词条 | Wooddale Church |
释义 |
| name = Wooddale Church | fullname = | img = Wooddale Church - Eden Prairie, Minnesota.jpg | caption = Wooddale Church, Eden Prairie campus | location = Eden Prairie, Minnesota | denomination = Evangelical | attendance = 5,500 | founded date = 1943 | founder = | capacity = | seniorpastor = | country = United States | website = {{URL|http://www.wooddale.org/}} | logo = | logosize = }} Wooddale Church is a large multi-campus evangelical Christian church located in Eden Prairie, Minnesota and Edina, Minnesota. The success of Wooddale Church led to the formation of many other similar churches in Minnesota. Today, Wooddale Church is affiliated with the Converge and the Conservative Congregational Christian Conference. HistoryWooddale Church was founded in 1943 at an organizational meeting in a former Minneapolis tavern.[1] That meeting led to a Sunday School and morning and evening church services on April 12, 1943. The original congregation adopted the name “The Wayside Chapel.” Until January 1, 1949 students from the Northwestern Bible School and Bethel College and Seminary actively led the small church. The congregation adopted the name "The Wayside Chapel," and for the first six years the church was run by students and faculty of Northwestern Bible School and Bethel College and Seminary. On January 1, 1949, John D. Lundberg became the pastor of the church. During the early part of 1949 the church made plans to reorganize as a Baptist church because of a desire to affiliate with other churches and because of the need for financial assistance. The congregation affiliated itself with the Baptist General Conference. On June 12, 1949, the church officially became "Wooddale Baptist Church" of Richfield. There were 32 charter members. That same month, the church broke ground for a permanent church building, albeit just a basement, which would be occupied November 13, 1949. The church continued to grow and by 1954 the Sunday School had grown to an average attendance of 238. This led to further construction of a Christian Education space. In the fall of 1955, Lundberg left to take a new position in Florida. In April 1955, Paul Thompson became the new pastor. He began his ministry on July 1, 1956. On February 1, 1957, Pastor Paul Thompson died from injuries received in an automobile accident. In May 1957, Peter Unruh became the senior pastor. Continued growth led to duplicate Sunday morning worship services and plans for construction of new facilities which were ready for use September 13, 1959. In 1962, the church began having duplicate Sunday morning services again and began planning for additional expansion, completed on September 27, 1964. On January 1, 1977, Leith Anderson began his ministry at Wooddale. Anderson retired as senior pastor on December 31, 2011. During Anderson's tenure, Wooddale expanded in size, relocated from Richfield to Eden Prairie and began multiple styles of Worship. In 2003, the Church joined Conservative Congregational Christian Conference.[2] Dale Hummel is the senior pastor of Wooddale as of August 1, 2013. Dale has committed his life to reaching people with the Good News of Jesus Christ and seeing lives transformed. Dale has served in several churches of various evangelical denominations. Prior to coming to Wooddale, he was senior pastor of The Compass Church in Naperville, IL. Dale received his Bachelor of Arts degree in Bible and Theology from St. Paul Bible College (now Crown College), his Master of Divinity degree at Ashland Theological Seminary and his Doctor of Ministry degree from Trinity Evangelical Divinity School. In 2018, the attendance is 5,500 people.[3] Present locationsEden Prairie campusIn 1981 the church purchased {{convert|32|acre|abbr=on}} of undeveloped land in Eden Prairie, Minnesota, a nine-mile (14 km) move. It was at this time the church was renamed "Wooddale Church". Construction on the new site began in the fall of 1983 was partially occupied in July 1984 and finished and fully occupied in November 1985. On October 30, 1988 construction started on a new {{convert|63000|sqft|m2|abbr=on}}, 2000-seat worship center, complete with pipe organ and a {{convert|199|ft|0.75|in|m|adj=on}} steeple (to avoid the need for a beacon light on the top), and was finished in November 1990. The continued growth of the Church meant that more space was needed. In 1995, construction began to provide new classrooms for the church’s youth programs and office space for the expanding staff. In March 2000 a {{convert|34600|sqft|abbr=on}} addition was dedicated. In the fall of 2000 the worship schedule was expanded to six services each weekend with a contemporary service on Saturday evening, and three contemporary services and two traditional services on Sunday morning. Attendance was soon averaging well over 4,000 each weekend, with about 2,000 children, youth and adults in Sunday School.{{Citation needed|date=May 2009}}{{When|date=May 2009}} As a performance venue for symphony orchestras the hall has been praised for its "bright, warm acoustics.[4] The campus continues to grow with average weekly worship attendance of approximately 5,000 people. Edina campusOn November 16, 2008, Wooddale expanded to a 2nd campus located in Edina, Minnesota. Ironically, this campus is located on Wooddale Avenue. Worship services including music, as well as children's programming, are held weekly on the campus. Loring Park campusOn March 13, 2016, Wooddale expanded to a 3rd campus, located in Loring Park at the historic Music Box Theatre in downtown Minneapolis. Worship services including contemporary music, teaching, and children's programming are held weekly on the campus. The campus is involved in outreach to the local neighborhood. Denominational affiliationWooddale Church is a member of both Converge and the Conservative Congregational Christian Conference. It is listed as a member congregation on both denomination's websites. References1. ^Hanners, David "Minnesota pastor brings calm hand to battered church group."David Hanners. Knight Ridder Tribune Business News. Washington: Nov 12, 2006. pg. 1http://search.proquest.com/docview/463164928/ (Subscription) Retrieved April 10, 2007 2. ^ Wooddale Church, [https://wooddale.org/about/history/ History], wooddale.org, USA, Retrieved December 10, 2017 3. ^Hartford Institute, Database of megachurches in the US, hartfordinstitute.org's website, USA, Retrieved December 10, 2017 4. ^Anthony, Michael."Shostakovich work proves worthy match."Publication title: Knight Ridder Tribune Business News. Washington: Oct 1, 2006. pg. 1 http://search.proquest.com/docview/463269039/ (subscription required). Retrieved April 10, 2007 External links
5 : Baptist churches in Minnesota|Evangelical churches in Minnesota|Evangelical megachurches in the United States|Churches in Hennepin County, Minnesota|Conservative Congregational Christian Conference churches in Minnesota |
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