If Bake Sales Are Good for Mission Trips, Why Not Purchasing a Building?

1209 bayside in Galt
By Linda Sladkey

GALT, CA (December 9, 2015) – Bayside Church of Galt combined old-fashioned fundraising techniques normally used to raise money for things like mission trips with the latest pathways for seeking donations to help purchase its first facility.

“We hosted bake sales, a hair-cut-a-thon, utilized a crowdfunder via Facebook, and sold our trailer,” said Campus Pastor Phillip Escamilla. “We also hosted a Financial Peace University class at the beginning of 2015 and saw our monthly giving increase throughout the year as a result.”

The church began with five families meeting to create a casual, contemporary church in 2008 and has since grown to more than 200 attendees. It became an official ECC church plant in 2010.

They first met in a high school, which meant a lot of hauling, setting up and tearing down equipment each Sunday, but then grew enough to rent a pre-existing 7,500-square-foot building that sits on 17,400 square feet of land. The lease included an option to buy, and the church purchased the building this past October.

The building includes an auditorium, a foyer—which doubles as a cafe and a youth space—three kids’ classrooms, an open kids’ area, a nursery, and office space. It also includes an upstairs apartment.

In addition to raising its own funds for the $620,000 purchase, the church was assisted with a loan from National Covenant Properties, which also had helped the congregation negotiate its original lease.

Picture of The Covenant Companion

The Covenant Companion

The Covenant Companion brings together stories and voices that connect, inform, and inspire. Subscribe to our print edition.
CONTINUE READING

Explore More Stories & News

Features

A Story of God’s Pursuing Love: Nicki’s Journey at Rock Harbor

After a devastating job loss, Nicki Andersen made God a promise: she’d read the Bible from cover to cover. What followed was a conversion, a baptism, and a community at Rock Harbor Church that would expand to embrace her granddaughter too, in the midst of her most difficult moments.

Features

The Joy of Choosing Broccoli

Intellectual agreement isn’t the same as living it out. Through honest stories of allyship and real advocacy in ministry, Jessica explores what women and men must do to build teams where everyone truly flourishes and grows stronger together.

Features

Jochebed: Lessons My Mother Taught Me

Julie Bromley traces a line from Moses’s mother, Jochebed, whose very name carried the glory of God, to her own mother, a Sunday school teacher and lifelong Bible student who taught her to ask hard questions and know who she belongs to.

Features

The Kitchen Where Work Is Prayer

How Covenant pastor and church planter Alex Song went from addiction and a Korean monastery to opening a community kitchen in Windsor, Ontario, where they feed neighbors, train teenagers, and create spaces of belonging.

Arts & Culture

Life or Death Circumstances

Adapting content from his new book, Don’t Despise Our Youth, Covenant pastor David A. Washington makes the case that the youth crisis gripping urban America is, at its core, a church problem. He proposes that we stop ministering to young people and start raising them up to minister to each

Features

Two Camps, One Centennial

Mission Springs and Covenant Point celebrate their 100th birthdays this year. From scrappy, faith-fueled beginnings, both ministries have become enduring places where generations of Covenant kids encounter God in creation, community, and a kind of holy foolishness.

CovChurch Now is a weekly email to share news, stories, and resources with the Covenant family.