fbpx
×

Log into your account

We have changed software providers for our subscription database. Old login credentials will no longer work. Please click the "Register" link below to create a new account. If you do not know your new account number you can contact [email protected]
Cleveland church planter is Indians’ chaplain
Tobin Perry, Baptist Press
April 04, 2013
5 MIN READ TIME

Cleveland church planter is Indians’ chaplain

Cleveland church planter is Indians’ chaplain
Tobin Perry, Baptist Press
April 04, 2013

CLEVELAND – It’s easy to look at professional athletes and just see the money, fame and life in the fast lane. But after a year of serving with Baseball Chapel in Cleveland, Southern Baptist church planter Alex Ennes sees something else – real people who need to hear about Jesus.

“Everyone wants a little piece of them – their team, management, their coaches, fans,” Ennes said. “You have to position yourself as the one person who doesn’t want anything from them.”

Ennes, who in January began the process of planting a Southern Baptist church in Cleveland, was selected prior to the 2012 season by Baseball Chapel to serve the Cleveland Indians. Baseball Chapel is a 40-year-old ministry recognized by Major League Baseball and Minor League Baseball to serve the spiritual needs of each team.

04-04-13cleveland1_175.jpg

Alex Ennes, who serves through Baseball Chapel as chaplain for Major League baseball’s Cleveland Indians, is a North American Mission Board church planter in Cleveland.

Ennes leads a chapel service every week during the season when the team is in town. He also makes himself available for prayer and the spiritual needs players encounter. His wife Shari leads a Bible study for players’ wives and girlfriends.

Because the chapel services come on game day, Ennes has to remain flexible on his chapel messages. Usually, he gets 10 to 15 minutes for a message.

“Sometimes the message will be a very clear gospel presentation,” Ennes said. “You are trying to let those who don’t know the gospel understand it. Other times, as you get to know their lives, you try to help them see what the Bible has to say about some of the issues they are dealing with – as if I were preaching at my church, just much more condensed.”

As an experienced church planter, Ennes understands what it’s like to get to know his ministry context and to attempt to communicate the gospel within that context.

“As a church planter you’ve got to learn how you are going to meet people,” Ennes said. “What do you say and what don’t you say. In the professional sports world, there’s a way to talk to people and a way not to. Just like in church planting, you’ve got to get to know your community.”

Since the players’ wives and girlfriends stay behind when the players go out of town, Ennes believes his wife’s ministry has even more potential than his own. He said Shari has built strong relationships with several of the women simply by being present and listening when needed. Because players’ wives often come to a new city and don’t know anyone, they appreciate help learning their way around.

Shari connected with Meryl Masterson, wife of the Indians’ Justin Masterson, through their experiences as mothers and wives. Masterson said her relationship with Shari has been so important precisely because it is so unique.

04-04-13cleveland2.jpg

Shari Ennes, left, connected with Meryl Masterson, wife of the Cleveland Indians’ Justin Masterson, through their experiences as mothers and wives. Ennes’ husband Alex serves as a Baseball Chapel chaplain for the Indians and a North American Mission Board church planter in Cleveland.

“Friends outside of baseball don’t really understand why we have to move three times a year,” Masterson said. “It’s hard to find friends who are truly going to be there for you … to have one friend you know will be praying for you.”

Masterson said Shari has been an important mentor for many of the other wives and girlfriends in the Bible study.

“She’s just there to listen,” Masterson said. “It’s so great that we can say anything, and we know it’ll stay right there in that room. We know it’s not going anywhere with Shari.”

As he starts up a new congregation – Gateway Church River in Cleveland’s Rocky River area – Ennes believes his work as a chaplain may provide some additional credibility in the community.

“I talk about my role as a chaplain sparingly, but I will talk about it,” Ennes said. “It’s a great conversation starter. Many people in Cleveland don’t know what to do with a church planter. Tell them you’re starting a new church and you might as well tell them you fell out of space. But give them something they can identify with – like the Indians – it makes them feel like you’re part of the community.”

Follow Ennes on Twitter at @alexennes.

(EDITOR’S NOTE – Tobin Perry writes for the North American Mission Board. Through Send North America: Cleveland, Southern Baptists plan to start 91 new churches in the metro area by 2016. For more information about Send North America: Cleveland, visit namb.net/Cleveland.)