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MAY 14, 2007

CONGREGATIONS
Multicultural congregations multiply – intentionally

IN THE NORTHEAST
Paul Kim is pastor of Berkland Baptist Church, a predominantly Asian-American congregation for students and young adults in Cambridge, Mass. He also is co-chairman of the Multicultural Church Network of the Southern Baptist North American Mission Board. Contact 617-497-3334, bbc-boston@berkland.org.
Stephen Um is the senior minister of Citylife Presbyterian Church in Boston. He also is an adjunct faculty member at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary and at Emerson College. Citylife, a multicultural congregation affiliated with the Presbyterian Church in America, was started in 2002 as part of the network of the Redeemer Church Planting Center in New York and now has more than 500 members, representing more than 25 ethnicities. It’s one of a number of congregations intended to appeal to theologically conservative young professionals in big cities. Read a Jan. 10, 2004, story from The Washington Times and a Feb. 26, 2006, story from The New York Times. Contact 617-424-1055, pastor@citylifeboston.org.
The Rev. Michael Westerberg is rector of Holy Transformation Orthodox Church in New Haven, Conn. Founded by immigrants from the Belarus area of Russia, the parish has become multiethnic and interracial. Contact 203-387-3882, frwesterberg@sbcglobal.net.
Peter Skerry is a political science professor at Boston College. During the 2006-07 school year, Skerry is a visiting scholar at the Russell Sage Foundation, where he is working on a book about how a distinct Muslim identity is emerging in the United States – influenced by the presence of Muslims from Arab, South Asian and African-American backgrounds. Contact 212-752-3279 (Russell Sage Foundation) or 617-552-3112 (Boston College), peter.skerry@bc.edu.

IN THE EAST
Jacqui Lewis is senior minister at Middle Collegiate Church, a multicultural, Reformed Church in America congregation in New York City. Lewis has written that multiracial and multicultural congregations “help us to rehearse the Reign of God here on earth.” Contact 212-477-0666, jlewis@middlechurch.org.
Steven Kushner is rabbi of Temple Ner Tamid. This Reform synagogue in Bloomfield, N.J. , has held multiethnic Shabbat services and discussed how factors such as interracial marriages and international adoptions are changing the ethnic makeup of communities and congregations. Read a Jan. 25, 2006, story from The Montclair Times challenging the stereotype that “you can’t be black and Jewish.” Contact 973-338-4486, rabbi@nertamid.org.
Richard Alba is a professor of race and ethnicity in the sociology department of the State University of New York at Albany. He is co-author of Remaking the American Mainstream: Assimilation and Contemporary Immigration and can speak about the impact of immigration and ethnic identity on religious life. Contact 518-442-4669, r.alba@albany.edu.
The Rev. Anita Hendrix is pastor of Hunting Ridge Presbyterian Church, a multiethnic congregation in Baltimore affiliated with the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.). Her congregation is about 60 percent Anglo, with others of African-American, Caribbean, Asian and African heritage. Contact 410-566-2926, huntingridge@verizon.net.

IN THE SOUTHEAST
• Imam Muhammad Musri leads the Islamic Society of Central Florida, a mosque in Orlando whose members come from more than 30 countries. Located in a mostly Hispanic neighborhood, the mosque is seeing an increasing number of Latino converts and now offers a Spanish-language program for women. Contact 407-273-8363, iscf@aol.com.
Gerardo Marti is an assistant professor of sociology at Davidson College in Davidson, N.C. He has done research on the religious experience of immigrants and also on the relationship between music in worship and congregational diversity. He wrote Mosaic of Believers: Diversity and Innovation in a Multiethnic Church, a study of the Mosaic congregation, a multiethnic Southern Baptist megachurch in Los Angeles. Contact 704-894-2481, gemarti@davidson.edu.
Nibs (Gibson) Stroupe and Caroline Leach are pastors of Oakhurst Presbyterian Church in Decatur, Ga., a congregation that’s committed to diversity and whose membership is about half white and half black. Together they wrote O Lord, Hold Our Hands: How a Church Thrives in a Multicultural World, and Stroupe is a co-author of Where Once We Feared Enemies: Inclusive Membership, Prophetic Vision and the American Church. Contact 404-378-6284, oakpres@earthlink.net.
Rabbi Mitchell Chefitz is scholar-in-residence at Temple Israel of Greater Miami. Temple Israel – a progressive, inner-city congregation and the oldest Reformed congregation in Miami – states on its Web site: “You want diversity? Some of our services are a tropical tzimmes of languages: English, Spanish, and Hebrew, with a little Yiddish, Ladino and Aramaic thrown in for good measure.” The congregation also is diverse in socioeconomics, in age and in religious background. Contact 305-573-5900, mchefitz@templeisrael.net.
Jim Thomas is pastor for cross-cultural mission at Chapel Hill Bible Church in Chapel Hill, N.C. People from more than 40 countries worship at this nondenominational congregation, which grew in part through a ministry to international college students and which is intentionally building relationships with African-American and Latino communities in that region of North Carolina. Contact 919-408-0310 ext. 112, Jim.Thomas@earthlink.net.

IN THE SOUTH
Mark DeYmaz is a founder of Mosaic Church of Central Arkansas in Little Rock. That congregation, founded in 2001, was established with ethnic and economic diversity in mind. It now has about 750 members, roughly half white and half black. DeYmaz also is a co-founder of the Mosaix Global Network, which is working to establish multiethnic churches across the United States. He wrote Building a Healthy Multiethnic Church, which is expected to be published in fall 2007. Contact 501-562-3336, mark@mosaicchuch.net.
Ed Shepard, an African-American, and Wes Dickson, who’s white, are co-pastors of Celebration Fellowship Church in Ponchatoula, La. Contact 985-386-8024, info@celebrationfellowshipchurch.org.

IN THE MIDWEST
• Michael N. Allen is senior pastor of Uptown Baptist Church, a multicultural Southern Baptist congregation in Chicago. The church has an English-speaking congregation that’s about half Anglo, half people of color. It also has congregations that worship in Spanish, Russian and Vietnamese, along with two West African congregations. Contact 773-784-2922, seniorpastor@uptownbaptistchurch.org.
Virgilio Elizondo is Notre Dame Professor of Pastoral and Hispanic Theology at the University of Notre Dame. A former rector of San Fernando Cathedral in San Antonio, Elizondo has written about the way that Mexican, Spanish and indigenous religious customs are blended into the Catholic Church in The Future Is Mestizo: Life Where Cultures Meet. Contact 574-631-7654, velizond@nd.edu.
Richard Brent Turner is coordinator of the African American Studies program at the University of Iowa in Iowa City. He is the author of Islam in the African-American Experience and can speak about the involvement of blacks in American mosques and Islamic life. Contact 319-335-2175, Richard-turner@uiowa.edu.
Corinne G. Dempsey is an associate professor of religious studies at the University of Wisconsin at Stevens Point. She wrote The Goddess Lives in Upstate New York: Breaking Convention and Making Home at a North American Hindu Temple, which explores the vibrant spiritual life of a nontraditional temple in Rush, N.Y. She can speak about issues of ethnicity among Hindus in the U.S. Contact 715-346-2505, cdempsey@uwsp.edu.
Korie Edwards is an assistant professor of sociology at Ohio State University. She has done research on when and how interracial congregations work and is a co-author of Against All Odds: The Struggle for Racial Integration in Religious Organizations. Contact 614-247-8482, Edwards.623@sociology.osu.edu.
Peter T. Cha is an associate professor of pastoral theology at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School in Deerfield, Ill. Cha wrote a chapter for This Side of Heaven: Race, Ethnicity and Christian Faith and is co-editor of Growing Healthy Asian American Churches; both were published in 2006. He also can speak about the experience of second-generation Asian-Americans in congregations. Contact 847-317-8034, pcha@tiu.edu.

IN THE SOUTHWEST
Rodney Woo is senior pastor of Wilcrest Baptist Church in Houston. Wilcrest, started in 1972 in a mostly white neighborhood, watched the neighborhood around it change dramatically and then made a decision to try to become a multiracial church. Read a July 8, 2006, profile from The Dallas Morning News of the church’s transformation into a congregation with no racial majority. Wilcrest’s vision statement proclaims the congregation to be “God’s multiethnic bridge that draws all people to Jesus Christ.” Contact 281-498-1370, info@wilcrestbaptist.org.
Herbert Cooper is senior pastor of People’s Church in Oklahoma City. This Assemblies of God congregation, started in 2002, draws about 1,400 people to worship on a weekend – about half black, about 40 percent white. Cooper is black; his wife, Tiffany, is white. Read his blog and a May 9, 2005, story from the Assemblies of God News Service about multicultural Assemblies of God churches. Contact 405-775-9991, info@peopleschurch.tv.
Ed Lee, who was formerly a pastor with a Chinese congregation, is lead pastor of Mosaic Community Covenant Church in Missouri City, Texas. The church’s Web site states that “like colorful, broken pieces arranged by an artist to create a beautiful picture, Mosaic is a blend of multiracial and multiethnic people, broken by the adversities of life but brought together by God.” Contact 713-269-4774, info@mosaicpeople.org.
The Rev. Simon Kalonga is administrator of Curé d'Ars, a Catholic congregation in Denver. This multiethnic parish, in what was once a predominantly white neighborhood, uses music and a worship style with a strong African-American flavor. Contact 303-322-1119, curedarsoffice@yahoo.com.

IN THE WEST/NORTHWEST
• Angela L. Ying is pastor of Bethany United Church of Christ in Seattle. Bethany was founded in 2000 at the site of a previously dying Anglo congregation in the diverse Beacon Hill neighborhood, as an intentionally multicultural, multiracial and multigenerational church. Read a Jan. 15, 2007, profile of Bethany and other local multicultural churches in The Seattle Times. Contact 206-725-7535, bethanyucc@earthlink.net.
Charles Lienert is pastor of the Community of St. Andrew. This Catholic congregation in a racially diverse neighborhood in Portland, Ore., offers Mass in English, Spanish and Kanhoval, a Mayan language. Contact 503-281-4429 ext. 11, lienert@archdpdx.org.
Jonathan Lee, son of a Korean missionary to the United States, is pastor of Holliston United Methodist Church in Pasadena, Calif. Holliston was formed by the merger in 2005 of an established but declining white congregation and a younger, growing Korean congregation. It has services in English and Korean. Contact 626-793-0685, humc@gmail.com.
Arlene M. Sánchez Walsh is an associate professor of Latino church studies at Haggard Graduate School of Theology at Azusa Pacific University in Azusa, Calif. She is working on a book about multicultural evangelical youth and can speak about the integration of Latinos in American churches, including Catholic and Pentecostal congregations. Contact 626-815-6000 ext. 5620, asanchez-walsh@apu.edu.
Karen Ward is abbess of the Church of the Apostles, a multicultural Lutheran-Episcopal congregation in the Fremont neighborhood of Seattle. Apostles describes itself as a multicultural “future church with an ancient faith.” Contact 206-851-8962, Karen@apostleschurch.org.



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