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P.O. Box 137. 443 Pleasant Grove Road

e-mail: hopeelca@ellijay.com

Phone: 706-636-4673

Pastor David Smedley, Pastor (706) 636-4673 (office), (404) 226-6833 (cell)

Ellen Ottinger, Administrative Assistant (706) 636-4673 (office)

Bob Martin, Director of Music, (706) 636-4673

Laura Rogne, Minister of Discipleship & Director of Christian Education (706) 636-4673

Nancy Hinton, Building Maintenence ((706) 636-4673

Rae Reta Peel, Musical Accompanist (706) 636-4673

The directions to 443 Pleasant Grove Road (Pleasant Grove Baptist Church's original building) are as follows:

From our former location at 3291 Old Highway 5 South:

   Turn right (heading north) on Old Highway 5 South.

   Travel 4.5 miles and turn left onto Highway 282/Tails Creek Road.

   Travel 2.3 miles on Highway 282/Tails Creek Road.

   Turn left on Pleasant Grove Road and travel .4 of a mile to get to the  

    church, which will be on the left- across from the cemetery.

 

From the Dairy Queen at 1043 South Main Street in Ellijay:

   Turn left out of the Dairy Queen parking lot then immediately turn   

    right onto Highway 282/Tails Creek Road- heading west.

    Travel 2.3 miles and turn left onto Pleasant Grove Road.

     Drive .4 of a mile and the church will be on the left - across the

     street from the cemetery. 

Our congregational founders first worshipped in Ellijay on December 10, 1989. They rented church facilities for a number of years prior to the purchase of our present nearly 14-acre site south of Ellijay just north of the intersection of Highways 515 and 382/Old Highway 5 South.

               

            

                               Hope Lutheran Church 1998 to present

For the last  nearly nine years, we have been worshipping in a 6,000-square-foot log church where our membership has grown from just fifty members to over 200! Our first official worship in the new sanctuary was on Easter Sunday, April 12, 1998 with over 100 people in attendance.

                             

                 Roy Stackpole           Watkins Memorial Church                

                              

                   Oakhill Methodist Church          Good Samaritan Catholic Church

Pastor Roy Stackpole was our first minister, traveling each Sunday from his home church of Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church in Morganton, Georgia to our temporary home at Watkins Memorial Methodist Church in downtown Ellijay. Later we moved to Oakhill Methodist Church on Highway 52 to the east of town, and then we moved back downtown to the Catholic Church just off the square in Ellijay.

                          

          Bill Corkish                    Gordon & Bea Narveson              Jack Hendricks

Over the years before our formal organization as a congregation of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, we were served by Pastor Bill Corkish, Pastor Gordon Narvesen, and Pastor Jack Hendricks -- all retired Lutheran pastors who extended their ministry in bringing us the gift of Word and Sacrament each Sunday.

                                 

                                        Dave Smedley

 In October of 1999, Pastor David Smedley came to us as a full-time Pastor/Developer to help move us to the point of organization and beyond.

                                 

                        Pleasant Grove Church             Drawing of our new facility, under construction

We have recently sold two acres of our property and the log church that has served us so well. While we are building our new sanctuary/office/classroom/fellowship complex on the remaining nearly 12 acres of our property, we will be worshipping and continuing our day-to-day ministry out of Pleasant Grove Baptist Church's original building at 443 Pleasant Grove Road. On completion of construction, our new home will have a sanctuary that can seat 350 people with lots more office, classroom, fellowship, and meeting space than we currently enjoy.

 

Jesus is God's son, sent by God to become human like us.  In his life and being he broke through the prison of sinfulness and thus restored the relationship of love and trust that God intended to exist between himself and his children.  Though he is eternal, with God at the beginning of time, he was born on earth of a virgin, by the power of the Holy Spirit.  Jesus was at once truly God and truly human.

The man, Jesus of Nazareth, lived and died in Palestine during the governorship of the Roman administrator Pontius Pilate; we believe him to be the Messiah chosen by God to show his love for the world.  He is God, yet with all the limitations of being human.   His relationship to God, however, was not one of sin but rather of perfect obedience to the Father's will.  For the sake of a sinful world, Jesus was condemned to death on the cross.

But death could not contain him.  On the third day after his execution, the day Christians observe as Easter, Jesus appeared among his followers as the risen, living Lord.  By this great victory God has declared the Good News of reconciliation.   The gap between all that separates us from our Creator has been bridged.   Thus, Christ lives today wherever there are people who faithfully believe in him and wherever the Good News of reconciliation is preached and the Sacraments administered.

 

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Martin Luther (b. November 10, 1483, in Eisleben, Germany, d. February 18, 1546 in Eisleben) is known as the Father of Protestantism.  He had studied to become a lawyer before becoming an Augustinian monk in 1505, and was ordained a priest in 1507.   While continuing his studies in pursuit of a Doctor of Theology degree, he discovered significant differences between what he read in the Bible and the theology and practices of the church.  On October 31, 1517, he posted a challenge on the church door at Wittenberg University to debate 95 theological issues.  Luther's hope was that the church would reform its practice and preaching to be more consistent with the Word of God as contained in the Bible.

What started as an academic debate escalated to a religious war, fueled by fiery temperaments and violent language on both sides.  As a result, there was not a reformation of the church but a separation.  "Lutheran" was a name applied to Luther and his followers as an insult but adopted as a badge of honor by them instead.

Lutherans still celebrate the Reformation on October 31 and still hold to the basic principles of theology and practice espoused by Luther, such as Sola Gratia, Sola Fide, Sola Scriptura:

We are saved by the grace of God alone -- not by anything we do;

Our salvation is through faith alone -- we only need to believe that our sins are forgiven for Christ's sake, who died to redeem us;

The Bible is the only norm of doctrine and life -- the only true standard by which teachings and doctrines are to be judged.

Another of Luther's principles was that Scriptures and worship need to be in the language of the people.

Many Lutherans still consider themselves as a reforming movement within the Church catholic, rather than a separatist movement, and Lutherans have engaged in ecumenical dialogue with other church bodies for decades.  In fact, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America has entered into cooperative "full communion" agreements with several other Protestant denominations.

Luther's Small Catechism, which contains teachings on the Ten Commandments, the Apostles' Creed, the Lord's Prayer, Holy Baptism, Confession and Absolution, Holy Communion and Morning and Evening Prayers, is still used to introduce people to the Lutheran faith, as is the Augsburg Confession.  These and other Lutheran confessional documents included in the Book of Concord may be ordered from the ELCA Publishing House at 800/328-4648 or www.augsburgfortress.org.

Want to know more about Lutherans? Go to www.elca.org .

 

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