8th St. Community Church

8th St. Community Church Reaching the Lost in the Hunting Park Community, to Salvation in Jesus Christ.

https://www.stfphila.org/sister-churches-2
10/20/2024

https://www.stfphila.org/sister-churches-2

Spirit and Truth Fellowship has several church plants. Our Philadelphia church started out as a church plant when our founding pastor, Manny Ortiz, and several others, moved here from Chicago. We desire to see new churches planted in this and other cities which proclaim the powerful, healing, saving...

Eyes on the PrizeStephen R. Rizzo Friday August 18, 2023Scripture Reading — Hebrews 11:8-16He was looking forward to the...
08/18/2023

Eyes on the Prize
Stephen R. Rizzo Friday August 18, 2023

Scripture Reading — Hebrews 11:8-16

He was looking forward to the city with foundations, whose architect and builder is God.
Hebrews 11:10

From the time he received God’s call, Abraham became a sojourner. He lived in tents and frequently moved around. While Abraham appreciated the blessings of God, he came to realize that everything on this earth is temporary. Everything has an expiration date. Over the years Abraham grew in perspective. He began to desire an even greater reward that comes by faith—an eternal home “whose architect and builder is God.”

Abraham didn’t live long enough to see all of God’s promises fulfilled. Neither do any of us. Yet throughout his life, Abraham kept moving forward, following after God. By faith, he knew that the best was yet to come. He looked forward to enjoying life with God in a city that God would build—a reference to the New Jerusalem (see Revelation 21-22). Abraham came to believe that the promised land was more than a plot of dirt in the land of Canaan. It was not only a place where Abraham and his descendants could live but also a place where God’s Spirit dwells in all his glory. Abraham believed in having life with God in heaven, and that made all the difference while he was here on earth.

We too live as sojourners on this earth. We experience partial fulfillments of God’s promises. And, like Abraham, we keep our eyes on the glorious prize that awaits us someday—when Jesus will return and make all things new.

Lord Jesus, we can get so distracted in this world. Help us to look forward to life with you in your kingdom when it fully comes. Amen.

08/10/2021

At Greenhouse Project, we exist to plant missional communities that cultivate lifelong disciples, leaders and advocates that will reach the lost and transfor...

04/12/2017

Easter in Kensington

I’ll never forget the night one of the kids on the block came banging on my door. It was late enough, and frantic enough, that I thought it was an emergency.

“You have to see this.” He dragged me down the block…

“WHAT. IS. THAT?” he asked, with big gleaming eyes.

“That’s a firefly” I said, with a smile, realizing it was his first firefly-sighting.

“Why does it glow like that?”

I thought for a minute. “I’m not sure. I think God just felt extra wild one day and said, “I think I’ll make a bug that’s butt glows in the dark.”

“God is cool” the kid said, grinning from ear to ear.

One of the most beautiful things we get to do here at The Simple Way is plant gardens in the concrete jungle of North Philadelphia — and see people discover the miracle of life, and fall in love with the Creator of life.

Gardens have a special place in the human story. After all God first planted humanity in a garden in Eden. And the most redemptive act in history began in a garden in Gethsemane. And the story ends in Revelation with the image of the garden taking over the City of God, with the river of life flowing through the city center and the tree of life piercing the urban concrete.

This is our 20th year of cracking open the concrete. And every year it gets more exciting. We’ve seen our first praying mantises and monarch butterflies. Honeybees and ladybugs. This past year we saw the first cardinals we’ve ever seen in our neighborhood. We’re hoping for some yellow finches and hummingbirds soon, and we have their food out waiting on them.

It is an act of faith, and defiant hope. And it is incredible to see how resilient creation is.

It is important work. Studies show over and over that having a garden rather than a lot filled with trash reduces the trauma and stress of a neighborhood. You can literally track the science of how gardens bring health to the body and the brain.

And it’s holy work. It is hard to stay convinced that there is a beautiful Creator when everything you look at is ugly.

Sometimes it’s hard to believe that there is a beautiful God when so much of what you see is ugly. It’s hard to believe in a God that is a lover of life when there is so much death and decay and abandonment.

So we talk alot these days about “practicing resurrection” — by making ugly things beautiful... and turning vacant lots into gardens... and loving people back to life. As people see life, they are filled with wonder.

That’s what Easter is all about. After all, resurrection is something we get to do every day. Every day is Easter. We are resurrection people.

One of the most exciting urban farming projects in our little village here at The Simple Way is our aquaponics system. We have a solar-powered greenhouse with a fish-pond underneath it. The water from the fish below pumps up and nourishes the plants, which grow without soil. It’s a great way to produce food when you don’t have a lot of good soil. Stuff grows like it’s on steroids, because the plants get food and water all day and night. And we now have fish that we’ve raised as babies that are bigger than your hand.

We’ve been able to harvest piles of kale, swiss chard, lavender, and beets from the aquaponics system and share them with neighbors and folks living on the street. Kids are awestruck as they pull carrots out of the pebble-filled raised beds. It is all quite magical.

I had an enthusiastic neighbor articulate some of the best theology I’ve ever heard. As I delivered a bunch of greens to her, she said, “You know what we are doing?” She went on. “We are bringing the Garden of Eden to North Philadelphia.”

And that is exactly what we are doing. With your support and your prayers, we are bringing the Garden of Eden to North Philadelphia. Thank you.
http://mailchi.mp/thesimpleway/easter-in-kensington?e=500f3f3009

I’ll never forget the night one of the kids on the block came banging on my door. It was late enough, and frantic enough, that I thought it was an emergency.

03/28/2017
John 4:13 Jesus answered, “Everyone who drinks this water will be thirsty again, 14 but whoever drinks the water I give ...
03/12/2017

John 4:13 Jesus answered, “Everyone who drinks this water will be thirsty again, 14 but whoever drinks the water I give them will never thirst. Indeed, the water I give them will become in them a spring of water welling up to eternal life.”

A heavy thought for today
03/01/2017

A heavy thought for today

Boaz at the GateBy Stephen R. Rizzo, Wednesday, January 25, 2017 12:00 AMScripture Reading: Ruth 4:1-10; Psalm 15Today y...
01/25/2017

Boaz at the Gate
By Stephen R. Rizzo, Wednesday, January 25, 2017 12:00 AM

Scripture Reading: Ruth 4:1-10; Psalm 15

Today you are witnesses that I have bought from Naomi all the property of Elimelek, Kilion and Mahlon. I have also acquired Ruth the Moabite . . . as my wife . . . .
Ruth 4:9-10

Like the good Samaritan in Jesus’ parable, Boaz goes out of his way to help. At Bethlehem’s gate, where legal decisions are made, Boaz lets the closer relative know of Naomi’s situation. The man is ready to do what is right. But when Boaz points out that Ruth is part of the package, the closer relative steps back; he does not want to endanger his own estate. He knows that if Ruth has only one son by him, then that son, as his only heir, will inherit his property, but another family name will be on the deed.

Boaz doesn’t bat an eye. The elders and people at the gate witness Boaz’s costly kindness. This good Israelite will keep his oath, even when it hurts: he will father a child for Mahlon in order to secure his property and name. Thus Boaz risks his own property and name. What generous humility; what a citizen of the kingdom of God!

The good Israelite Jesus, born in Bethlehem, did not consider equality with God something to hold on to. So outside Jerusalem, in the presence of all the people and elders, he humbled himself and paid the highest price to fill the emptiness of all who yearn for a Redeemer. “Therefore God . . . gave him the name that is above every name . . . to the glory of God the Father” (Philippians 2:9-11).

Father God, may we confidently entrust our name and all our property to Jesus Christ, in whose name we have all that we need forever. Amen.

There are a couple of sayings that go around as we mark the end of one year and begin the next.  One is that the new yea...
01/01/2017

There are a couple of sayings that go around as we mark the end of one year and begin the next. One is that the new year brings us a blank slate, a completely new start. The other is a saying from the past; “This is the first day of the rest of your life.” The idea is that we come to a place where at the end of one year we can turn with eagerness to all that a new year has for us.
But our yesterday, our last year, holds broken and irreversible things for us. We have memories of lost opportunities, blunders, and failed expectations that will never return, that we can’t do over.
For those of us who are believers it is all too often easy to forget that God is the God of our yesterdays. Our present enjoyment of God’s grace tends to be lessened, maybe even squashed, by the memory of yesterday’s sins and failures. Anxiety is apt to arise whenever we are reminded of our yesterdays. It can often be quite hard to accept that He allows the memory of them so that we can turn them into a ministry of spiritual growth for our future. God reminds us of the past so as to protect us from a very shallow security in the present and so that we may not be tripped up again by the same failures in the future. God is in the business of transforming any destructive anxiety we have concerning our past into a constructive thoughtfulness for the future. The cross settled all the claims the past may have on our conscience so as we mark the time of a new year may we lay our past rest. Leave the broken, irreversible past in His hands, and step out into the future with Him

Address

3760 N 8th Street
Philadelphia, PA
19140

Opening Hours

11am - 1pm

Telephone

(215) 455-8823

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