New Church Life January/February 2016 | Page 43

      to new small groups. When John Chapman spread the seeds of truth through the frontier he went house to house like the Lord’s first disciples, meeting in families’ homes and forming small groups. “Father” Fred Waelchli used the same strategy when travelling through the United States and Canada. Harold Cranch relied on small groups when he was the only General Church minister west of the Mississippi. Some of the small groups he started became congregations that could support a resident minister, as in San Diego, Tucson, Los Angeles and San Francisco. Others continued as small groups for years or decades. Small groups were also a key strategy used by Frank Rose and others in camps such as Laurel, Maple Leaf and Arizona Mountain Camp, and also in building the Sunrise Chapel congregation. This map shows current societies of the The Academy Movement also started a s General Conference of the New Church, with the largest cluster around Manchester. a small group of just six people: W. H. Benade, J. P. Stuart, N. C. Burnham, Thomas Wilkes, J. R. Hibbard and R. L. Tafel. It soon grew to more, but it was the small group that gave birth to the vision and the zeal. Small Groups in Large Congregations The largest New Church congregations have always had reflections of smaller groups within them, such as home doctrinal classes and study groups, committees, choirs, chancel guilds, Sunday School classes, boards, school teachers and students, Theta Alpha and Sons of the Academy, in addition to the nuclear and extended families that sometimes grew from small groups into quite large ones. There are many uses that can be done by individuals working alone. A treasurer may do the books when no one else is in the room. A volunteer might mow the lawn or the pastor might fix a toilet with no one else around. But most of the uses of the church can be done best when people work together in small groups. One advantage of a large congregation is that they can accomplish large projects that are beyond the capabilities and resources of a small congregation. For example, the Bryn Athyn Church has often hosted General Church Assemblies because it has had enough resources to do so. There is no way 39