Church remnant makes $1M gift

Baptist Press

It was no coincidence that their greatest gift came in the months leading up to their church’s 100th anniversary this May.

One million dollars for international missions, given by a congregation of 12. It is a story as much about change as it is faithfulness, a story that begins in another time – during the 1950s heyday of Sixteenth Street Baptist Church in the mill town of Greensboro, N.C.

Sunlit-stained glass and a cathedral ceiling greeted the faithful on Sunday mornings as they filled the church’s oak pews. During revivals, at times crowding its balcony to capacity, sinner and saved alike walked the sanctuary’s burgundy carpet. Church members shared their love for Jesus door-to-door; neighbors were always kind enough to answer their knock, if not their invitation.

Don Smith was 22 years old when he first came to Sixteenth Street Baptist. Now 75, he remembers the pew where he sat and surrendered his life to Christ some 53 years ago. His mind still echoes with melodies of soul-stirring hymns and the sound of chimes from the church’s steeple on warm summer nights. Smith married the church’s organist, Audrey, and together the couple raised three children there. Smith was a deacon, a Sunday school teacher and a choir member.

But while Smith’s faith remained constant, the world around him did not.

As Greensboro entered the 1970s, the city began to change dramatically. Its identity as a mill town was gone. Neighborhoods from which the church once drew hundreds of worshippers transformed into transient communities. Church membership first began to decline, then plummet.

In 2001, Sixteenth Street Baptist changed its name to North Pointe Fellowship. The hope was to appeal to a more diverse community while retaining its Baptist faith and heritage. Still, membership continued to drop.

Soon, North Pointe’s congregation was faced with a difficult choice. With only 20 remaining members, they could no longer afford to maintain the church’s sanctuary or its five stories of educational space. Smith knew it would have to be sold.

He arranged for the congregation to meet in the basement of a nearby building during the transition. A charter school bought the property for $1.8 million, and North Pointe began searching for a new home.

Church members met with contractors, drew plans and looked for land. But Smith says the congregation realized that raising a new building would be foolish without anyone to fill it.

North Pointe’s 12 remaining members prayed fervently for direction. Unanimously, they felt the Lord leading them to give the money from the sale of the church to missions. Some went to local ministries, but more than half was given to international missions, including $1 million to the Lottie Moon Christmas Offering.

“We didn’t know any better cause,” Smith said, noting the church’s past missions involvement, including decades of faithful Lottie Moon giving and even sending missionaries from among their own ranks.

As for the future of North Pointe Fellowship, Smith said the church is seeking God’s will. Though many of its former members now worship with other Greensboro congregations, a small remnant continues to meet each Sunday.