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Lincoln
Christian Church
204
N. McLean
217-732-7618
Preaching Minister:
Tom Gerdts
Worship:
8:30AM & 11:00AM
Trinity
Episcopal Church
402 Pekin St.,
Lincoln
217-732-7609
Pastor: James Cravens
Worship:
7:30 & 9:45AM Sunday
9:00AM Tuesday-Friday
Immanuel
Lutheran Church ELCA
1409 Pulaski St., Lincoln
217-732-6777
Pastor Joe Bleakley
Worship:
9:00AM Sunday
Zion
Lutheran Church
Lutheran Church-Missouri
Synod
205 Pulaski St.,
Lincoln
217-732-3946
Pastor Mark Carnahan
Pastor Kirk Cunningham
Worship:
8:00 & 10:30AM Sunday
7:00PM Wednesday
Radio, WLLM-AM 1370:
8AM Sunday
TV, Cable Channel 15:
10:00AM Sunday
5:00PM Monday
First
United Methodist Church
302 Broadway St., Lincoln
217-732-2204
Pastor: Larry Maffett
Worship:
Sept-May: 8:30 &
10AM
June-Aug: 9:00AM
website: www.gbgm-umc.org/
lincoln1stumc/index.html
United
Pentecostal Church
1422 Pekin St.,
Lincoln
217-732-4662
Pastor: David Mitchell
Worship:
10:45AM & 6PM Sunday
Sunday School:
10AM
Bible
Study:
7PM Wednesday
To inquire
about listing your congregation's worship information, please e-mail us
at ldn@lincolndailynews.com
or call us at 217-732-7443. |
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Walking
the talk, 24-7
A
profile of Allan Elder and the Sons of Light motorcycle ministry
[SEPT.
23, 2000] Ministry
and evangelism among hard-core motorcyclists — bikers — is not for the fainthearted or the
fair-weather Christian. According to Allan Elder of the Sons of
Light motorcycle ministry, biker evangelism takes the Christian
message to its essential core. Bikers who live on the edge of life
and often face the edge of death are blunt and ask the direct
question: "Are you a just a Christian on Sunday or are you a
Christian 24-7?" They want to know if you live the faith you
profess 24 hours a day and 7 days a week, according to Elder. Bikers
"will call you on it if your life is not 24-7," he says.
"Regular people won’t." That lack of accountability in
the mainstream churches is "killing Christianity,"
believes Elder. The Sons of Light ministry seeks to share the Gospel
of Christ with those who live hard and ask the hard questions.
Allan
and his wife, Paulie, will go wherever bikers are gathered; set up a
tent; distribute Bibles, tracts and meals; and lead services on
Sunday morning. For a recent rally their daughter-in-law Jodi ran
the grill that prepared free breakfasts. One of the most important
ministries they provide is conversation and a sympathetic ear for
lonely bikers who want to talk. The Sons of Light is not a rigid
organization run from a suite of offices. It is led by committed
Christian friends and is shaped by the practical faith of its
supporters.
According
to Elder, the ministry to bikers, some of whom are members of
hard-core motorcycle clubs, is an ongoing battle of "fear
versus faith." He admits that he is often reluctant to go to a
biker rally, reluctant to pack the tent and all the supplies
necessary and then spend what is often an exhausting weekend. But
"as soon as I get there I’m pumped and inevitably I have an
awesome weekend."
In
our recent conversation he admitted to times of discouragement and
even fear as they encounter tough, even violent bikers. Elder
acknowledges the frequent need "to pray for courage, to pray
for boldness." He says that his experiences have taught him
that you get courage the same way you get patience — through
trial. One of those trials was a foray into a hard-core biker bar to
hang posters for their Sunday worship service. Elder and his friends
prayed as the bikers glared at them. Their prayer was answered when
one of the bikers in the bar walked up and asked if he could have
some posters to put up in the campground.
Those
who undertake this ministry sometimes put both their faith and their
lives on the line. Elder told of a violent biker who put a cocked
gun to the head of the Christian who was sharing the gospel with
him. The biker asked, "Where will you go if I blow you
away?" The Christian answered confidently, "If you shoot
me, you blow me into the presence of God."
Allan
Elder is uniquely suited for this ministry through both his life
experiences and occupation. He owns Elder Custom Cycle, located at
203 S. Sangamon St., where he repairs, modifies and customizes
motorcycles with his son, David. The business itself serves as an
important contact point for the ministry. According to Elder, many
bikers first see "my faith and commitment" as customers in
the shop. Some bikers come in daily or weekly "just to
talk" and to share their lives and their problems. He says that
there is no fooling the bikers about your Christian faith. They look
below the surface and mere appearances. "They know the truth
and they appreciate the truth — they know it when they see
it," he said.
Elder
believes that three elements of his life have suited him for his
present ministry. His mature age, his tour of duty in Vietnam, and
his life experiences growing up in a broken family and in foster
care have prepared him to help others. Elder’s birth parents were
alcoholics and were often troubled and in trouble. From age 10 to
age 17 he was shuffled between foster homes. He entered the army at
age 18 and served four years, including 1½ years in Vietnam. During
his tour in Vietnam he developed problems with both "attitude
and alcohol." After his discharge, he amplified those problems
when he began riding with bikers in Colorado and the West.
Over
the next several years there was a slow but steady convergence of
the two elements which would form the foundation of his ministry:
cycles and the Christian faith. One of the few constants in Elder’s
life was his fascination with the motorcycles that his stepbrothers
and foster brothers owned. In biker clubs Elder found the acceptance
and "family" he had longed for all his life. Over the next
several years and two failed marriages Elder came into contact with
both Christians and the church but found both very different from
what he read in Scripture or saw in the life of Christ. In bikers he
found a straight-ahead honesty; in Christians and the church he saw
"people who didn’t walk what they talked."
In
the 1980s Elder’s life was changed by two key events. In 1985 he
met Harold Alexander in Wapella at a motorcycle rally — the first
Christian Elder had met who "walked his talk." While
others "compartmentalized" their faith, Alexander
demonstrated authentic Christian faith and "got me
motivated," said Elder. Two years later he met and married
Paulie, his wife and partner in ministry, who shared his growing
commitment to Christ. Allan and Paulie have one child in Lincoln,
David, who is their partner in the cycle shop. David and his wife,
Jodi, have three children, Ashley, Abbey and Wesley.
The
Elders have had their faith tested and refined many times in their
15 years of motorcycle ministry. Biker clubs and organizations
identify themselves by wearing unique patches or "colors"
on their denim or leather vests. Allan designed the distinctive
patch for the Sons of Light, which includes the images of the
Christian fish, the cross and a cycle. Biker patches or colors are
given and they are worn in a deadly serious way. They show whom you
ride with and to whom you give your allegiance. Bikers have been
killed defending the people and ideas represented by their patches.
According to Allan Elder, bikers who are leery of Christian
hypocrisy say, "If you put on a Christian patch, live it out or
we will pull it off!" Christians who minister to the often
rough world of the bikers must, as it says in Scripture, "put
on Christ" and must "walk the talk, 24-7."
This
idea is well expressed in a writing by Bob Moorhead which speaks of
wearing the Christian "colors."
I
won’t give up, shut up, let up, until I have stayed up, stored up,
prayed up, paid up, preached up for the cause of Christ. I am a
disciple of Jesus. I must go till He comes, give till I drop, preach
till all know, and work till he stops me. And when He comes for His
own, He will have no problem recognizing me — my colors will be
clear.
You
may reach Allan Elder and his ministry by phone at (217) 732-5454 or
by e-mail at www.sonsoflight.org.
[John
Welter]
Church
announcements
Lincoln
AFLC church hosts a gospel music concert by The Chosen Ones
[OCT.
6, 2000] The
Chosen Ones will be in concert at 7 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 7, at Good
Shepherd church, which is located at 1140 North State St. in
Lincoln. The church is part of the Association of Free Lutheran
Congregations (AFLC).
The
Chosen Ones are a family group who share with others their Christian
ministry of music, puppetry (Ralphie and Friends) and testimony.
They are from Manchester and have traveled through 22 states and one
foreign country. In addition to personal appearances, they have been
on television and radio. There is no charge for admission to the
concert, but there will be opportunity for a freewill offering.
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