| Church statement, circa 1964
To be better able to minister to the needs
of students, we desire also to become an established church in the community.
Because students do not reside here permanently, mission work which is
directed to them, although it is a very essential ministry with benefits
extending far beyond the local church, does not result in an established
church. A church consisting of members who make their home in the
community gives a greater stability to the work of the church and offers
a more effective church-home for the students.
For these reasons and because there is no
church of Reformed character in the city of Ames, we have purchased property
which we believe will serve both the needs of the campus and the community.
This property is located about a mile west of campus in the midst of a
newly developing section of the city. In addition to the several
hundred homes already located there, it is estimated that in the next few
years an additional three to five-hundred homes will be built. The
city has already constructed a new elementary school to serve this area.
Thus the Christian Reformed Church has an
unusual opportunity in the city of Ames. There is no church of a
Reformed character in or near this city. Previously our people and
those from Reformed churches have had to either travel long distances to
attend their own churches or join churches of other denominations.
We have now begun our own work in Ames. The beginnings are small,
but the challenge is great. We pray that the work we have begun may
lead under the blessing of our Lord Jesus Christ to the establishment of
a Christian Reformed Church in the city of Ames. |
Ames Daily
Tribune, October 14, 1966
By Joyce Manchester
The Christian Reformed Church, nationally,
is a comparative young denomination having just come into being slightly
more than 100 years ago, in 1857. The denomination has some 600 congregations
in the United States and Canada with a heavy concentration in Pella and
Northwest Iowa. The Christian Reformed Church in Ames is located
at 3624 Ontario Road and presently are meeting in the basement of the parsonage,
but have future building plans at the blueprint stage only waiting for
financial readiness...
They were largely descended from a mother
church in Holland, The Dutch Reformed, and the creeds are shared by all
Reformed churches throughout the world. The theological difference,
said the Rev. Arlan Menninga, pastor of the Christian Reformed Church here
is small, the practical difference is the Christian Reformed is more conservative
in following tradition. The main emphasis of the denomination in
the past 25 to 50 years has been on missions , first foreign and now home
missions. The home missions work is devoted to the responsibility
of overseeing groups of people from the denomination who have no church
home.
As for instance the church in Ames is governed
by a Home Mission Church, the First Christian Reformed, Wellsburg.
The home churches are affiliated with Classis, here it's the North Central
Iowa Classis. There are four Classis in Iowa. The Classis meets
three times a year, the president being elected for each meeting and only
for that meeting. The Home Missions Committee under the Classis administers
the business affairs of a mission church. The primary requirements,
said the Rev. Mr. Menninga, for a mission church to become a self-supporting
church is leadership, financial independence and proof they are ready to
assume church status. A local church is governed by elders and deacons
with the minister being the teaching elder. To become an elder one
must have spiritual maturity and leadership ability. "I'm sure we
have qualifications now for leadership here," he said.
The church here began in 1961 when a group
of families with Christian Reformed backgrounds felt the need of establishing
a Christian Reformed fellowship began meeting first in Alumni Hall and
then in the Memorial Union. The group was adopted by the Home Mission
Committee of the Classis and the Wellsburg church was appointed as its
mother church.
The first regular pastor, although two served
previously in a temporary capacity, was the Rev. Mr. Menninga, who came
in 1964. The group then began meeting in the parsonage at 3624 Ontario
Road. The three and half acre site will contain, in the future, their
proposed new church. Presently though the group, who averages between
90 and a hundred at morning worship, are meeting in the basement of the
parsonage.
"I consider it the church," said the pastor.
"Our church has seen continued and rapid growth," he continued. "In
less than three years we have more than tripled in size."
The Rev. Mr. Menninga is a graduate of Calvin
College and Seminary, Grand Rapids, Mich. and came here from Mountain Lake,
Minn. He and his wife, Joann have four children, Laura, 8, Mark,
6, Judith, 3, and Alisa, eight months.
The Lord's Supper is observed six times
a year and during a special week-day service during Passion Week.
Baptism by sprinkling is for infants and children and for adults who have
never been baptized.
The small, but growing congregation supports
a Women's Guild for bible study and fellowship; a student fellowship group
who meets for Sunday night supper following the evening worship; an adult
monthly discussion hour on Sunday evening, who discuss practical Christianity;
a monthly church night program, a varied program for Bible study, inspiration
and fellowship. In addition they have Sunday school for all ages
and a vacation Bible school.
They have two worship services each Sunday,
one at 10:30 a.m. and one at 6 p.m. The center of both worship services
is the preaching of the Word from the Bible. Each service also utilizes
a lot of congregational singing. "I am proud of the faithful attendance
at worship services" commented the pastor. The local church is headed
by a steering committee. The congregation is composed of people from
the Ames community, university staff, married students and single students.
Ecumenical-wise the denomination has approached
like faiths in a preliminary talking stage, namely the Orthodox Presbyterian,
German Reformed, and Reformed Church of America.
One indication of becoming more progressive
is that at the 1966 synod the previous ruling on regular attendance at
the theater was changed to one which "encourages discriminatory use of
the film arts." The basic changes have been in techniques used but
not the way of presenting the preaching of the Word as the basis of all
Christian faith. |
Groundbreaking Ceremony for the church building,
March, 23, 1967
Ames Daily Tribune, March
24, 1967
TO BUILD CHURCH - A ground-breaking ceremony
was held Sunday morning, launching the construction of the church building
for the University Christian Reformed Church at 3624 Ontario St.
Following morning worship, the entire congregation walked to the building
site to observe the ceremony. The first shovelsfull of earth were
turned by Paul Van Soelen and John Verkade who have been in the congregation
since its beginning, Dennis Luhrs representing the university students
in the congregation, and the pastor, the Rev. Arlan Menninga.
The building was designed by Savage and
Verploeg Architects of West Des Moines. It will include facilities
for worship, fellowship, and religious education, a kitchen, and a study
for the pastor. The exterior of the building will combine the effects
of stained wood, brick, marble-chip coating, and hand-split cedar shake
shingles. The beginning of the construction marks the end of two
years of planning and preparation.
The general contractor, Don Bartholomew
of Carlisle, expects to begin work at the site this week. The completed
building will be ready for occupancy in about six months.
The Christian Reformed congregation has
been worshipping in temporary facilities in the basement of the parsonage
for nearly three years. Prior to the completion of the parsonage
in 1964, worship and fellowship were held in rented rooms on Iowa State
University campus. |