Rock Harbor of ages
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Andrew Edwards
After spending seven years looking for a home, the congregation at
Rock Harbor Church finally has a place to call its own.
Unlike the biblical tale of a seven-year journey in ancient
Israel’s wilderness, Rock Harbor’s congregants confined their travels
to Newport-Mesa before finally settling down in a former warehouse.
“We’ve been looking for seven years, [with] 36 different addresses
we’ve been looking at,” teaching pastor Mike Erre said. “God just
kept saying not yet, not yet, not yet.”
The church held its first services in its new home Saturday night
and Sunday morning.
“It’s overwhelming, in a good sense,” church elder Greg Rieke,
said. “We’re just grateful for what God’s done and what he’s
provided.”
The 7-year-old church had held services at the Costa Mesa Senior
Center and Vineyard Newport. The new digs are nestled inside an
Eastside business district just a short drive from John Wayne
Airport. One of their neighbors is a plastics company.
On the inside, the building still shows signs of its transition
from a warehouse into a sanctuary. Gray, industrial-looking ducts
hang over worshipers’ heads, and unfinished woodwork around doors and
on walls show the church is still putting the finishing touches on
its architectural transformation.
The ongoing work on the building is like the congregation’s
spiritual growth, Erre said.
“We kind of see this as a great metaphor for our faith,” he said.
“You don’t have to be a finished project coming to God.”
Though a lot of the heavy-duty work was done by hired
professionals, Rock Harbor volunteers donated many hours over the
past six months to help ready the building for services.
“There’s been a whole lot of people that put in a lot of effort,”
volunteer supervisor Reed Robinson said.
Members of the church said they are connected by more than just
bricks and mortar.
“Our church has never been defined by a building,” church elder
Brady Schmidt said. “Nothing can contain what God wants to do in
people’s hearts.”
Rock Harbor Church may not always call their new building home,
lead pastor Todd Proctor said.
“We anticipate growing out of this building,” Proctor said,
calling the former warehouse “just a step along the way.”
Proctor is also a keyboardist for the church band, which, like
many contemporary churches, is based on the sounds of drums and
electric guitars instead of traditional organ music. The church has
scheduled special music services tonight and Tuesday, where members
will record a live album to commemorate their new home.
“We’re not doing it to make money,” Erre said. “It really is a way
for people who attend Rock Harbor to worship beyond Sunday.”
* ANDREW EDWARDS is the news assistant. He can be reached at (714)
966-4624 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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