Pastor Prays for A Move of the Holy Spirit After Area Churches Unite
By Steve Rees, Special to the ASSIST News Service
BOULDER, CO (ANS – Jan. 20, 2016)
-- A Presbyterian pastor and his congregation are praying for moves of
the Holy Spirit through their church and city after an extraordinary
demonstration of unity and generosity by a group of messianic,
charismatic and evangelical leaders in Boulder County, Colo.
Pastors
and leaders from eight churches in early 2016 presented First
Presbyterian Church in Boulder with nearly $50,000 to help its members
buy their historic building and land from its parent denomination, the
PC(USA), and join instead a conservative Presbyterian group
headquartered in California.
“We
pray that this would be the first move of the Holy Spirit in a way that
will truly blow in and through this town in shocking, incredible,
courageous and encouraging ways,” says the Rev. Erik Hanson of the
“astonishing” gift and “astounding” display of unity from neighboring
congregations.
Though
the break with its parent is cordial, First Presbyterian Boulder
desires autonomy, ownership and stronger adherence to traditional
interpretations of scripture.
Twenty
people including eight pastors and church leaders showed up
unexpectedly at a staff meeting of First Presbyterian to present their
cash gifts to Hanson and his associates; they then prayed among each
other and for 40 staff members, sharing communion, laughter and tears
during the impromptu combined worship service of 60 people from eight
churches.
Among
them were pastors from two Boulder County churches – one of them a
megachurch with 20,000 or so members and the other a smaller charismatic
congregation – both having special and historic ties to the First
Presbyterian Church Boulder.
Flatirons
Community Church, one of the fastest growing and largest churches in
the United States, began with a small Bible study group within First
Presbyterian.
Flatiron's
pastor, Jim Burgen, joined peers from smaller churches during the
surprise visit to First Presbyterian, calling the downtown church an
“anchor,” as well as “courageous” and “bold” in its decision to leave
the PC(USA) and join the ECO: A Covenant Order of Evangelical
Presbyterians.
Charismatic
church Vinelife has a long history of cooperation with First
Presbyterian, hosting together outreaches to the less fortunate in
Boulder. Members from both churches literally wash the feet of homeless
or needy people, providing pedicures, haircuts, meals and other services
at annual events called the Boulder Foot Wash and Lamb's Lunch.
Volunteers also share the Gospel and pray for those who are open to
personal ministry.
Vinelife's
Teaching Pastor, Luke Humbrecht, was part of a conversation with
Messianic Pastor Gene Binder of Cornerstone Church about rallying other
Boulder congregations to help First Presbyterian with the $2.29 million
price tag on its building and land.
“It
was a Holy Spirit moment, a kairos moment when Vinelife members started
streaming to the altar with their tithes and offerings totaling
$28,000” says Pastor Bob Young. “They were giving their gifts to
Vinelife but they knew their offerings were designated for First
Presbyterian.”
The
six other churches uniting with First Presbyterian in buying its
building and land are All Souls, Ascent, Calvary Bible, The Well and
Boulder Valley Christian, whose pastor Matt Carlson envisioned the idea
and presented it first to two church leaders, then to six other pastors
who meet monthly for prayer, worship and fellowship.
The
display of unity amidst diversity and the combined generosity of eight
congregations inspired First Presbyterian's Associate Pastor Carl
Hofmann.
“Sadly,
churches and pastors too often view each other with jealousy and a
competitive spirit. We lamely look at neighboring congregations,
particularly the newer and more successful ones as competitors for
market share.
“In
this surprising act of kindness, these pastors demonstrated how Jesus
views his church: He sees us all together in one body in a region,
teaming up to minister together in his name,” Hofmann says.
Hanson
agrees. “I can't think of a more extraordinary expression of unity from
God's people than to come let us know that they are standing with us
spiritually and financially.
“That expression of unity was worth all its weight in gold,” he says.
The
church is about two-thirds of the way to its financial goal, and an
overwhelming majority of its members voted to join the more
conservative, biblically-based order of Presbyterians.
Photo
captions: 1) Exterior of historic First Presbyterian Church in downtown
Boulder. 2) Vinelife Teaching Pastor Luke Humbrecht. 3) Footwashing in
the church.3) Vinelife Lead Pastor Bob Young. 4) Steve Rees.
About
the writer: Steve Rees is freelance Christian journalist who loves the
church and writes about how it engages the culture and works toward
fulfilling the Great Commission. He lives in Longmont, Colo. and attends
Resurrection Fellowship, a nondenominational, missions-driven church
that honors all the gifts of the Holy Spirit and the five-fold ministry
offices. The church is in Loveland, Colo. Rees formerly worked as a
newspaper reporter and was among the first journalists who wrote about
Promise Keepers before it spread nationwide from Boulder, Colo. He can
be contacted by e-mail at steverees@peoplepc.com
** You may republish this and any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net).
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