Pubdate: Sun, 11 Feb 2007 Source: Burlington Post (CN ON) Copyright: 2007 Burlington Post Contact: http://www.haltonsearch.com/hr/bp/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1528 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) THY KINGDOM COME Young Pastor Has NRG For His 24/7 Church Kevin 'Kip' Philp didn't find God in drugs but rather because of the effect they were having on his mind and soul. An overnight stay in a jail cell after a drug-fueled odyssey was the second similar event in a matter of months that convinced the teenager from North Bay that he needed to turn his life around, or else. Fast-forward 14 years and the stereotypical image of a long-haired druggie teen is long gone, having been replaced by a clean-cut, 32-year-old, married father of three. However, he still retains some vestiges of his youth -- six tattoos scattered about his arms, legs and back, what he describes as mainly abstract symbols, except for the image of an iguana. After 12 years as a young adult minister, most recently for 4 1/2 years at Glad Tidings Pentecostal Church on Guelph Line, Philp is now an ordained Christian pastor who has started a new church inside an unlikely location -- the NRG Kingdom nightclub. Philp hopes to convince young people hungry for spiritual nourishment that after a weekend of partying and dancing -- perhaps at NRG on a Friday or Saturday -- that they will head to the Plains Road nightspot on a Sunday to check out his place, the 24/7 Church. He said a Burlington Post story about the club piqued his interest in it as a possible venue for a church. "What really drew my attention to the article was the number of young people going to it," he said. (NRG attracts hundreds of youths to its weekend dance events.) Philp has signed a lease with the bar/dance club to rent one of the nightclub's large dance rooms, with access to two smaller rooms for programming for youth and children. Services running 60-90 minutes are planned for Sundays at 6 p.m. The general manager of NRG acknowledged their latest tenant is a bit different from the usual clientele. "It's a little unorthodox setting (but) in a less uptight setting" for a church, said Darryl Foster. "We've been doing a lot of renting lately" to various groups, he added. The first church service was held last Sunday afternoon and went without a hitch, said Philp. "I think it went really well. I recognized some faces and I saw some new ones. I would say the majority were in their 20s but there was a mix of all ages. It was standing room only," said Philp, estimating 230 people attended. While you wouldn't expect a traditional church service in a nightclub setting, the 24/7 experience, Philp says, will be a mix of up-tempo message delivery grounded in basic Christian teachings. "Our goal is to be different not better.... Everything we say will be based on Scripture but said in another way" to relate to younger people and non-churchgoers. "I was interested in connecting with people who had never set foot in a church in their life. When I asked them why, it had nothing to do with God or the Bible, it had to do with church, the environment, the stereotypes. "We don't want to change the message or water it down, just put it in terms that people can relate to. We believe church needs to be the most creative place on Earth. The most important message deserves the most dynamic presentation." The 24/7 Church at NRG will have professional musicians, a nine-foot TV screen and smaller monitors around the room displaying text and images of the service. Philp left Glad Tidings last August to devote himself full time to getting the 24/7 Church going. He said a 50-member leadership team has donated countless hours to its formation; he often puts in 18-hour days, he said. A friend of Philp's says the 24/7 concept of a church is overdue here. "I really think that this would interest people all over the city who have been looking for a place to worship but do not like the stuffy feeling of some of the more traditional churches in Burlington," said Jack vanderDeen, a Glad Tidings parishioner and volunteer who worked with Philp during Glad Tidings' Friday night youth programs. Philp says the church's name has multiple meanings. It is a reference, in part, to spirituality needing to be a 24-hour-a-day, seven-day-a-week lifestyle. It also refers to verses in the Bible, from The Book of Jeremiah, chapter 24, verse 7, and The Acts of the Apostles 24:7. "I will give them a heart to know me.... The Lord added to their number daily, those being saved....," Philp quoted in part. He said the church is a serious undertaking. "We are under the cover of the Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada," which has provided him with some start-up and operational funding. "There is a regional director I meet on a monthly basis. I have to draw up budgets." Born in North Bay and moving to Newmarket at age 10, Philp was involved in the drug sub-culture from a young age getting into LSD (acid) at age 12. Two events combined to make him re-think his reckless lifestyle. At a Halloween party he took so much acid that his friends wouldn't let him drive home. "I was freaking out from this overdose and they forced me into my truck." He was hallucinating so much that he jumped from the vehicle. His 'friends' left him on the road. "I lay there for several hours, until 5:30 a.m., when a police officer found me." He was not charged. "I went home and said (to his parents) 'I have to get out.'" Philp moved to New Liskeard, Ont. but got into trouble again. "I had a flashback smoking drugs in this guy's basement. I had a moment of clarity and I went outside in my sock feet; it was snowing. I'm full of these drugs, crying and out of control. The cops came and put me in a holding cell." Again avoiding charges (Philp says he has no criminal record), this time he vowed to himself to change his ways. He stayed with relatives in Huntsville for a few months. One day he visited Bethel Pentecostal Church and its pastor, Randy Cox. "He introduced me to Christ and I became a Christian. I had no (drug) withdrawal symptoms even though I had been a heavy user since I was 12." His life changed in a hurry. He went on speaking tours of high schools in Canada, the U.S. and England telling teens about drugs and Christ. He got his high school diploma at age 19, the age he got married to Shanni, an audiologist at Chedoke-McMaster Children's Hospital. Their children are aged 4, 10 and 13. The head pastor at Glad Tidings Pentecostal has only good things to say about Philp's work there, although he admitted their initial meeting about filling the youth pastor position was a bit of an eye opener. "When he interviewed with us he came in wearing a short-sleeve T-shirt and you could see his tattoos," said Senior Pastor Scott Doggart. "I don't know if he did that on purpose but we knew what we were getting into. "His life story is one of God rescuing him. I think that's why he has such a facility with the (youth) culture. Pastor Kevin Philp is a man of marvellous vision and energy for a good cause -- which of course is the spread of the gospel." The 24/7 Church website is www.go247.ca. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman