Youth of Servant Church of San Deigo joins STRONG Baseball Night

Servant Church of San Diego members enjoyed watching and praying for their youth ministry who joined the STRONG Baseball Night. (Photo taken by Timo Volz from Pexels.com)

Servant Church of San Diego asked members to join them and pray for their youth ministry who joined the STRONG Baseball Night on June 20 at Trolley Station at 25th & Commercial.

The church’s Facebook post on June 18 noted that the Padres would be against DBacks. They met at 5:45 p.m. and came back at 9:30 p.m.

Meanwhile, the church’s Instagram post mentioned that it was a fantastic night with the church’s youth ministry.

Servant Church

The church website revealed that they envision having every individual, family, and community in Greater Logan Heights know the saving gospel of Jesus Christ. They also seek to let these people encounter His transforming grace.

Besides, the Servant Church of San Diego’s goal is to serve others as they have been performed by Jesus Christ, God’s perfect servant. 

They said they wanted to do this mission with the powerful Scripture of God and gracious love. God expressed this great love through interactive evangelism and intentional discipleship. 

Also, they show it by being involved and investing in the community, as posted on their website.

One of their belief is that God serves others. They said the Bible is the real story of God creating and handling everything. They added that the Scripture shows how God loves and helps others.

Greater Logan Heights Community

According to the website, Greater Logan Heights is one of San Diego’s most historically important downtown places. It has diverse ethnic groups in the urban areas. 

There are also a lot of people living in these locations. They said that it consists of six distinct yet the same neighborhoods. 

These places are Barrio Loga, Logan Height, and Memorial. Sherman Heights, Grant Hill, and Stockton are also included.

Moreover, the church said Greater Logan heights had been a shelter to many of the city’s newcomers, workers, and service members. It has been their home since the late 1800s.

 As of now, they revealed that it is also San Diego’s youngest urban place, with a different blend of 40,000 Hispanics, Blacks, and Whites.

These people are from a dynamic mixture of industry, art, commerce, and housing, as posted on their website.

In addition, they said that it was built in the mid-19th century. Greater Logan Heights has embraced successive groups of German, Japanese, African American, and Mexican immigrants. 

They said that these waves of various nationalities established and fueled the man of San Diego’s most vital industries.

Also, the church added that the area had been a shelter to the city’s shipyards, a U.S. naval base, and numerous service members since the end of World War I.

Vibrant but Undeserved Community

Despite all the positivity, the website revealed that Greater Logan Heights had become one of the city’s most racially separated, economically slumped, and criminally exploited downtown areas for most of the last century. 

They added that this happens because of the discriminatory housing and business rules and regulations.

However, recently, the community has begun encountering renewal and redevelopment.

This progress attracted a younger generation of immigrants looking for urban housing, cultural diversity, and business availability.

The church emphasized that in this area, the energetic but underserved neighborhood of Greater Logan Heights, they wanted to serve God and others. 

They added that they would gather God’s redeemed servants through Biblically faithful, Christ-centered, and ethnically diverse meetings.


 

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