Summer 2000 Archive Click Here to return to the current issue.

Celebration Place Church Grows to 65

Rock Hill Celebration Place Church, started in January 1999 as a place to celebrate Jesus, family, worship, and other members of the family of God. Eighty-four persons attended the first service, and worship attendance has now grown to an annual average of 65.

Celebration Place Church meets at Ebinport Elementary School. They feature adult contemporary style of worship and wear casual attire.

Worship services focus on family strength and togetherness, so the entire family sings together and prays together before the children's sermon. Cell groups meet on Sunday evening to pray together, to study Scripture on which the morning sermon was based, and to care for any needs being experienced in the group. Fellowship and acceptance are a special part of these meetings.

NewStart Director Craig Winesett and his family have served as church planters for this exciting new work. As noted elsewhere in GROW , Rev. and Mrs. Ray Moore have recently accepted an invitation to pastor the Celebration Place Church.

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Chicago Hispanic Ministry Grows to 14 Congregations

The Hispanic ministry on the Chicago Central District started during the Thrust to the Cities campaign. Two churches were established--one shared facilities with the Northside Church and a mission was started in the Blue Island Church.

Rev. José Alfaro in more recent years has provided leadership to Hispanic ministries in addition to serving as pastor of Chicago Spanish First Church, and additional congregations have emerged. A Spanish-language ministerial training program was begun with Rev. Brian Wilson and Rev. Charles Roberts in 1986 and continues to this day, now under the direction of Rev. Sergio Mayorga. Today, 14 Spanish-speaking congregations form part of the Chicago Central District, the largest being Chicago First Spanish and Chicago Emmanuel Spanish, both in the city of Chicago. In 1999, two new Hispanic congregations were begun, one in Momence and one in Waukegan. Both currently have mission status.

In the 100 new works projected by the year 2010, 34 are considered predominantly Hispanic. This large goal is an inspired missional commitment to reach the growing Hispanic population; 30 percent of those living in Chicago claim to be first- or second-generation Hispanic.

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Missional Ministry in New England
Nielson Planting Aldersgate Chapel

Rev. Merritt Nielson, after serving many years on staff at Wollaston College Church, is planting a church in Plymouth County in the South Shore area of Boston. An additional 100,000 persons are expected to move to the area in the next 10 years. The core group is being built from a mailing to Eastern Nazarene College alumni who may feel God's call to this kind of mission.

When asked to describe his vision for the new church, Nielson said: "I picked up three phrases from Dr. Paul Cunningham's prayer at the Millennial Conference that will guide us: The future is our friend. We have nothing to fear. God is already there."

Paul and Nancy Willette Named New England Missionaries
After years of pastoring and starting nine new churches, Paul and Nancy Willette have been named missionaries to the North Country--Vermont and New Hampshire. The goal is to serve communities where old-line churches have been closed. Willette's prayer is for lay missionaries, retied pastors, beginning pastors, bi-vocational pastors to consider giving themselves to this ministry.

Three Churches Team Up to Plant Portuguese Church
At an area pastors' meeting where the missional idea was discussed, pastors from Brockton First, Lakeville, and Walpole Emmaus churches came up with starting a Portuguese church in Taunton, Massachusetts. They invited Carlos Tavares from the Cape Verde Islands to become pastor. New Bedford International Church loaned members for the core group. Tavares lives with the Daniel Leite family until the work gets established.

Leite pastors the Walpole Emmaus Church and then preaches on Sunday afternoons at Cambridge and Framingham. He believes new churches could be started immediately in many places by simply beginning weekday Bible studies in Nazarene homes of people who live 10 or 15 miles from the home church.

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South Carolina Launches Missional Emphasis
Two-Pronged Approach Works Well

While politicians stir controversy over the flag at the state capital , South Carolina Nazarenes are working to win hundreds of people to Christ across their state. While civic leaders and reporters revisit and open old wounds, Nazarenes are building bridges of salvation, holiness, and racial harmony.

The South Carolina District has started 10 new churches, now at various levels of strength and organization. These churches report a total of 450 in average worship attendance. District NewStart Director Craig Winesett, in addition to his NewStart duties, has served as the pioneer church planter of the Celebration Place Church in Rock Hill, which averages 60 in worship attendance. Rev. and Mrs. Ray Moore recently moved from Charlotte Trinity Church, a well-established 300-plus-member church, to become pastors of Celebration Church. This move gives Winesett more time to resource existing NewStarts, to give leadership to planting additional new churches , and to supervise the startups of New Hope in Christ centers. Moore and Winesett are examples of missional pastors and illustrations of how God raises up leaders when new churches are started.

NewStarts

In addition to Celebration Place Church, the list of other NewStart churches include Columbia Korean, West Columbia Hope in Christ, Beaufort New Direction, Greenville Reality, Simpsonville Life Spring Community, Spartanburg New Horizon, Manning NewStart, and Anderson Haitian. Though each new congregation is unique in spirit and focus, all are part of a great effort to increase the witness of the Church of the Nazarene throughout South Carolina. Dr. Winesett personally plans to plant another new church within the next 24 months.

Replicative Compassion Plan

Hope in Christ Ministries is another unique church planting strategy that holds incredible promise for the future, especially in ministry to southern African-Americans. Hope in Christ Ministries is a plan to start compassionate ministry centers in every county in North and South Carolina. The strategy calls for establishing a center to meet physical needs of hurting people and then developing a fully organized Church of the Nazarene at each site to meet spiritual needs of persons served in the centers.

In most instances, Hope in Christ Ministries is a return to the inner cities left without a Nazarene witness when established churches moved to the suburbs. The method to bringing this compassion/NewStart vision to a reality is to begin a ministry in each setting focused on empowering people through emphasis on education, compassion, and responsibility. Each center is started by an interested group of Nazarene lay and clergy leaders who gather others from area churches, find a facility, incorporate and initiate compassionate ministries that fit special needs in their geographic area. Their plan is to keep from duplicating services that are already provided by other church and civic agencies.

Field Tested

New Hope in Christ Ministries was field tested when Rev. Arnold Williams opened the first center at Columbia, South Carolina.  In a Nazarene church building where attendance had declined to five, Revs. Arnold and Judy Williams (a husband and wife ministry team) began the first New Hope Compassionate Ministries in 1991.  Since then, New Hope Church of the Nazarene has helped hundreds of people experience God's love and has been used by our Lord to make a dramatic change in individuals, families, and community.  In that location, Rev. Arnold Williams became affectionately known as "Missionary to Main Street."  Rev. Judy Williams now serves as pastor of New Hope Church and as director of New Hope Center in Columbia.

In addition to helping develop, motivate, and train new personnel for new centers, Rev. Arnold Williams serves as director of the Hope in Christ Center at West Columbia Hope in Christ Ministries.

The Williamses came to Christ through the ministry of Florence St. John's Church in its opening days in 1987.  To plant the Florence church, Dr. Charles Johnson came from Meridian, Mississippi, to hold an evangelistic campaign and Vacation Bible School.  After the revival, St. John's Church was organized and Rev. Eddie D. Sipp was installed as pastor.  The Arnold Williamses soon joined the church and felt called to preach.  In only 13 years, they have moved from new converts to ordained elders.  They are living examples of the Word of God's instruction for Christians to pray for the Lord of harvest to send laborers.

South and North Carolina Cooperation

In 1999, District Superintendent James Bearden, Dr. Craig Winesett, and Rev. Arnold Williams began to dream of starting a Hope Center and a Church of the Nazarene in many different locations.  Soon Arnold was selected as district director of Hope in Christ Centers for both North and South Carolina.  Since then, several centers have been licensed by the state and are up and running.  Each center is individually incorporated while being connected to the larger network of the two Carolina districts.  The tie between centers provides coordination and encouragement.  Each center commits to compassionate evangelism--meeting physical, emotional, and spiritual needs.  These centers offer alternatives to the destructive cycles that have imprisoned so many people in the inner city for so long.  The main purpose of each center is to bring the hope of Christ into North and South Carolina communities.

Leaders and participants for Hope in Christ are not difficult to recruit because, as one layperson explained, "All my life I have wanted to assist the poor and needy but didn't know how to start.  Now I have a delivery system that makes it possible for me to serve."

Both efforts to plant new churches--NewStart and Hope in Christ Centers--are magnificent ways for a district and local churches to become missional.  These ministries require that their pastoral leaders work a lot like missionaries do overseas: (1) they study the culture, (2) they question existing conditions, (3) they gain the confidence of the people through service, (4) they learn the language of the setting, (5) they understand and confront their own comfort zones, (6) they try new methods, and (7) they expect God to send leaders.

Like overseas missions, no one knows how quickly these works will develop.  District leaders are trying to keep open to what God is doing and follow His leadership.  The spirit of a missionary, the persistence of a missionary, and the "do-or-die" commitment of a missionary are being lived out in many places across South Carolina--and that is what being missional really means in terms of the human costs.

As a way to start churches, Hope in Christ is a strategy that could be replicated in many settings.  Those who have interest can contact the South Carolina District Office.

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West Columbia Hope in Christ
Pastor Williams, District NewStart Director Craig Winesett, and District Superintendent James Bearden plan strategies for planting many more Hope in Christ Ministries.

Rev. Arnold Williams started Hope in Christ Ministries at West Columbia in September 1999. He pastors the church, directs the local compassionate ministry center, and serves as Hope in Christ District Director for North and South Carolina. Sunday attendance at West Columbia now averages 30. 

Manning NewStart Sponsored by Sumter Calvary Church
Rev. Dale Turner, church planting pastor at Manning NewStart Church, started with 20 people in February 1999. The congregation, now meeting in a strip shopping mall, has grown to 110 in attendance. Sumter Calvary Church, pastored by Billy Williams, sponsored the new church with a core group of members and financial support. Turner, who grew up in Sumter Calvary Church, says his target audience is "plain old country folks who enjoy a church that feels like a Cracker Barrel restaurant."

Beaufort New Direction Community Church Starts with No People
Veteran pastor Gary Rupert and his wife, Sherry, started a pioneer work at Beaufort in August 1999. Pioneer means they started with no one but themselves. But since God providentially directed them to this area, they are filled with optimism for the future. After being in existence for less than a year, the church now averages 40 in worship and meets at the Boys' Club. Their story of developing a NewStart church without a starting core group reads like a happening out of the Book of Acts.

Williams Cultivates Friendship of Haitian Children
In this picture, Hope in Christ Ministries Director Arnold Williams gets acquainted with a child from the Haitian church in Anderson, which started in June 1999 and now has an attendance of 30. Since they recently moved to a larger facility, they believe their membership will grow quickly. There is reason to believe this is the first Haitian church of any denomination in South Carolina. Since Haitians often move great distances to be near a church, it is expected more Haitian people will move to Anderson to become associated with this new work.

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