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Upcoming Events
Friday, July 4
  • Live Music, Dessert, Coffee on Cafe Expresso Patio 7:00 PM to 10:00 PM
    Bring your lawn chairs for an evening of music, dessert, coffee and great fellowship. If you have a talent you can share, contact Rick Frazier at 489-1758 or sign up at the Connection Center.
Saturday, July 5
  • Water Works at the Farmer's Market 8:00 AM to 12:00 PM
    The church passes out cold, bottled water at the Farmer's Market every Saturday from 8am - noon. Sign up at the Connection Center to become a part of this powerful outreach to our community
  • Saturday Evening Worship Celebration 7:00 PM
    Contemporary Worship Service. Children's Ministry and Nursery are provided. Cafe Expresso and Up-Words Bookstore are open before and after the service.
Sunday, July 6
  • Contemporary Worship Services
    9:00 AM and 11:00 AM. Children's Ministry and Nursery are provided at both services.
  • Small Group Bible Study 5:00 PM
    "Doing Life Together". Call Dave or Tanya Deitsch for more information at 419-753-2745.
  • 3:16 by Max Lucado 6:00 PM
    Bible Study with Barbara Lee at 6:00 PM at the church.
Monday, July 7
  • N.A. Recovery Meeting 7:00 PM to 8:30 PM
    Meets at the church in the Commons. This group is not affiliated with our church. For more information on this group, contact Bruce Schroerlucke at 492-7554.
  • Angel Food Ministries 7:00 PM to 8:30 PM
    Orders will be taken from 7PM-8:30PM. Cash, Money Orders or Food Stamps are accepted.
Tuesday, July 8
  • My Father's House 9:30 AM
    A ministry which started for seniors, but now blesses the young and old alike. Feed the soul and body alike with bible study and lunch.
  • Live Worship and Prayer - Enter His Refuge 7:30 PM to 8:30 PM
    Come and be refreshed!! Live Worship and Prayer in the sanctuary. Enter into His refuge after a long day at work!!
Wednesday, July 9
  • Worship and Prayer 12:00 PM to 1:00 PM
    A time of worship and prayer. All are welcome. Come and go as you can. (2 Chron. 7:14)
  • Da Underground Youth 7:15 PM to 8:15 PM
    The teens meet in the Commons at 7:15 PM. For more information contact John Silkauskas at 937-750-9953. For John's biography visit Ministries - Teens.
  • Word Search - Bible Study 7:30 PM
    Pastor Fred Gillenwater has been teaching on relationships.
Bible Search
NOTE: Put quotations around
your keyword search to find your
exact phrase together.
 ex. love, "Jesus wept", sin
 
 ex. 2 Timothy 3:16
 
provided by biblegateway.com
About Us
Fred Gillenwater - Pastor
rrcc@bright.net

When Pastor Fred and Vicky Gillenwater visited Russell Road Christian Center in 1999, they felt God was calling Fred to become the pastor there.  After 22 years with a major corporation, Fred left to answer that call.  This was Fred's first work in full time ministry.  For 14 years he had been in an evangelistic ministry in prisons, churches and inner city tent meetings and had traveled to many other states to evangelize at other churches.  He has been a part of Son Reign Ministries, a prison ministry for 18 years, and has been the President for 5 years.  In the year prior to coming to Russell Road Christian Center, Pastor Fred mentored a group of young people in a large local church.

Fred and Vicky have been married for 31 years and reside in Tipp City, Ohio.  They have 2 grown children.  Their son Frederick is an educator at Sinclair Community College and is married to Sarah, who is a graphics designer for a large church.  Frederick and Sarah have one daughter, Zada. Angie, their daughter is currently employed by the U.S. government.  Vicky has been an RN for 12 years and currently works for a cardiology group in Dayton

In addition to taking classes at The Beacon University and attending Methesco Bible College in Columbus, Ohio, Fred is also the pastor of the Botkins United Methodist Church.

Pastor Fred Gillenwater's gift to people is simple and profound.  He is able to extract precepts, laws, and commands from the bible and apply them to complex issues and problems in people's lives.  He's able to find powerful solutions to seemingly impossible problems and relate them to people in a practical and "easy to understand" manner.  In times like these, finding a man like Pastor Fred is like a thirsty man finding a pool of cool, clear, drinking water in the desert.
Lee Behnken
International Missionary
 
Pastor Fred's passionate faith in Jesus Christ and his heart for evangelism touched many pre-churched people during his years at Ginghamsburg Church.
Mike Slaughter
Pastor of Ginghamsburg UMC
 
Of course I would be honored to comment about my good friend Fred Gillenwater.  There are precious few people who I regard more highly than Pastor Fred.  He has been a world-class christian for many years and now in the pastoral ministry, a tremendous influencer for the Kingdom of God.  Fred is a trusted colleague and a great friend who always has Jesus on his mind.  I am honored to call Pastor Fred my friend and respect his calling with the highest regard.
Because He said GO,
Dr. Patrick Murray

 

 


Charting the Course - Our Lead Team

Front Row , Left to Right - Karen Centers and Steve Richardson

Back Row, Left to Right - Bob Kinson and Pastor Fred Gillenwater

 

 

Vision Statement

 

To establish, facilitate, and coordinate ministries by providing wisdom, guidance, and counsel, and to support the pastoral ministry.


A Brief History - Who Are the Methodists?

WHAT IS DIFFERENT OR DISTINCTIVE ABOUT BEING A UNITED METHODIST?

 

In addition to being committed to the basic tenets of classical Christianity, traditionally United Methodists have proclaimed the following emphases:

*The availability of God's grace for all
*The essential unity of faith and works
*Salvation is both personal and social
*The church as a community of Christ's disciples who seek to share in God's mission
*The inseparability of knowledge (intellect) and vital piety (devotion to religious duties and practices ) as components of faith
*Seeking holiness of heart and life both as individuals and in our society.
*A cooperative ministry and mission in the world often referred to as "connectionalism"
*A link between Christian doctrine and Christian living.

 

 

The United Methodist Mission

 

We are called by Jesus to be a growing church, leading others to be followers of Jesus Christ by devoting ourselves to worship, prayer, and biblical learning, caring for our families, serving our community, and sharing with others the message of God's grace and love.

 

 

A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH

 

In 1703, John Wesley was born in the parsonage of an Anglican Church in a poor farming community in northeastern England.  His father Samuel was a pastor and his mother Susanna - a strong, intelligent woman - taught all her children at home.  They learned not only how to read and write, but to become godly people.  He attended Oxford University and at age 22 was ordained into the ministry.  At Oxford, John, his brother Charles and other students formed a religious society called the Holy Club that followed a methodical religious life-style of Bible study and fasting.  Other students teasingly called them "Methodists."
In 1735, John and Charles felt the call of God to be missionaries in Georgia.  However, after two long years of ministering to the British colonists and Indians in Savannah, a very discouraged John returned home to England.  Although he "kept all the rules in his religion", he had no joy in serving Christ and was unsure of his salvation.
One night on May 24, 1738, he reluctantly went to a prayer and Bible study meeting held on Aldersgate Street in London.  There a teacher read Martin Luther's explanation of the Book of Romans.  Wesley described in his journal what happened:
"About a quarter before nine, while the teacher was describing a change which God works in the heart through faith in Christ, I felt my heart strangely warmed.  I felt I did trust in Christ, Christ alone for my salvation.  An assurance was given me that He had taken away my sins, even mine, and saved me from the law of sin and death."

That night he found the joy and enthusiasm he previously lacked.  He and his friend George Whitefield began preaching in the open fields and city streets.  John Wesley preached at least 40,000 sermons and traveled almost 250,000 miles by horse before he died at age 87.  Those who joined the movement begun by Wesley's enthusiastic preaching continued to be called "Methodists."  Thousands of people found new life in Jesus Christ.  Orphanages and schools were set up all over England.  Methodists worked for prison reform and provided medical assistance to the poor.  Wesley staunchly opposed slavery, calling it, "the scandal of religion, of England and of human nature."  Missionaries were sent to America, the first arriving in the 1760's. 

One of the many preachers sent to America was Francis Asbury.  Arriving in 1771, he refused to leave when the Revolutionary War came.  He and other Methodist preachers like him - called circuit riders - traveled long hours on horseback in often bad weather to preach the gospel across the frontier of the United States.  Asbury lived to be an old man, but the average Methodist circuit rider lived only into his middle thirties.  The lifestyle was hard, but they considered it a privilege to preach the gospel.

In 1784 the Methodist Episcopal Church was established with Francis Asbury consecrated bishop.  It was the American beginning of the Methodist branch of today's United Methodist Church.

The other major branch of our UMC came from the Reformed tradition.  Philip William Otterbein became a preacher like his father and grandfather.  He came to America in 1752 and, like the Methodist circuit riders, risked harsh weather and hostile local people to visit German immigrants who were organized into prayer groups.  Asbury and Otterbein both preached Jesus Christ as Savior and the same basic message: Repent of your sins.  Turn to Jesus Christ and be saved.  Love God with all your heart.  Love your neighbor as yourself.

Otterbein formed what became known as the United Brethren Church.  Meanwhile, in Pennsylvania, Jacob Albright, became a Christian in 1791 (the year of John Wesley's death) and began preaching a message similar to that of Otterbein and Asbury.  Groups of people influenced by Albright grew into the Evangelical Church.  This church had much in common with the United Brethren.  In 1946 the two formed the Evangelical United Brethren Church.
 
In 1968, the Evangelical United Brethren Church (EUB) and the Methodist Church merged to form the United Methodist Church.  At that time, the membership was nearly 11 million.  Today membership is about 8 million.

The United Methodist Church is divided into annual conferences.  Each annual conference is led by a bishop and a varying number of district superintendants.  These people help the bishop appoint your local pastor and are in a way the shepherds of the pastors.  Every year each annual conference has a meeting attended by all pastors and lay representatives from each congregation.  Every four years the church has Jurisdictional Conferences (five regions) and one large General Conference attended by delegates elected at Annual Conference.  The General Conference is the main lawmaking body of our church.


Advancing God's Kingdom - RRCC's Vision and Mission

 

 

The Vision

To build a people who are established in God's Word, advancing His Kingdom; a body of believers endeavoring to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace.

 

 

The Mission

To seek and save the lost,

to set the oppressed free

through preaching the gospel

and making disciples.

 

 


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