HomeMy WebLinkAboutCHRIST FELLOWSHIP CHURCH - PDP / FDP - 29-94C - MEDIA -C49 LIFE, The Coloradoan, Sunday, May 23, 2004, www.coloradoan.com
Church
Continued from Page C1
ticularly challenging.
"A lot of new church starts don't
make it," said Kim Lanman, pastor of
the 50-member Life Community
Church, which in its three-year exis-
tence has met in two Poudre School
District schools and now at Cinema
Saver 6 at 2525 Worthington Circle.
But each hardship is an opportunity
for deepened faith and a greater sense
of community, pastors say.
"We would not be in this position
without these relationships," said Ed
Davis, pastor of Christ Fellowship
Church. "I find that I'm more excited
about ministry than I have been all my
life. I would not trade the hard times
for anything."
Ups and dawns
Although Christ Fellowship Church
has survived in temporary housing for
longer than most, several Fort Collins
congregations know what it's like to
set up and break down church each
Sunday in schools, office and retail
space, coffee shops and movie the-
aters.
Poudre School District facilities,
which the district rents to community
groups for a fraction of the cost of
most commer-
cial
`We knew that have beenra
if God didn't nlumberressing ofra
churches. The
want us to district rents
space to two
have (the churches, said
Bill Franzen,
land) he would executive di-
rector of oper-
close the ations for the
doors, and if dtBut changes
God wanted it in district poli-
cy in 2002 —
district s
to happen, must nowtaff
utnowtaff
then all the bra gas eande
doors would the district no
longer rents to
be open.' community
users on holi-
- The Rev. Mark day weekends
Cranor, pastor of St. — sent some
James Orthodox churches look -
Church mg elsewhere
for accommo-
dations.
Life Community Church moved its
Sunday service from Rocky Mountain
High School to Cinema Saver 6.
I've looked into some storefront
property. But a lot of them want
$11,000 or $12,000 per month" for
about 10,000 square feet, Lanman said.
And storefront property or office
space presents some image problems,
some pastors say.
`Whenever you have the
dream or vision, and you
are so convinced that it
will happen, it doesn't
feel like a sacrifice.'
— Karla Alpers, Christ Fellowship
Church member
Redeemer Lutheran Church, which
on Easter moved into its second
church building at 7755 Greenstone
Trail off Carpenter Road, met for a
short time in a storefront on South
College Avenue.
"Some people would call to ask for
directions, and when I told them we
were next to a U-Haul dealership (on
South College Avenue), they decided
it was not for them" Runtsch said.
"We had a nucleus who were very
dedicated and willing to sacrifice fi-
nancially but also sacrifice the niceties
of church."
Finding a home
Pastors who move to Fort Collins
from other areas to "plant churches"
often are discouraged by the price of
land and commercial property
Many churches prefer to buy from
churches that are outgrowing their
current facilities. But that takes good
timing.
"It's not as frequent as you might
think " said Steve Stansfield, a broker
with Realtec, a local commercial real
estate company.
Commercial property, like residen-
tial real estate, has appreciated at a
brisk pace the past 10 years, Stans-
field said.
"I don't know by what factor, prob-
ably 30 to 40 percent," he said.
The entry-level price for bare -
bones office or industrial space with-
out high visibility is about $100 per
square foot, he said.
"One condition of our markets is
that the retail sector is the strongest.
That probably would cost the congre-
gation more than office space," Stans-
field said. "Changes in employment in
the past few years have opened up a
lot of office space."
Churches that prefer to build will
find that land prices in the area vary
greatly, Stansfield said.
"It just depends on where it is. It's
very dependent on location and po-
tential other use."
Small churches looking for land of-
ten have their share of disappoint-
ments.
"We missed the one piece of prop-
erty that was reasonable by 24 hours.
We didn't find out about it in time,"
said Cranor, pastor of St. James Or-
thodox Church.
V. Richard Haro/The Coloradoan
GROUNDWORK: Workers from Kehn's paving lay asphalt to build the parking lot last week at Christ Fellowship Church in Fort Collins.
Two years later, the church bought
the same piece of property for
$500,000 more, albeit this time with a
building that would accommodate
200 to 300 people, Cranor said. The
improvements, the congregation
spent about $160,000 in fees. Site im-
provements, including street im-
provements, cost another $300,000 to
$400,000, Davis said.
congregation raised $100,000 in 45 days for a down payment. Making saesCeS
•r
"Even then, the bank waned to Building projects can be hard on
have five of us be guarantors for congregations, largely because of the
$100,000 each ... since our loan in financial strain, local pastors said.
proportion to our congregation in- "Every dollar spent is a dollar that
come was so high." someone at some time has to put into
Christ Fellowship Church bid on a contribution plate," Runtsch said.
six different pieces of land before "People make tremendous sacrifices
buying the 3.5 acres of property on to make the mission come through.
Ziegler Road, One member gave 40
Davis
wascrest- You've got to solve percent
Members ts salary."
ofChrist
fallen each time;' your money issues. A Fellowship Church are
he said. But the no strangers to finan-
Ziegler Road lot f people are afraid cial sacrifice. At a cost
oo
property turned p p of $1.5 million, Christ
out to be far su- of talking about mon- Fellowship's 8,700-
perior. "I felt like sqaure-foot facility on
an idiot when I e , . It doesn't mean Ziegler Road is a big
saw what God y endeavor for a small
had given us." ' congregation.
Like other de- you disqualify faith. "I have friends who
velopers, church- — Ed Davis, pastor of Christ say, `I won't be In-
es must spend Fellowship Church volved until there is a
whatever it takes church building be -
to comply with cause every Sunday
city or county land -use codes regard- it's, `Give, give, give,' " congregation
ing street improvements, storm wa- member Alpers said. "We made ad -
ter, curbs, sidewalks, parking spaces justments in lifestyle that made it pos-
and utilities. sible for us to give. Whenever you
Christ Fellowship Church spent have the dream or vision, and you are
$30,000 for items such as traffic stud- so convinced that it will happen, it
ies and soil tests to make sure it was doesn't feel like a sacrifice."
feasible to build on the land. Before The church also received gener-
the church could get started on site ous donations from several local
churches and a grant and low -inter-
est loans from the church's denomi-
nation, the Evangelical Presbyterian
Church.
And the congregation has decided
to open a day-care center at the new
church, an idea it borrowed from
Mountain Range Church.
"The day care will run the place,"
Davis said. "That's how a small church
like this affords its own building."
Keeping the faith
Throughout the long journey of
finding a permanent home, Christ
Fellowship Church has relied on a
combination of faith and fact, Davis
said.
"The bottom line is you have to do
your spiritual research," he said.
Other pastors agree that prayer
and faith are what keep the congre
gation going at stressful and disap-
pointing points of the process.
"We knew that if God didn't want
us to have (the land) he would close
the doors, and if God wanted it to
happen, then all the doors would be
open," Cranor said.
"Yes, there is some business to it.
But there is a much bigger part of
faithfulness and obedience to what
God wants you to do," Lanman
agreed.
Faith, however, has to be coupled
with a solid business plan, Davis said.
"You've got to solve your money
issues," he said. "A lot of people are
afraid of talking about money.... It
doesn't mean you disqualify faith"
A NEW DAY -
Worshippers
arrive on
Easter for the
first services
at the new
Redeemer
Lutheran
Church in
southeast Fort
Collins.
Rich Abrahamson
The Coloradoan
For many smaller congregations,
the long journey of finding a
permanent home is filled with
sacrifice, belief and, in the end,
a quest worth pursuing
Building on faith
Rich Abrahamson/The Coloradoan
SUNDAY SERVICE Jennifer Avery, left, and other members of tan Chapel. Christ Fellowship, which does not have a perma-
Christ Fellowship Church meet for services at Good Samari- nent home, will open its new church building this summer.
`I find that I'm more
excited about ministry
than I have been all
my life. I would not
trade the hard times
for anything.'
— Ed Davis, pastor of Christ
Fellowship Church
NEW HOMff: The Rev. Ed Davis of
Christ Fellowship Church is pictured
earlier this month in what will be the
sanctuary of the congregation's new
church building at 3850 Ziegler Road.
Rich Abrahamson/The Coloradoan
By KELLI LACKETT P H i Z 3, 101
Kell iLackett@coloradoan.com
white trailer sitting
behind the new home
of Christ Fellowship
Church at 3850
Ziegler Road reminds
the congregation of
the gypsy life it has
led the past 21 years.
The church's congregation, which
numbers fewer than 100, has been us-
ing the trailer to store chairs, educa-
tional materials and sound equipment
it has set up at public schools and
strip malls, where it has met for more
than two decades. Most recently, the
congregation has been meeting in the
chapel at Good Samaritan Village.
Finally, after years of setting up
and breaking down for church every
Sunday, the building the congrega-
tion has always dreamed of is materi-
alizing.
"I'm incredibly excited about the
possibilities," said Karla Alpers, who
with husband, Joel, has been a mem-
ber of the church for about 10 years.
Most Fort Collins churchgoers in-
sist that a church is not a building,
but a community of believers. Yet, a
building provides the kind of stability
often necessary for a church to retain
members and to grow.
"There is something psychological
about it. People want to know that
you are going to be here for the long
run," said the Rev. Mark Cranor, pas-
tor of St. James Orthodox Church,
which met in Cranor's Wellington
garage for two years before buying a
small church in Wellington. In 2001,
the church moved to a L3-acre prop-
erty at 2610 Southeast Frontage Road,
near East Prospect Road and Inter-
state 25.
But buying or building a church or
moving to a larger one in the Fort
Collins area, where land and com-
mercial real-estate prices are compar-
atively higher than in some other
parts of the country, can be a big
challenge, local,pastors say.
There are a number of stages at
which congregations can stall, from
finding temporary housing to raising
money to locating affordable proper-
ty to securing a loan for a mortgage
to complying with city and county
regulations. Small churches and those
without much financial backing from
a denomination find the process par -
See CHURCH/Page C4