Modern religion at Rock Harbor
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Alicia Robinson
The squat, rectangular, industrial-looking building next door to a
plastics manufacturing firm seems an unlikely place to celebrate
Christmas Eve.
But it is a church, and people came in droves Friday to watch
performances of “The Corner Window,” a musical drama that puts a
modern spin on the Biblical story of Christmas.
The drama is new, but the approach isn’t; Rock Harbor Church puts
something of a modern spin on everything.
“We just happen to have a lot of people who are good at acting and
singing and dancing, and we give them a place to use those gifts for
God,” said Jen Mulroney, the church’s communications director.
In other years, the church has dramatized the Biblical story of
Mary and Joseph and afterward the pastor talked about how it relates
to modern life, said Chad Halliburton, who directs the church’s
productions. This year the church’s creative team decided to do the
opposite.
“The Corner Window” presents vignettes of modern characters who
pass by a nativity scene in a shop window and reflect on what it
means to them.
One of the church pastors plays a keyboard, and he and several
other performers sing.
The assembling of the minimal set -- a window frame, a door, a
bench, a street lamp -- was put to music and was incorporated into
each of Friday’s five performances.
Those who attended the noon performance appreciated the new
direction. “My church is a little bit more traditional, but I love
this,” said Nancy Howerton of Rancho Santa Margarita.
While he comes from a Catholic background, Greg Kirk of San Diego
liked the modernity of musical drama.
“It was awesome,” Kirk said. “It was quite creative. They did a
wonderful job putting it together.”
These days it’s not unusual for churches to use contemporary music
and technology in their services, and pastors even wear jeans. The
goal is to make parishioners feel like the church is relevant to
their lives.
Rock Harbor itself is fairly young. It was founded in 1997, and
church leaders moved into their first permanent facility -- the
squarish, ecru building on Fischer Avenue -- little more than a month
ago.
The church doesn’t have members in the sense that their names are
on a roster, but about 3,000 people attend services each week,
Mulroney said. It’s evident that many of them relate to what the
church is doing. Most of the 75 people who produced the drama were
volunteers.
Halliburton, the communications director, started as a volunteer
and he’s never been this involved with any church before, he said.
When he helps create performances, which can include plays, music
and modern dance, he tries to give people a feeling that they were
part of the presentation, he said.
“My hope is that people walk in there not knowing what to expect,”
he said. “They know that they’re going to get the truth [and] they
know that they’re going to get it in a relevant way.”
It was relevant to at least one person among the hundreds who
attended Friday’s shows.
“I don’t even go to this church anymore,” said Cheri Stabile of
Irvine. “I just come here on the holidays because I like the
service.”
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