About New Hope : Our History
A Message from Rev. Steve Norden (2009) - A History of New Hope Church
"Therefore, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses,
let us also lay aside every weight and sin that clings so closely,
and let us run with perseverance the race that is set before us,
looking to Jesus the pioneer and perfecter of our faith" - Hebrews
12:1-2a
Sometime in early 1976: I was interning as a seminary
student at Second Reformed Church in Kalamazoo, Michigan. We were having
dinner with the Senior Pastor, Jay Weener, when he said, "At some time
during your ministerial career, you should consider planting a church." A
seed was planted. The idea of being a church planter took root.
Thank
you, Jay Weener, for being a part of New Hope's cloud of witnesses.
September
1976 to June 1977: I spent the year between my second and third
years of seminary as an intern at Good Samaritan Reformed Church in
Gahanna, Ohio. I came to love Columbus. I learned that a Reformed Church
could be vital and vibrant in a location that was not traditionally
an enclave of the Reformed Church in America.
Thank you, Harold DeRoo
and Harvey Mast, for being a part of New Hope's cloud of witnesses.
1978
to 1984: Called to be pastor of Youth and Education at Second
Reformed Church in Kalamazoo, MI, I was privileged to serve with two
of the finest mentors one could ever have. Jay Weener certainly had
left his spiritual fingerprints upon my life. Don DeYoung, my other
mentor, helped me understand that a church should be intentional about
reaching "Christ's least of
these" and
being a "big tent" where all are welcomed in the name of Jesus. Without
being trite, if one were to look up "servant leadership" in the dictionary,
you'd simply find Don's picture.
Thank you, Don DeYoung, for being
a part of New Hope's cloud of witnesses.
January 1982: At a Synod
of Michigan (now Synod of the Great Lakes) Genesis youth event, I
happened to have a random (or providential) breakfast with Dick Welscott,
responsible for new church development in the Synod of Michigan (now
the Synod of the Great Lakes). In the course of the conversation,
Dick said, "We're
ready to plant a new church in Columbus, Ohio." When I asked how soon
they wanted someone in Columbus, Dick told me that they wanted someone
there during the summer of 1982. Since Jean and I were expecting
our first child (now Billy), I knew that this was an inopportune
time. I told Dick, "The timing is not good. Let us know when
you're ready to start a new church somewhere else." In early 1983
I received a phone call from Dick Welscott letting me know that there
had been some glitches in the process. The Synod of Michigan and
Holland Classis were still looking for someone to plant a church
in Columbus. "Was
I still interested?" was the question. As they say, the rest is history.
Thank you, Dick Welscott, for being a part of New Hope's cloud of
witnesses.
Summer 1983: I had been extended the call to be the founding
pastor for a new Reformed Church in central Ohio. After considerable
prayer and reflection, I felt God was calling me to Columbus and
we made the decision to move. The same day we put our house on the
market in Kalamazoo, MI our son, Billy, was diagnosed with cancer.
Our world crashed around us. Our plans were put on hold. A phone
call came. "Steve,
if God wants you in Columbus, God will find a way for you to be there.
That's what we're praying for. Let's wait for God's answer."
Thank
you, Ron Lokhorst, for still being a part of New Hope's cloud of
witnesses.
Still summer of 1983 until 1991: Planting a church
requires support -- financial and spiritual. Holland Classis decided
to be the supporting agent for a new Reformed Church in central Ohio.
Who would be the flagship? Maplewood Reformed Church of Holland, MI,
along with their pastor Dave Bruininks, makes a decision to be the "mother
church" for
a new Reformed Church in central Ohio. Over the years they offered
significant financial and, more importantly, prayer support to a
fledgling church.
Thank you, Dave Bruininks, and all the saints of
Maplewood Church for being a part of New Hope's cloud of witnesses.
Flashback
to September of 1953: The Norden family arrives in Yokohama,
Japan. For 17 years Steve grows up as an MK (missionary kid) in a culture
where the Christian faith is an alien religion. Russell and Eleanore
serve faithfully as Reformed Church missionaries until 1991 when they
retire. This experience clearly shaped a passion for reaching those
who are pre-Christian, spiritually unaware or apathetic. This is one
of New Hope's reasons for being.
Thank you, Russell and Eleanore Norden,
for being a part of New Hope's cloud of witnesses.
Spring 1983 to present: When I received the call to
plant a new church in the rapidly growing suburbs of northwest Central
Ohio, many wondered what this would mean for the future well-being
of our family. After all, there were no guarantees that anyone would
want to be part of a new Reformed Church in America congregation. And
even if anyone were to become a part of it, there were no assurances
of financial assistance for this new congregation beyond the five year
timeframe it had been given to become self-sufficient. Especially concerned
were Jean's parents. Still, once the decision was made to move, Jean's
father was present with her at the meeting of the Holland Classis when
I was installed as new church development pastor for the northwest
Columbus ministry of the classis. Jean's mother and father drove to
Columbus to help with the move, and they have been present for nearly
every major event in the life of New Hope Church.
Thank you, Stanley
and Betty Boven, for being a part of New Hope's cloud of
witnesses. Without your material support and the support of your
prayers, New Hope would not be here today.
February 1984: Alone,
on the night that I moved into our new home in Ohio, the
doorbell rang. A neighbor stopped by to welcome me, but also to make
sure that no one was breaking into the previously unoccupied house.
He asked what brought me to Columbus and, when told that I would
be attempting to plant a new congregation for the Reformed Church
in America, a small denomination of which he was probably unaware,
my new neighbor responded that his grandfather was a German Reformed
Pastor. This neighbor emerged as a key leader in the life of New
Hope and is still with us today.
Thank you, Rick Schuster, for being
a part of New Hope's cloud of witnesses.
March 1984: A meeting is held
in our living room for those who might be interested in a new church.
Present is an acquaintance that we had made eight years earlier while
I was interning at Good Samaritan Church in Gahanna. This acquaintance
also became a key leader in the life of New Hope, presently serving
as Elder.
Thank you, Barb Lewis, for being a part of New Hope's cloud
of witnesses.
Interlude: Rick Schuster and Barb Lewis are two of
many who have faithfully served as Consistory members, Bethel Bible
students, Stephen Ministers, team leaders, committee members, and volunteered
in myriad ways to extend the "good
news" of Jesus through the ministry of New Hope Church.
Thank you, to
the hundreds of you, for being a part of New Hope's cloud of witnesses.
September
16, 1984: New Hope's first worship service was held at Indian
Run Elementary School in Dublin with 69 people present.
Spring 1987: A worshipping congregation had been born
and was growing. As they grew, they recognized that Indian Run Elementary
School in Dublin would be only a temporary home. The question of a
permanent worship place was raised, and after careful, extensive searching,
property was identified. New Hope's congregation recognized that without
additional financial help, the purchase of 20 acres on Powell Road
next to the Columbus Zoo simply would not happen. David Cooke, Bill
Dykema, Wally Sparks and I traveled to Holland, MI to appeal to the
churches in Holland Classis for financial support. After great deliberation,
the President of Holland Classis stated: "It's
time to put our money where our word and our prayers have been. The
congregation of which I'm pastor will commit $20,000 toward New Hope's
property purchase." With that pledge of support, other congregations
followed suit.
Thank you, Ken Reynen and Fellowship Reformed Church,
for leading the way. Thank you saints at First, Third, Rose Park
and Trinity Reformed Churches for joining Fellowship and being a
part of New Hope's cloud of witnesses.
Fall 1989 to Fall 1991: A
capital stewardship campaign was held to raise funds for New Hope's
first facility. After unanticipated challenges, ground was broken
on Palm Sunday of 1991. Construction was completed and worship held
in New Hope's first "permanent" home
that October.
Thank you, you faithful band of pioneers who traveled
from Indian Run Elementary School to 5115 S. R. 750, for being a
part of New Hope's cloud of witnesses.
Another interlude - September
1984 to early 1992: When the Norden family moved to northwest
Columbus in 1984, I quickly learned that I was not the first pastor
to attempt to plant a church in the rapidly growing suburbs. In fact,
many churches were being planted, and it was a challenge to identify
features that distinguished one church from another. Within months,
New Hope and Good Samaritan decided to run a local 30 second ad following "The
Hour of Power" television program. Featuring
Dr. Robert Schuller, identifying himself as a pastor of the Reformed
Church in America and encouraging viewers to find a like congregation,
this "commercial" has
been without question the single most effective advertising tool
in New Hope's history. Beyond this, the kindness extended to New
Hope by Dr. and Mrs. Schuller is beyond compare.
Thank you, Robert
and Arvella Schuller, for being a part of New Hope's cloud of witnesses.
Still
another interlude - Easter 1985 to the present: During our
first year in Columbus, one of the few places that we could take Billy
was the Columbus Zoo. It was at this time that the amphitheater near
the Scioto River was built (Water's Edge). Early in 1985 I placed a
call to the Director of the Columbus Zoo inquiring about the possibility
of holding a Community Easter Sunrise Service in the amphitheater. Two
weeks before Easter, I received a call from the Zoo director with message, "I
think it's a great idea. Let's do it." Even though it snowed on
Easter of 1985, the Sunrise Service at the Zoo was a "hit."
Thank
you, Zoo Director (at the time) Jack Hanna and Mayor of the City
of Columbus (at the time) Dana G. "Buck" Rinehart, for making New Hope's
Community Easter Sunrise Service at the Columbus Zoo a 25-year tradition,
for ensuring that you and those who have succeeded you have enjoyed
a great neighborly relationship between the Zoo and New Hope, and
for being a part of New Hope's cloud of witnesses.
Spring 1996 to
August 2008: In May of 1996 a senior at Dublin Scioto High
School, participating in the Dublin Schools' Young Professionals Academy
and who with his family were members of New Hope, asked if he could
shadow me as part of his curriculum. Over the next several years
this young man was involved in the leadership of New Hope as Associate
in Ministry, Seminary Intern and then as New Hope's first Associate
Pastor. Today this leader serves as Associate Pastor at Marble Collegiate
Church in Manhattan (the successor to the FIRST congregation of the
Reformed Dutch Protestant Church on the North American continent
and now Reformed Church in America) and has a bright future as a
pastor in the Reformed Church.
Thank you, Steve Pierce, for being
a part of New Hope's cloud of witnesses.
1999 to present: New Hope
learned that the Columbus Zoo had purchased all the property surrounding
New Hope's. The church had literally become an island in the midst
of the Zoo! The Zoo made overtures about the possibility of a property
exchange. After years of sometimes agonizing deliberation, New Hope
and the Zoo agreed on an exchange and sale of property. A capital
stewardship campaign was held during the spring of 2003. Groundbreaking
for the new building occurred in August of 2004. On May 15, 2005
New Hope held its first service of worship in its present facility,
tripling the size of its physical home. New Hope Preschool opened
in September 2005. From its modest beginnings, today New Hope Preschool
will gladly welcome over 130 children for the
2009-10 school year. New ministries have been added and a capital
stewardship campaign was held in 2007 for the purpose of reducing
debt to grow ministry.
From the beginning: When I received a telephone
call late one evening in March of 1983 asking me to be the founding
pastor of a new Reformed Church congregation in northwest central
Ohio, we knew that our lives had changed. To leave a loving, supportive
congregation in Kalamazoo to head to an uncertain future was a huge
challenge. That challenge was greatly magnified by our two-year-old's
medical condition. Through these challenges and many more, Jean has
been strong and solid in her support. As the Norden family has grown,
each member has added their own unique contribution to the growth
and life of New Hope.
Thank you, Jean, Billy, Charlie, and Pieter
for being a part of New Hope's cloud of witnesses.
Each person who
is a part of New Hope Church today has taken their place among New
Hope's cloud of witnesses. On Sunday, September 13, we will celebrate
New Hope's past, present and future as we give thanks and glory to
God in our worship. There will be one worship service only at 10:30AM.
Our guest speaker will be the Rev. Billy Norden, Pastor of Youth
and Young Adults at Wyckoff Reformed Church in Wyckoff, NJ. There
will be a reception following at 12:00 noon. While there is much
for which to give thanks and celebrate, we hesitate to claim that
this has been done in our own strength and by our own resources,
or even to be self-congratulatory or think that we've "arrived." The
writer to the Hebrews reminds us that the great cloud of witnesses
has and will continue to fix their eyes on Jesus, the pioneer and
perfecter of our faith. So, as we celebrate 25 years of service,
faith and discipleship, let us look to Christ, following where He
leads and serving as He calls us. And may our voices unite in saying, "To
God alone be the glory!"
More History
A message from Rev. Steve Norden (1985)
New Hope Church Timeline
For more information on New Hope Church,
please contact the church office at office@NewHopeWorship.com or
614.766.5445.