A church up in St. Louis basically took that vision and ran with it. It's kind of like our vision at Hope on steroids (of course the legal kind, with a prescription...).
Here's what I'm talking about.
It’s Saturday night in St. Louis, Mo. A crowd gathers at a hot new venue for music, art and theater that’s unapologetically named The Chapel and sponsored by Memorial Presbyterian Church.
Tonight a punk band is playing. It could just as easily be an indie, acoustic, rock, folk or experimental group. The Chapel has featured all of these plus artists and theater groups.
The people arriving are the young and hip. Urban dwellers. Students at Washington University. Internationals. Gays. In short, people in the creative classes, the unreached populations near the church—those who Memorial set out to influence in the city by serving it. And serve it they do.
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2 comments:
The demographics of St. Louis are certainly different than the little neighborhood in which our fellowship resides. With tailoring to our area and talents, this would be an exciting way to reach out. G
Gail,
Definitely different demographics in Bradenton. You're right that we would have to tailor it more to our area. I'm trying to think to what we can do that is more distinctly "us."
Geoff
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