Emerging Leaders

Iglesia Presbiteriana Nuevas Fronteras: Faithfully Serving Its Community

Iglesia Presbiteriana Nuevas Fronteras: Faithfully Serving Its Community

The multicultural, multilingual church located in the heart of Plainfield, NJ, is defined by its name Iglesia Presbiteriana Nuevas Fronteras. It is represented by a congregation of dedicated Christians from 17 countries throughout North America, South America, and the Caribbean. The church is a representation of the mostly Latino/a immigrant population of the Plainfield community, with this demographic leading the populous at 43.8 percent.

Nuevas Fronteras is home to many Spanish speaking immigrants and second-generation Americans who are marginalized. In 2017, 22.9 percent of Plainfield’s residents lived in poverty. These rates were 12.3% for white non-Hispanic residents, 16.4% for Blacks, 27.0% for Hispanic, 63% for American Indians and 31.8% for other races and residents and 8.0% for two or more races. This home away from home incorporates the mixed cultures of its community through worship, music, and fellowship while providing services to the community such as vacation bible study, La Cocina Caliente, immigration assistance, job preparation, a clothing bank, and ESL for the elderly.

Second Baptist Church of Asbury Park: Building Their Community into God’s Desired Image

Second Baptist Church of Asbury Park: Building Their Community into God’s Desired Image

Adedayo Adebayo, a 2020 Sacred Sector Fellow, served at the Second Baptist Church of Asbury Park (SBCAP), a predominantly Black church that was incorporated in 1891. It is a church committed to Christian growth, and they do this through practical, engaging, experiential, and creative teaching of the scriptures. SBCAP has a wide range of ministries through which they carry out their God-given purpose. They are an intentional, intergenerational, impactful, and inspirational community.

SBCAP is built on four pillars of purpose – Worship, Discipleship, Benevolence, and Outreach – and through the four pillars, they continue to strive to make their community into God’s desired image.

Chapel Pointe: Desiring to Make a Radical Impact for the Kingdom

Chapel Pointe: Desiring to Make a Radical Impact for the Kingdom

Chapel Pointe is a growing church in Hudsonville, MI that pursues a mission to multiply transformed followers of Jesus. To that end, the church strives to intentionally reach, serve, and disciple its community. It also holds strategic partnerships with other ministry leaders, with a desire to see the church make a radical impact for the Kingdom in its community and beyond. In this article, Max Spoelstra introduces his host site, Chapel Pointe, through the Three P’s framework of organizational policy, public positioning, and public policy.

The Council of Churches Greater Bridgeport: Creating a More Just, Healthy, and Vibrant Society

The Council of Churches Greater Bridgeport: Creating a More Just, Healthy, and Vibrant Society

Creating and maintaining a just and equal society in the city of Bridgeport, CT is the main purpose of the Council of Churches in Greater Bridgeport. Omar Nicholson, a 2020 Sacred Sector Fellow who is serving with the Council this summer, reflects on his initial interaction with the Council and its sacred mission. The Council engages this mission through several outreach efforts, including working to address food insecurity, criminal justice, educational reform and the Becoming Anti-racist summer study series. Omar shares plans to assess the organizational and public policy culture at the Council and also to provide supportive consultation to the Racial Ally initiative.

Prison Fellowship: Dedicated to Justice that Restores

Prison Fellowship: Dedicated to Justice that Restores

Yasmine Arrington, ScholarCHIPS, Inc. Founder and Executive Director and 2020 Sacred Sector Fellow, analyzes Prison Fellowship’s mission and activities in respect to the Three P’s framework. She elaborates on how Prison Fellowship’s approach to ministry and advocacy for all those impacted by crime and incarceration makes prisons sacred and rehabilitative, advances criminal justice reforms, and supports prisoners, their families, and their communities.

Lexington Rescue Mission: Offering the Hope of the Gospel to the Community

Lexington Rescue Mission: Offering the Hope of the Gospel to the Community

Chloe Specht, a Sacred Sector Fellow, wrote a summary of Lexington Rescue Mission’s (LRM) history and description of their work in the greater Lexington, KY community. The article features a description of major ongoing projects and programs and why they are valuable to LRM’s clientele. Chloe plans to help LRM prepare for their new women’s transitional housing program.

National Evangelical Association: Living Out Their Sacred Mission to Honor God

National Evangelical Association: Living Out Their Sacred Mission to Honor God

Prudent leaders of faith-based nonprofits in the U.S. often seek out best organizational assessment practices in order to administer constructive changes that will position their organization to more fully live out its sacred mission. Sacred Sector Fellow Rev. Girien R. Salazar provides an introduction to the National Association of Evangelicals (NAE), a Christian ecumenical organization comprised of 40 major denominations, and provides a preliminary application of Sacred Sector’s Three P’s Framework of organizational assessment: Public Policy, Organizational Practices, and Public Engagement. Salazar discusses what he hopes to learn throughout the fellowship and how he plans to contribute to the organizational goals of his host-site.

Redemption Housing: Bringing Restoration and Healing to Returning Citizens

Redemption Housing: Bringing Restoration and Healing to Returning Citizens

This article will highlight Redemption Housing, a faith-based organization that is designed to help men assimilate back into society through intentional relationships and access to social services in a dignified environment. Unlike typical nonprofit half-way houses, it’s a faith-based organization that has real solutions to housing and employment for citizens. Redemption Housing believes spiritual practices that engage and encourage corporate worship in a covenant faith community supply social support and accountability for formerly incarcerated persons so they do not re-enter the prison pipeline. Rev. Dianne Faust of the historic Grace Baptist Church of Germantown and a Sacred Sector Fellow has been instrumental in helping the organization put in place policies and practices that bring about physical, emotional, and spiritual healing in returning citizens. She has also helped Redemption Housing to expand its housing capacity by forming partnerships in the community with other churches.

On Ramps Covenant Church: Embodying a Theology of Place

On Ramps Covenant Church: Embodying a Theology of Place

How many times have we left the church in order to get to church? This is the question that started On Ramps Covenant Church in Fresno, CA. It is a multi-generational, multi-ethnic, interracial, multi-class, and multi-educational congregation with a strong theology of place. In this post, Michael Carline-Perez writes about his role as a Sacred Sector Fellow with this remarkable congregation.

CrossPurpose: Helping Image-Bearers Out of Poverty

CrossPurpose: Helping Image-Bearers Out of Poverty

In Denver, CO, over 350,000 people live at or below the poverty line. While homelessness persists in that city as it does in many urban areas of America, it is the working class poor in Denver who often feel the economic pinch the strongest. One nonprofit and faith-based organization, CrossPurpose, is committed to addressing the issue of financial insecurity through a six-month-long career and community development program. Hunter Hambrick, a 2020 Sacred Sector fellow, provides a brief overview of CrossPurpose’s history and mission, assesses how this organization lives out the Three P’s and details his role there this summer.

Equipping Churches for Their Role in Immigration and Asylum

Equipping Churches for Their Role in Immigration and Asylum

Immigration laws and regulations are the focus of a lot of debate and emotion, and the impact on asylum-seekers of constantly shifting priorities and enforcement policies has been fear, pain and suffering for many who are simply seeking a safe harbor. Gretchen Saalbach, a 2020 Sacred Sector Fellow, has been working with the SoCal Presbyterian Immigrant Accompaniment Ministry as they seek to bring clarity to churches and individuals on the complexities of immigration among their congregations, and recruit them to help.

Meet the 2020 Sacred Sector Fellows: Adedayo, Sarai and Omar

Meet the 2020 Sacred Sector Fellows: Adedayo, Sarai and Omar

This is the first in a four-part series featuring the 2020 cohort of Sacred Sector Fellowship, which equips current and recently graduated seminarians for service within the faith-based nonprofit sector. Meet Adedayo, Sarai and Omar -- three seminarians who are pursuing their faith-based vocation with the Sacred Sector Fellowship this summer.

Congregations and Christian Citizens Essential to Ending Human Trafficking

Congregations and Christian Citizens Essential to Ending Human Trafficking

This article, drawing on the research Sacred Sector Fellow Denise Strothers completed for her dissertation, addresses the overwhelming task of how a congregational communities and faith-based organizations can take steps to assist victims and perpetrators of human trafficking. This article equips Christian men as citizens, as well as faith-based organizations and their leaders, to address the complex social challenge of human trafficking holistically, integrating congregational best practices on how to work with exploited people, an understanding of how to influence public policy and advocate for justice in human trafficking, and an awareness of how their faith calls them to shape culture through public positioning. Denise states: “My research reflects a holistic public justice approach because it encourages both individuals and their faith communities to live out their right roles and responsibilities, based on their intrinsically held sacred values.”

The Role of Sacred Public Partnerships in Serving Those with Developmental Needs During COVID-19

The Role of Sacred Public Partnerships in Serving Those with Developmental Needs During COVID-19

In such a short amount of time, COVID-19 has changed our whole way of living. As we look forward to a time when the virus will be gone, it’s hard to imagine anything could go back to the way it was before. While there has been substantial coverage on how the virus is evolving, predictions on “flattening the curve” and increased public education hygiene and social distancing, minimal attention has been given to how COVID-19 is impacting organizations that support individuals with developmental needs. Ryan Slaughter, a 2018 Sacred Sector Fellow, shares how he learned, through serving, employing and advocating for people with disabilities, the ways that faith-based nonprofits can holistically live out their faith in the ways they engage with people with disabilities. Slaughter shares how this work is even more important amid the health and economic impacts of COVID-19, and how faith-based organizations can creatively partner with government to better serve this community.

Organizations as Embodied Ideas: Towards A Theology of Institutions

Organizations as Embodied Ideas: Towards A Theology of Institutions

Public justice holds that each sphere of life has an accompanying institution or community and that government ought both affirmatively live out its distinct roles while preserving space for all other distinct civil society organizations to fulfill their unique responsibilities. Public justice is a concept closely tied to the act of embodying theological ideas in institutional contexts. As someone who had spent the last few years primarily studying ideas, this framework provided a way for Sacred Sector Fellow David Tassell to see those ideas come to life. Tassell shares how this public justice framework provided a means to see theology inform the structure of organizations and institutions, as well demonstrate how the mission and purpose of a faith-based organization is a means for theological notions of justice to become embodied in entities that actively make society more just.

Advancing a Sacred Sector Framework in the Academy

Advancing a Sacred Sector Framework in the Academy

Schools and academic institutions have an important task of shaping the minds and preparing individuals for success in the world. These institutions, however, can sometimes perpetuate errant ideologies and hurtful stereotypes. During the 2018-19 academic year, Princeton Theological Seminary was one institution that had to come to terms with its questionable past. In this article, Kerwin Webb explains how the Sacred Sector Fellowship provided him with a framework to critically examine the role of institutions as it relates to public justice and to  provide sufficient language to name the right roles and responsibilities of the government and institutions of civil society. 

Fellowship Perspective: Kerwin Webb

Fellowship Perspective: Kerwin Webb

Kerwin Webb, a seminarian at Princeton Theological Seminary, participated in the inaugural Sacred Sector Fellowship. The Fellowship is a learning community for emerging leaders who seek to work with faith-based organizations to integrate their sacred missions in the public square. This is accomplished through organizational practices, in public policy engagement and in cultivating positive public positioning. Webb recently shared his experience in the program and how he has applied what he learned to support his church ministry in Asbury Park, New Jersey.

Fellowship Perspective: David Tassell

Almost three years ago, my wife and I had the joy of joining Table Covenant Church, a church plant in Fairfax, Virginia. We immediately connected with the welcoming congregation and church vision: a commitment to the community and to cultivating a deep learning environment. Several months later, the church gave me the opportunity to join the staff as the Pastoral Intern for the remaining two years of my seminary program. These two years afforded me the opportunity to cultivate pastoral leadership in addition to my academic learning, and they drove my learning forward, fueling questions that ultimately connected me with the Sacred Sector Fellowship.