Church, at its best, is like family. That truth was clear to me as I looked over the sea of faces at the last worship service of New Song Community Church on June 27, 2021. It was certainly a bigger crowd than our normal 15 to 20 people. In addition to the regulars, I saw faces from many past eras of New Song: former leaders and elders, those who helped in designing and directing the building of this facility, some who experienced loss and struggle, many who grew and matured and went on to serve God in other places.
My husband, Steve, and I had been part of New Song Community Church from its inception as a church plant from Winding Waters Brethren Church in September 2001. Our two boys grew up at New Song as we changed locations and service times, from Sunday evenings at Open Door Church, to Sunday mornings at the Elkhart YMCA, where we had to set up and tear down chairs and equipment every week. We focused on loving God and loving people into a growing relationship with Jesus. During those days, we regularly substituted our normal Sunday worship service with “be the church” activities by serving someone in our community. We built ramps, painted rooms, raked and cleaned yards, donated and planted flowers.
When the opportunity came, we purchased land along the M217 corridor near Union, Michigan, and made plans to build our own church building. Those were days of excitement and camaraderie as our “field of dreams” became walls and roof and windows built with our own sweat and effort. We held our first service in the new building on Easter Sunday of 2009.
New Song became known as a friendly and family-oriented church. Many visitors passed through the doors and were greeted with love and acceptance. It was hard to be a stranger at New Song! Our sons found opportunities to serve, learned through children’s church lessons, and eventually become technical experts in the audiovisual area and running the sound booth. They had a whole church of “uncles” and “aunts” looking out for them and watching them grow.
And now, at this final worship service, voices were raised in celebration, Jesus was lifted up, and we all gave glory to God for the work He had accomplished through New Song over the years. “All my life, He has been faithful,” we sang. “All my life He has been so, so good!” One person shared about the love and support he received in his fight against alcoholism, and the loss of a child. Another told of coming to New Song as a newly married, young Christian, and how, through the support and encouragement of leaders in the church, he accepted the call to ministry, and now serves as the pastor of a new church in Elkhart. Several ladies praised God for the love and caring of the church family in the loss of their husbands. Everyone who shared agreed that the friendliness and family atmosphere of New Song drew them in and enveloped them like a warm hug from the God who loves abundantly and graciously.

The final service of New Song, and meal afterwards, was like a family reunion, with “old” members meeting “new” members, and the sharing of memories and telling of stories of good times and hard times. While the organizational entity of New Song Community Church may have ended, the legacy of New Song lives on in the lives God changed and directed through its ministry, and the ongoing connections and friendships made between so many members of God’s family.