We are a gospel-centered church that runs hard after reconciliation. We are Christ-centered, intentionally multiracial, and focused on seeing the Kingdom of God come in Brunswick.
Whether you are new to the area, searching for spiritual guidance, or looking to connect with a supportive community, Union City Church has a space at the table for you.
You can learn more about us below.
"Reconciliation" is a word that has been around a long time. Take a minute and learn more about it.
“Reconciliation” means that two parties who were enemies lay aside their hostility and become friends. In the first century, as the Apostle Paul was starting churches and telling people from all walks of life what God was doing in Jesus Christ, he used the word "reconciliation" to describe it. For him, that word meant several things:
In 2 Corinthians 5, Paul is talking about the work that he does as a preacher and a church planter. He says that God first reconciled Paul and other believers to Himself in Christ. Because Jesus died and rose again, God no longer counts sin against people who place their trust in Him. He reconciles people to Himself.
He also gives us the ministry of reconciliation: that is, we become ambassadors for Christ, imploring people to receive this reconciliation.
Paul uses the word “reconciliation” again in Ephesians 2, talking to Jews and Gentiles. These two racial groups were hostile to one another, because they were divided by culture and by religion. But because both Jews and Gentiles are now in Christ, they have become family. Paul is not just telling people of different races to get along. He is saying that we just are one already. Christ has done it by reconciliation.
It is now our job to live into the reality that, across cultural, racial, national and socioeconomic lines, we belong to one another. In the New Testament, there is no such thing as a Jewish church and a Gentile church in the same town, or a rich church and a poor one in the same town. That would have been unthinkable.
So we practice reconciliation across racial and social lines that divide our town and especially our churches. That is more than just diversity or being nice to each other. We have to have the courage to sit down and talk about why we have not been acting like family in the past, and what needs to change in order to move forward.
It’s not easy work, but it’s good work.
In Colossians chapter 1 Paul uses the word "reconciliation" one more time. He says that when Christ died he did not just aim to reconcile people to himself, but "to reconcile all things to Himself, whether on earth or in heaven" (Colossians 1:20). The world and its systems and structures will one day be under the reign and order of Jesus Christ. The church signals that reality to the world as we work to reform what is under our influence, seeking justice and righteousness in our communities.
Reconciliation means all of these things: individuals coming to faith, people becoming family across social and racial lines, and churches seeking justice in the name of Christ. This is what we want to be a part of.
If you want to learn more, we’ve curated a selection of books, movies, podcasts and other media around the topic of gospel-based racial reconciliation.
We’ve created a series of short videos for white Christians who want to engage in the conversation around race and justice. Find the series by clicking below.
We believe there is one Triune God: Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
We believe in God the Father as the Creator of all things. We believe that all humans are made in the image of God.
We believe in the divinity and humanity of Jesus Christ. We confess Him as Lord and follow Him alone.
We believe in his sacrificial death for sinners, his resurrection the third day, and his bodily return. We believe in the power and presence of the Holy Spirit as he builds his church.
The Bible is God’s word and is our authority. It is the primary way that God speaks to us.
But we do not read the Bible alone. We need the community of faith, past and present, to read with us and help us to understand the Scriptures. We hold to the historic creeds of the church: the Apostles' Creed, the Nicene Creed, and the Athanasian Creed.
This last word is a little harder to define. Here's one way to sum up what it means to be Reformed.
By Scripture alone. We trust the Bible as God's word to us. We believe what it says.
By grace alone. Our problem as humans is that we have lived in rebellion against our good and holy God. The remedy for that rebellion comes from God alone. He is the one who chooses us, calls us, rescues us, makes us alive, forgives us, adopts us, changes us, and brings us home to him. Everything we have is a gift from him.
By faith alone. The posture that God requires from us is faith. We find life and redemption not through our own efforts, but by trusting in Christ. Trust is the act of relying upon, listening to and following God.
Through Christ alone. Jesus Christ accomplished redemption for us by his death and resurrection. There is no other method, person, practice, philosophy or system by which we can be reconciled to God and one another.
To God alone be the glory. The reconciliation that God accomplishes in Christ will bring glory and honor to Him alone. No one--no person, no minister, no church or group of people--will be exalted before Him. All the praise and glory goes to God the Father, Son and Spirit, forever.
Union City Church is a part of a network of churches, the CCCC.