Apartment ministry reaches people where they live
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A UMNS photo by Lisa Hampshire Lake Highlands United Methodist Church�s apartment ministry now includes complexes in seven communities.
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Lake
Highlands United Methodist Church�s apartment ministry now includes
complexes in seven communities, where many �parishioners� continue to
worship long after moving out. The owner, who is a Christian, donated
apartments for the outreach ministry. UMNS photo #481 by Lisa Hampshire. Accompanies UMNS Story #494, 10/25/04. |
Oct. 25, 2004By Steve Smith* DALLAS
(UMNS) - For Mario Martinez, 13, the only church he has ever known for
the past five years is the two-bedroom apartment transformed each Sunday
into a sanctuary, nursery and Sunday school classroom at the complex
where he lives with his family. Lake
Highlands United Methodist Church brings worship services to Mario and
dozens of other residents of the complex each Sunday because most of the
older residents work during traditional worship hours. "It’s
time for us to get outside of our little group here and try to reach
people outside the walls of our church," says the Rev. Pamela Clark,
associate pastor at Lake Highlands United Methodist Church, who heads
the church’s off-campus ministries. "The
concept is based on the fact that there are a lot of folks that cannot
or will not go to the traditional church setting because it’s
intimidating," she says. "Those who come to our churches in the
apartments for the first time wouldn’t be able to walk into a church and
go through the Lord’s Prayer.
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A UMNS photo by Lisa Hampshire Residents like Edgar Moyo (left) help lead hymns, which are often sung in English, Spanish and native African languages.
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Residents
like Edgar Moyo (left) say the congregation at their apartment church
is like a family where each member feels at home with each other. Moyo, a
transplant from Zimbabwe, lives next door to the church and sings its
praises. Hymns are often sung in English, Spanish and native African
languages common to the complex dwellers. UMNS photo #482 by Lisa Hampshire. Accompanies UMNS Story #494, 10/25/04. |
"We set up a community of faith right here where people live."For
Mario, being part of that community includes helping the younger
children. "Their parents might work on Sunday, or they’re probably not
at home, and (the children) can come to the apartment community and have
a good time for at least one hour," he says. Clark’s
apartment ministry, which Lake Highlands United Methodist Church
started nine years ago, is one of many imaginative evangelism efforts
that United Methodist churches across the country use to reach the
unchurched - people who cannot attend church on Sunday mornings for
various reasons - and the many ethnic groups now populating most
American cities and looking for places to worship. Lake
Highlands’ ministry now includes complexes in seven communities, where
many "parishioners" continue to worship long after moving out. The
owner, who is a Christian, donated apartments for the outreach ministry. Clark says the apartment ministries have changed the way she views being a pastor. "I’m
able to live out my call to ministry, which isn’t in a normal church
setting," she says. "It’s outside in the community. It’s reaching people
who may not be thinking what difference they would make or what
difference Jesus would make in their life.
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A UMNS photo by Lisa Hampshire The Rev. Pamela Clark (right) hopes the apartment ministry will �reach people outside the walls of our church.�
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The
Reverend Pamela Clark (right) is associate pastor of Lake Highlands
United Methodist Church in Dallas. Lake Highlands started a unique
apartment ministry nine years ago to reach the un-churched, people who
cannot come to church on Sunday mornings for various reasons, and the
many ethnic groups now populating most American cities and looking for
places to worship. UMNS photo #484 by Lisa Hampshire. Accompanies UMNS Story #494, 10/25/04. |
"What I have seen is a lot of broken, hurting people who are looking for something to satisfy an empty hole that they have."Residents
such as Edgar Moyo and Norman Madawo say the congregation at their
apartment church is like a family where each member feels at home. Moyo,
a transplant from Zimbabwe, lives next door to the church and sings its
praises. "We
fellowship with each other, we share our problems, whether financially,
morally, spiritually. It helps us grow as Christians," Moyo says. "We
don’t come here and share plastic, cosmetic smiles, but it’s more about
our day-to-day living, so it helps us a lot." Moyo
and Madawo help lead the worship services, where hymns are often sung
in English, Spanish and native African languages common to the complex
dwellers. "To
come to church is just one of the happiest things that has happened to
me, and we are just so glad to have a church around the corner," Madawo
says. "Here, I am part of the family. They know me by my first name,
they come to my house." For more information, go to the church’s Web site, www.lhumc.com, send an e-mail to pclark@lhumc.com or call (214) 348-6600 *Smith is a freelance writer in Dallas. This story is based on a script by producer Lisa Hampshire for UMTV.
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