Home  |  About Us  |  News  |  Employment  |  Church Search  |  myBGCT  |  Give Online  |  Español  
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Merger revitalizes church’s evangelism approach

By Carrie Joynton (7/15/08)

 

The Memorial Baptist Church north campus opened its doors Easter 2008 to a revamped stage and more contemporary worship style.
BAYTOWN — When Memorial Baptist Pastor Brad Hoffman heard Trinity Baptist Church was struggling and looking for help, he knew the solution—merging congregations and renovating the building—would require a big step of faith for Trinity members. But Hoffman never dreamed how much it would transform his own church’s ministry and evangelism.


Only 16 members remained at Trinity Baptist Church in fall of 2007 after about a decade of steady decline; the church was at its largest in the mid-1990s with 200 members. Trinity Pastor Bill Herrin approached Hoffman in September 2007 about offering Trinity’s facilities as a Memorial Baptist satellite campus. The conversation was timely, Hoffman said.


“About two and a half years ago, we began praying at Memorial about having a second campus, and moving into the multi-site concept of doing church,” Hoffman said.


Church leaders at Memorial had set their sights on the northeast side of Baytown to focus new ministry in the fastest-growing part of the city. When Herrin called Hoffman in September about combining efforts, Hoffman realized Herrin’s church, situated in the heart of northeast Baytown, would provide a perfect location.


The remaining members of Trinity Baptist Church would face a dramatic and difficult change, however. Instead of trying to revive Trinity Baptist Church’s current ministries, Hoffman determined it was time for a fresh start. The Trinity congregation would have to merge with Memorial Baptist Church for healthy ministry to continue.


“Zero plus zero equals zero. You can’t keep something perpetually on life support,” Hoffman said.


“Our solution was to shut [the church] down, have them relocate to our original campus and integrate.”


Trinity Baptist Church finally closed the building in December, and for the next few months Memorial and former Trinity Baptist members worked side-by-side to renovate the building and reinvent its purpose for ministry.


“There are some families out there that I could not be more proud of for taking this on as their mission,” Hoffman said.


“Our church just pulled together.”


The doors of what was formerly Trinity Baptist Church reopened Easter 2008 to a completely transformed venue for worship and fellowship, known now as Memorial Baptist’s north campus. 217 people attended the church’s first service, and for the former Trinity Baptist Church members, seeing the church building filled was a realized dream.


During renovations, Hoffman maintained a vision for reaching out to the immediate community.


“We knew the demographic [of the northeast area]—they’re young families out there. We designed something specifically targeting young adults,” Hoffman said.


Memorial Baptist Church members enjoy fellowship Sunday mornings over a cup of hot coffee at the north campus coffee bar.
Memorial’s original campus offers Sunday school classes and other weekly functions for members, representing a more traditional model of church life. In contrast, the north campus only provides Sunday morning worship, but with a distinctly modern edge. Fog and lights flood the stage during services of music and prayer. The north campus features a coffee bar with 16 different kinds of coffee, which opens 30 minutes before each Sunday worship service.


But the church isn’t just a Christian coffee shop with a lights show. It’s designed to appeal to younger generations as part of an intentional evangelism strategy, Hoffman said.
“It is highly relational,” he explained.


“We are able to work our relationships … to earn the right to share Christ, to witness to authentic, live faith.


“People come before the service just to talk, and stay 30 to 40 minutes after the service just to talk or grab a cup of coffee. Not to say that the traditional model can’t be that, but in essence it’s not driven by the same priorities.”


For smaller, generational churches considering the future, Hoffman expressed hope that donating property to churches with “a vision for multisite ministry” becomes a viable option. Herrin’s generosity and his congregation’s flexibility enabled a ministry for Memorial Baptist that “seemed impossible,” Hoffman said.


“We call it a God thing in the sense that he gave us an asset that we really weren’t searching for, and He placed it in our laps. As it came together it became very apparent that God was in this in a huge way,” he said.

JAN   FEB   MAR   APR   MAY   JUNE    JULY   AUG   SEPT   OCT   NOV   DEC


2003
   2004   2005   2006   2007   2008


This program is made possible by gifts through the BGCT Cooperative Program.
Copyright © 2005-2006 Baptist General Convention of Texas. All rights reserved.
Help  |  Site Map   |  Contact Us Privacy Policy