About Ryan Neaveill

Ryan Neaveill

Ryan Neaveill moved to Champaign in 1994. He received his bachelor's degree in music from Illinois Wesleyan University in Bloomington, Illinois, and is half-way through his M.A. at Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary in Evanston. He has had dual careers working with words (editing, proofreading, and page layout) and music (composing, performing, and teaching). Ryan is a published and award-winning composer and teaches music lessons in the Champaign-Urbana community. Visit his website at neaveill.com or his music studio at cumusiclessons.com

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The Church Hopper #3: St. Luke CME

St. Luke CMEThis past Sunday, April 27, my family and I attended St. Luke Christian Methodist Episcopal Church in Champaign. I had never attended a CME church before and so I really did not know what to expect. The only things I really knew for sure were that this church has, like me, a Methodist heritage and that it has, unlike me, a black heritage.

I have visited or attended many Methodist churches (e.g., Urbana First UMC, Champaign First UMC, Wesley UMC, New Horizon ) but they have all, unfortunately, lacked in the area of cultural diversity. I have also visited a few black churches (e.g., Love Corner, Salem Baptist, Canaan Missionary Baptist ), but none of these had Methodist roots.

So I was quite curious about St. Luke CME, for here is a church that has both a black and a Methodist heritage. How, then, would it come across? Would one of these heritages win out over the other? Or would this church somehow manage to marry Methodist and black culture into a cohesive whole?

I was pleased to find that the latter was the case.

The worship service at St. Luke followed traditional Methodist liturgy and all of its old familiar trappings were present including an organ prelude, call to worship, choir processional, hymns, gloria patria, scripture reading, sermon, offering, doxology, benediction and postlude. We even said the Apostle’s Creed.

But this wasn’t your old, stodgy, anal-retentive Methodist worship service, for driving all of this familiar liturgy was the infectious and celebratory music of the black church.

It rocked.

And the folks at St. Luke were by far the friendliest I have ever met in a worship service. I think almost everyone in that church shook my hand.

My only complaint about St. Luke — and forgive me if I’m starting to sound like a broken record — is that there was no Eucharist. I really don’t want to preach another sermon here about the importance of Communion in Christian worship, so all you churches out there in Champaign-Urbana, would you please just start doing it every time you worship?

OK, off my soapbox.

St. Luke is a lively and friendly church that has successfully joined the Methodist and black cultures into a rockin’ good worship service. So if that’s what you’re looking for in a church then check ’em out at 809 N. Fifth Street in Champaign.

St. Luke Christian Methodist Episcopal Church: 4 stars

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Comments (3)

Posted by: ad
Wednesday, May 7, 2008 1:59 AM

Is it air conditioned? Do they provide child care during service or other times? Do they have help getting there van or volunteer? Are they accessible to the handicapped? Did you let them know you were comming? You were welcome as a guest, do you think you would be welcome as a member being outside of the culture? What is the average age? Were their many children, what age groups? Are there many singles? What committees/charity do they sponsor internaly and externaly? Is the minister the kind of guy you call for help in the middle of the night? What is the average income? What is the dress code? Are the taking new parishers and if so what's involved?

Posted by: Ryan Neaveill Author Profile Page
Thursday, May 8, 2008 9:51 PM

Those are all excellent questions. I will try to incorporate some of them into my next Church Hopper article. Thanks for your feedback.

Posted by: Rob
Wednesday, May 28, 2008 11:49 PM

I have enjoyed your previous postings and they were wonderfully descriptive and very detailed on several points.

I didn't get a clear picture of this church. I was also curious about the cultural diversity you were seeking? The adage about Sunday morning being our most racially divided hour of the week is a tough trend to overcome.

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