The Columbus Dispatch

Better together

Columbus churches collaborat­ing to help city

- Danae King For Columbus city director

Local churches are beginning to look beyond the number of people in their pews and toward the bigger picture of what they can do for the city of Columbus as a whole. h A local network, For Columbus, has been leading area Christian pastors since 2019 in collaborat­ion, with the goal of bettering the city. Soon, that work will be aided by a new partnershi­p with national research and technology companies so that Columbus pastors can have an even better idea of what the city – and their congregant­s – need.

“We are here to help the community and to lessen human suffering and to improve thriving. We can’t impact the whole city if we aren’t collaborat­ing.”

Adam Ward

“We are here to help the community and to lessen human suffering and to improve thriving,” said Adam Ward, city director of For Columbus. “We can’t impact the whole city if we aren’t collaborat­ing . ... If we’re not working together, no one’s going to care and we’re not going to make the city better.

The Barna Group, an evangelica­l Christian polling firm based in Ventura, California, and Gloo, a Boulder, Colorado-based network that provides technology platforms for organizati­ons, took notice of the work in Columbus and decided it would be one of the first communitie­s where it launches a new national project.

The initiative, called Barna Cities, officially will be launched Wednesday to offer local data and live forums for churches in four areas: Columbus, Dallas-fort Worth, Kansas City and South Florida. Its goal is to get 150 local pastors on board.

Part of the reason Columbus was chosen, Ward said, was because For Columbus, part of the broader nonprofit Catalyst for Columbus, brought faith leaders together in the fall to offer learning extension centers for Columbus City Schools. Local churches and faithbased organizati­ons hosted 90 centers that gave small groups of students access to tutors, meals and the internet so they could study when school was being conducted virtually due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

At first, Columbus wasn’t even on Barna’s list of top 20 cities to work with, Ward said, but once he told them about the work that had already started in the city, they were on board.

Now, Barna officials say they are excited to work with Columbus faith leaders.

“You generated so much momentum,” Savannah Kimberlin, Barna’s director of published research, said during a video call with area pastors in February. “The enthusiasm we’ve seen in Columbus, it really feels like a very passionate grassroots effort. You do want to be leaders who are informed and connected.”

Ward said he sees the collaborat­ion with Barna and Gloo as another tool for the coalition of leaders that already exists in Columbus. The polling data provided on social, cultural, economic and religious areas will allow church leaders to look back and see if they’re making an impact, he said.

More than 70 local churches already have signed up to be a part of the partnershi­p with Barna and Gloo, and Ward is anticipati­ng more will be on board after the Wednesday launch.

Churches can look at overall data on Columbus residents, but also drill down and see how their congregati­on specifically is thinking and what they want and need.

For example, if the data shows that more Columbus residents need food assistance, then the church network can work together to provide that. And if congregati­on-based data shows that people want certain topics addressed, pastors can retool their sermons to reflect that, Ward said.

“We don’t have to lead by feeling,” he said. “We certainly need that part too, but by combining the two we can make very powerful decisions . ... It is a tool that is helping us say ‘We’re in this together; we’re not independen­t,’ while still benefiting independen­tly.”

It also can unite area churches around similar causes, he said. Ward also hopes it helps increase the relevancy

of churches to society, which he says has been on a steady decline, accelerate­d of late by COVID-19.

“If two or more churches were to come together to help the church do something, solve an issue, more people outside would be willing to listen,” he said.

The Rev. Mark Ford, pastor of care at One Church, which has two Columbusar­ea locations, agreed.

“The church of Columbus wants to do everything we can to love better and serve better and help people to be their better self,” said Ford, who is excited to see the data from his church and the city through Barna and Gloo. “If we can do that by collecting our resources and bringing our individual talents and uniting them in a way people’s needs are met better, homes are stronger ... that’s what the Christian community is all about.”

Sometimes, people just need to know who’s working toward the same goal and willing to work together toward it, Ford said.

The Rev. Ben Douglass, a part of For Columbus who has not yet signed on to participat­e in the research initiative with Barna and Gloo, recently discovered other pastors he can work with on the West Side, where he is the lead pastor at Faith Community Church.

One question, he said, is how useful the national project will be to a small church like his, which has about 50 members. But either way, the idea of working together to help the city’s residents

is essential.

“I feel like we have to collaborat­e together if we really care about people,” Douglass said.

He and other churches on the West Side have hosted a prayer walk, welcomed children to learning extension centers and had a discussion on racial reconcilia­tion. More recently, the churches have partnered with Lower Lights Christian Health Center to do a COVID-19 vaccine clinic, he said.

“It was a really cool thing that happened, and part of the reason it happened is because churches started working together,” he said.

Still, Douglass knows there are a lot of roadblocks to churches working together, including time. Many pastors are busy with their own flock and may struggle to find the time to collaborat­e. There’s also an independen­ce that exists inside churches, Douglass said.

Ward agreed and added that there also can be competitio­n for congregant­s among churches.

But through For Columbus, local pastors are seeing that the church is stronger together than it is apart, Douglass said.

“Jesus is bigger than our individual churches, and what he’s doing is calling us to be doing something bigger,” Douglass said. “If a church is only individual­ly focused, you’re missing your mission. I would be an unfaithful pastor if I only cared about people in my church.” dking@dispatch.com @Danaeking

 ?? BARBARA J. PERENIC/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Pastor Ben Douglass preaches at Faith Community Church, one of the area religious institutio­ns working for the good of the city through the For Columbus network.
BARBARA J. PERENIC/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Pastor Ben Douglass preaches at Faith Community Church, one of the area religious institutio­ns working for the good of the city through the For Columbus network.
 ?? PHOTOS BY BARBARA J. PERENIC/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Pastor Ben Douglass listens as a member of the congregati­on does a Bible reading at Faith Community Church.
PHOTOS BY BARBARA J. PERENIC/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Pastor Ben Douglass listens as a member of the congregati­on does a Bible reading at Faith Community Church.
 ??  ?? Douglass, playing guitar and singing at Faith Community Church, says that churches are stronger together than they are apart.
Douglass, playing guitar and singing at Faith Community Church, says that churches are stronger together than they are apart.

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