Editorās note: From March 7-13, the TEXAN is partnering with NAMB to share seven stories of hope in Christ made possible through generous giving to the Annie Armstrong Easter Offering.
ATLANTAĀ Ryan McCammackās 17-year-old son is āa great kid,ā but every day, Ryan is very aware that his son needs guidanceāthe loving guidance of a father. Itās hard for him to imagine just removing himself from that picture.
But thatās the story of many of the kids in his community. About 60% of the homes in DeKalb County, Georgia, donāt have dads in them. The county consistently ranks in the top two in the state for abortions. It struggles with racial and socioeconomic tensions. There are large black and white populations, a rapidly growing Latino community and a close geographic proximity to a large group of refugees from all over the world.
When Ryan and his wife, Tricia, and their eight children moved to the Atlanta area to plant Gospel Hope Church, they wanted the congregation to reflect the multicultural community around it. To do that, Ryan, a white pastor, partnered with Rod Dewberry, a Black pastor who became Gospel Hopeās executive pastor.
And Ryan took on the challenge of learning east Atlanta like an international missionary learns a completely new culture and language.
āIf we’re going to actually have truly multicultural or multiethnic churches, then we have to be committed to raising our racial IQ,ā he said.
As a result of that investment, whatās developed over the past few years is a church thatās about 50 percent African American, 40 percent white and 10 percent international. But diversity isnāt the goal, Ryan saidāthe gospel is.
He says the point is to ābe about making disciples and be a church that loves all kinds of people, and let God bring all kinds of people.ā
When people get the gospel, it changes them, and it brings racial reconciliation, Ryan said.
That doesnāt mean the cultures all assimilate into one kind of worship; it means they worship together in an array of ways that represent the body of Christ as a whole. They love one another well, then they work together to proclaim the gospel to and serve their communities.Ā
One way theyāre doing that is by working to flip the script for the fatherless in DeKalb County through investing in foster care ministry, crisis pregnancy centers and ministries that fight human trafficking.
Adapting and adjusting in ministry
As COVID-19 spread and racial issues also came to the forefront in the nation, the church addressed them both. They rolled out their Mercy Fund to help people in the community who were struggling as a result of the pandemic. And Ryan and Rod prepared and preached a sermon series together called āReconciledā from the New Testament book of Philemon.
āIt didnāt feel weird for us to lean into some of these tensions at all,ā Ryan said, explaining that because of the way the church had addressed the topics of unity and diversity in the past, it wasnāt a stretch for them to address matters with truth and grace when things got more difficult.Ā
āIf you make it a habit of speaking to the issues your people are facing, when big things do come up, you have that relationship capital in the bank,ā he said. āWe also offered an online course called āBetter Togetherā that emphasized the importance of community in this divisive season. This was our philosophy even before the pandemic, and itās only continuing now.ā
And in that unified environment, God has worked. A man named Abraham* who came to Gospel Hope had been to church but didnāt have a deep grasp of the gospel. It wasnāt long after getting involved that he wanted to be baptized and follow Christ fully.
āNow, Abraham leads one of our ministry teams and feels led toward pastoral ministry,ā Ryan said. āHe is currently pursuing a degree in biblical studies and plans to do a ministry apprenticeship with us in the near future.ā
Loving the community beyondĀ
The church is also seeing others come to faith and experience a growing desire to take that hope to others. Theyāve already sent out one missionary, and others are planning to leave soon to help plant churches in other countries.
Itās all part of what Ryan says is Godās mission for their church, to be a church for the nations.
āEssentially, we want to say to people, no matter what your starting point, through Jesus, you can be reconciled to God vertically. And also, no matter what your starting point, you can be reconciled horizontally to people who are radically different from you,ā Ryan said. āLook around. This is a church for sinners who need a Savior, not a particular type of person. We may not vote the same or look the same, but as we pursue the mission of Christ together, we build unity.ā
The Annie Armstrong Easter OfferingĀ® provides half of NAMBās annual budget, and 100 percent of the proceeds go to serve missionaries in the field.Ā The offering is used on the field for training, support and care for missionaries like the McCammacks and for evangelism resources.
*name changed