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It began on a long wooden pew.

I grew up on The Banner, Calvinettes (now GEMS), rolls of King peppermints, and the steadfast traditions of my Christian Reformed church in suburban British Columbia.

I used to believe that at some point all Christian Reformed kids had to spread their wings, fly the CRC coop, and explore the wider world of Christianity. Weā€™d travel like vagabonds to charismatic revivals and Pentecostal worship servicesā€”finally, finally, experiencing the omnipotent God weā€™d learned so much about.

The moment my last high school bell rang, I hopped a plane to New Zealand. Eventually I settled in a prominent Baptist congregation in the heart of Queenstown, where my brother and I lived.

My memories of the church are sparse. I remember my brother, in a testosterone-induced flurry, scaling the churchā€™s roof with his bare hands. I remember the calico church cat whoā€™d comb through the pews looking for bored churchgoersā€™ attention. But the memory that stands out clearest is the

particularly bright Sunday morning the minister read aloud the following passage:

Now listen, you say, ā€œToday or tomorrow we will go to this or that city, spend a year there, carry on business and make money.ā€ Why, you do not even know what will happen tomorrow. . . . Instead, you ought to say, ā€œIf it is the Lordā€™s will, we will live and do this or thatā€ (James 4:13-15).

Those words helped me, at the age of 18, first understand Godā€™s bigger story. I could make my own plans, but ultimately God was guiding my path.

Upon returning from New Zealand, I endeavored to reinvigorate my Christian Reformed experience. I made my profession of faith, began leading the senior high youths at Student Dynamics, and helped raise funds for Mexico missions efforts. Each proved a wonderful, life-giving experience, but I still felt I was missing somethingā€”something of the experience of God.

Two years later I began attending a non-Christian Reformed churchā€”an evangelical community some close school friends had helped plant in a nearby city. The church had a feeling of newness and mission that captivated me. After much prayer and with the blessing of my Christian Reformed

pastor, I began participating in this community and didnā€™t look back.

Until now, more than five years later.

Perhaps it was the theological and doctrinal questions I began to wrestle with as I entered adulthood. Perhaps it was because I discovered that my new church, like my old one, had problems too. But as I have come into my mid-20s, the experience of the CRC tradition has begun to soothe my weary evangelical soul.

Reading Albert Woltersā€™ Creation Regainedā€”a wonderful exploration of beauty, faith, and creation given to me by a friend working with the Reformed think-tank Cardusā€”I began to find language to understand the teaching of my youth. The encompassing nature of Godā€™s great narrative resonated with me; and the call to sanctify the world, not repress it, set fire to foundations long laid in my Reformed upbringing.

My return to the Reformed tradition is still in process, but what Iā€™ve learned so far is that the Christian Reformed Church has much more to offer than Iā€™d first realized. With ministries like the Christian Reformed World Relief Committee, Aboriginal Ministries, and the Office of Social Justiceā€”not to mention pews filled with intellectuals, artists, and environmentalistsā€”the CRC is a vibrant and dynamic community of faith.

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