Assemblies of God USA SearchSite GuideStoreContact Us
Current_issue
Subscribe
Spanish
Daily_Boost
Previous_issues
Key_Bearers
Weekly_drawing
Conversations
Guard_your_heart
Bible_reading_guide
ABCs_of_salvation
Questions_Answers
Who_we_are
Staff
speakers
PE_Books
Contact_us
Links
Home

2002 Frontline Reports


Churches, members mobilize to help people with disease (December 30, 2001)

Pilot shows plane, shares the Lord (December 23, 2001)

SonBeams provides social outlet, spiritual training (December 16, 2001)

Veterans Day (November 11, 2001)

Chi Alpha chapter reaches the world (September 30, 2001)

Church's Independence Day celebration draws more than 50,000 (September 16, 2001)

A passion for missions (September 9, 2001)

Lifestyle evangelism influences hedonistic neighborhood (August 26, 2001)

Church takes Christ to inner-city needy (August 12, 2001)

Nontraditional services draw worshippers (July 22, 2001)

Dirt floors and horses: Welcome to Cowboy Church (July 13, 2001)

Northland Cathedral members know God's timing is best (June 24, 2001)

Youth, children's outreaches spur church growth (June 17, 2001)

Revival transforms blighted neighborhood (June 10, 2001)

Vacant mall becomes home for growing church plant (May 20, 2001)

Single moms find strength to build strong families (May 13, 2001)

Spiritual freedom is hallmark of three-decade ministry (April 29, 2001)

Modern hangout serves as haven for teens (April 22, 2001)

Merged congregation challenges stereotypes (April 8, 2001)

Hell's Alternative: The Reality (March 25, 2001)

Vietnamese congregation moves forward (March 18, 2001)

Rejoicing in the rubble (February 25, 2001)

Faith Health Clinic treats the whole person (February 18, 2001)

Former prostitute befriends box-dwellers (Feb. 11, 2001)

Crisis Pregnancy Outreach saving lives, helping mothers (January 21, 2001)

Ministering at the Gates of Hell (January 14, 2001)


2000 Frontline Reports

Vacant mall becomes home for growing church plant

(May 20, 2001)

Big. Empty. Weeds in the parking lot. Sunset Point Plaza was lifeless, until a new church plant voted to lease a 10,000-square-foot banquet hall in the nearly deserted mini-mall.

Fox Valley Christian Fellowship held its first service at Maplewood Middle School in nearby Menasha on Easter in 1997. The first Sunday 170 came. Average attendance is now 320.

For years, the Wisconsin—Northern Michigan District leaders saw the need to plant a church in the rapidly growing Appleton, Wis., area. Steve Nickel, associate pastor to Ron Held, senior pastor of Racine (Wis.) Assembly of God for more than 6 years, accepted the challenge. In summer 1996, Nickel and his wife, Jeanne, met with Arden Adamson (now district superintendent; then, district secretary) to discuss becoming church planters in the Appleton area.

In November 1996, the district gave approval to the Nickels to start the process by attending a Church Planting BootCamp and raising a minimum of 25 percent of their budget.

Nickel says, "BootCamp is where we spent a week determining who we are, our values and what kind of church we were going to be. It’s also where we developed our vision, strategy and time lines."

Nickel placed two ads in the newspaper about an informational meeting to be held at a hotel for those interested in a new Assemblies of God church in the south Appleton area. About 90 people came.

On Easter, March 30, 1997, Fox Valley Christian Fellowship held its first service at Maplewood Middle School in nearby Menasha. The first Sunday 170 came. "We averaged 116 people for the first few months," Nickel says.

"Part of the reason we came," says Jake Van Veen, deacon and missions coordinator, "is that Pastor Nickel’s ministry is directed more outward than inward."

At the end of seven months, the church was averaging 160 on Sunday mornings. It was time to look for larger facilities.

The congregation spent hundreds of hours renovating the former banquet hall. When they moved to the new location, average attendance immediately jumped to 193. As the church grew, they leased and renovated an additional 4,000 square feet. Average attendance is now 320.

The mall’s owner was willing to sell all 68,000 square feet and eight acres (which includes a paved and lighted parking lot) to the church for $1.1 million. The church purchased the property in September with funding through the Assemblies of God Financial Services Group. They are now in the process of renovating inside and out.

From the start, Nickel says, "We committed to tithing from our general fund to missions." A missions convention is held every six months. This 4-year-old church is giving nearly $100,000 annually to world and home missions. In 1999, eight people flew to Argentina to help build a church. Last June, 18 people drove to Minneapolis, Minn., to help home missionaries Chris and Monica DeLaurentis in a building project.

In July, the church had an evangelism seminar and outreach. A weekly visitation ministry – FRIEND: First-timers Receiving Information, Encouragement, Nurturing and Direction – trains people in evangelism.

According to Tom and Holly Behm, who have been attending Fox Valley Christian Fellowship for three months, the focus on ministering to children and youth caught their attention. Holly says, "If children don’t have a place to go, why would parents want to bring them or come themselves?"

"There are at least 20,000 children and youth in our area," assistant pastor Brian Pingel says. "In our youth group, which now has up to 50 each week, only 26 percent live with their mom and dad."

Nickel says, "I use the phrase, ‘Believe God’s heart; see God’s hand.’ We’ve seen God’s hand; we’re praying that our community will see God’s hand as well."

— Dan Van Veen, news and special projects coordinator, Assemblies of God Office of Public Relations

E-mail this page to a friend.
©1999-2009 General Council of the Assemblies of God