Whether you are brand new to the church thing or you’ve been around church for a while; we want to say welcome! Our goal at Christ United Methodist Church is to create environments and experiences where you can encounter God in the midst of your life. When you come to Church on a weekend, our aim is that you would be inspired by the music, encouraged by the message, welcomed by our amazing community of people & be reminded that God’s grace is here!
Christ United Methodist Church has a long history of being a community of people who love God, love their city, and desire to be a church that is relevant with an outward focus where all are welcomed.
Our church journey began with a few families in the Fort Collins area who wanted to start an Evangelical United Brethren (EUB) congregation. On Sunday, January 8, 1961, the first service was held for the Fort Collins EUB Church. Our location on East Drake Road was a sheep pasture that was transformed into the sanctuary, which was completed and first used on Sunday, January 12, 1964.
By 1968, the EUB church had joined with the Methodist Church, forming the United Methodist Church. The Fort Collins EUB Church became Christ United Methodist Church.
Our Narthex and south addition became a reality when they were added to our beautiful Sanctuary building in 1992.
In the years that have followed, our congregation has grown, as has our building. We have active adult, youth and children’s Sunday school classes along with study and service groups.
When our Fellowship Hall and classrooms were constructed in 1993, the building committee committed to making our facilities available for use by nonprofit groups. Currently, we host numerous groups: 12-step self-help groups, a rehearsal location for two choirs, a quilting group, and many others.
Compassion: We are committed to living out Jesus’ teachings of love and compassion for all people. We seek to be a community that cares for one another and for those in need, both within our church and in the wider world.
Social justice: We believe that following Jesus means working for justice and equality for all people. We are committed to addressing issues of systemic oppression and to advocating for policies and practices that promote fairness and equality.
Spiritual growth: We believe that faith is a journey, and we strive to provide opportunities for individuals to grow in their relationship with God and with one another.
Community: We believe that faith is best lived out in community. We seek to be a supportive and nurturing community that encourages individuals to use their gifts and talents to serve one another and the wider world.
Pictured here, the Cross and Flame comprise the symbol of the United Methodist Church. The history and significance of the Cross and Flame emblem are as rich and diverse as The United Methodist Church. The insignia’s birth quickly followed the union of two denominations in 1968: The Methodist Church and the Evangelical United Brethren Church.
Following more than two dozen conceptualizations, a traditional symbol—the cross—was linked with a single flame with dual tongues of fire. The resulting insignia is rich in meaning. It relates The United Methodist church to God through Christ (cross) and the Holy Spirit (flame). The flame is a reminder of Pentecost when witnesses were unified by the power of the Holy Spirit and saw “tongues, as of fire” (Acts 2:3).
The elements of the emblem also remind us of a transforming moment in the life of Methodism’s founder, John Wesley, when he sensed God’s presence and felt his heart “strangely warmed.” The two tongues of a single flame may also be understood to represent the union of two denominations.
At our best . . .
We embrace God’s grace.
God loves us completely before we know it. That love, that grace, is a free gift offered to all people. We accept God’s free gift of love through the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus the Christ and open ourselves to the ongoing work of the Holy Spirit, who accompanies us and empowers us to become like Christ for the world. One God creates in love, saves us for the sake of love, and renews us through love.
We follow three simple rules.
These General Rules have governed Methodists from the beginning of the movement:
Though these rules may be simple to say, they are not easy to follow. We need one another and the ongoing work of the Holy Spirit to guide, motivate, and help us remember to keep it simple and keep our focus on God.
We are a connected community.
The people of The United Methodist Church are The United Methodist Church, loving God and neighbor. Clergy and laity are equal partners in leadership, but Christ is the head of the church.
We are connected through our structure, our will, and the power of the Holy Spirit to learn how to be Christ in and for the world. Each individual builds a relationship with God in community with the local congregation, which is linked and knit together with other congregations and with the larger body (regional conferences, denominational service and support agencies, and the General Conference, which sets policy and direction for the global United Methodist Church). Together, as the body of Christ, we shine the light of God’s love throughout the world!
We are devoted to social holiness.
“There is no holiness but social holiness.” Our tradition of social justice began with John Wesley; it continues with us; and it is our hope for future generations. We take the joy of the gospel story to the world in word and action as
We are compassionate and generous.
The United Methodist Church reaches out with deep compassion to help hurting people. Our United Methodist Committee on Relief (UMCOR) is quickly on the scene all over the world to provide aid, love, and care to victims of natural disasters, violence, and warfare. The offerings collected in local congregations help support the work of the church in the neighborhood, the community, and the world. It is the people, however, who do that work, who are the body of Christ in and for the world.
We are open and diverse.
Jesus sought out and welcomed all who wished to know and love God—the poor and marginalized as well as the powerful. The Methodist movement brought new life to this focus on openness and diversity, taking the good news beyond the church walls to meet people where they were, to nurture and strengthen them as human beings and beloved children of God, and to send them out to continue sharing the joyful message of God’s love.
Our Social Creed
(From The Book of Discipline of The United Methodist Church 2008. Copyright 2008 by The United Methodist Publishing House. Used by permission.)
As United Methodists, we are called to
We are a worldwide church. You can find a United Methodist church, mission, school, hospital, or clinic in villages, hamlets, towns, and cities around the world. More important, you can find United Methodists around the globe (more than 11 million of us) working, serving, and loving in the name of the risen Christ.
We are moving toward perfection.
Will you find all of these wonderful aspects of United Methodism actively at work in every local congregation? No, we are not perfect. What you will find is that we, following the teachings of John Wesley, believe that we are called to live in ways that move us toward perfection. We work together and pray together and study together and worship together so that we can go out into the world with the love of God, empowered by the Holy Spirit to love and serve in the name of the risen Christ—to transform the world.
Learn more about it . . .
To learn more about what makes The United Methodist Church special, to find a local United Methodist congregation, and to find ways to serve and connect, speak to a United Methodist pastor or:
Copyright © 2010 Cokesbury