Knoxville’s traffic.
In response, Rader says active members must possess a particular mindset. “People are here because they choose to worship in a downtown church. They (intentionally) drive by the suburbs in order to come here, and they have to make an extra effort to get here for weekday activities,” says Rader.

While leaders of the mainline denominations think their regional membership base will endure suburban flight, a changing downtown population also compels them to consider new challenges. The Central Business Improvement District (CBID) office reports that the downtown residential population has risen from 1,200 to 1,700 residents in recent years largely because of new condominium and rental developments.

The increase may not seem significant in light of phenomenal growth in West Knoxville and other parts of the county. However, the pending completion of 250 more upscale housing units underscores an emerging population trend that several downtown church staffs are factoring into future plans.

First Baptist of Knoxville, the most evangelical of the three churches, should connect easily with the latest downtown influx because their membership resembles at least two segments of the new resident profile: the Double Income Couples with No Kids (DINKS) and Empty Nesters. And the man for the defining hour might be Shiell, a Generation X member, who seems to possess both the intellect and energy required to lead the distinctive Baptist church, which is affiliated with the Southern Baptist Convention and the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship (CBF), a theologically moderate organization that seeks to promote spiritual freedom and tolerance of different Biblical interpretations.

Shiell has only been the senior pastor for a year and a half but the high-profile minister seems one step ahead of his pastoral peer group when it comes to one-on-one outreach. “We’re networking with the downtown realtors and the neighborhood associations to identify the people who are moving in… to be the first one to say welcome to the neighborhood,” says Shiell.

The assertive strategy that Shiell describes should come as no surprise with a Southern Baptist church. However, Shiell says their evangelistic approach contradicts the Baptist stereotype. “What we’re about is relationships and transformational life change. For some people moving into downtown, that’s going to mean a long-term commitment to them …” he explains.
And, you don’t have to live downtown to be within First Baptist’s sphere of influence. Members are already cultivating relationships with a diverse group of downtown workers because of a new “seven-day-a-week” outreach emphasis. “We have definitely stepped it up a notch to find creative ways to get people into the building,” says Shiell.

For instance, Shiell teaches a Wednesday Bible study that draws over 150 downtown professionals, many of whom are boomers, during the business lunch hour. The church also offers an English for Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL) class during the week. Church members tutor children of the foreign students while their parents attend the language class. Some of the Hispanic students enrolled in the classes also work in the downtown hospitality industry, another future target audience. First Baptist plans to host receptions for downtown hotel employees, many of whom are hourly wage earners.

While Shiell seems grateful for the new pool of prospects that downtown revitalization efforts are creating, he’s also convinced that a “service” experience is what will ultimately draw visitors from anywhere in the region. “If someone is already serving, they have immediate ownership in the place… They come, they’re involved and their lives are changing,” explains Shiell. “We change better when we serve instead of sitting around talking about it,” he adds.

Joining the church is then just a natural progression for the active visitor, according to Shiell. He thinks Kids Hope U.S.A., a school-based mentoring program, is the type of project that might interest a visitor-seeker. This volunteer activity exposes participants to a different side of downtown by bringing them face-to-face with at-risk children at South Elementary School.
Once a week, Shiell and other church members interact with children who live in poverty and sometimes severely dysfunctional home situations. “Educators have documented that a mentor’s relationship with a kid prevents them from falling through the cracks and keeps them off crime and drugs,” explains Shiell. Shiell, who makes a point to practice what he preaches, says he keeps that weekly commitment because he needs to. “I learn a lot from people who are not Christians. I have built some relationships with people who have helped to shape my messages,” he says.

Church Street United Methodist Also Delivers Kinder and Gentler ApproachDr. Jan Buxton-Wade, associate pastor of Church Street United Methodist, echoes Shiell’s zeal for social-oriented missions by quoting Methodist founder John Wesley who said, “the world is my parish.” Buxton-Wade cites a new partnership with the Lennon-Senney United Methodist Church, an East Knoxville congregation, to illustrate her members’ desire to share God’s love with the world. Described as an “act of reconciliation” on the church’s website, the volunteer project involves helping elderly members of the African-American congregation with home repairs and remodeling through a partnership with the Knoxville Leadership Foundation, a network of faith-based organizations.

And Dr. Bill Fowler, senior pastor, explains the ultimate purpose of the project. “Very few of us have persons of another ethnic group or another race as our friends, and that’s just kind of how it falls out. Well, reconciling means that you are opening one’s self up to things that separate.”
That same reconciliation principle applies to their relationship with the Muslim community, according to Fowler. For instance, several members periodically converse with members of an Islamic mosque in the Fort Sanders area. After the Danish press published the controversial cartoon that portrayed Muhammad as a violent prophet, Fowler says they invited the local group to talk about the reaction of the Muslim community. “Our friends of the other faith were very candid with us, and we really could understand what is going on in the minds and hearts of the Islamic people,” says Fowler.

Hallmarks such as reconciliation and social action are being celebrated this year as Church Street observes its 75th anniversary on Henley Street and contemplates the historical church’s future. Although the congregation will eventually “intensify” visitation to the new downtown residents, Fowler says prayer is their primary outreach strategy. “We don’t do a lot of high pressure, twisting of arms in order to get people to join. We want the Holy Spirit to do that,” he says.

As far as programming changes that might occur to offset membership loss or recruit new members, Fowler suggests that it will be church as usual. For instance, the formal worship service will remain a cornerstone of their identity inside the old-world, gothic style architecture—even though thousands now flock to churches where contemporary is the main style of worship.

Buxton-Wade, associate pastor, says formal worship such as congregational readings, candle lighting and classic hymns still fills a particular churchgoer niche. “You have to be authentic. We know who we are at Church Street, and we know what we do best and that’s what we try to stick to,” says Buxton-Wade.

Neither Fowler nor Buxton-Wade is alarmed about the fact that their numbers are not rising, choosing to trust God instead. “For some reason, God draws people to the place of worship where they need to be,” explains Buxton-Wade. Despite that seemingly unshakable confidence and the decision of several downtown churches to stick with traditional forms of worship, Church Street and First Baptist of Knoxville do offer contemporary worship alternatives, too.
Buxton-Wade thinks the biggest obstacle facing Church Street United Methodist, which has over 2000 members, is not the emergence of the suburban mega-church or its modern worship style but rather the high mobility rate.

“Someone will come into Knoxville with a new job and then get a promotion,” says Buxton-Wade. “You’re invested in them emotionally and you depend on them as part of the congregation, and then they move to Charlottesville, Atlanta or somewhere else, and it’s very sad,” she adds.

But there’s a positive side to a mobile society, too. Job transfers bring many new families to the high-profile church. Buxton-Wade credits their well-trained ministers of youth and children as well as an exceptional music education program for attracting those families.
With a significant number of young families on their roll, Church Street stands out among other downtown churches, who have lost local multi-generation memberships over the years and have not been as successful at recruiting new Knoxville families.

First Presbyterian Claims “Jehovah Jireh” for the Future Tucked away in a more remote part of Knoxville’s downtown street maze, a much smaller and older congregation “goes several extra miles” to attend First Presbyterian. The congregation shares the same view of Christian service as their counterparts, according to Rader, First Presbyterian’s associate pastor. (Dr. Harris Schultz is interim pastor.)

And the church’s location doesn’t hinder them from pursuing such socially oriented endeavors as the Community School of the Arts. The project, which provides instruction in everything from painting to voice and musical instruments, fosters the creativity of about 200 students from low-income families.

Rader thinks another integral part of First Presbyterian, which interests his highly educated congregation and perhaps the scholarly segment of the new downtown demographic group, is their rich history. Images of turnips on needlepoint seat cushions and the organ in the chapel literally commemorate the church’s roots. Written accounts tell how James White, Knoxville’s founding father, who was also a Presbyterian elder, reserved a turnip patch for the original First Presbyterian church “plant,” which was built in 1792.

The importance of the facts surrounding the church’s evolution hit home in 1992 when the congregation discovered that generational stories were their only proof of ownership. The church quickly pursued deeds. However, it wasn’t the first time that the congregation became proactive about their possessions.

Both Union and Confederate forces occupied the church at different times during the Civil War. A lengthy struggle followed before the church property was returned to the congregation—or “violent rebels” as they were called by a military commander.
A group of ladies celebrated the church’s victory by painting Jehovah Jireh above the chapel pulpit, which translates as “the Lord would provide.” A new inscription of the words, Jehovah Jireh still hovers over the Presbyterian pulpit to inspire members as they struggle with 21st century challenges.

While Rader admits that suburban growth has hurt membership through the years, he thinks his close-knit congregation will remain loyal because of their heritage and the unique theological niche that they fill as a member of the Presbyterian Church (USA).

Despite Rader’s firm resolve, a congregational self-study is underway to determine the church’s future plans and, perhaps, how to minister to the new downtown prospects. At this point, Rader would just like to meet them. “I’ve gone around to most of the buildings that have condo units and you can’t get in… They have buzzers and locked doors,” he explains.

If and when Rader does find the new residents, he says his congregation will use spiritual discernment to determine their next step rather than a more common “programming change” strategy: “Let’s just build a church that looks like Wal-Mart…let’s have the simplest of hymns…and in three years, when trends change, let’s change everything again…” Rader explains.

The Tie that Binds
In the struggle to maintain a productive presence in downtown Knoxville, all of the church leaders seem to agree that a strong ecumenical relationship gives them an edge over other churches who operate independently.

The ecumenical bond is most visible at interdenominational services, which are held throughout the year. The close union is also manifested through the activities of the Knoxville Inner City Churches United for People, (KICCUP). In addition to the three churches featured in this story, the Immaculate Conception Catholic Church, St. John’s Cathedral and other mainline denominations in the downtown are members of KICCUP.

Through combined efforts, Buxton-Wade says churches can learn from one another’s strengths and, more importantly, dispel the doubts of many unbelievers who ask: “Why should I become a church member when you all argue all the time. If you can’t agree on anything, why do I want to be a part of that?”

Mentoring Children

Another strategy for building relationships in the Center City is through public school mentoring. We partner with KidsHope USA to provide one-to-one mentoring for students at South Knoxville Elementary. Mentors are able to invite these children and their families to join us for programs at the church and still respect the boundaries of church and public school. Many of these families have received assistance through our Christmas Brunch, Halloween/Trunk or Treat program, and the Easter Eggstravaganza.

Meeting Needs in the Latino Community

Article by Alison Wingfield

Meeting Needs Where They Find Them

One thing leads to another. That’s what First Baptist Church, Knoxville, Tenn. found out when they decided to expand their ESOL program by providing transportation for first generation Latinos from an apartment complex. The ESOL program led to a Latino VBS which led to a revival which led to a Spanish-speaking Sunday school class which led to a Latino church—all within a year and a half.

“Things happen and we have to respond,” said Senior Pastor Bill Shiell. “The church has been really flexible.”

The impact of the church’s Latin ministry can be summed up in one person's experience. Dora, who was attending the church’s ESOL classes, came to the revival held at FBC by a team from Iglesia Bautista Shalom church of Houston. She was one of five who accepted Christ and was baptized at the end of the week.

When FBC started their Spanish-speaking Sunday school class, Dora attended the class. Soon after it started, Dora needed a new heart valve. Because she was an undocumented immigrant, she was not eligible for Medicare and couldn’t have the surgery. Pastor Shiell called church member Sandy Wisener, who had been a healthcare consultant. Wisener started making some phone calls and soon found the help Dora needed to pay for the operation.

“If you ask enough questions, it doesn’t matter how many times you are told ‘no’,” said Wisener. “Especially in this country, there are incredible resources. You just have to ask.”

“Dora wouldn’t be alive without an ESL class, and the revival,” noted Shiell. “It was one of those things that God does, a God moment.”

After helping Dora, the church realized they needed to continue their ministry by beginning a Latino church. “At that point, we said ‘I don’t know what we’re doing, but we are going to get this church going, because there are a thousand Doras out there,” said Shiell.

Armed with a grant from CBF and matching funds from FBC, bi-vocational pastor Victor Perez and his wife Patricia are now leading the new Latino church which meets every Sunday with 20 to 30 Latinos in attendance.

“We are here because the Lord brought us here,” said Perez. “CBF and FBC have been the most helpful and supportive columns in the building of this new church.”

While the churches meet separately on Sunday, everyone comes together on Wednesday night. “It’s what I call the meshing and mingling of the missions and social, the full circle effect on Wednesday night. We integrate this into our programming, so we can teach a missions lifestyle by modeling,” said Shiell. The Latino children sing in children’s choirs and go to missions alongside the mostly white FBC children.

Shiell realizes that immigration issues are a hot button topic right now. But the church is committed to helping whoever God puts in their path. “We might be able to do good with the prejudice issue,” he said. “Look what the love of Christ can do. It breaks down the walls in our hearts and theirs.”

And mends a broken heart valve.

Arts

Eastern University is a pioneer in this field.

Here's a link to some of their great work....
http://www.eastern.edu:93/academic/campolo/inst/urban/arts/index.shtml


BuildaBridge International connects youth workers, churches, communities, and volunteers to the Arts Community and finds a way to minister to the working poor.

http://www.buildabridge.org/index.php

Here is one example from Rochester, New York.....The Downtown United Presbyterian Church hosts an "Arts and Lunch" series.

http://www.dupc.org/a/downtown_arts_link.php

The Arts is another important part of center-city work. How do you use the arts in ministry?

Linking Volunteers with the Church

Empty nesters and the Creative Class want to change the world. They have plenty of time and resources to be used in organizations that serve others. What better place than to introduce them to relationships than through the church?

How do you link volunteers outside the church with ministries in the church? How do you mobilize members and attenders to serve in the community?

Our Community Minister has developed a project called Get Connected, a series of conversations to match the church family with service opportunities. Many people outside the church volunteered to assist during Disaster Relief.

Here's one church's way of linking youth to volunteer projects.....

University Community- Sacred Space on Campus

University students are another component to the center city. They live in the downtown area as students and remain afterward as residents.

Sacred space on campus
By Manya A. Brachear
Chicago Tribune
March 02, 2007
As teenagers, Chris Wolff and Shae Statser turned away from church when they believed their churches had turned away from them. But God had no trouble finding them once they started college.
Now Wolff and Statser, both students at Columbia College, worship at their respective churches nearly every Sunday morning. And at a coffee shop in the South Loop on Tuesday nights they nosh on bagels and compare notes on what it's like to be a college Christian.
'I think college kids are afraid to go to church,' said Statser, a 21-year-old dance major. 'I think there's a whole mask college students put on when they go to church. ... People don't think they can be who they are because somebody's going to judge you.'
Facing this fear head on and filling a void at urban campuses in the city's South Loop, Chicago's Episcopal and Evangelical Lutheran churches have joined forces to serve students such as Wolff and Statser--more than 25,000 in all at Roosevelt University, Columbia College, the Art Institute, DePaul University and Robert Morris College.
Dubbed the South Loop Campus Ministry, the project aims to create a safe space for young people to ask questions about their faith, meet other faithful young adults and encourage an appreciation for the liturgy shared by the Episcopal and Lutheran denominations. Grace Episcopal Church, 637 S. Dearborn St., serves as a central sanctuary for the group.
Studies show that despite strong spiritual commitment during the teen years, most 20-somethings--the most skeptical age group in the U.S.--pull away from churches, particularly during the 'college years.' According to Christian polling firm The Barna Group, more than 60 percent of young adults surveyed who were churchgoers in their adolescence are no longer connected to a Christian community.
'Many people see [serving students] as an extra ministry--more like icing on the cake rather than the cake itself,' said Heidi Murken, a seminarian at Lutheran School of Theology who serves as a mentor for the urban campus ministry. 'I think we're shooting ourselves in the foot if we don't invest in the time when people can often stop going to church. I think it's not a good move for the future.'
The Episcopal and Lutheran denominations have been in full communion since 2000, meaning their theology and mission are similar enough that they can share worship together and share communion. That bond is what draws the students for discussion every Tuesday, even though they worship at the churches of their choice on Sundays.
The two denominations also share long histories of college ministry. Both have offered ministries for college-age students at the University of Chicago and Northwestern University for more than 50 years.
But Murken acknowledges there are challenges to campus ministry. The population changes from year to year, and most of the students are on a limited budget. As a result, the local denominations have not invested in Chicago's urban campuses, causing students to turn to non-denominational groups such as Campus Crusade for Christ and InterVarsity Christian Fellowship for spiritual formation.
Incentive to launch a ministry downtown came with the construction of the University Center, a 4,000-bed residential tower that has helped stabilize the student population at the five South Loop schools. Sue Cromer, a canon in charge of youth ministries for the Episcopal Diocese of Chicago, said the ministry also offers a chance for students to slow down for a spiritual education.
'We can offer quiet contemplative space that they don't always get other places,' Cromer said. 'People don't get: `What is the relevance of my faith and the relevance of God in my world on my campus?' You need that quiet so you can hear what God is calling you to do. It's when you slow down looking for God that you find that next step, that next connection.'
Marcus Pera, coordinator for Midwest campus ministries for the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, said the Chicago project could serve as a model for other urban, commuter campuses.
'We speak of it as a missionary outpost of the church,' he said. 'The young adult population is the most unchurched age group in the country and not only unchurched but de-churched, meaning they're a heck of a lot of people that were brought up in the church but no longer walk with it for a whole assortment of reasons.'
A confirmed Lutheran, Wolff, 20, said he had grown bored with the monotony of the liturgy and unsatisfied by the reluctance of other youth groups to welcome questions.
While he enjoys worshiping with the youth at his evangelical community church and praying and singing with InterVarsity Christian Fellowship, a non-denominational group on campus, he relishes the candid and often analytical conversation that takes place when the South Loop group gets together.
'It's always good to question something and then look into it and see how you feel about it and talk to other Christians about different ideas,' Wolff said. 'It's all about growing in your faith and learning as well.'
On one recent Tuesday over bagels, Statser posed the question: 'Who came up with the definition of Christianity? Where did all this come from?'
Murken got out her laptop and typed in Nicene Creed to fuel the discussion. Jess Elfring, a 21-year-old acting major at Columbia, pulled out a medieval European history text.
At other non-denominational campus ministries, Elfring said she felt judged for not having Bible verses memorized.
'If you open it up like that, you're going to get more young adults to come,' she said. 'This is my chance to connect with people like myself."

FBC Knoxville offers a lunch Bible study (designed intentionally for students who are members of Bedside Baptist) that follows our 11:00 a.m. service.

What ideas can you suggest for reaching university students....

The Business Class

Another group in the city is the business class. These people drive into the city to work every day.

Here's one idea from Atlanta....

Groups feed women's minds, spirits
Food for Thought and its sister program, Lunch Encounters, present thoughtful events that fit in with busy lives.
By H.M. Cauley
For the Journal-Constitution
Published on: 03/29/07

Sometimes more really is better. Take the case of the monthly women's program Food for Thought. The third-Thursday lunchtime meeting brings business and executive women from around downtown and Midtown to North Avenue Presbyterian Church, where they spend an hour being inspired, motivated and stimulated by thought-provoking speakers.
The idea was such a good one, and so successful, that some of its participants decided Buckhead women needed the same kind of event. The result is the recently organized Lunch Encounters, held for one hour on the second Wednesday of the month at Second-Ponce de Leon Baptist church.
Organizers of the two programs agree that the meetings fill a need for women of all faiths from across the city.
"This is definitely a ministry to the community; it's not designed to be an on-ramp to the church," said Ann Carter McDonald, a 34-year member of North Avenue and the founding force behind Food for Thought. "We wanted this to be broad in its outreach, not just denominational, but a sort of a front porch to the church. It's a place to consider what it means to integrate faith into life without a denominational or liberal/conservative bent. It's also a wonderful way to bring women of different races together."
Since it started 10 years ago, Food for Thought has been faithful to its original goal, said Carter McDonald.
"In a low-key way, we wanted to expose people to ways to integrate their faith with their work and to be exposed to other Christians who were doing that," she said. "Then we saw there were many people out on our sidewalks at the noon hour —- many women in the workplace that the local churches had not paid a lot of attention to. We wanted to create a place of respite, a relaxing place and where people would be challenged; where they could find Christians engaged in thinking about the same things they were thinking about."
The organizers also knew the event had to be time-sensitive to fit into busy working women's schedules. And the speakers had to bring some insight or idea that would stay with them after they left the church. Among the many who have taken the podium are Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin; Chick-fil-A owner Truett Cathy; Georgia first lady Mary Perdue; and developer John Wieland and his wife, Sue. There's time before and after the talk for women to network and mingle and to sit down to a $6 boxed lunch from Panera Bread.
From an initial group of about 80, Food for Thought has drawn more than 200 on occasion. And it continues to grow.

At First Baptist Knoxville, we have a seasonal ministry called the Bridge. 100-150 people attend a weekly lunch and Bible study. Judges, paralegals, educators, administrators, retirees, volunteers, and public servants attend. Most attend other churches; very few attend our church on a Sunday morning but connect with us each week.

Offer your suggestions or ideas.....

People in the City

As cities are renewed, three kinds of people move in, the Creative Class, Empty Nesters, and the Working Poor.

Creative Class- young professionals, 20somethings, single and married adults

Empty Nesters- people whose kids have left for college

Working Poor- people transitioning from homelessness into a permanent living arrangement

Renewing the Church in the City

Many of us are committed to ministering in the heart of the city. Every church is different, and most are not church plants. They are existing churches desiring to be renewed and to reach the Creative Class, Empty Nesters, the Poor, and anyone else in the neighborhood. This is a place to exchange ideas, share what's working, and link to other resources.