02
Jan

The Year in Review

Dear Foundry church and friends,

I hope you had a great Christmas and that 2009 is off to a good start for you and your family.  2008 was a fantastic year for The Foundry and I want to take a moment to share with you what God has accomplished this year through our church.  Whether you are a regular member of The Foundry or you have supported us through your prayers, your giving, or through your service, we each get to share in the harvest.  Thank you for helping to start a brand new church for Corona de Tucson, AZ.  You are a part of changing lives by helping Corona to “Love God and Love People”.

The Foundry - 2008 in Review

Launch! I’d have to say that the most significant accomplishment for The Foundry in 2008 is that we got started!  Launching a new church is an incredible event that takes time, effort, preparation and a lot of help from God.  Our Launch Day in August was a great success.  Months of preparation, promotion and planning went into making this new church a reality.  The Sneak Peek services in May, June and July helped us prepare for launch and to get the word out that a new church was starting soon.  The mission teams from Missouri, North Carolina and Texas each were tremendous helps to our start.

Changed Lives – This year 22 people made first time decisions to accept Jesus Christ as their Savior!  Many of those came during “Kids Summer Fun Week” in June.  The rest have come as a result of building relationships and seeing the Holy Spirit make people aware of their need for Jesus.  In addition we are seeing believers grow in their walk with Christ and people who had once given up on church and God rediscover the amazing life that God has for them.

Changed Community – We know that a church that focuses only on itself is missing out on why God placed it in the community it is in.  With this in mind, The Foundry has made it a priority to take the love of God to our community.  We have invested in our local middle school through multiple work projects, helped meet the needs of several families in the area and have partnered with other local churches to work together to reach this area for Jesus.  

The Bible says in 1 Corinthians 3:9 “For we are God’s fellow workers;”  The whole passage, 1 Corinthians 3:5-9, talks about how we each play a part in getting the job done but it is God who causes the results.  Thank you again for your doing your part in helping us get off to a great start in 2008.  We look forward to sharing with you as “fellow workers” the great things God is going to do in 2009!

Love God and Love People!

Pastor Ash

Ashley Evans
Pastor
The Foundry
www.thefoundrytucson.org
ashley@thefoundrytucson.org
520-269-3213 

10
Dec

Starfish in the desert

I love CHRISTmas.  It’s a wonderful season of joy and remembering God’s amazing love for us.  It also brings to light the many needs around us.  Sometimes the needs can seem overwhelming and we fall victim to the notion that we can’t make a difference when there is so much need.

I am reminded of the old story about the guy on vacation at the beach.  He got up early one morning to enjoy some solitude on the beach before everyone else got there.  As he sat there enjoying the sunrise and sand and listening to the sound of the waves he saw someone way down the beach walking his way.  Every so often the man would stop and bend down and toss something into the ocean.  As he got closer the vacationer asked him what he was doing.

The man replied “Every night when the tide comes in starfish wash up on shore.  The tide recedes leaving them stranded. Some make it back to the water before the sun gets high but many don’t and the noonday sun bakes them on the sand.  So I spend my mornings helping them back into the water.”

The vacationer looked down the beach and saw it was covered with starfish.  He remarked “Doesn’t it seem like a waste of time? There’s no way you can save all these starfish.  Do you really think you’re making a difference?”  The man looked down, picked up a starfish and tossed into the ocean.  “It made a difference to that one. . .”

Last night on the news there was a story about a family in need this Christmas.  I’m aware that there are needs everywhere but this one was different.  The family is in BIG need - single mom, 3 kids, car busted, little or no propane, etc.  What made it hit home was that this was a family we know, right here in Corona.

I can’t do everything but I’m darn sure going to do something.  If you want to help give me shout.

Gotta go take a walk along the beach now.

Ashley

16
Oct

Getting Up

I was watching the Giants / Browns game last night. The Giants’ QB, Eli Manning, was driving his team down field just before the end of the first half.  The defense blitzed and he picked up on it in time to find the open man and deliver a perfect pass for a big first down.  On the replay they showed the blitzing defender hitting Eli just as he threw the ball and Eli straining to see if the receiver caught it.  I noticed that Eli did not have a look of elation even though he made a great pass.  Instead it was a look of pain.  You see, earlier he had been knocked around in the game, even sacked a couple of times I believe.  After almost a full half of “playing” football his body was sore, battered and bruised.  The look on his face said “OK, that’s one more good pass.  Now let’s line up and do it again.” He knows full well that the next play may not be as successful.  He knows that when he goes to pass the ball there are five possible outcomes and four of them are bad.  But he does again. And again.  And again.  Not every pass is a touchdown.  Not every play goes for big yards.  But with enough perseverance he’ll get in the end zone.  He’ll succeed.

And then he’ll have to do it all over again.

That’s a little like what it’s like being a church planter.  By no means is every Sunday a “touchdown” Sunday. Some weeks you make a little more progress toward the goal.  Some weeks you feel like you get sacked.  But you get back up and get ready for the next week.  You do it all over again.  And again.  And again.  Eventually with enough perseverance you get to see some really good things happen.

04
Sep

Subtitles

Morgan is sick today so I’m staying home with her.  As eat my breakfast I’m watching the History Channel.  There is a show about life in the southeastern mountains known as the Appalachians  - a show about “mountain folk.” Billy Ray Cyrus is narrating.  This episode is about churches in the mountains and especially about snake handling churches.  As I watched I noticed that for a couple of interviews with people who had thick southern “hillbily” accents the History Channel felt the need to add subtitles - as if they were speaking a foreign language! I looked away and just listened to see if I could understand them.  No problem.  Maybe it’s because I spent the last ten years in western NC. Words like “stretchin’ up”, y’all, yonder, reckon, and fixin’ to need no explanation to me.

I wonder if Christians and Churches could use subtitles?  Are we speaking a language that we’ve grown accustomed to hearing that makes little or no sense to the rest of the world?  Just something to think about. . .

21
Aug

LGLP

So tonight Madison, my 4 yr old, picks up my big Bible - the one I got when I was ordained; it could double as a coffee table Bible; it could almost double as a coffee table!  She asks me to “read her the words in the big Bible”.  I told her there were a lot of words but moslty they teach us about how much God loves us and how we can love God.

As though I had forgotten to say it and she was completing my sentence, Maddie then said “. . . and love people!”

I was amazed.  I stopped what I was doing and just beamed with pride.  “Love God and Love People” is something we’ve been talking about for over a year as we’ve been in the process of starting this new church.  It’s on our card’s, our signs, our brochures, I even talk about getting it tattooed on me sometimes - Briggette LOVES that idea.

The point is this:  I know that I get.  I know that Briggette gets it.  What’s really cool is when you see other people get it.  I look forward to the day when “Love God and Love People” is second nature to the people of The Foundry.

Ash

15
Aug

80%

Week 2 at The Foundry was good.  We had a few less people here than we did at the launch but that is very normal for church starts.  Launch day for a new church is a lot like Christmas and Easter Sundays for other churches - you get a lot of people there and then you don’t see them for a while.

Even though we had fewer people here Sunday, most of the ones who came were from Corona.  In weeks past we’d been having some friends from other churches showing up to help.  Recently they’re coming less and less and people from our community are showing up more and more.  I think it was like 80% last week.

10
Aug

Week 2

WOW!  This week went by FAST.  There was a lot going on at work (I work part time at the local middle school) and a lot to do for the church now that we’re meeting every week.  I got spoiled meeting once a month during the summer!

Looking forward to tonight to see what God does.

Ash

05
Aug

Not an Update

We started a church Sunday night but this is not an update about how things went.  If you want an update check out  launch update

I got home Sunday night after everything had wrapped up and it hit me.  Wow. We just started a church and I’m the pastor.  It reminded of when Briggette and I were newlyweds.  One day early on, the realization of actually being a husband made me pause.  I was married, I was now “responsible”.  I was responsible for our safety, our financial security, for fixing things that broke even if I didn’t have a clue how, for what we made of this life, for the family we’d have, and for explaining difficult math problems to my kids with a history of the numerical system when a much simpler answer was all they needed.  I think I grew up a little bit right then. Not out of fear of failure, but out of a sense of duty, a calling, a maturing.  And yeah maybe also because Briggette’s dad owns a lot of guns. . .

The full realization that I am now the pastor of a church is one that caused me to pause.  It probably also causes a wide range of responses from those of you who have known me over the years. . . I had those same feelings of being responsible. Of knowing that so much was riding on me.  Yes this is God’s ship and he’s directing the wind and waves but for some odd reason he’s put me at the helm.  He’s made me “responsible” for this new church.

Sunday night I think I grew up a little bit more.

31
Jul

10×24

I got home today to see a freshly poured 10′ x 24′ slab of concrete right by my existing patio. I was not surprised to see it.  The guys had set the forms the other day and told me they’d be back today for the pour.  What did surprise me was how unfinished it looked.  Edges were rough, there were no expansion seams, there were holes and nicks in various places.  I was really hoping this was not what they were going to leave me with.

Then the guys came back.  I watched as they smoothed out the edges, cut the joints, wet the concrete to make it workable, and filled in the holes and nicks.  They got to a point where I thought they were done but they kept working on the new patio, wetting and brushing and smoothing until it looked really good.  When they were done I was very impressed.  These guys took pride in what they did.  It was 104, there was no shade in my yard but they worked until the job was done right and done well.

As we get ready to launch a brand new church this Sunday, their commitment served as an example to me to strive for excellence.  I know things are not going to be perfect and we’re not going to be able to “offer” all that a lot of other established, larger churches can.  I just pray that as we’re starting and growing, we will do the things we do with excellence. Wether it’s worship, kids ministry, tech, setup, greeting, or whatever I hope people will see that all we did was done right and done well.

29
Jul

Chillaxin’

Tonight we got together with the launch team (as many as could make it) and had a cookout at the park.  It wasn’t a team meeting, a Bible study, or a recruitment gimmick.  I just felt like we needed to hang out together. It was cool - relationally that is - it’s never cool in Tucson in months that end in “uly”.  It took the pressure off the wives to cook a meal, the dads got to shoot the bull, the kids played on the playground.  All in all it was very relaxing and fun.

We met a couple of families as we just hung out and invited them to worship.  We need to do more of this.  It’s good for us and it’s a great way to get to know our neighbors.  Maybe we’ll make it a once a month thing?

A New Church   Launch Team
 
Love God Love People   For Our Partners