Difference between revisions of "Horse Lake Christian Fellowship, BC"

From BrethrenPedia

Jump to: navigation, search
(Correspondents)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
 
=History=
 
=History=
Peter Porrovecchio and his wife moved to BC from Adelaide, Australia for work, and thru the testimony of a work associate, Jim of [[Prince George Gospel Chapel, BC]], Peter and his wife were saved, and became involved with the assembly there. They eventually relocated to 100 Mile House and hosted the first meetings of the 100 Mile House assembly in their home from 1981-1984 before returning to Adelaide, Australia where they serve in a large asssembly there.
+
Peter Porrovecchio and his wife moved to BC from Adelaide, Australia for work, and thru the testimony of a work associate, Jim of [[Prince George Gospel Chapel, BC]], Peter and his wife were saved, and became involved with the assembly there. They eventually relocated to 100 Mile House and hosted the first meetings of the 100 Mile House assembly in their home from 1981-1984 before returning to Adelaide, Australia where they serve in a large asssembly there.  Its formation was encouraged by [[Leonard H. Laine]] who started [[Williams Lake Christian Fellowship, BC|Williams Lake Christian Fellowship]] within the same area in 1960, that met thru 1983 before he joined [http://www.wlefc.org/ Williams Lake Evangelical Free Church].
  
 
P.W. "Bill" Shatford and his wife Joyce served as correspondents in the early middle years (1967-1970) of an assembly known as Prince Rupert Gospel Chapel (1960-1976+) then from 1971-1980+ at Prince George Gospel Chapel (+1954-2020+), and co-led an assembly hive around 1982 known as Kelly Road Gospel Chapel that continues thru 2020, where he continues to serve as an elder. Bill gave encouragement to the readers of Interest on Feb. 20 of 1984 (for the May issue), "I have been visiting the little assembly at 100 Mile House (210 miles south of Prince George). It is a comparatively new work and about a dozen saints meet in homes for worship, breaking of bread and study of the Word. There is a need for a mature couple to live there and assist this group of believers".
 
P.W. "Bill" Shatford and his wife Joyce served as correspondents in the early middle years (1967-1970) of an assembly known as Prince Rupert Gospel Chapel (1960-1976+) then from 1971-1980+ at Prince George Gospel Chapel (+1954-2020+), and co-led an assembly hive around 1982 known as Kelly Road Gospel Chapel that continues thru 2020, where he continues to serve as an elder. Bill gave encouragement to the readers of Interest on Feb. 20 of 1984 (for the May issue), "I have been visiting the little assembly at 100 Mile House (210 miles south of Prince George). It is a comparatively new work and about a dozen saints meet in homes for worship, breaking of bread and study of the Word. There is a need for a mature couple to live there and assist this group of believers".
Line 10: Line 10:
 
By late 2006, according to a November issue of Uplook, the assembly had relocated to a structure on 5827 Horse Lake Road, where locally they became known as the Good News Center, inspired by ex-Hutterite assembly believers in Lethbridge, AB who had adopted a similar name.
 
By late 2006, according to a November issue of Uplook, the assembly had relocated to a structure on 5827 Horse Lake Road, where locally they became known as the Good News Center, inspired by ex-Hutterite assembly believers in Lethbridge, AB who had adopted a similar name.
  
The assembly continues to this day (2020) with about forty or so believers, not to mention a historically strong children's work. See [https://hlcf.org/ HLCF's website] for current info.
+
The assembly continues to this day (2020) with about forty or so believers, not to mention a historically strong children's work. See [https://hlcf.org/ HLCF's website] for current info.
  
 
=Annual Conference=
 
=Annual Conference=

Latest revision as of 01:08, 3 July 2025

History

Peter Porrovecchio and his wife moved to BC from Adelaide, Australia for work, and thru the testimony of a work associate, Jim of Prince George Gospel Chapel, BC, Peter and his wife were saved, and became involved with the assembly there. They eventually relocated to 100 Mile House and hosted the first meetings of the 100 Mile House assembly in their home from 1981-1984 before returning to Adelaide, Australia where they serve in a large asssembly there. Its formation was encouraged by Leonard H. Laine who started Williams Lake Christian Fellowship within the same area in 1960, that met thru 1983 before he joined Williams Lake Evangelical Free Church.

P.W. "Bill" Shatford and his wife Joyce served as correspondents in the early middle years (1967-1970) of an assembly known as Prince Rupert Gospel Chapel (1960-1976+) then from 1971-1980+ at Prince George Gospel Chapel (+1954-2020+), and co-led an assembly hive around 1982 known as Kelly Road Gospel Chapel that continues thru 2020, where he continues to serve as an elder. Bill gave encouragement to the readers of Interest on Feb. 20 of 1984 (for the May issue), "I have been visiting the little assembly at 100 Mile House (210 miles south of Prince George). It is a comparatively new work and about a dozen saints meet in homes for worship, breaking of bread and study of the Word. There is a need for a mature couple to live there and assist this group of believers".

Dr. Donald G. Street, a family medical professional, was raised in Vancouver, and moved to 100 Mile House in his mid to late 20's (in 1980) to finish his medical training and residency, and by early 1984 (Interest 1984-1) was hosting the assembly in his home at 100 Mile House until 2006.

In 1989, Craig Funston, of Lone Butte, BC, wrote into Interest about possibly relocating his Christian bookstore to 100 Mile House, and indicated he had visited and preached at many assemblies throughout BC that "desperately need tentmakers in British Columbia who will move into small interior towns to either anchor struggling works or start new ones."

By late 2006, according to a November issue of Uplook, the assembly had relocated to a structure on 5827 Horse Lake Road, where locally they became known as the Good News Center, inspired by ex-Hutterite assembly believers in Lethbridge, AB who had adopted a similar name.

The assembly continues to this day (2020) with about forty or so believers, not to mention a historically strong children's work. See HLCF's website for current info.

Annual Conference

Many attend their annual Labor Day conference from throughout BC, as well as Alberta "with workshops and seminars dealing with a variety of topics such as assembly life and testimony, the Christian's walk and topics for youth", according to an advertisement in Uplook. See Visiting Ministry for dates, location (if known), theme, and some of the invited speakers.

Locations

  • @ Peter Porrovecchio's home 1981-1984
  • Dr. Donald G. Street's home @ 6511 Mercer Rd. 1984-2006
  • Good News Center @ 5827 Horse Lake Rd. 2006-current

Early Correspondents

  • Dr. Donald G. Street 1981-2020+
  • Doug Gilmore 1983 (1944-2007)

Also See

Sources

  • Interest: 1984 Jan, May; (incorrectly identified location initially as 70 Mile House; The issue in May corrected this). 1989 Sept;
  • Uplook: 1998 Aug; 1999 July-Aug; 2001 Aug; 2002 April; 2003 April; 2003 June; 2006 June-Sept, Nov; 2007 July; 2008 May-June; 2009 June-July; 2010 May-July; 2013 July-Aug;