As the outcome of his pancreatic cancer grew clear, someone asked Pastor Chris Nelson how he'd like to be remembered by the congregation at Bethlehem Lutheran Church in Minneapolis.
He responded: "I would like my legacy to be: He left and it didn't make any difference."
"It was never about Chris," recalled Ben Cieslik, the pastor who posed the question and who worked with him for seven years. "It was always about God in the church. He was a profoundly humble man, but also incredibly confident. He knew the skills he'd been given, building teams to continue the work."
Nelson died June 18 at home in Eden Prairie with family and friends after being diagnosed in November. He was 64.
In his 23 years as senior pastor, Bethlehem's congregation grew from 800 to more than 4,000 as Nelson translated the tenets of a Southern Baptist "purpose-driven church" to traditional Lutheran theology.
Arriving at Bethlehem in 1994, Nelson faced the challenge of revitalizing its mission at a time of stagnating membership, Cieslik said. Nelson and lay leaders visited Saddleback Church in California, where Pastor Rick Warren famously developed the concept of the "purpose-driven life." In the church, this means paying attention to five things: how people worship, how they serve within the church, how they connect, how they grow in faith and how they reach out into the world.
Nelson and the parishioners returned "blown away" by this way of working as a community, Cieslik said. "It energized the staff, and was both a loosening and an empowering of the congregation."
As Bethlehem's main congregation grew, two new church communities also were founded: the Spirit Garage for younger generations, and Jacob's Well, known as "a church for people who don't like church."