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A ‘Sending’ Congregation

Westminster, Colo. RPC

   | Columns, Congregation of the Month | June 01, 2010



Location: Westminster, Colo.

Presbytery: Midwest


Membership: 72 communicant; 43 baptized


Organized: 1973


Pastor: Rev. Shane Sapp

Over its nearly 40-year existence, Westminster RPC has been a “sending” congregation. A brief look at its history will explain why.

In February 1970, a presbytery commission disorganized the Denver RP Church, an inner-city church that began in 1890 and enjoyed many fruitful years of ministry before its decline. At the same meeting, the commission called J. Paul McCracken to come to the Denver area to begin a new mission work in the growing Denver suburbs. After an initial survey, Paul chose Westminster and moved his family in September 1970.

Westminster is a city of 111,000 people northwest of Denver and near the Rocky Mountains. The city got its name from a Presbyterian university that was established for a short time here in the early 1900s.

In January 1971 morning worship services and classes began in a local school gymnasium; and about two years later on Mar. 31, 1973, the Westminster RPC was organized with 36 members.

In 1974, the congregation purchased a large ranch-style house along with 6 cres of land on 112th Avenue, which was then a country lane. The three-car garage was converted into a meeting room and the rest of the house was used for classes, fellowship and the pastor’s study. Over the years this church-house became a home for many people, not only for those who attended the meetings of the congregation, but also for various singles, married couples who needed assistance, and even a Laotian-Hmong refugee family.

In 1995, the congregation began a building project that lasted for 7 years and culminated in a new building dedicated in early 2003. We have a strategic location along 112th Avenue—now a busy thoroughfare—and a thriving community college and city library next door.

Paul McCracken pastored us for 16 years from 1970 to 1986; Marty Wilsey for 5 years through 1990; Bob Hemphill for 16 years through 2006; and, after a two-year period without a pastor, Shane Sapp has completed his first year as pastor.

Westminster began an extension work in Colorado Springs in 1981, centering around the Bob Mann and Bob Wager families, who had been active members of Westminster. A congregation was organized there and Bruce Backensto served as the first pastor. In 1986, Paul McCracken left Westminster to become the pastor in Colorado Springs. Today, the Springs RP Church is a thriving congregation of 165 people, with remaining ties to Westminster as its first daughter congregation.

As our second outreach, in 1999 services began in Longmont, a city of 86,000 about 40 minutes north of Westminster. In 2003, the Salt and Light RP Church was organized. Westminster contributed three elders, a deacon and several seed families to this daughter congregation. Former Westminster pastor Marty Wilsey was subsequently called to be Salt and Light’s first (and current) pastor.

Pastor Bob Hemphill and his wife, Cheryl, moved from Westminster to Laramie, Wyo., in 2007 to start a new work there under the oversight of Midwest Presbytery. Westminster and Longmont both supported this effort with financial help and with members attending services there on a rotating basis. In January of this year, the Laramie RP Fellowship was organized as a mission church with 19 charter members.

While it is true that God is the One who calls His servants to plant new churches, Westminster has played a role on the “sending” side of the equation by providing many of our members and all three of our former pastors (Paul McCracken, Marty Wilsey and Bob Hemphill) to minister in and pastor the three outreach congregations in Colorado Springs, Longmont and Laramie, respectively.

At present, the Westminster RPC is led by a session of four active members.

There are seven deacons, and we have five standing committees that help carry on the work of the church: Christian education, fellowship, mission and ministry, AV/internet and nursery.

We praise God for His work among us over the last 40 years—really the last 120 years—starting with the former Denver congregation and now extending His church up and down the Rocky Mountain Front Range. We look forward to the ways He will guide, bless and use us in the days to come. Please pray for us to that end. To Him be the Glory!

—John Duke (Photos by Jonny Duke)