William Eavenson William Eavenson

A Church For the City | Joining God's Kingdom Work in our Neighborhood of Evanston

When you look in Ms. Adkins’ eyes, its easy to see why some of the most influential people in the city respond deferentially to “the mayor of Evanston.”

Ms. Adkins grew up in Bessemer City, Alabama before moving to Cincinnati.  She has lived in Evanston for 54 years and seen quite a bit.  When you talk with her, you will certainly hear stories.  But they are never stories about herself: they are always stories about the beautiful neighborhood she is a part of, and her efforts to tirelessly serve Evanston residents and see a community continuously re-imagined for the better.

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You’ll hear about the transformation of the St. Leger apartments, and how the tragic accident of a young boy falling and severely injuring his neck, galvanized Ms. Adkins into action.  Through her efforts and in partnership with the city, a 100+ unit, crime-ridden slum was torn down and replaced with a brand new 26 unit affordable housing community that has played a key role in the recovery of Evanston as a walkable, vibrant urban neighborhood.  You’ll hear about the transformation of the Evanston Recreation Center, the addition a new façade and the creation of a beautiful waterpark facility that on hot summer days is now filled with children’s smiles and parents’ laughs.  You’ll hear about how Evanston is the educating community: home to amazing schools from the 5-star Horizons’ Day care on Woodburn to Evanston Academy, Academy of World Languages, and Alliance Academy at the elementary level, to the top-ranked Walnut Hills High School, to Xavier University.  You’ll also no doubt get invited to the Evanston Area Council of which Ms. Adkins is the president.  Why will you be invited?  Because Ms. Adkins wants everyone involved!  “There’s no big I’s and little you’s in God’s eyes,” she often says, “We must accentuate the positives and downplay the negatives.  Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding.  In all thy ways acknowledge Him and He will make your paths straight.”

Ms. Adkins embodies this unrelenting trust in the Lord.  Faith in Christ has become central to the heartbeat of the Evanston neighborhood.  Ms. Adkins has been a constant supporter of our work at The Mission Cincinnati because she sees us as a church whose ministry goes “beyond the four walls and into the community.”  She also sees that we have many young people in our church, and as such believes we are perfectly positioned to reach the youth of the neighborhood for whom her heart truly breaks.  Alongside Ms. Adkins and the Evanston Area Council, we have had the privilege of connecting at the grassroots level with groups in our community that are trying to do good work.  Our people have tutored preschoolers at Evanston Academy, we’ve helped put on 2 annual Halloween Trunk or Treats for the neighborhood, and in April we threw our own Evanston Easter Egg hunt that was attended by over 250 people from our community.  When Ms. Adkins saw the event she said, “We should have invited the news out today!  People only hear the bad stories coming out of Evanston.  They need to know that good things are happening here too!”

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We are honored to be part of the Good Stories God is writing through our neighborhood and torch-bearers like Ms. Adkins.  Evanston is certainly still a neighborhood of need.  We have high child poverty statistics, drug trafficking is a continuous problem, and crime stats—though decreasing—are not negligible.  We are also a community that is wrestling with issues of housing justice and gentrification.  But this neighborhood is also full of beauty, full of life, and full of passionate residents eager to make a positive difference.  As a church that loves our neighborhood and seeks to pray for and work toward its welfare, we continually seek to be a faithful presence in our place that reveals God’s Kingdom more and more on our streets and works to promote equity and justice in the redevelopment of our community alongside all the folks here who have already been engaged in this work long before we arrived.  This is difficult work, but it is joyful and we are so excited about how God continues to root us more and more in this beautiful neighborhood and increase our favor with and opportunities to serve and be served by our neighbors!  We dream about a future when our church can renovate a permanent space in the community and open the doors to a “front porch for Evanston” where people from every pocket of the community can come together to enjoy food, conversation, and great public events. 

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Our work to reach out to and serve the neighborhood of Evanston is one of the many ministries you will be supporting by giving to The Mission Cincinnati on #givingTuesday!  Also if you live in Cincinnati and desire to be a part of a Christian faith community that takes its place seriously and genuinely seeks to serve its neighborhood, we’d love for you to connect with you!  We meet for worship every Sunday at 10 AM at the Evanston Recreation Center (3204 Woodburn Ave. Cincinnati OH 45207).  We’d love to meet you, hear your story, and share ours!

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William Eavenson William Eavenson

Introducing Advent | A Spiritual Season & and a Lens for our Longing and Hope

Have you ever watched the videos of especially festive Black Friday celebrations?  The ones where the doors of a big box retail store open early in the morning to crushing waves of thousands of people stampeding and clamoring over one another to get the best deals on stuff. 

I find this phenomenon illustrative of the reality of our world and the state of the human heart: our world is broken and we long to see it repaired, our hearts are empty and desperate and we are longing for someone or something bigger than us to come and save us.

The commercial enterprise of the “Holiday Season” (which now seems to start as early as late September) is so successful because it speaks into the longings and hopes we feel as 21st century humans.  “Just buy this thing,” the holiday season enterprise promises, “and you will be happy!”  Consumerism always has a shiny looking, readily-available, concrete object that promises to satisfy our longings and bring our hopes to fruition.  The problem with this—that I’ve experienced and I’m sure you have as well—is that these consumeristic saviors never work.  They can’t deliver.  They can’t heal our hearts or make us new. 

If you find yourself in that place of unsatisfied longing and unrealized hope right now, I have good news for you:  you aren’t alone!  Such feelings aren’t new.  Dating back through the history of the Church and even back to Old Testament Judaism, the people of God have always been a people familiar with longing, a people clinging to not-yet-realized hopes.  The nation of Israel in exile, longed for the coming of God’s promised Messiah, the one who would rescue her from foreign captivity, heal her wounds, forgive her iniquities, and re-establish her in the land of promise.  The Christian Church recognized that in Jesus, Israel’s Messiah had come, and that through the cross and resurrection, Jesus had enacted a spiritual rescue, not only for Israel, but for all people who would put their faith in Him.  This same Jesus gave us glimpses through the way He lived His life, of what a world ordered under God’s benevolent Kingship would look like: no more tears, no more disease, no more sin, no more pain, no more division, and no more death.  Jesus, 40 days after His resurrection, ascended into heaven and promised to one day come again and establish, in full, the Kingdom He had begun to reveal in part.  Ever since, Christians throughout the centuries have longed for the second coming of Christ.  It is Christ’s return that will bring the realization of the Christian hope for a world made new where people will live in intimate friendship with God again.

It is for these reasons that the season of Advent emerged in the church calendar.  Advent is a penitential season, indicated in worship by the color purple and observed over the course of 4 Sundays leading up to Christmas, in which the Church actively calls to mind the first coming of the Christ child in the Bethlehem manger, and looks forward to the day when the victorious Risen Christ will come again to make all things new.  Advent is a journey toward Christmas that is marked by the lighting of candles along an Advent wreath.  These candles—symbols of Christ’s light—are lit against a backdrop of comparative darkness that represents the brokenness and need of our world.  As each candle is lit, the light grows brighter and the darkness is pushed back.  As Christ comes into our hearts, our own darkness is lessened, our own wounds our healed, and our own longings are satisfied.

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In so many ways, Advent is a remedy to our Black Friday woes.  By observing Advent, and letting its solemn, peaceful, and prayerful rhythms animate our lives in the days leading up to Christmas, we find rest from the manic motion of the Holiday Season enterprise.  We find space to long for a Savior that can truly satisfy, and hope in His coming again which is true and sure.

In Advent, the Church also prepares for the coming of Christ.  The actions and motivations of such preparation can also serve as an antidote to the anxiety-producing rhythms of preparing one’s home or family for holiday festivities.  The spiritual preparations we make during Advent are marked by increased prayer for our world, our nations, our cities, our churches, and our families.  They are marked by repentance where we call to mind the things in our hearts and lives that are not of the Lord so that we can confess them, seek Christ’s forgiveness, and join with Him as forgiven ones to continue to reveal His Kingdom here on Earth and make ready for His coming again.  When we practice such postures of prayer, repentance, and expectation over the weeks leading up to Christmas, Christmas’s joy and celebration are all the more powerful. 

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So if you are feeling restless, burnt-out, hopeless, or overcome with longing for something real, I invite you to find a church community with whom you can experience the journey of Advent.  If you’re here in Cincinnati and don’t have such a community, come and join us at The Mission Cincinnati for worship every Sunday at 10 AM at the Evanston Recreation Center (3204 Woodburn Ave. Cincinnati, OH 45207)!  On Thursday evenings at 7 PM during Advent (Dec. 7th, 14th & 21st), we will be gather for special Advent prayer and communion services in homes across our city.    If you would like to join us for one of these special prayer services and need address information, please contact Derek at admin@missioncincinnati.org we will give you all the info you need to join us.  We can’t wait to journey with you through this beautiful season.  May we all experience more and more of Christ’s presence, power, and love in each day!

May the Lord bless you and keep you and make His face to shine upon you and give you peace!

Fr. William

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William Eavenson William Eavenson

A Place to Belong | Spiritual Homecomings at The Mission Cincinnati

When Michael Delfín stepped into his first worship service at The Mission Cincinnati, he said it felt like coming home.

While the joyful welcome of friends and strangers was encouraging and the music and sermon were clear and uplifting, what Michael remembers most about that first Sunday was the incredible experience he had receiving communion.  Our services take place in a white-washed cinder block room.  When it comes time to share the Lord’s supper, the words we say around the table are ancient prayers from the Anglican Book of Common prayer that haven’t changed in centuries.  Typically the celebrant (the priest presiding over the table) will offer a few words of reflection connecting the grace we experience in communion with one of the points of the sermon, but there are no pyrotechnics, no emotionally charged stuff, just an ordinary moment.  And that’s what makes Michael’s experience so incredible.  When he went forward to receive the elements, he recalls powerfully feeling God’s embrace: knowing Christ’s love for him, and sensing deeply in his spirit that this church was the family God was calling him to make home.  When he returned to his seat, he realized he had shed tears.  He had encountered God powerfully, in a way he could compare to few other moments in his life.

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Michael is not alone in this experience of community, welcome, and God’s presence at The Mission Cincinnati.  One of our other members, AudrieAna Gardner, when asked what makes The Mission Cincinnati unique responded, “we don’t just talk about God here, we experience Him.”  Others have shared similar experiences of being profoundly touched by God at the communion table.  Perhaps it is the visual of children from our neighborhood sharing the body and blood of Christ with medical students, retired financiers, neighborhood leaders, and teachers.  Perhaps it is the experience of people who used to not know each other from Adam, suddenly finding their lives knit together in a deeply spiritual way.  Strangers now serve together and invite each other into their homes.  They pray together, they worship together, and as the Apostle Peter wrote of the church in one of his Biblical letters, they are experiencing Christ building their lives together “like living stones to create a spiritual house in which God dwells” (1 Peter 2:5).  Or perhaps it is simply Jesus being faithful to His promise that when two or more are gathered in His name, there He will be also (Matthew 18:20).  Perhaps it is all of these things.

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The result however is clear, people are experiencing belonging together in Christ at The Mission Cincinnati.  We don’t all look the same or have the same backgrounds and that is part of the beauty.  There is room at the table for all.  Our worship services, our Mission Communities, and our ministries of hospitality are some of the ministries you fuel by giving to The Mission Cincinnati on #givingTuesday.  We are always excited to make space for the next person to come to Christ, the next person to experiencing the gift of spiritual family, the next person to hear God say in their spirit “Welcome Home.”

If you live in Cincinnati and are interested in what such an experience of worship feels like, you are welcome to join us Sundays at 10 AM at the Evanston Recreation Center (3204 Woodburn Rd.  Cincinnati OH 45207).  If you have any questions about our church or wish to speak with a pastor, please reach out to us at william@missioncincinnati.org.

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William Eavenson William Eavenson

"Jesus Really Loves You" | Transforming the Lives of Middle & High School Students One by One

One of the things we are passionate about at The Mission Cincinnati is being a church that builds bridges for the sake of Jesus between resources and needs in our community.  

Our neighborhood of Evanston is called "The Educating Community."  Why?  Because we are home to a 5-star daycare, 3 elementary schools (Evanston Academy, Alliance Academy, and the Academy of World Languages), the top-ranked public high school in Ohio (Walnut Hills High School), and Xavier University.  That's a lot of schools in one neighborhood!  We would not be good stewards of the Gospel in our community if we were not making every effort to reach these students with the message and love of Christ!  

To that end, our church partners with Urban Young Life, even helping to support local missionaries Jake & Emily Wenstrup as they serve to start new Young Life Chapters at Walnut Hills High school and Clark Montessori to reach middle and high school students with the love of Jesus.  Here is how Jake describes what he and Emily's ministry has been like far:

"As a new Young Life Staff, I am continuously blown away by the relevancy of the Gospel and the kindness of God's presence admist the darkness of the lives of high school and middle school students. These past months, I have had the privilege to kick start both Young Life (ministry for high school students) and WyldLife (ministry for middle school students) at Walnut Hills and Clark Montessori. I am grateful for a team of 5 other leaders, including my wife, Emily, and a supportive parent base I have had the opportunity to coach cross country at Clark Montessori and tutor athletes at Walnut Hills High School.

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God has brought a group of 25 junior high students and 15 high school students at our initial events for WyldLife and Young Life. Together, that equates to over 40 lives weekly that God has put in front of us to faithfully walk alongside. As we have done so, I am reminded of my own experiences as a teenager, longing for someone to step into my life and point me towards truth. 

My heart broke hearing a 7th grade boy who shared: "I know who Jesus is and there are lots of people who say 'I love him' and 'he is my life,' but I just don't feel that way." What an honest picture of our youth as they seek to find life in following Jesus. Something I think we are often too afraid to say. Even hearing one 8th grade boy share after hearing a teaching about Jesus coming to Levi's party of tax collectors and sinners: "I only go to church twice a year, but I didn't know that God loved me all the time." God is at work in these schools, even one that sits at the heart of Evanston yet has been long disconnected.

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We were witnesses to God moving at YoungLife Fall Weekend through the message of Jesus in our students from Walnut Hills and Clark. We got to hear YoungLife staff share about the God of the Universe coming near to us alongside 600 other students from Greater Cincinnati. What a fun time for the inner city of Cincinnati. Excited to watch what lies ahead!"

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We are so excited about what Jake, Emily, and all the Urban Young Life leaders are up to as they share Jesus with students all across our city!  Our partnership with Urban Young Life and Gospel impact in the lives of high school and middle school students is one of the many amazing ministries you can support by giving to The Mission Cincinnati this #GivingTuesday!  

Want to learn more about our partnership with Urban Young Life?  Live in Cincinnati and want to get involved in ministry to high school or middle schoolers?  We'd love to talk with you and connect you to opportunities to serve!  Reach out to us by emailing william@missioncincinnati.org.

Also, we'd love for you to join us in worship alongside others in this fellowship of missionaries every Sunday at 10 AM at the Evanston Rec Center (3204 Woodburn Ave. Cincinnati OH 45207).

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From Fist Fights to Forgiveness | Jesus Makes All Things New

We found out about the fight on a Sunday afternoon.

We were  celebrating a baptism in our church when we learned that Demetrius, an elementary schooler, neighborhood resident, and one of our Mission Kids had been beaten up by older neighborhood boys the previous Friday Night in the Rec Center parking lot.  His hand had been injured and he would likely have to have surgery.  What made this even worse was that one of the kids who had beaten him up was also one of our Mission Kids, an older boy named Elijah who had spent many of the past few weeks learning about God across the table from Demetrius, the boy he’d now beaten up.

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We were devastated.  We prayed.  We brought all of our leftover food to Demetrius’ family that day so they wouldn’t have to make dinner as they cared for their son.  We wept over the beauty and the brokenness of our lives and the lives of those in our community.  We sought God: “Lord, what are you doing in this?  How can we be a part of bringing your healing in this situation?”

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A few weeks passed.  We rejoiced when Demetrius found out he didn’t need surgery.  Just a brace.  Demetrius was there every Sunday but Elijah was nowhere to be found.

Then came the week we’d been anticipating for awhile: Demetrius and Elijah both came to Mission Kids on the same Sunday.  One of our members, Anne was leading Mission Kids that Sunday.  She loves these kids.  She had been praying into this situation for weeks.  She knew God was up to something.  Over the course of the morning she took each of the kids aside for a one-on-one conversation.  When she spoke with Demetrius, she talked to him about forgiving people who hurt you, about forgiving Elijah.  When she spoke to Elijah she talked about reconciliation, about the need to apologize to Demetrius.  God softened hearts that morning.  God brought forgiveness and healing into the lives of Demetrius and Elijah.  Where there had been pain and hurt, now there was healing and restoration.  Jesus makes all things new!

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Every week more than 15 kids from our community come to learn about the reconciling love of Jesus through our Mission Kids ministry.  This is one of the many amazing ministries that you can support by giving to The Mission Cincinnati this #GivingTuesday!  We'd love for every kid in our neighborhood to experience the life-transforming power of the Jesus who makes all things new.

Do you live in Cincinnati?  Maybe you not only want to give, but you have kids who'd like to experience this Jesus who helped Demetrius and Elijah reconcile!  You're invited to join us each Sunday at 10 AM at the Evanston Recreation Center (3204 Woodburn Ave. 45207) for worship at The Mission Cincinnati!  Mission Kids ministry is offered each week for children ages 0-10.  

We are always looking for more people who are passionate about loving our children and sharing Jesus with them.  If you are interested in helping with Mission Kids or if you just have questions about our ministry or our church, reach out to us at william@missioncincinnati.org

We can’t wait to hear from you and meet you one Sunday!

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What's The Mission Cincinnati All About Anyway?

“This isn’t just a church where you hear ABOUT God, this is a church where you actually EXPERIENCE Him.”

“From everything you guys do in the community, its clear that you believe in church outside the four walls of a building.  What you do on Sunday mornings is beautiful but its clear that you see what you do the rest of the week out on the streets as being just as important.”

“This is the first church that I can really say feels like home.  I think I want to stay in Cincinnati after I finish my degree just to continue to be a part of what God is doing here…”

These are just a few of the things that members of our church and residents of our neighborhood of Evanston have said about The Mission Cincinnati.

What are we all about?

Well officially, The Mission Cincinnati is an intentionally rooted, creative, diverse, and empowered community of faith seeking to love God and reveal His kingdom by stewarding His goodness, truth, and beauty in our neighborhood, our city and the world.

What does that mean?

It means we’re a church that values place. 

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We care about playing our part in what God is up to locally in our neighborhood of Evanston and our wider parish of Uptown Cincinnati: everything from OTR and Clifton to Xavier University and Norwood.  We value our place by spending time with people where they are: whether that’s hanging out at the Evanston Rec Center, sharing planned and impromptu meetings at coffee shops like Community Blend, Café DeSales, or Landlocked Social House, helping our community put on awesome events like the Evanston Trunk or Treat, a neighborhood Easter Egg Hunt, or the District 2 National Night Out, or partnering with amazing organizations like Urban Young Life, Intervarsity at UC, the Music Resource Center on Woodburn Ave. or the Evanston Area Council: we desire to be a church FOR our place.

It means we’re a church that values creativity. 

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A group of artists from our church meets every week in homes to share meals and talk about how God is revealed through writing, music, and the visual arts.  We pursue excellence in our musical expression on Sundays, blending the styles of ancient hymnody with contemporary praise choruses and soulful Gospel tunes.  We believe God is revealed in beauty.  We want HOW we communicate Jesus to have just as much integrity as WHAT we communicate about Jesus.

It means we’re a church that’s intentionally seeking to break down the walls of race, age, and socio-economics that divide our nation. 

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We are church filled with every generation, a church of many races, and a church where wealthy and poor worship and share life together.  Just as Jesus has brought reconciliation between God and man, so He empowers us to share reconciliation with one another.

It means we’re a church led by the authority of God’s Word, connected to Christians across the world and throughout history through the sacraments of communion and baptism, and empowered by the life of the Holy Spirit. 

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We are charismatic and contemplative, liturgical and spontaneous, reverent and warm, ancient and contemporary.  Our worship is nourished by the streams of evangelical faith, liturgical practice, and charismatic expression.  We seek to draw the best of all Christian denominational worship traditions together in one beautiful expression.

It means we’re a church, coordinated by God’s mission to share the message of Jesus’ death, resurrection, and salvation with all people even while we work in the world to reveal God’s Kingdom on Earth as it is in heaven. 

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We not only share our faith in words, but seek to establish justice on our streets.  We desire to show mercy to the weak and challenge the affluent to get to their hands dirty in serving our city.  We spend time getting to know each other, discerning what gifts God has given each person in our midst, and then seek to empower those gifts so that they can bless and encourage others to the greatest possible extent.  The people God brings to us are a great treasure and we seek to love and shepherd everyone who comes in our doors as Christ would.

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We’re a young church: we’ve only been meeting for weekly worship for 9 months.  We’re a growing church: every week new people join us in worship, share meals with one another in homes, pray together, and wrestle with questions about what it means to love God and His people today, here in Cincinnati.  We’re a welcoming church: all are invited to join in worship and experience the life of our community regardless of what you already do or don’t believe.  We’re a fellowship of missionaries: our life together is marked by friendship and mutual welcome in community, but also in shared sacrificial service to our world.  We’re not a cruise ship, we’re a sailboat: everyone matters, everyone is counted on to get involved!  We’re a Christ-centered church: we believe Jesus is the only hope for our world. 

Want to learn more about how you can belong, grow, serve, and go as a part of The Mission Cincinnati?  You are invited to come and see what God is up to here every Sunday at 10 AM at the Evanston Recreation Center (3204 Woodburn Ave.)  Our services last about 1 hour and 20 minutes and involve musical worship, call and response prayer, a powerful and relevant message, and a time of communion.  Mission Kids childcare is also available for children ages 0-10.  Come as you are!  We are a casual bunch. 

If you have any questions or would like more information about our church, please reach out to our pastor Fr. William by emailing him at william@missioncincinnati.org

 

 

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