In 1866 German immigrants founded a Christian Reformed congregation among the fertile fields of northern Illinois, 25 miles west of Rockford. A hundred years later Ken Ross, 54, was growing up in that church, German Valley CRC. Kenās parents were members, and so were his grandparents. In fact, Kenās grandparents were part of the second generation to make German Valley their home. Ken is an elder, a former deacon, and a praise band member. He and his wife, Cathy, raise corn, soybeans, cattle, and āa little wheatā on a large farm in partnership with Kenās two brothers.
When Ken was in catechism and youth group, the church was thriving 100 years after its founding. āThere were 60 to 70 kids in Sunday school classes and youth group,ā he says. Besides Sunday services and educational classes, the church held ice-cream socials and other get-togethers, including two-day āMission Festsā to get reacquainted with missionaries on home service. āIf you held something, everybody came. The commitment was very high. Church was fun. Even catechism!ā Ken remembers. āThe Christian Reformed bond that was common to all was evident, even if we didnāt really talk about it.ā
But over the following two decades, this country church began to bleed, then hemorrhage, members to the point that a CRC agency official bluntly told the church council, āThis is the deadest church Iāve ever seen.ā
Ken admits the church had begun to die during the late 1980s and into the ā90s. āWe werenāt growing evangelistically. The culture started to pass us by, and we werenāt adapting. Young people werenāt staying, people were moving out, and many of the older people were dying. . . . People realized that the church would be dead if we didnāt finally initiate major changes.ā
Thankfully āthe Spirit is always thinking way far ahead of where weāre at,ā says Ken. And the ādeadestā church is now anything but, and growing. And Ken clearly relishes it. āThe Spirit has come back in a big way,ā he says. āThe preachingās exciting, the musicās exciting, people are friendly and ready to accept new people.ā Ken credits their pastor, Jake Ritzema, for āāinfectingā everybody who was sort of waiting for something to happen.ā Infecting them, that is, with enthusiasm and renewed commitment to being wholehearted Christians.
Part of the change involved switching to less formal worship and to mostly contemporary music accompanied by a homegrown praise band. Cathy Ross chooses the songs. āWe still sing some hymns, just in a set with contemporary songs,ā she explains. āThere are a lot of fluff songs out there. Thatās why I have to be very discerning. . . . I look for Scripture-based songs that are singable and have a ātake homeāāsomething that sinks in.ā Ken adds, āMaybe we show weāre still a German church in that, when we get to the music, we just sing; we donāt repeat choruses over and over.ā Most importantly, āPeople can say, āI met God here.āā
German Valley CRC would not be what it is apart from the Christian Reformed Church, Ken believes. āWhen our church thought it might close, we thought, āWhere would we go?ā We didnāt have a good answer. The CRC has lots of strengths. Itās a denomination that thinks the deepest about the Bible. If there is a way to rate how a denomination thinks about God, who thinks of God as the biggest God, the CRC does that. Thatās key. God is the center of everything.ā
Ken acknowledges that āthe CRC sometimes thinks itself into a corner,ā but as long as we remain ābig-God people,ā and our thinking is accompanied by action and service, itās the best of all worlds.
About the Author
Marian Van Til was a founding member of Jubilee Fellowship CRC, St.
Catharines, Ontario. She and her husband live in Youngstown, N.Y.,
where Marian works as a writer, editor, and church musician. Her first
book, George Frideric Handel: A Music Loverās Guide, was released in
June.