Aaron Au seemed to have it made in his musical career. For 10 years he had been a first violinist with the Edmonton Symphony Orchestra (ESO), during which time he appeared as a soloist and a chamber musician in both violin and viola in concerts across Canada, the U.S., Cuba, and Europe. He was a frequent guest on CBC Radio. But God was calling him to something else.
āWhile things seemed to be going well in terms of my musical career,ā Au explained, āthe Lord was preparing me for something else.ā Au said that he never imagined the journey to which God was calling him and his wife, April, as church planters.
On September 14, during a special service at Mosaic House Christian Reformed Church in Edmonton, Alberta, Au was one of a team of individuals blessed and sent out to establish Avenue CRC. It is a new church plant in the cityās Alberta Avenue community, an inner city neighborhood that struggles with issues related to crime and poverty. The church will meet biweekly in a coffeehouse.
Auās call to ministry began with the diagnosis of a close family member with severe depression. During this difficult and reflective time, Au said, āI felt God calling me away from the ESO to pursue studies at Edmontonās Taylor Seminary and soon after at Calvin Seminary.ā Au has completed the M.Div. degree at Taylor and coursework at Calvin Theological Seminary. āI just need to complete my language requirements before going through the candidacy process for Minister of the Word,ā he explained. Au will be a bivocational pastor, continuing to work part-time as a professional musician.
With ties to the Baptist and Pentecostal traditions, neither Au nor his wife had any previous connections to the CRC. Along the way, however, he met Bruce Gritter, pastor of The River CRC, and Victor Ko, pastor of Mosaic House, who would become Auās mentor. Au is quick to say, āWe have felt very welcomed into the family, and we both find the Reformed faith to be full of beauty and depth.ā
Au and his wife have moved into the Alberta Avenue community. Au considers it a joy and a blessing to live in this diverse community where he and his wife will work and minister. āWe are just one of the neighbors, not ācourageous ministersā coming in from the āoutsideā to work in this ācrime-riddenā area; we live here and we care for our neighbors and they care for us. It's in our daily interactions, mowing each otherās lawns, shoveling each otherās walks, and just living life here that we have gotten to know our neighbors. We really feel like itās in those day-to-day interactions that we experience Godās love together.ā
Au said that a number of members of the churchās launch team live in or near the neighborhood. āWe want to make sure that we're not āservice-providersā coming in from the outside but āstakeholdersā who live in and are completely invested in our neighbors and neighborhood.ā
About the Author
A former nurse and chaplain, Janet Greidanus is a freelance news correspondent and long-time writer of the In Memoriam column for The Banner.