Faith Community Background
Faith Community Church 
A United Methodist Congregation  

  410.426.8177 • Office
  contact@faithcommunityhamilton.org

Faith Community Church
About Us

Pastor JackieThe Pastor's Two Cents

It’s really a joy and a privilege to serve a congregation and parish where so much community outreach is already taking place! This is one of the focal points of the United Methodist Church. As described in the Conference study text, Five Practices of Fruitful Congregations, our church is quite accustomed to “risk-taking mission and service.”
As I see it, my role as pastor is to introduce to some and help implement the other practices: “radical hospitality, passionate worship, intentional faith development, and extravagant generosity.” I am excited about being in the midst of burgeoning opportunities for discipleship, leadership development, and witnessing. I can’t wait to see God’s plan unfold as we embark on this trail together. WOW!

Rev. Jacquelyn L McLellan, a.k.a., Pastor Jackie

Faith Community is a progressive United Methodist Church.

By calling ourselves progressive, we mean that we are Christians who:

1. Have found an approach to God through the life and teachings of Jesus;

2. Recognize the faithfulness of other people who have other names for the way to God's realm, and acknowledge that their ways are true for them, as our ways are true for us;

3. Understand the sharing of bread and wine in Jesus's name to be a representation of an ancient vision of God's feast for all peoples;

4. Invite all people to participate in our community and worship life without insisting that they become like us in order to be acceptable (including but not limited to): believers and agnostics, conventional Christians and questioning skeptics, women and men, those of all sexual orientations and gender identities, those of all races and cultures, those of all classes and abilities, those who hope for a better world and those who have lost hope;

5. Know that the way we behave toward one another and toward other people is the fullest expression of what we believe;

6. Find more grace in the search for understanding than we do in dogmatic certainty - more value in questioning than in absolutes;

7. Form ourselves into communities dedicated to equipping one another for the work we feel called to do: striving for peace and justice among all people, protecting and restoring the integrity of all God's creation, and bringing hope to those Jesus called the least of his sisters and brothers; and

8. Recognize that being followers of Jesus is costly, and entails selfless love, conscientious resistance to evil, and renunciation of privilege.