Downtown Church: Difference between revisions
David Bains (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
David Bains (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[Image:Downtown Church logo.gif|right]] | [[Image:Downtown Church logo.gif|right]] | ||
The '''Downtown Church''' was a | The '''Downtown Church''' was a church located in what it called. "the warehouse", a red-painted former auto service center at 300 [[24th Street South]]. There are currently four pastors leading the church, [[Keith Best]], [[Rodney Calfee]], [[Andrew Jenkins]] and [[Brandon Reeder]]. The service style was contemporary, with music led by a multi-piece band. | ||
Founded in [[2000]] by Andrew Jenkins, it was initially known as '''Ecclesia''' and then as '''Crossroads Community Church'''. | |||
The church held regular Sunday services with scriptural lessons as well as Wednesday evening prayer services. In addition, numerous meetings are held at member's homes. The church also offers classes in parenting, sewing, budgeting and other life skills. The downtown warehouse includes a prayer room accessible by key-code 24 hours a day. | The church held regular Sunday services with scriptural lessons as well as Wednesday evening prayer services. In addition, numerous meetings are held at member's homes. The church also offers classes in parenting, sewing, budgeting and other life skills. The downtown warehouse includes a prayer room accessible by key-code 24 hours a day. | ||
In November [[2007]] the downtown church organized a restoration of the mural painted alongside [[University Boulevard]] in front of the [[Southtown]] housing project. | In November [[2007]] the downtown church organized a restoration of the mural painted alongside [[University Boulevard]] in front of the [[Southtown]] housing project. | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
* "Crossroads Church members minister ‘differently’ in downtown Birmingham" (August 5, 2004) {{TAB}} | |||
* [https://obits.al.com/us/obituaries/birmingham/name/nicholas-pearson-obituary?id=14293081 "Nicholas Atkins Pearson"] obituary (January 31, 2005) {{BN}}. | * [https://obits.al.com/us/obituaries/birmingham/name/nicholas-pearson-obituary?id=14293081 "Nicholas Atkins Pearson"] obituary (January 31, 2005) {{BN}}. | ||
* Williams, Roy L. (November 18, 2007) "200-plus volunteers restore faded mural painted alongside Birmingham's Southtown housing complex." {{BN}}. | * Williams, Roy L. (November 18, 2007) "200-plus volunteers restore faded mural painted alongside Birmingham's Southtown housing complex." {{BN}}. | ||
Line 17: | Line 18: | ||
[[Category:Former nondenominational churches]] | [[Category:Former nondenominational churches]] | ||
[[Category:24th Street South]] | [[Category:24th Street South]] | ||
[[Category:3rd Avenue South]] |
Revision as of 06:56, 11 March 2023
The Downtown Church was a church located in what it called. "the warehouse", a red-painted former auto service center at 300 24th Street South. There are currently four pastors leading the church, Keith Best, Rodney Calfee, Andrew Jenkins and Brandon Reeder. The service style was contemporary, with music led by a multi-piece band.
Founded in 2000 by Andrew Jenkins, it was initially known as Ecclesia and then as Crossroads Community Church.
The church held regular Sunday services with scriptural lessons as well as Wednesday evening prayer services. In addition, numerous meetings are held at member's homes. The church also offers classes in parenting, sewing, budgeting and other life skills. The downtown warehouse includes a prayer room accessible by key-code 24 hours a day.
In November 2007 the downtown church organized a restoration of the mural painted alongside University Boulevard in front of the Southtown housing project.
References
- "Crossroads Church members minister ‘differently’ in downtown Birmingham" (August 5, 2004) The Alabama Baptist
- "Nicholas Atkins Pearson" obituary (January 31, 2005) The Birmingham News.
- Williams, Roy L. (November 18, 2007) "200-plus volunteers restore faded mural painted alongside Birmingham's Southtown housing complex." The Birmingham News.
External links
- Downtown Church on MySpace.com