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Franklin Circle Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) "Widening The Circle For All God's Children!"
Our Pastor | |||||||||||||||||||||||
"Every Day Is A New Chance For Resurrection!" ~ Pastor Allen V. Harris
Read Pastor Allen's recent article from the DiscipleWorld magazine! Click HERE! Allen Harris is the Pastor of Franklin Circle Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) in Cleveland, Ohio. He was called as a Redevelopment Pastor to the historic, diverse, urban congregation in the spring of 2001 in hopes of helping the congregation to reclaim a clear sense of its identity and to renew its mission to the community. In April of 2004 the Region of Ohio and the congregation affirmed the work Allen and the congregation had done to revitalize the church and they called him to continue to be their Pastor.
Rev. Harris moved to Cleveland from New York city with his partner of 15 years, the Rev. Craig Hoffman, in 2000 after a 10 year pastorate at Park Avenue Christian Church in Manhattan. While serving as Associate Pastor at Park Avenue Christian Rev. Harris was ordained into ministry on Pentecost Sunday, 1991.
In his ministry at Park Avenue Christian Church Rev. Harris spent time studying and developing skills in working with multi-ethnic, multi-cultural, economically-diverse congregations. He also served for almost ten years as the Developer for the Open & Affirming Ministries Program of the Gay, Lesbian, and Affirming Disciples Alliance. He continues to use all of these skills at Franklin Circle Christian Church.
Rev. Harris was born and raised in Roswell, New Mexico. He received his B.S. in Religious Education at Phillips University, Enid, Oklahoma and his M.Div., with a concentration in Religious Education, from Brite Divinity School, Texas Christian University, in Ft. Worth, Texas. While at Brite he served for over three years as Assistant to the Pastor at
Currently, Rev. Harris is on the Community Advisory Board of Lutheran Hospital. Within the Christian Church of Ohio (Disciples of Christ) he is honored to serve as Co-Director of Advance Conference, with the Rev. Margot Connor. He was also elected in the summer of 2006 as an at-large member of the Adult Conference Planning Committee.
He has previously served on several non-profit and denominational boards, including Interfaith Partners In Action of Cleveland (InterAct Cleveland) where he served as Board President; the General Board of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) where he served on both the Administrative Committee and on the Executive Committee. He is a proud graduate of the Neighborhood Leadership Institute (Class 17).
Pastor Allen was invited to write for the DisciplesWorld magazine.
Pastor Allen Participated In Cathedral College Conference June 2 2-7
(The Rev. Douglass Bailey (left), The Rev. James Forbes (center), and the Rev. Barbara Brown Taylor (right) To find out more, go to: http://www.cathedralcollege.org/pages/cnfrnc/conferenceSchdl7.shtml
Some Quotes That Inspire Me: ~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+ The American writer, Willa Cather, once wrote: "The miracles of the church seem to me to rest not so much upon faces or voices or healing power coming suddenly near to us from afar off, but upon our perceptions being made finer, so that for a moment our eyes can see and our ears can hear what is there about us always." ~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+ "Living On The Edge" "Jesus can live on the edge because he lives from a center radiant with God's love for him and for all creation. There his treasure lies, there his heart abides, from there the boundaries of his heart expand to transform every edge into a potential center of God's untamed grace. As the Spirit of God gradually conforms our hearts to the heart of Jesus, we begin to move away from centers of world and self to edges where God is doing a new thing." + John S. Mogabgab, Editor, Weavings: A Journal Of The Christian Spiritual Life, Volume XIII, Number 4, July/August 1998p. 3. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Powerful Prayer Attributed To Sir Francis Drake: Disturb us, Lord, when ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Quote on Grace and Thanksgiving, by Rev. John Thomas Saying a prayer before meals quietly or with others acknowledges that my life depends on God's bounty and on a host of people who grew, processed, distributed, prepared, and served the food that gives me nourishment and delight. Saying a prayer by a hospital bed admits that my health rests in God's love as well as the skills of scientists and physicians and nurses and a host of people who maintain these places of care. And, yes, even sending a thank-you note, as mothers perhaps instinctively knew, is far more than social convention, but an awareness that the best gifts and thus much of the joy of life are not things we can give ourselves but come from beyond us as an alluring expression of love, even an invitation to love. Each thank you becomes a way to practice gratitude so that more and more our lives are weaned away from the myth of entitlement and the arrogance and isolation of independence. Each thank you becomes a way to practice gratitude so that more and more our lives are shaped by the truth of our belonging to others, even to Christ. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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