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Moments with missionaries: Evan Chartrand

Starting a church is many things. It’s exciting and exhausting, humbling and rewarding, daunting and wonderful—often all at once. Oh, and it’s one more thing: unpredictable.

The lead-up to the launch service at Anchor, Panama City Beach, Fla., felt less like following a carefully planned timeline and more like learning to keep our footing as the waves kept coming. That’s oddly fitting, considering our church is planted in a beach town.

Mission group March 2026
The core group at Anchor, Panama City Beach, Fla. Anchor had its launch service Dec. 14.

For those unfamiliar with the process, here’s some context: Veteran church planters recommend holding a “preview service” in each of the three months before the launch service. Think of it as a way to find your footing before the big day. But because of several major delays, Anchor’s first preview service didn’t happen until Nov. 16, 2025 . . . just four weeks before the Dec. 14 launch.

Suddenly, the pace changed. We were about to do three months’ worth of work in four weeks.

The unpredictability showed up from the start. The portable church equipment hadn’t arrived yet, so the first preview service included a borrowed sound system, a folding table for an altar, and worshipers sitting at cafeteria tables. Why not chairs, you ask? Because we discovered that morning we didn’t have a key to the chair closet. Still, we gathered, and God was there with us.

The weeks that followed were fluid and full of improv. On Nov. 30, we walked into a cafeteria in need of some serious cleaning, so we added “full-blown sweep and mop” to our list of set-up duties. Again, we gathered, this time for a Communion service.

Dec. 6 was a big day—our church equipment finally arrived! We spent five hours discovering how to turn our cafeteria into a sanctuary.

We came back four days later to set up for a midweek Advent service, only to find the after-school program did not get the memo that we’d be there. So we had an audience of two dozen elementary school students watching as we transformed their cafeteria into our church. Mid-service, our brand-new sound system suddenly went silent. I used my “big boy” voice to finish the service and later discovered the problem: a dead battery. Whew! Could have been worse.

The day before our launch service, setup took three hours. We handled (and I think this number is accurate) about 976 last-minute details, deep-cleaned the cafeteria, and yes, made sure new batteries were in the microphone. We had to be Martha that day so we could be Mary the next.

Then the day arrived, and the launch service went beautifully. About 60 people attended, including over two dozen guests—even the city’s mayor. After three months’ worth of preparation condensed into a fluid, fast-moving few weeks, we could finally breathe in the beauty of it all.

Here’s the most remarkable part: God used our humble, imperfect, continually-pivoting efforts to proclaim sin and grace to those 60 people that day. They heard forgiveness pronounced and salvation proclaimed. They heard about Jesus, their Savior and anchor for their souls. And we have the privilege of bringing that good news to this community every week.

Starting a church can be unpredictable. It can feel like standing in the surf: never fully in control, constantly adjusting, surrendering just enough to stay upright. Turns out, that’s where God does some of his best work.

Author: Evan Chartrand
Volume 113, Number 03
Issue: March 2026


Starting soon

These home missions are planning launch services in the coming months:

  • March 29: Mount Hope, Bend, Ore.
  • April 5: Crossroads, Chicago, Ill.

Please keep these new missions in your prayers.