Offering gratitude to our Sustainer and Provider!

Can you even begin to imagine how many thousands of lives have experienced the transformational presence of Jesus Christ in, and through, Tabernacle Baptist Church over these last 130 years?  

God’s goodness to this congregation is cause for deep gratitude and abiding joy. Sunday, November 26, is Christ the King Sunday. We will give thanks for another year of life and ministry together and celebrate an “offering of financial commitmentsfor the upcoming year.

Will you take time to pray about your financial participation in what God will do in and through Tabernacle in the year ahead? And as an expression of your intention, will you please complete an online commitment form indicating your financial participation for 2018?  Your information will remain confidential. You may also print a hardcopy (click here)

Some of the highlights of this last year include: 

    • Creation of a Statement of Welcome, through a process of respectful and prayerful dialogue. The model we created together will be used by sister congregations in the years ahead.  
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    • Relocation of family members to remote regions of the world for the purposes of sharing the Gospel, sending multiple teams to NYC to serve in Hell’s Kitchen, supporting refugees in our community, and the feeding of hundreds of our immediate neighbors in need. 
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    • The equipping and sending of both Rev. Kristen Koger, our Pastoral Resident, and Samuel Lian, our Youth Ministry Intern. We also welcomed Jacque Green, our beloved Pastoral Intern, into our midst.
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    • Our worship themes centered on openness to God’s leadership and an openness to others. God helped us to “make the road by walking” and guided us to make space “for everyone born….a place at the table”. We have “looked backward” to see God at work through the imperfect lives our fore-bearers so that we might “walk forward” in faith with an understanding that our work isn’t finished yet. 

 

Let’s take this moment as an opportunity to affirm God’s transformational work, each and every week, inside and outside our buildings. Let’s all dig deep as Tabernacle once again finds itself in an exciting season of saying yes to whatever God has for us. And let’s give with a spirit of gratitude and in humble expectation of what God is going to do next. Thank you for all that you mean to this congregation, and to the gospel of Christ. 

Sincerely,

Sterling W. Severns

Pastor

Click here to print a hardcopy

Click here to fill out the online form

IMPORTANT CHANGE IN WORDING IN OUR Constitution (TCCC), DEC. 3

We are indebted to the Child Care Center Ministry and Administrative Teams for their good work in helping us to establish a new committee structure for TCCC. The trial period has been very helpful and we now feel that it is time for us fro ammend our constitution. The congregation will vote on the proposed changes on Dec. 3. Hard copies of the proposed change are available in the Welcome Center.
 
Click here to view the proposed changes. 

A good word from Samuel UC Lian, Oct. 2017

Greetings, my sisters and brothers in Christ! 

I hope this finds each of you well. I understand I’m very late to write to you this but better late than never, right? I want to say thank you to you for my time at Tabernacle as the Pastoral Intern for the youth from September, 2015 to May, 2017. First, I would like to acknowledge the fact that you raised me up to lead the youth because of that, I could lead the youth group that I was once in. Tabernacle is “home” for me because of you. I am thankful and grateful for the youth leaders and mentors that came before me; I won’t name them all. But they have shaped my life in a way that I could not expect when I first came to Tabernacle.  

Second, 

To the congregation: I cannot thank you enough for your love, support, encouragement and kindness you gave me as a pastoral staff. Thank you for allowing me to lead you and showing me what it means to be a minister not just to the youth but the whole congregation. Since the first day I stepped into Tabernacle back in 2009, you always welcome me with open arms and show me what it means to share the love that Christ has given to others. Kudos to you for raising me right! Thank you for allowing me to minister you by giving me opportunity to share sermon and communion with you. You have shown me what it means to welcome everyone at the table. 

To the youth parents and team: I don’t know how you let me the teenagers. For that, I will always be grateful and thankful to you because it takes a lot of courage, trust and faith. You supported me since day one as I led the youth. Not only you allowed me to minister the youth but also to you as well. I could not have done it without you. I know there were times I might have let you down, but you picked me up and encouraged me be a leader to the youth. Your support, love and patient meant the world to me. Thank you for trusting and having faith in me as I led the youth. 

To the youth: I do not know where to begin but we, indeed are wonderfully weird and for that I’m thankful. Though I was to lead and teach you, I think you have taught me more than I could have ever imagine. You welcome whoever enters the youth room with opened arms and always make a place for them at the table. I do not have enough words to describe how much you have impacted my life to be a leader and minister. Keep supporting and encouraging one another as you have done. Know that you matter, are loved and worth so much. Thank you for trusting in me as I led and ministered you. I LOVE each and everyone of you. Though I may not be your youth leader, do know that I am still here for you and I am one of your biggest fans. May our God watches over your head and blesses you. 

Words cannot describe enough how grateful and thankful for being a Pastoral Intern for the Youth. The Tabernacle is HOME and I give thanks to God for that. 

Your brother in Christ, 

Samuel Lian 

Help us prepare for visitation weekend, Nov. 9-12.

We are excited to welcome our Associate Pastor Candidate for a visitation weekend, Nov. 9-12. It’s important that we spend time familiarizing ourselves with the Associate Pastor Job Description prior to her arrival. Please carve out 10 minutes to listen to the introduction and read through the description. Contact a member of the Search Team, or Sterling, if you have specific questions.

Please remember to sign-up for one of the Q&A Sessions for the visitation weekend. 

 

 

Familiarizing ourselves with the Assoc. Pastor job description prior to visitation weekend.

We are excited to welcome our Associate Pastor Candidate for a visitation weekend, Nov. 9-12. It’s important that we spend time familiarizing ourselves with the Associate Pastor Job Description prior to her arrival. Please carve out 10 minutes to listen to the introduction and read through the description. Contact a member of the Search Team, or Sterling, if you have specific questions. 

We also encourage you to sign-up for one of the Q&A Sessions for the visitation weekend. 

TBC Construction & Renovation Committee Update: Fall 2017

The turn of events for the TBC Construction & Renovation Committee over the past six weeks has been rather astonishing.  The change in direction for our efforts was presented to the members who attended the Quarterly s Meeting on October 15th, and the new proposal seems to have been very well-received.  Please review this summary of events and next steps to remain updated and engaged in the future of our TBC facilities.  We sincerely appreciate your involvement in what has been a story of patience.

At the July 2017 Quarterly Business Meeting the congregation voted approval of demolition of our two row houses.  This may have been the third or fourth time the church has voted to take the houses down, and this decision was no easier than in the past.  It was a difficult choice that we felt was necessary based on the condition of the houses and the anticipated costs to fix them.  This vote included an understanding that we would proceed with creating a new front to the Williams Building after row house demolition, as well as with creating more detailed plans for the “green space” that would be result from tearing down the row houses.  We had completed plans and pricing for the demolition, scheduling the destruction to begin on 10/2/17.  We also scheduled a meeting with our neighbors to alert them to any impact the work would have on them for 9/24/17, and we invited both church members and our TCCC families to bid on items in the two row houses to raise money before demolition began.

That’s when our path began to take a new course!  An individual interested in some of the items for purchase from the row houses asked Eliot Clark of Stonewall Construction to stop by to help with making sure some of the items of interest would work.  Eliot’s immediate reaction was not so much about those items but rather what he could do to save the houses.  His professional career has been working on the restoration of Fan District homes, rehabilitating hundreds of homes in his own neighborhood.  His father died in May, and he knew that his father would be honored if Eliot could help us save these historic homes.  He quickly created a possible cost/profit estimate spreadsheet, and he left a message for our Senior Pastor to call him.  Sterling called Eliot about twenty minutes before Fellowship activities on Wednesday, 9/20/17, walking into the Fellowship Hall that evening in amazement at what he had heard.  Eliot made a generous offer to help significantly reduce the overall costs of renovation, essentially making an offer to save the church close to $250,000 in professional fees.  Could this be another example of God’s divine intervention in the life of our church?

With this new opportunity regarding the row houses, the committee members agreed to pause the efforts related to tearing down the row houses and focus on refining the details around saving them.  Since 9/21/17 the members of the Construction & Renovation Committee have worked to validate that Eliot’s proposal to save the row houses and turn them into duplexes (two apartments per building) is doable for TBC.  There are many elements to consider—construction costs, how we pay for construction, City Code requirements, tax implications, tax credits that may be available due to restoring historic homes, property management, impact on the Tabernacle Child Care Center (TCCC), etc.  Our research so far indicates that the proposal appears to be viable.  We will know more about the effect on the bottom line income numbers when all costs have been identified and incorporated in our analysis.   We will continue to expedite additional research to ensure that all aspects of this proposal make this new approach for the row houses is in the best interests of our congregation today and in the future.

  1. Why Do We Want Apartments?
    • This approach essentially establishes another endowment for the church
    • The net income from the rent each year can support TBC and its ministries long term
  1. What Will We Need to Do to Establish & Manage These Apartments?
    • Apply for a Virginia Baptist Extension Board construction loan of up to $500,000.
    • Determine how to use our God-Sized Vision funds to support the row houses proposal and any additional approved improvements to the main church building.
    • Verify & Complete Steps for Tax Credits, based on renovating two historic homes (~$100,000 to pay towards costs).
    • Establish an LLC (Limited Liability Corporation).
    • Outline all anticipated longer-term costs associated with the apartments, including:
      • Property Management, with a cost of ~10% of rental income annually
      • Maintenance/Vacancy costs annually, allowing for ~10% per year
      • Insurance Costs (have verified that insurance remains similar to today’s costs)
      • Loan Payments
    • Complete architectural drawings and confirm construction costs.
    • Secure a Special Use Permit (SUP) to change zoning from Single Family Dwelling to zoning for apartments (six month process), and determine costs associated with obtaining this SUP.
    • Set up financial management of the project.
    • Establish what we believe to be true net income/expense dollars during construction, after construction, during paying off the loan, and after the loan is paid off.
    • Present the results of our additional analysis for a church vote regarding whether we proceed with this proposal.
    • Create a milestones plan for renovation and communicate impact of renovation activities to our neighbors and TCCC families.

We invite you to ask your questions to any of our Construction & Renovation Committee members at any time.  It is important for you to be informed about this proposal, and we welcome your input.  We plan to keep you updated on a regular basis prior to holding any vote for action related to how we address use of the row houses.  This is truly a unique story of how God provides, and we can only wonder how He will continue to bless our efforts as we move forward in this story that is part of Tabernacle Baptist Church!

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