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The Christian Chronicle » continuing coverage

Continuing Coverage


(photo by Bobby Ross Jr.)
Giving with love - Olivia Saxon joins other children in offering a contribution to help support the Cupboards of Love food pantry. Greeting her is senior minister Teddy Tacket. The pantry is part of the Lynn Street church's effort to "take the word from our seats to the streets," said Tackett.
God’s house in a warehouse
AT 100 YEARS OLD,  a West Virginia church transforms a bakery into a sanctuary. The congregation celebrates its history as it enjoys a revival.

PARKERSBURG, W.Va. — Teddy Tackett is no crackpot.

He says he was a cracked pot, though, when the Lynn Street church came calling in 2001.

Both the congregation, which had dwindled to about 35 mostly older members, and Tackett, who had left 13 years of full-time ministry to sell vacuum cleaners,  were praying for revival, he said.

“It was the grace of God that put us together,” said Tackett, now the senior minister.

Since Tackett’s arrival, the church has focused on restoring broken Christians and showing Christ’s love to unsaved neighbors in one of the older, rougher sections of this industrial, working-class city of 33,000 souls.

“A hundred years ago, when this church started, this was a rich place, a great neighborhood,” Tackett said.

“But it really needs a light right now, and God has allowed us to be the light.”

In the past seven years, the once-dying church has baptized about 150 people, leaders said. Average Sunday morning attendance has topped 300.
read more
Winters in Alaska can be both brutal and beautiful, as illustrated by this photo. Members at the Anchorage Church, the state's largest congregation, say they're not only surviving, but thriving.
photo provided
Reaching the last frontier
ANCHORAGE, ALASKA - When Nelda and Michael Rico visited the Anchorage Church of Christ a few years ago, they didn’t know anybody. Nelda, a nurse at Providence Alaska Medical Center, had moved here from the southern part of the United States. Neither she nor her husband, Michael, a retired hospital worker, had ever been inside the church.

When the invitation song was sung that morning, a solitary figure walked down the long aisle toward the minister, who sat down with her on the front row. The preacher soon rose to read the woman’s response card. An extramarital relationship was the gist of it.

It wasn’t the word “adultery” that shocked the Ricos. It was the church’s response.

“Suddenly, it seemed like hundreds of people began pouring out of the aisles and rushing toward the woman,” Nelda said. “People stood in long lines to hug her and love her.”

Nelda shook her head in disbelief as she recalled the experience. “The places I went to church before never would have done that,” she said. “They would have shunned her and basically told her to pack her bags and get out.”

From that moment on, Nelda and Michael knew that the Anchorage church was the one for them. read more
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