Change of Plans for Christmas Eve and Christmas

City Hope Family,

Unfortunately we are canceling our in person Christmas Eve and Christmas services. We really were hoping to not have to cancel these services and were trying to make something work but it just was not possible. As many of you know our family has been dealing with Covid and I just recently tested positive along with several other staff members. Considering the combination of this and the extremely cold temperatures the elders and I decided it would be best to cancel the services. In light of this, I recorded a Christmas Eve and Christmas devotional video that will go live on our youtube page at 2 PM on Christmas Eve. Click here for the devotional video. Again, we are so sorry to have to cancel these services but we are praying that everyone is back to being healthy for next Sunday’s worship on New Year’s Day.

In Christ alone,

Pastor Josh Holowell

Updated City Hope Fellowship Covid-19 Protocols (3/13/22)

Effective March 13, 2022


City Hope Fellowship will continue to base our current safety protocols on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s recommendations, which were updated February 25th. These protocols will be updated as pandemic conditions and CDC recommendations change in the future. 


Following the latest CDC “COVID-19 Community Levels” metric, in counties labeled High Community Level, everyone should wear a mask in indoor public spaces, regardless of vaccination status. In counties labeled Low or Medium, face masks are recommended specifically for people who (a) are at high risk for illness, (b) have been exposed to someone with COVID-19, (c) have symptoms, or (d) a positive COVID-19 test.  We will continue to monitor transmission levels in Delaware County and keep you informed when our county changes status.


We plan to continue to follow CDC guidelines as we have been, with the following exceptions when Delaware County is labeled as Low or Medium:

 

1.  Nursery workers will continue to wear masks.

2.  Sunday School and Children's Church workers will continue to wear masks.

3.  Communion servers will continue to wear masks while serving communion.

4.  We ask that children wear masks during Sunday School and Children's Church 


The Lord commands us to “Love your neighbor as yourself” (Matt. 22:39) and “in humility value others above yourselves, not looking to your own interests but each of you to the interests of the others” (Phil. 2:3-4). The CDC’s latest recommendations are specific to individual counties, based on county-specific hospitalization data. Because Delaware County COVID-19 hospitalizations may rise and fall over the coming months, we should all be prepared to change our masking practices to continue to help care for our neighbors and community.


Part of our responsibility of loving our neighbors as ourselves includes making everyone feel loved, welcomed, and comfortable among us if they choose to continue wearing a mask while others aren’t. Thank you for helping us create and maintain that environment at City Hope!


A huge amount of data shows that COVID vaccines and booster shots continue to be the best way to protect ourselves from infection, and they are particularly effective against severe illness and death. We encourage every eligible person in the City Hope family to get vaccinated and boosted.



Frequently Asked Questions:


  • How will changes in mask expectations be communicated to the congregation? We will communicate any week-to-week changes in mask expectations through all our typical communication channels, such as text, email, social media, and signs on the Patterson Building doors on Sunday mornings. We will continue to supply masks at our welcome areas.

  • What data is the CDC’s Community Level metric based upon? According to the CDC, “The COVID-19 community level is determined by the higher of the new admissions and inpatient beds metrics, based on the current level of new cases per 100,000 population in the past 7 days.” Learn more here.

  • Can I still wear a mask, even when our CDC Community Level is Medium or Low? Yes, you are always welcome to worship with us wearing a mask.

  • Will there still be a livestream for Sunday morning worship? Yes. We plan to continue the livestream of our Sunday morning worship indefinitely.

  • Why are we following CDC guidelines instead of State of Indiana guidelines? Decisions made by government officials must take into account many factors, including economic and political considerations. CHF is only concerned with the health and safety of our members, friends, and neighbors. Thus, we will follow best practices that are based on medical recommendations from our country’s principal health protection agency.

  • How can I sign up to get a COVID-19 vaccine or booster? All 3 vaccines are readily available in our community and are available as booster shots. You can learn more and sign up here or sign up by phone by calling 211. 

  • Who should I talk to if I still have more questions or concerns? These protocols were written and approved by the CHF elders. Please reach out to one of us if you have further questions or concerns and we’ll be happy to talk with you.


Paul Brown (paulbrown.bsu@gmail.com)

Adam Hoeksema (adam.hoeksema@gmail.com)

Josh Holowell (josh@hopeformuncie.com)

Paul Nagelkirk (prnagelkirk@gmail.com)


Sunday 1/30/22 will be Virtual Worship Service Only

City Hope Family,

Throughout the pandemic we have sought to love God and love neighbor as we care for one another and our community by keeping everyone safe and seeking to minimize the spread of Covid 19. We have tried to make prayerful decisions based upon the guidance of public health officials and balance our need for embodied community and loving our neighbors by minimizing contact to help lessen the spread of the virus and the burden it places on the medical system. Due to a substantial spread of Covid-19 positive cases and exposures among our staff team and volunteers over this past week we will be going virtual for this Sunday (1/30/22) morning’s worship service at 10:15 AM on our YouTube channel: https://hopeformuncie.org/live. We anticipate returning to normal in person services next week but will alert you if anything changes in that plan. Please continue to pray for our church and our community and join us for scattered worship in our homes this Sunday. If you have any questions you can reach out to Pastor Josh at josh@hopeformuncie.org or (765) 351-3217.

In Christ alone,

City Hope Session

Josh Holowell

Paul Nagelkirk

Paul Brown

Adam Hoeksema

A Pastoral Letter on Becoming a Church in Pursuit of Racial Justice

A Pastoral Letter on Becoming a Church in Pursuit of Racial Justice

In 2020 we are continuing to struggle against a very real and dangerous problem. White supremacy and the racist policies, ideas, and hate that flow from it has plagued the world for far too long. This has come at great costs. It has cost black people and other people of color their physical, mental, emotional and spiritual health, their well-being, their opportunities, their livelihoods, their prosperity, their peace, and their very lives. It has gone on not only because of the evil intent of the vocal and active proponents of white supremacy, but also because of the silence and complicity of white people. The silence and complicity of pursuing the status quo, of voting into power those who have created or maintained racist policies, of not challenging policies and decisions, of not being “our brother’s keeper,” and of concerning ourselves with only that which promotes our flourishing rather than actively pursuing an equitable society in which everyone flourishes and in particular those who are marginalized.

A Quiet Life during COVID-19

Very few people today would choose 1 Thessalonians 4:11 as their life verse.

Make it your goal to live a quiet life, minding your own business and working with your hands, just as we instructed you before.
— 1 Th 4:11.

It feels like it lacks ambition, goals, and even faith. What kind of faith does it take to live a quiet life? What kind of faith does it take to mind your own business? That doesn't sound risky and audacious. That doesn't sound like the kind of faith that gets you a book deal or a megachurch or an autobiography and speaking tour. It sounds, well, boring. But, it requires a different kind of faith. A faith that trusts a sovereign God can use mustard seed impact for massive kingdom growth. A faith that acknowledges I can be obscure and unknown to the world because the God of the universe knows and loves me. A faith that sees God as the main actor in human history not me. Really, it's a biblical kind of faith.

While many of us wouldn't choose this kind of story, we have largely been forced into it by the COVID-19 crisis. We are having to figure out how to attend to our own business (my own soul, my family, roommates, self, finances, etc.) without the quick and easy distractions of life. We are having to learn how to be quiet. How to simplify things. How to slow down.

In the midst of all of this, churches have tried to respond. Many churches have chosen to ramp up their services through all the virtual avenues possible. More avenues to connect online and more programing for bible study, prayer, and connection. I am certainly grateful for these attempts and nothing I write here is meant to be a critique or attack on churches who have ramped up. We are all trying to figure out what works best in the fog of a global pandemic. At City Hope however, we have largely scaled back. We have done so for a number of reasons both personally and corporately and I want to outline a little bit of my thinking about this path. Also, I want to communicate this because we have been functioning this way without communicating effectively the reasons for it, which I am sure has left some within our church feeling a little out of the loop. This was not intended but certainly an oversight of communication for which I am sorry.

I decided that we would intentionally scale back largely because we are a weary church. As a church plant seeking to bring the gospel, see the Kingdom grow and transform our city through racial reconciliation, radical acts of justice and mercy, and relational discipleship, we are weary. That is hard work. And our young church plant (which has gotten a lot younger through multiplying babies!) is tired. Maybe I'm just tired as the planter, but I get the sense that our volunteers, staff, and committed folks are tired. We were sensing this before the pandemic and then with the lockdown it gave a natural and real pause to life as we knew it. Rather than fight against that, we could embrace that pause and slow down. Now, I realize this pause comes with all sorts of other very real and severe threats and concerns. These have certainly not ignored these concerns and have sought to address them through individual relationships and a team of volunteers and staff committed to extending help through our mercy fund. The lockdown is not a vacation and so this has not been a slowing down vacation mindset. It is a slowing down to lament, evaluate, prioritize, simplify, rest in the Lord, and recharge. But we have scaled back other programing because we needed a pause.

From the very beginning of City Hope, I have said that for our vision to be really lived out it must be on display not primarily on Sunday mornings but at our dinner tables. This obviously is not literally possible at this point. That is the other main reason we have scaled back. We have largely pursued a non-programed and organic discipleship philosophy. That is hard to translate to planned virtual offerings. My hope is that all of you are using this time to connect with one another in very real ways and continuing to pursue the relationships that help point you to Jesus.

With the governors announcement yesterday to get Indiana back on track (https://www.backontrack.in.gov/) we are beginning to process and evaluate the next steps we will take as a church. We will work with the leadership of MadJax and heed the advice of public health officials as we consider what in-person activities are not only possible but prudent. We have not made any decisions on a plan moving forward but will be seriously looking into it over the next week. Our motivation will continue to be love of God and love of neighbor and not simply our own preferences or desires. I know that I miss you all and our gatherings but we will consider the implications of everything we do for our whole city before moving forward.

That being said, we will begin to slowly ramp up some more opportunities to connect in the coming weeks, but only as we continue a commitment to slowing down and pursuing an intentionally new way of doing life as a follower of Jesus. By that I mean our ramping up will not be adding things simply for the sake of adding things to further distract us from the important soul work of quiet rest before God and glorifying him through our responsibilities. I hope to outline some of that this Sunday during our worship service.

In the meantime, I want to give a few suggestions to take this profoundly difficult and awful reason for a lockdown (a devastating global pandemic) and make this an intentional pause. Even as things begin to open up, we will need to be wise, cautious and stay home more than we desire in an effort to keep others and ourselves safe.

  1. Take some time each day to pray. Focus on God's character. Lament the current challenges you face. And try to think of specific things you are thankful for today.

  2. Take some time each day to connect. Connect with the people you are with in lockdown (family, roommates, etc.). Be thankful for these people (especially the ones that bother you- siblings, roommates, children, parents!) and see them as made in God's image and wonderful in his sight. Also connect with friends virtually. Connect with people in our church through FaceTime, Zoom, Google, text messaging, and phone calls. The only way the church can function as the church is when we all take the responsibility of reaching out to each other in care and love. Take this time to build into the meaningful relationships you have in your life and even reconnect with old friends.

  3. Give yourself grace. During this time the things that normally take me an hour have taken two. My brain has sputtered and skipped more than usual making me slightly more absent-minded (for those of you who know my normal absent-mindedness... pray for Whitney!). Some of you are coming out of this time with awesome new hobbies and skills while others are feeling great about being out of pajamas for multiple days in a row. Both are okay. None of us took a class on how to live through a global pandemic so give yourself some grace in walking forward each day.

  4. Take time to revaluate the pace of your life before COVID-19. We have been walking through a new sermon series called Upside Down: Learning from Jesus in an Age of Chaos. This series is designed to help us evaluate the ways in which our lives were out of balance with the upside down Kingdom of God. What time could be better to evaluate these things than when the whole world is turned upside down anyway! In what ways did we set a pace that made walking with Jesus another thing we added to our day rather than a new way of living? In what ways did we run so fast to get a main hustle, side hustle, hobby, and friends that we forgot to sit silently at the feet of Jesus? How do we go back to the basics of following Jesus and see the Upside Down Kingdom of God reshape and transform everything?

Was this intentional slowing down and scaling back the right thing to do? I don't know. I don't pretend to have all the answers (I loved my seminary experience but skipped that Pastoring through a pandemic class!). My hope is that it will recharge us for the work ahead. The recovery from this pandemic is going to take a long time. The mental health, economic, relational and physical toll of this crisis will be far-reaching and the church of Jesus Christ must play a real role in bringing hope and love. But that role must be one where we are abiding in Jesus, the true vine, for life. So, let's make sure we are doing that together for the glory of God. Can't wait to see you all soon!

In Christ alone,

Pastor Josh

COVID-19 Update for City Hope Fellowship

City Hope Friends and Family,

After consulting together as a team and in working with our rented facility management (MadJax) we have the following plan of action for ministries within City Hope Fellowship:

  1. All in-person meetings, worship services, classes, etc. will not be taking place at MadJax until after April 15. This is the requirement of the leadership at MadJax and we will be respecting that and not having any City Hope events in our current location. This includes our worship service, faith and finances class, men’s and women’s bible studies and children’s bible study. We were very excited about these new groups, but we are in full agreement that an abundance of caution is wise at this time.

  2. We are suspending all in person small groups and City Hope ministry meetings that may take place in homes (including our new Wednesday night bible studies and Faith and Finance) until after April 1st. In the next few weeks we will continue to monitor and evaluate if in-person meetings in homes should take place. We encourage you not to gather together in groups unless absolutely necessary and only with the necessary precautions of social distancing, reducing physical contact, hand washing, and thorough cleaning.  Please follow the recommendations of the CDC in terms of hand washing, minimizing physical contact, being prepared, and how to detect symptoms and what to do if you have them. (this information can be found here: https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/index.html)  

  3. We will be live-streaming on Sunday morning a modified worship service for you to participate in together. We will pray and preach the word and we encourage you to participate together in your home.

  4. We encourage everyone to reach out to each other via phone calls, text messages, and video chats. We are a family and we need each other. While we do want you to isolate physically, we don’t want you to isolate relationally.

  5. If you are in need of any help, whether that is prayer, conversation or errands and groceries because you are ill or at high risk please text the church at 765-295-7164 and we will seek to meet the need. If you are able to provide help please text the church as well and we will inform you of needs that arise.

For some of you these steps will feel extreme. This is correct. And yet love of neighbor requires extreme actions. The church throughout history has stepped in the gap to provide for the least of these and to care and lead. We must continue to do so in partnership with local authorities and institutions. If we are able to physically isolate and stop the spread of COVID-19 we can save lives. As we take these measures remember to reject any racism and discrimination that is at work throughout our nation. COVID-19 isn't connected to race, ethnicity or nationality so let us act accordingly. Please continue to pray for leaders around the globe and in our community who are making tough decisions at every institution in order to save lives. Please pray for medical professionals as they put their lives at risk to care for others. And pray for the vulnerable in our community who are most at risk to be affected. Also, pray for us as a church. The recovery from this global pandemic will take time and will cost each of us personally. We will in the coming weeks, months, and years know much more about how we as a church and individuals can play a role in helping the Muncie community thrive.

In Christ alone,

Pastor Josh Holowell and the City Hope Staff Team

Shame and Identity

Shame and Identity

Shame can often be a secret inner battle that everyone deals with to one degree or another. But God is beckoning us to hold onto hope unwaveringly and believe in what Jesus accomplished on the cross and in His resurrection for us. Even further, I think we need to learn to wrestle with God and His word when we enter battles with shame and disbelief because God wants to speak to us when we are waiting for healing and His promises.

0-17: Learning to Lose to the Glory of God

0-17: Learning to Lose to the Glory of God

What if we feel like we lose in academics, in our career, in our relationships, with our parenting, in our spiritual life? What if your life doesn't look like you wanted it to and according to the standards you set for yourself or others set for you, you seem to be losing? What if I am losing my health? What if I am losing my emotional stability? What if no matter how hard I try to get ahead in life, the powers of this society beat me down and I lose? What if we look up at the scoreboard in the heat of life's trials and you are down 20-1?

Missionary While Black: The Importance of Sending People of Color to the Mission Field. pt 1

Missionary While Black: The Importance of Sending People of Color to the Mission Field. pt 1

“Where are the other black missionaries?” Tracie Warren who currently serves as the financial coach for the Impact Movement was asked this question during one of her mission trips to Africa. This question is the same question I had while in Jamaica and while serving in campus ministry as a student and even now as staff. The world is waiting for us. While watching a talk given by Sandra Van Opstal I was challenged, during her talk, she challenged her primarily white audience with this statement “we often see minority communities as the mission field but they are actually the mission force”. I heard this a did a good ole Baptist “Amen!”. Yes, yes yes, when we limit people of color to something to be reached, we often limit their ability to be sent.