Fri. Sep 20th, 2024
7 Trendsetting Churches

7 Trendsetting Churches
In an age of Twitter and Facebook, churches too are breaking new ground in evangelism, humanitarian aid and community development.


1. Expecting Miracles in Las Vegas

Every other week, Scott Linklater, 32, and teams of sidewalk evangelists make their rounds on the notorious Las Vegas Strip, where they distribute gospel tracts that resemble huge $100 bills. They see the 40 million tourists who visit the Strip annually as their mission field, and in the last year have shared the gospel with more than 120,000 people.

Out of the outreach effort grew the Expectation Church Network—a group of “simple churches,” or house churches, affiliated with the International Church of the Foursquare Gospel. “In order to share the gospel, we can’t spend our time and resources on the stuff that other people spend their time and resources on,” Linklater says, referring to the overhead and administrative costs associated with church buildings. “Necessity is the mother of invention.”

Expectation Church currently links eight simple churches, and Linklater hopes that together they will share the gospel with 200,000 people on the Strip this year. In time, he wants to reach more than 1 million Vegas tourists annually. “We can justifiably say we can do that as we build up more and more workers,” he says.


2. Reaching Unchurched Millennials in Minnesota

When Peter Haas and his wife, Carolyn, moved to Minnesota to plant a church, they hoped to launch an arts-focused ministry that attracted the unchurched. Five years later, what they’ve built is Substance Church, a 2,000-member congregation in St. Paul where 70 percent of the members are part of the Millennial generation, or under age 30, and most were previously unchurched.

A former rave disc jockey, Haas, 34, says he always hoped to build a church for people like himself—“who are very open to God but can’t relate to what we perceive to be the organized church.” Known for its ultra-contemporary worship, Substance Church meets in three locations, but Haas says the ministry’s style is not the real draw. He says research shows that most unchurched people are multiethnic and under age 30, and they feel disenfranchised in churches where the average age of the platform leaders is over 40. “We felt we’ve got to make sure we’re representing people they can relate to on our platform,” Haas says.

But a bigger key, Haas believes, is fostering Christian community by helping members find a core group of friends who will support them in their Christian walk. “We’ve lost that communal element to Christianity,” Haas says. “Our whole philosophy hinges on getting every single person in a small-group community in as short a period of time as we can and getting them into ministry. That’s the driving force.”


3. Redeeming the City in Milwaukee

Holy Redeemer Institutional Church of God in Christ in Milwaukee, burned its mortgage in 1987, a year after it was established. Since then the 5,000-member congregation has been moving aggressively to empower the residents in its city. 

Led by Bishop Sedgwick Daniels, the church established a credit union; K-12 school; housing complex for senior citizens; $15 million youth center that houses a Boys & Girls Club, theater, and social service agency; and a free health clinic. The next project, Bishop’s Creek, will include more than 120 three-bedroom townhomes, a hotel, shops, water park, and a dormitory for children that are displaced. Funded through church giving as well as grants and business partnerships, phases one and two of the $70 million project will open this year, with the hotel and water park scheduled to open in 2011.

“The vision of the church is to win souls for Christ,” Daniels says, “but … we have a divine mandate that says we are to be mission-minded. We’re to feed those that are hungry, clothe those that are naked, preach the Word or make it accessible. In order to do that, you must first give a hungry man food, as did Christ … and they can readily receive the Word. So you provide services, and you provide a holistic environment where that Word can be embraced with love because it’s demonstrated through care.”


4. A ‘Servolution’ in Louisiana

Dino Rizzo has a clear ministry goal: to start a revolution of service in churches worldwide. He’s starting in Louisiana, where he and his wife, DeLynn, are meeting the needs of the poor and hurting through The Healing Place Church in Baton Rouge. 

The 7,000-member church has 10 campuses, including two Dream Centers that provide food, clothing and other needs in some of the poorest areas of their city. Church members also regularly mow lawns, help neighbors move and give away water on the local college campus as part of an outreach initiative influenced by pastor Steve Sjogren’s book Conspiracy of Kindness. When temperatures dipped below freezing last January, Healing Place gave away dozens of space heaters. 

“We were not serving to grow a church,” says Rizzo, who released his book, Servolution, last year. “We were serving because of the cause of Christ in our hearts. We felt like that was the best tool to reach people who Jesus died for in our community. As it caught fire and people got a hold of that, it just began to blossom and take off.” 


Rizzo’s vision to see a “servolution” comes closer to reality each year. The ministry has two campuses in Africa, and in March it hosted Servolution 2010, when churches worldwide led 10 days of community outreach in the run-up to Easter.  

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