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the capital campaign

Solutions: a new community center
A new Community Center attached to our current facility.

See proposed drawings here:

1. Is there an overwhelming need for a Community Center?
Yes there is a need when we consider the radical changes in our community. We want to continue serving our community as well as improve our service, but we are restricted by the physical limitations of our current facility. Here are a few potential opportunities a new Community Center would provide:

  • This center will provide tangible expressions of love to our surrounding community (affordable daycare, tutoring, English classes for immigrants, career counseling, sports programs for underprivileged children, possibly a free medical clinic, free legal advice, parenting classes, marriage and premarital classes, music, arts programs, etc.)
  • When we built our current auditorium, we built it with an eye toward the future to seat 3000 adults. Since we were working with limited funds, we did not build proportionate space for the children 3000 adults would bring to us. At this moment, Vineyard Columbus finds itself in the unfortunate position of turning away children each week in various children's ministry classes. In order to effectively minister to our children, and to minister to the number of children we will have when the auditorium is at capacity, we will need ten additional early childhood classrooms and a second large space for our kids.
  • The center will provide accessible ways for members at Vineyard Columbus to get involved with the community and make new friends.
  • The center will provide opportunities to introduce Jesus to those who do not know him in a way that is non-threatening and holistic.
  • The center will provide more space for expanding existing ministries.
  • The center will be a training ground and a model for community centers around the world where we have sent our missionaries.
 

  the giving   campaign links:

 
from Rich and Marlene  
we have been blessed  
our challenges  
solution: a new community center  
solution: world missions  
giving questions  
2. Why not simply host a Community Center in our existing building?
Hard as it may be to comprehend (because of our large facility), we simply do not have the room to schedule many more activities within our existing facility. Did you know that:
  • We schedule over 10,000 rooms per year.
  • We average over 900 events per month in our church building apart from our weekend services.
  • The existing gymnasium is booked year round for VLI (Vineyard Leadership Institute) on Tuesday nights except for the month of December.
  • The gymnasium and chapel are not available on Wednesday nights except for a few dates each summer when The Rock (our middle school group) does not meet.
  • English as a Second Language (ESL) meets on Tuesday nights September through May and uses five rooms, plus two childcare rooms.
  • Our swing and social dance class ministry, an outreach to the community, meets two times a month on Friday nights in the gymnasium and has 200+ people attend, mostly single adults.
  • Soaking Prayer for Healing groups use 2-4 rooms every Monday, Wednesday and Thursday evenings.
  • Along with many other life-support groups, we also have grief support, which meets on Saturday mornings, Integrity.Men, which meets on Tuesday evenings and uses a double room and six breakout rooms, and Recovering in Grace (a co-ed ministry), which meets every Tuesday evening. Beauty to Ashes (a recovery group for women who are victims of sexual abuse) meets every Wednesday evening. The Eating Disorders recovery group meets every Thursday evening.
  • On Thursday nights, we host the New Community Series, Alpha, Welcome Dinners, wedding rehearsals and wedding reception preps, along with recovery groups and Bible studies.

Suffice to say, there is virtually no evening in any month where rooms are available to do the range of activities we plan for our Community Center.

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3. Why is it important to connect the Community Center with our church building?

  • A Biblical Reason – The church in America has tended to separate three dimensions of the whole gospel. These three dimensions are: words that proclaim the truth of God (the traditional focus of evangelicals); signs that proclaim the power of God (most loved by Pentecostals and charismatics); and deeds that proclaim the love of God (a strength of liberals and social activists). Each is a part of the Good News of the gospel. But the gospel is not fully proclaimed until all three dimensions are experienced and manifested. The preaching and praying that takes place in our church building should not be separated from the deeds of mercy that proclaim God's love. The whole gospel involves the truth, the power, and the love of God.

    Another way to express this is to say that the challenge of the Great Commission to make disciples of all nations must never be separated from the challenge of the Great Commandment to “love your neighbor as yourself.” A holistic understanding of the gospel means that we ask ourselves the question, “What does salvation mean for a child or adult who finds Christ at our church, but goes back to a destructive home life filled with drugs, violence, or minimal educational opportunities?” The church building should not be separated from a significant part of its outreach any more than the three strands of the gospel should be separated.
  • A Friendship Reason – Jesus didn't simply come to enable his followers to get to heaven. He also came to build new communities of followers here on earth. These new communities are to cross racial, socio-economic, and ethnic lines. A Christian's friends should include not only people who are like us, but also people who are unlike us. A Christian's friends should include the desirable and the undesirable, the needy and the wealthy, the lovable and the unlovable. Jesus wants to bring all the different types of people who live in the neighborhoods around our church building into full church membership so that we can together enjoy mutually edifying relationships within our church community.
  • A Prophetic Reason – Our church leadership has been praying for over a year and a half about the possibility of constructing a Community Center that could reach our surrounding neighborhood with a wholistic gospel. We looked at various buildings in our neighborhood as possible sites for a Community Center. One day when Rich was on a prayer walk, the Holy Spirit spoke to him and he had a vision of an arrow shaft with the head of an arrow. He felt the Lord saying to him: “I've been building Vineyard Columbus into an arrow shaft for years. The Community Center will be the point of the arrow.” In other words, God has built the thousands of people who comprise Vineyard Columbus' church family and our existing facility into a giant arrow shaft. But an arrow shaft will not penetrate our community in a maximum way unless an arrowhead is attached to it. The Community Center will be the arrowhead.

    Even architecturally, the Community Center will face Cooper Road and will be the first thing people see as they approach our property. It will serve as the point of the arrow for this Central Ohio neighborhood!
  • A Practical Reason – Even before the vision for the Community Center was born, we had plans to build additional children's ministry space for our weekend services. Why? We need the space! We currently do not have enough space for children if the auditorium is approximately 65% capacity. But our desire is to not only minister to the children and parents within our congregation. We want to reach out into our community. Up until now, Children's Ministry has not been used as an outreach vehicle due to space limitations. We know that a vibrant children's ministry builds the kingdom within and through the lives of children. It is vital to our ability to reach our community. The Community Center vision includes the needed space to continue our vibrant children's ministry while reaching our community by meeting our community's felt needs at the same time.
  • A Stewardship Reason – God has given gifts and talents to each of our 6600+ church members. These gifts and talents are not simply given for the purpose of blessing our own families by allowing us to earn an income, or merely blessing our own church. Our gifts and talents are meant to be given away. For example, what opportunity does an attorney have to use his or her legal training to bless the larger community in a Christian environment? What opportunities, for that matter, do moms, athletes, musicians, librarians, tutors, computer analysts, or vocational counselors have to bless our larger community in a Christian environment?

If we are blessed…to be a blessing—where can we actually carry out this mandate in a practical way? The Community Center will provide each individual church member an opportunity to give away whatever God has given them: friendship, talents, spiritual gifts, life experience, prayer, and, of course, the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

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4. Are we changing our church's mission?
Our Mission Statement reads: Our purpose as a church is to develop a community of passionate, mature, reproducing disciples; to plant passionate, mature, reproducing churches; and, to transform the world by love and good deeds for the glory of God.

Our Community Center and the extension of Vineyard Columbus' involvement in world missions is simply a means for us to keep doing what we've always been committed to do: make disciples, plant churches, and serve the world through love and good deeds. Our giving campaign does not signal any change in our mission or vision.


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5. What was the decision-making process resulting in the plans for a new Community Center?
Our decision-making process was a product of regular discussion by our Senior Pastoral Team (Rich Nathan, Craig Heselton, Bill Christensen, Steve Robbins, Stephen Van Dop, and Eric Pickerill ), research on our neighborhood and of all local alternatives, extra-local research regarding other community centers in other communities, prayer over the last year and a half, and an openness to the voice of the Lord. Our executive pastor, Craig Heselton, our teen pastor, Kerry Davis, and our after school director, Kevin Brown, along with our Senior Pastoral Team, participated in putting the business plan together for the Community Center.

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6. How will the Vineyard Columbus Community Center be different than suburban centers such as the existing community center in Westerville, or government social service agencies?
A Hindu priest once asked the missionary E. Stanley Jones what Christians could offer beyond what Hindus already had. E. Stanley Jones answered simply, “What we can offer you is Jesus.” Jesus is the difference our Community Center will offer. The Community Center will not be a government agency since our aim will be to accompany our services with the person, the love and the message of Jesus.

Another very significant difference will be our relational expectations. We want to make friends with those using our Community Center and not just acquire “clients.” We also want to go beyond simply meeting people's economic needs by contributing to people's emotional, mental, moral, and spiritual needs.

And unlike suburban community centers, Vineyard Columbus' Community Center is not intended to be “Club Vineyard” where Christians can go to hang out or play basketball in an environment that is “safe and secure” from non-Christians. Quite the opposite, Jesus came not for the “well,” but for the sick, the least, the last, and the lost. We envision our Community Center to be a light to our community bringing needed services such as career and financial counseling, a daycare center, medical services, marriage and family counseling, and sports ministries to those who lack such services. Our Community Center is not an answer to the question: “What does Vineyard Columbus get out of this?” but rather, “What can Vineyard Columbus give away?” We know we have been blessed, and now we desire to be a blessing to others.

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7. Where will the Community Center be located?
The new Community Center will be where our old offices were located – at the front end of our building near Cooper Road . That old office structure will be torn down and a two-story Community Center will be built on the site. The gymnasium and the chapel will remain untouched.


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8. Why are we adding a daycare center to our Community Center?
We want to provide quality, Christ-centered daycare at a reasonable price, which would be a huge help to families in our immediate area. The northeast side of Columbus has very few quality daycare programs. The Clintonville, Worthington , Dublin and Bexley communities are well-known for having quality early childhood facilities. Our neighborhood is comprised of nearly 40% single-parent-headed families. We need quality daycare.

Quality programs involve low child-adult ratios, educationally well-qualified administrators and teachers, and a defined, developmentally appropriate curriculum so children aren't just babysat, but are encouraged to learn through teaching and experiences.

We would have the opportunity to minister to families that we normally wouldn't have the opportunity to come in contact with. Even through many may not be Christians themselves, they often welcome the influence of Christianity on their children, providing a significant opportunity for evangelism to families.

By hosting a daycare, we'd have the opportunity to minister to low-income families and single mothers through Title 20 Federal funds, meeting needs in a practical way.

Having a daycare program would further indicate that we, as a church body, value children and have a vested interest in their spiritual success. Our daycare would also be available to meet the needs of families within our own church.


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9. Are there any plans to build a school?
At this time, we have no plans for a school beyond our daycare and preschool programs. There are many excellent Christian schools in our Central Ohio community, but we have learned to never say “never” at our church.

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10. How will our existing church programming be affected? Specifically, will we continue to minister through Fruit of the Vine – our food pantry, our medical clinic, our homeless outreach and our ministry to children in the downtown area?
We will continue to keep Fruit of the Vine on Fifth Avenue and minister to the downtown community through our food pantry, medical clinic, and children's program. We will continue to use Fruit of the Vine as a launching pad to the homeless, those in prison, in nursing homes, and in shelters. Far from shrinking Fruit of the Vine, we believe that as thousands of gifted people at Vineyard Columbus become envisioned to serve our community via our new Community Center, the Fruit of the Vine ministry will be greatly expanded.

11. Who will run the Community Center?
The Community Center will operate the way much of Vineyard Columbus operates. There will be several paid staff that will help develop and run the various programs and outreaches the Community Center will offer. However, many of the services offered by the Community Center will be entirely staffed by volunteers. Many of our current programs (after-school program, M.O.P.S., medical clinics, etc.) are almost completely run by volunteers from our church. The Community Center will expand the opportunities for people in the church to serve in new and exciting ministries.

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12. How do my gifts and talents fit in?
Our hope is that you will use the gifts and talents God has given you to serve the community through this church. Whether you have legal skills, career counseling skills, childcare skills, talent in sports, etc., we want to see you using your gifts for the advancement of the Kingdom. There will be numerous opportunities for you to serve as paid staff or as a volunteer. Job and volunteer opportunities will be announced as the building gets close to completion.

13. When will we break ground and when will the Community Center be completed?
The current timeline for construction would begin demolition of the front end of our current facility in June of 2005 and be ready to open the Community Center in October 2006.


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14. What will the Community Center cost?
The projected cost of the Community Center is $5,000,000 (+furnishings). Operating costs are projected to run at about $750,000/year.

15. Are there ways to cut costs?
We have already cut several options out of the cost of the Community Center (such as a climbing wall) to better use our resources. We may shell (unfinished floor, ceiling and walls) part of the second floor of the Community Center. We cannot add a second floor later if we only build a finished one-story building now. We are doing our best to make inexpensive room for expected growth that can be used in the future as God directs.


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16. How will the Community Center be paid for?
We hope to completely fund the building project with the contributions of our congregation through our three-year giving campaign. Ongoing expenses of running the Community Center will be paid for through our annual tithes and offerings.

17. What is the budget, how do we maintain costs, operating expenses?
The operating costs have been projected at $750,000. We can maintain the operating costs of the new community center through the current church budget.


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  © 2008 Vineyard Church of Columbus