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Welcome to my Workshop! Look around, get some hints, give some hints.
Once I'm done with the project I move the good stuff to my Archive and throw the rest away.
Just be mindful that this is where I'm working on new projects so, please, no vandalism! Enjoy!



Saddleback Church

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Saddleback Valley Community Church is a megachurch located in Lake Forest, California, founded by Rick Warren in 1980. [1] In 2007 Outlook Magazine listed Saddleback Church as the fourth largest church in America.[2]

The church is autonomous and is independent of any denominational control. However, the church recognizes the benefits of cooperation with other churches in world missions, and voluntarily affiliates with the Southern Baptist Convention in its national, state and local expressions.[3]

The church states that its purpose is to glorify God by fulfilling the Great Commandment (Matthew 22:36-40) and the Great Commission (Matthew 28:18-20). [4]

History of Saddleback Valley Community Church

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Very little of Saddleback’s ministry was preplanned according to Pastor Rick Warren. He simply knew God had called him to plan a new church built on the five New Testament purposes. [5]. Rick & his wife, Kay Warren, sensed God’s leading to establish a missionary-sending church in a major metropolitan area of the United States. They chose to start a church in the Saddleback Valley in Orange County, southern California, because it was the fastest growing area in the United States. [6]

Two weeks after the Warren’s arrival in the Saddleback Valley, they held their first Bible study in their rented condo on January 16, 1980. On April 6, 1980 two hundred five people attended Saddleback Valley Community Church’s first public worship service. [7]

“Saddleback has experienced continuous growing pains throughout its brief history. To accommodate our continuous growth we used seventy-nine different facilities in the first fifteen years of Saddleback’s history,” says Rick Warren.[8] In 1995 nearly ten thousand members moved into the new permanent worship center in Lake Forest, California.[9]. Saddleback celebrated its 25th anniversary at the Angel Stadium, in Anaheim, California with over 30,000 people in attendance. [10]

Ministries of Saddleback Valley Community Church

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Saddleback has more than 200 ministries serving the church and the communities. [11]These ministries range from support groups of various types to career coaching & counseling. Examples of the major ministries include:

  • Celebrate Recovery– was founded in 1991 by Pastor John Baker of Saddleback Church with the goal of helping people overcome disorders, addictions and hurts. Over 9,300 people at Saddleback have gone through the program. [12] Churches and prisons in the United States have implemented the program, and as of March, 2004 more than 150,000 people had participated. [13]
  • HIV/AIDS – The passion for churches fighting the global pandemic of HIV/AIDS was begun by Kay Warren, the wife of Rick Warren, at Saddleback Church in 2002. She believes HIV carries a stigma that other diseases don’t carry and the church will outlast every government in this HIV/AIDS fight. [14]The HIV/AIDS initiative at Saddleback includes annual Global Summits focused on how we as Christians can lead the world to stop aids, educational/training programs that will equip volunteer mission teams and HIV/AIDS Toolkits for churches to be used locally & internationally. [15]
  • Purpose Driven – The term, "purpose driven", comes from the teaching of Rick Warren. To be “purpose driven” is understood as being driven by God’s purposes, not our own. Purpose Driven is not an organization, but a paradigm based on an understanding of the biblical purposes of the church. The tenets of the Purpose Driven paradigm have been taught to hundreds of thousands of Christian leaders worldwide through conferences and seminars, with many pastors adopting the principles in their churches.
  • P.E.A.C.E. Plan – The P.E.A.C.E. Plan was begun by Saddleback Church in 2003 under the direction of the senior pastor, Rick Warren. The plan is a massive effort to mobilize one billion Christians around the world into a “church to church” outreach effort. The P.E.A.C.E. Plan is led by small group teams to attack the global giants of our day: spiritual emptiness, corrupt leadership, poverty, disease and literacy. Rick Warren has said repeatedly, “This is why God made me. Everything else I have done was simply preaching for the P.E.A.C.E. Plan.” [16]
  • Youth Ministries - The ministries for the youth begin at birth, All Stars; junior high Wildside; high school ministries to the college aged ministry, Crave. There are over 2,000 junior and high school students involved in the youth ministries at Saddleback. The purpose of all the programs for the youth is to reach non-believing students, to connect them with other Christians, to help them grow in their faith and to challenge them to discover their ministry and honor God with their life. [17]
  • Doug Fields has been a pastor to students at Saddleback Church since 1992 and believes one of the greatest ways that Christian teenagers can impact the world is by serving. [18]

Notes

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  1. ^ htpp://www.saddleback.com/html/story.asp
  2. ^ http://www.christiannewswire.com/news/732424365.html
  3. ^ AMENDED AND RESTATED BYLAWS, Article IV, June 25, 2003, of SADDLEBACK VALLEY COMMUNITY CHURCH, a California Nonprofit Religious Corporation.
  4. ^ AMENDED AND RESTATED BYLAWS, Article II, June 25, 2003, of SADDLEBACK VALLEY COMMUNITY CHURCH, a California Nonprofit Religious Corporation.
  5. ^ Rick Warren, (1995)The purpose driven church (p.27) Grand Rapids:Zondervan
  6. ^ Rick Warren, (1995) The purpose driven church (p.34) Grand Rapids: Zondervan
  7. ^ Saddleback Churh @ Angel Stadium. (April 25, 2005) Extending the vision…the next 25 years! [Bulletin]. Lake Forest, CA: Saddleback.
  8. ^ Rick Warren, (1995)The purpose driven church (p.45) Grand Rapids: Zondervan.
  9. ^ Saddleback Church @ Angel Stadium (April 25,2005) Extending the vision…the next 25 years! [Bulletin], Lake Forest, CA: Saddleback
  10. ^ http://www.saddlebackfamily.com/story/7312.html
  11. ^ http://www.saddleback.com/html/story.asp
  12. ^ Ministry Opportunity Guide (p.36). Lake Forest, CA: Saddleback Church.
  13. ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celebrate_Recovery
  14. ^ http://www.purposedriven.com/en-US/HIVAIDSCommunity/StartingA Ministry/Why.htm
  15. ^ Kay Warren, (2007) Dangerous surrender. (pp.231-235) Grand Rapids: Zondervan
  16. ^ http://www.lighthousetrailsresearch.com/peaceplan.htm
  17. ^ Ministry Opportunity Guide (p.109). Lake Forest, CA: Saddleback Church.
  18. ^ http:www.bluefishtv.com/Bio.aspx?id=1040