Winnipeg Christians
host Grey Cup activities
By
Kevin Heinrichs ChristianWeek staff

Courtesy of
Athletes In Action
Football
and faith: Michael "Pinball"
Clemons will be one of the CFL
players participating in Grey Cup activities
hosted by Christians in Winnipeg. |
WINNIPEGCome
Nov. 22, The Meeting Place, a seeker-oriented
church in downtown Winnipeg, will be empty. Normally, its three Sunday morning
services attract 2,000 people. But on Grey Cup
weekend, the congregation will meet at the
Winnipeg Convention Centre, to host the official
Grey Cup Sunday service.
Senior pastor Paul Wartman
expects attendance to swell to 5,000. He says
hosting a Grey Cup service fits perfectly with
the churchs seeker-sensitive vision.
"Its an event that the city at large
identifies with," he says. "Its a
venue for people with a great deal of suspicion
about church to feel more comfortable coming to a
service."
The Meeting Place hadnt
planned on the football-themed service, but a
request from the CFL coincided with the idea to
hold occasional services in a larger venue to
unite attenders from all three services.
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Why was The Meeting Place asked to host
the event?
Grant Koropatnick, director of
operations for TMP, explains that the churchs
worship band has performed at pregame
"tailgate" parties at Winnipeg Blue Bomber home
games. A CFL executive remembered them during a planning
session of the Grey Cup committee. Athletes In Action
representative Dave Johns sits on that committee and was
asked if "those guys" could do a Grey Cup
service. Johns contacted The Meeting Place, which agreed,
even with only five weeks notice.
That may sound like a lot of time, but
the event requires about 300 volunteers, seeing to
everything from audio/video and lighting to security and
emergency response, not to mention childcare for 400-500
children.
"Were telling our people
that were taking Jesus to the Grey Cup," says
Koropatnick.
The Mennonite Brethren congregation is
urging its attenders to invite non-Christian friends to
the event, hoping that a church service centred around
the Grey Cup weekend will create a stronger contact point
for people hesitant to come to a regular church service.
Michael "Pinball" Clemons and other Christian
athletes are scheduled to give testimonies.
Pastoral staff hope that the service
wont drain the sanctuaries of other Winnipeg
churches. "The heart of what were doing is to
use this just like any other Sunday, to make Christianity
culturally relevant."
Big breakfast
A day earlier, AIA is hosting its
annual Grey Cup Breakfast featuring "Pinball"
Clemons, Winnipeg Blue Bomber defensive lineman Craig
Hendrickson and other CFL athletes.
The breakfast "gives the community
positive Christian role models from sports," says
Johns, who is also the Blue Bomber chaplain.
"Canadians are pouring into
athletic centres, but the churches are sure having
trouble getting people into their buildings. [Christians]
have a longer lasting, more exciting message than any
stadium, so we want to utilize this platform to talk
about faith," he says.
Johns says Christian athletes should
get off any pedestal, but keep their platform to say that
theres more to life than football.
Grant Memorial Baptist Church is also
holding an evangelistic service at its sanctuary in
conjunction with the Grey Cup weekend.
There hasnt been an official
service endorsed by the CFL since the Grey Cup in Regina
in 1995, where the service was held in a large tent near
the stadium.
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