Page 2 of 2   <      

Faithful Servants of New Orleans

Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.

When new members are introduced, they are expected to announce their choice of mission work. They are imbued with another Slaughterism: They are not "volunteers," but "servants."

The difference, congregants say, is that volunteers serve at a time and place of their own choosing; servants obey the call of a master.

"We don't volunteer as a matter of convenience," said parishioner Bruce Heft, a school bus driver who will make three trips to New Orleans this year. "We serve."

The church has so systematized its mission offerings that each year it publishes a glossy catalogue of 11 distant mission opportunities, including Chicago, New York, New Orleans, Jamaica, Thailand and Haiti. Volunteers pick a trip and pay a fee ($275 for six days in New Orleans; $2,999 for 11 days in Thailand), meet a trip leader, become oriented, and go.

Slaughter came to Ginghamsburg 29 years ago at age 27, inheriting a sleepy crossroads church that he jokes grew to 60 from 90 during his first year. Yet Slaughter had ideas and energy and jolted the tiny church. "He's not a nurturer; he's a gooser," said Dena Helsinger, a registered nurse on a recent New Orleans trip.

Today, the church has a $6 million annual budget and employs about 120 full- and part-time staff. It holds five weekend services that feature lavish multimedia technology and upbeat Christian music.

Inside the church, the mood is joyful and dress is casual. Congregants arrive in shorts, grab a free pastry or cup of coffee, chat with friends and wander into an hourlong service. There is no cross inside the multi-purpose sanctuary nor soaring above the angular, red-brick building.

Congregants sing, worship and listen to Slaughter's message in chairs that will be stowed away so the building can be put to another use later in the week.

Not surprisingly, Ginghamsburg's culture reflects Slaughter's iconoclastic vision of a community of faith.

"I believe Jesus is absolute truth, but I don't believe Christianity is absolute truth," Slaughter said. "I believe Christianity as a religion has become something significantly different than what Jesus was about."

Although Ginghamsburg's culture emphasizes Scripture and each believer's personal relationship with Jesus Christ, it is firmly embedded in the liberal evangelical tradition that dedicates itself to social justice rather than battling over hot-button cultural issues.

Yet Slaughter says it is pro-life in the broadest sense, throwing itself at the service of the poor and dispossessed.

Since 2005, Ginghamsburg has raised $3 million to aid the victims of the genocide in Darfur, raising more money each year than the year before.

It started four years ago when Slaughter admonished his congregation with typical bluntness that "Christmas is not your birthday. Stop acting like it." He asked them to halve their holiday spending and give an equal amount to the poor in Darfur. His flock responded.

Which illustrates another much-repeated Slaughterism: "Live simply so that others may simply live."

Bruce Nolan writes for the Times-Picayune in New Orleans.


<       2


© 2008 The Washington Post Company