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Starting multi-ethnic church is pastor’s unfolding dream

FORT WORTH, Texas (BP)--When Stephen Drake first joined a Baptist church 18 years ago, he knew something was missing -- ethnic and racial diversity in the congregation. 

  Guide: Planting Multicultural Churches 
  Understanding Affinity Groups
  Planting Multicultural Churches - PPT

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Date: 3/9/2006


Missionary in Cleveland guides ‘Bridges of Hope’ initiative

“The 2 million people of Cleveland are an interesting, diverse lot,” Chestnut noted. “We have people from 117 different nations. We have a lot of folks with Eastern European roots.
 
But the Asian population is the fastest-growing segment of the population. I’d describe Clevelanders as tough, hard-working people. The weather up here tends to make people tough, but they’re also the friendliest I’ve ever met.”
 
The Greater Cleveland Baptist Association:   37 churches -– 20 are Anglo while the rest represent different ethnic and language groups, including African American, Spanish, Korean, Ukrainian, Russian and Slavic congregations. There’s even a church for the hearing-impaired.   
 
Cleveland Demographics: Between 1980 and 2000, Cleveland lost fully one-sixth of its population. During the 1990s, the number of 25-to-34 year-olds nationwide declined by 8 percent, due to the aging of the Baby Boom generation. In Cleveland, this age group shrank nearly three times as fast.  During the 1990s, the number of 25-to-34 year-olds nationwide declined by 8 percent, due to the aging of the Baby Boom generation. In Cleveland, this age group shrank nearly three times as fast.
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Date: 3/8/2006


Study Reveals New Insights Into America's First Suburbs

Neither fully urban nor completely suburban, America's older, inner-ring, "first" suburbs have a unique set of challenges—such as concentrations of elderly and immigrant populations as well as outmoded housing and commercial buildings—very different from those of the center city and fast growing newer places.

  • Overall, from 1950 to 2000 first suburbs grew twice as fast as the national rate—with most of this
    growth occurring several decades ago.
  • Today, nearly one-in-five Americans now live in first suburbs, up from about one-in-eight in 1950.
  • Nationally, 31.5 percent of the population lived in a first suburb or primary city in 2000.
  • Los Angeles is, by far, the largest first suburb with 5.4 million residents in 2000—more than that of
    32 states.
  • Over 20 percent of the nation’s non-white residents now live in first suburbs.

 

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Date: 2/15/2006


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