Calvary Baptist Church
Calvary, Cedar Oak Park
Calvary Baptist Church is located at 19915 S. Old River Road, Oswego,
Oregon. The church was organized on April 6, 1958.
The
membership wanted a Scriptural name for their church at
Oswego. Baptist, church, cedar, oak, and park are all words found in the
Bible. Yes, park is in the Bible too -- paradise is Greek for park.
Its name and location is further adorned when it is found that the church is
situated on Old River Road, Lake Oswego. The whole area, ten miles south
of Portland's city center is, indeed, most picturesque.
It was a close-knit, dedicated group that met in the West
Linn Inn on April 6, 1958, to organize a Baptist Church according to the
precepts of the New Testament and the historical Baptist position, There
were 38 charter members which included the pastor, Matthew Ellick. The
church continued to meet for worship on Sundays in this rented room of the inn,
which was located in the neighboring town of West Linn. a short distance south
of the place where the new church stands.
The same year a plot of ground was secured in Cedar Oak Park,
and the sod was broken for the church building on Labor Day. That it
should happen to be on that day was symbolic, there would be more shoveling,
incessant labor, almost endless days of it. The church was fortunate to
have a male quartet, not the ordinary kind, but one that made their saws sing
and their hammers ring, and so the building rose.
The group was hard pressed financially. Many of them
were young people of high school age and consequently their earning capacity was
not great. "Will it be possible to finish the project?"
was the question. And it was not an academic one. The group turned
to the Conference for advice and aid. A loan was secured from the
Revolving Building Trust. Some help was received form the brotherhoods of
the Conference churches. Thus it was possible to dedicate the church in
the spring of 1961 with many visitors from neighboring churches and the
Conference, represented by its secretary. David
Carlson of Temple Baptist Church supplied the pulpit for a time until
Leonard Hillstrom, the new pastor arrived.
In 1964 Calvary was still pastored by Leonard Hillstrom.
He was in the fourth year of a four and one half year pastorate. The
church was only thirty-two months old when he began his Calvary ministry
December 1, 1960. The six year old congregation had 73 members and Sunday
school attendance was averaging 135 in the three year old first unit
building. Pastor Hillstrom resigned n July 1965 so he and his wife Martha
could continue their education.
Endel and Gloria Meiusi came to Calvary Church after starting
two new Estonian Churches in California and Vancouver, B. C. They served
three years at Calvary, from January 1966 to January 1969 when they moved to
Loma Vista Baptist Church in Spokane, Washington. Calvary was Pastor
Meiusi's first ministry in the Baptist General Conference.
Palmer Peterson from the Oregon Baptist Retirement Home was
interim pastor after Pastor Meiusi left. Philip Goodwin was called to
Calvary and began his ministry July 1, 1969. Pastor Goodwin resigned after
a 2 1/2 year ministry.
Truett and Kay Johnson came to West Linn October 1, 1972,
from a student pastorate in Dalbo. Minnesota, where they served while Truett
finished his theological education at Bethel Seminary. The
church built a new sanctuary and dedicated it on October 1, 1976, eight months
after the ground breaking ceremony.
Membership at Calvary peaked at 107 in 1981. The 25th anniversary in April
1983 was a time of celebration at Calvary, Cully Olson was the
speaker. The building note was burned, marking an end to indebtness on
the new sanctuary. Pastor Truett resigned on May 31, 1984.
Ray and Teresa Durkin began a ministry at Calvary four months
later on September 30. Pastor Durkin had been on staff with Pastor
Hillstrom at Bethel Baptist Church while he was a student at Western
Conservative Baptist Seminary.
One of the products of Calvary is Teresa McIntosh, who grew
up in the church and served in Sunday school and youth ministries was appointed
in 1988 as a Baptist General Conference missionary to Mexico.
Excerpts for this article were taken from Rev. Gordon Carlson's book "Seventy Five Years History and John Bergeson's book "Fourth Quarter."
Calvary Baptist Church has
since disbanded from the Columbia Conference. Calvary disband for the
reason most churches do. It was dying. There was no new blood and
the church just kept getting smaller and smaller.
Attempts to prevent the death just weren't successful.
I think most significant is the fact that when Calvary was
sold the money was put aside for CBC church planting. That financial asset
helped to start 5 (or more) churches in the Columbia district. It provided
church planters with a portion of their salary during the crucial start-up phase
of the church. All of this is something I believe the Calvary people
should be proud of. God worked through the closing of the church.
Evidence again
that all things do work together for good. The church is currently called West Linn Christian
Fellowship.
The above two paragraphs is from an email received on August 25, 2002,
from Teresa McIntosh. She is currently part of Northwest Church Planting.
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