Originally printed in the Fall 2004 issue of
Church Communicates the Gospel in Inner-City Context
There was a shooting on one of the bus runs the Sunday night that Terry Raburn, district superintendent for the Peninsular Florida District, spoke at Pastor Tommy Kyllonen's Crossover Church in Tampa. It didn't begin to slow down the church's community outreach.

Pastor Tommy Kyllonen

Fla.vorFest 2002 2 disc DVD cover
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"Crossover is in one of the most down-trodden, compromised areas of Tampa," Raburn says, "and Tommy sends out buses across that area to bring in kids. The church is very youth oriented, but it offers spiritual growth on a level that every age level can accept. The Spirit of the Lord is incredibly present at Crossover. I don't know how many people would have the chance to see 'Amazing Grace' done with stomp and rap, but at Tommy's church you can."
Crossover Church's sole purpose is to give streetwise teens and 20-somethings a soul purpose. It's been this way since Tommy Kyllonen came to Tampa, Fla., in 1996 and started the "hip-hop" youth ministry at the church with four teens.
The group grew to nearly 200 during the next 6 years. When Kyllonen became senior pastor 2 years ago, the church as a whole transitioned its focus to reaching out to those in Tampa's hip-hop culture.
Sunday morning services at Crossover are like no other. A disc jockey runs turntables, with hip-hop as well as rhythm and blues tunes mingled with praise and worship songs booming from overhead speakers. Remarkable testimonies from former drug dealers and strippers help define the services.
"God made it clear that we were supposed to reach out to what the majority of the neighborhood was, and that's hip-hop," says Kyllonen, 30. But that doesn't mean the gospel is watered down for the congregation, which is 50 percent Hispanic, 25 percent black and 25 percent white.
"We tell it like it is, but we always do it in love," says Kyllonen, noting the church has nearly 20 first-time visitors each week.
Visitors receive a free CD that includes music from various hip-hop and R&B artists who attend the church, as well as an introduction from Kyllonen, who has also recorded five hip-hop albums under the name Urban D.
For the community, Crossover holds quarterly Christian hip-hop and R&B concerts, which include a graffiti expo on a portable wall the church built. The church recently completed construction on a basketball court and, thanks to a $13,000 grant, a 10,000-square-foot skate park complete with half-pipes, ramps and rails.
"Our church doesn't look like your typical church," says Kyllonen, noting that the church is covered with murals. "The crowd we're reaching doesn't want to come into a place where there are pews and stained-glass windows."
Edward Bayonet, who is known as Spec, says Crossover's hip-hop environment led him to accept Christ as Savior at a youth service in 1998.
"I saw [people] here that looked like dudes from around my block," says the 25-year-old Spec, who as a teen regularly sprayed graffiti on the streets of Long Island, N.Y. "I felt comfortable because I could be myself."
Now Spec puts his love for Christ into his love for art. He is Crossover's media director, designing promotional graphics, fliers and the church's website.
"Hip-hop was all I knew," Spec says. "Hip-hop isn't our god, but we use what we know as a tool for Christ."
Today nearly 300 people from ages 18-50 attend Sunday morning services at Crossover, and the church recently added a second service. On Thursday nights more than 60 teens attend a junior high-only hip-hop youth service that started last year with 15, while 220 senior high and young adults meet in the main auditorium.
Newcomers are plugged into small-group Bible studies. The church has drama teams, a choir, and open microphone and poetry nights.
Youth can purchase Christian hip-hop music from Crossover's CD store. The church also has a hip-hop shop and a skate shop, and produces a magazine.
"New churches establish a new presence for Jesus," says Church Planting Director Paul Drost. "With the diversity of America now, the more churches we have that can target different segments of the population, the greater impact we can have on extending God's kingdom. I heartily recommend churches like Crossover."
by Isaac Olivarez, Today's Pentecostal Evangel
Enrichment Journal is published quarterly for Assemblies of God ministers by the General Council fo the Assemblies of God. Click here to begin your subscription to Enrichment Journal. |