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Bruce Dent

Bangor Church Finds Success in Its Ministries

Bruce Dent · May 11, 2018 ·

Crosspoint Church’s Worship Team at the 2018 Easter Service. (Photo by Crosspoint Church).

By Bruce Dent

Fewer residents of Maine identify themselves as religious than those of almost any other state—only New Hampshire, Vermont and Massachusetts are less religious—according to a 2016 study conducted by the Pew Research Center.  Only 34 percent of the adult population in Maine consider religion to be an important part of their life.

This lack of religiosity has proven challenging for religious institutions throughout the state, with many churches facing declining membership.  But Crosspoint Church, a large Baptist church in Bangor, has managed to buck the trend by modernizing and focusing on youth and families.

In the early 2010s, Westboro Baptist Church, a radical Baptist church from Kansas came into the national spotlight for its protests of the legalization of marriage equality.  Since the early 1990s, its members have been picketing events for the LGBT community, military funerals  and abortion clinics.

“We just kept getting more and more people saying, ‘Are you the same group as this group?’ And we just decided it was time to just have a more seeker-friendly name where the more people can relate to who we are,” said Pencil Boone, the Pastor of Youth Ministries.  The church, long known as Bangor Baptist Church, changed its name to Crosspoint Church.  Though the name changed, it remains an evangelical Baptist church that focuses primarily on biblical teaching.

In addition to changing its name, the church began to focus on new families.  Today most of the services at the church are produced in a contemporary style with music performed by the Crosspoint Christian rock band and choir.  Although the churchgoers appear stoic, at the Easter service many were clapping and swaying to the music.  Every Sunday, three services attract a total average of about 1,000.

Crosspoint has added other family amenities, such as a Tim Horton’s and a nursery on campus.  Before and after services the Tim Horton’s is open, and people can purchase coffee, donuts or the Crosspoint Church worship team’s CD. These family amenities have offered a way for the community to mitigate some of the issues of the 2nd Congressional District, such as the opioid crisis and unemployment.

Pencil Boone, left, in the Thrive Student Ministries Building. (Photo by Rommel Ojeda).

In 2009 Crosspoint founded Thrive Student Ministries, a youth ministry program run by Boone. Before working at Crosspoint, Boone was a missionary broadcaster working on the Isle of Bonaire, in the southern Caribbean; Swaziland and Melbourne, Australia.

The youth ministry offers a venue for high school and college students to worship and learn about their religion.  Over the past years, the program transitioned part of its focus from the students to service.  When the student ministry was started, it was initially “all about the kids,” explained Boone.  Now the mission is about “the people that live outside these walls that are in great need,” Boone said.

This transition has led to the creation of student mission trips. For the past seven years, youth in the church have left their local community to serve those in need. These trips began with missions to foreign countries, but the legal liability was more than the church wanted to take on. “So we decided why not get the same type of exposure in a major city. So we have been to Philadelphia three times, inner-city Boston three times and this year we’re going to Detroit,” Boone said.

These trips are designed to offer the students the ability to serve those in need.  For some students, this ministry offers them a first opportunity to leave the state and explore another part of the country.

At a time when church-going Maine has dwindled, Crosspoint appears to have figured out how to offer its members an important base of support.

“Less than 4 percent of the [Maine] population goes to church on any given Sunday. And so we’re a real anomaly,” said Boone. Ken Walsh, the CEO of the Alfond Center in Waterville, a joint Boys & Girls Club and YMCA that serves children throughout the 2nd Congressional district, noted that “on the economic scale is that they have less people going to their churches and therefore they’ve lost resources and there are different issues they have to deal with.”

Walsh said he believed that churches and religion are important for both the development of children and the health of a community. “There is a core of respect and right and wrong…to understand that to hurt somebody else is not the right thing to do,” he said.  “Or to pray or meditate to something if things are challenging.  Kids don’t have that.  The bottom line is having something to fall back on, I think a lot of kids don’t have something to fall back on.”

Members of Crosspoint’s youth ministry said the church has offered an important base of support.

Healing Through Storytelling at Millinocket’s Library

Bruce Dent · May 11, 2018 ·

Director Matt DeLaney has led a fundraising effort to keep the Millinocket Memorial Library operating. (Photo by Rommel Ojeda).

By Bruce Dent

One resident describes how her brother, after his high school graduation,  pulled a number out of a hat to apply for a job at the mill.  Another tells the story of going to a nearby wilderness camp to go hunting. Others tell tales of working to restore the downtown area after years of economic devastation.

These are some of the stories captured by the Katahdin Story Booth Project,  the creation of the town’s new library director, Matt DeLaney, who is working to preserve the history of the Katahdin region through storytelling.

“We see this project as a bridge between this glorious past, this really unique rise and decline, to something uncertain,” DeLaney said during a recent interview. ” To make that transition easier or better, let’s celebrate all the things that were great,” DeLaney said.

Like the town, which suffered greatly after its mill closed in 2008, the Millinocket Memorial Library also fell on hard times.

In 2015, it was shut for 11 weeks after its annual budget, which once stood at $175,000, dwindled to nothing.  The library had been a department in the town’s government for nearly 100 years, ever since  it opened in 1919, but it lost most of its municipal support as the town’s tax base shrank.

In response to the library’s closure, an organization called Friends of the Library, made up of residents, worked with the town to find a different funding plan.  At the end of negotiations, the town agreed to fund utilities for three years while Friends of the Library would fill positions in the library on a volunteer basis, excluding the director.

In late 2016, Matt DeLaney joined the library as the new director.  He started his career working as a public librarian throughout New York state, most recently serving as the chief financial officer of the Syracuse public library system.

When DeLaney took over, he began seeking state, federal, and non-profit grants to keep the library running and to find funds to upgrade the facility.  In the end, DeLaney and Friends of the Library raised more than $1 million.

Part of the funding has been used to develop and grow the Katahdin Story Booth Project.  Some of the organizations involved in this project are the National Park Service, the East Millinocket Library, the Maine Folklife Center, GrowSmart Maine, and Designlab, a web design firm

Story Booth interviews are collected by high school students who act as audio technicians. The interviewer starts with general questions that then get more personal. Who has been the most important person in their lives? Do they have any regrets and what were the happiest moments of their life? How would they like to be remembered?  The last portion of the interview is about the storyteller’s vision for the future of the Katahdin region.

“The idea is to … start a storytelling movement,” DeLaney said. He has been developing kits with mobile recording devices, microphones, consent forms, and interview scripts.  He said the goal is to be able to hand off the kit to residents and have them do the project on their own.

“These are stories that would be lost forever, and every one that we capture is captured forever,” DeLaney said. “Everyday a person passes away and we lose that story.”

To learn more about this project or to hear snippets of interviews, visit here.

Photos: Portraits of Penobscot Avenue

Bruce Dent · May 8, 2018 ·

Photos and Captions by Bruce Dent

Millinocket, once a booming town with a population of 8,000, has seen massive economic change since the final mill closure in 2008.  One place this is made abundantly clear is the town’s downtown located on Penobscot Avenue.  Of the 37 establishments, only 22 are still open.  But despite the bleak feeling, there are some new businesses seeking to revitalize the area.

Abandoned Buildings


Wilson’s Jewelry was a local store that closed its doors a few years ago.


The photo above and below are examples of abandoned structures that are no longer identifiable as businesses.

Surviving Businesses


Angelo’s Pizza & More is one of the longest surviving businesses in downtown Millinocket.  Their busiest season is the summer when the hikers from the Appalachian trail come into town.  They sell pizza, hamburgers, soups, and pastas.


The Blue Ox Saloon was opened New Year’s Eve 1994 by Tom St. John. “When the mill shuddered, it basically killed every store on Main Street.” according to Jamie Whitehead, the manager and bartender.

Public Service and Community Assistance


This is the Millinocket Municipal Building, which contains the office of the Town Manager, the Town Council, the Town Clerk, the Police Station, and the Maine District Court.


The Katahdin Institute is a non-profit organization that serves as an educational resource to those in the region.  The organization is led by Steve Golieb, the president.  They offer a platform for local residents to complete their GED, some college classes, or a full degree.  All classes taught in the school are transferable to over 2000 colleges and are accredited by ACE or NCCRS.

New Businesses


Design Lab is one of the newer businesses to come to downtown Millinocket.  It is a full service design studio that is owned and operated by John Hafford and Jessica Masse.  Despite their hope for the future of the town, they only employ a small number of local residents.


Turn the Page Bookstore & Wine Bar is owned and operated by Steve Golieb.  This building also houses Golieb’s health foods company Edible Wilds LLC, which sells teas, jams, and syrups. Before Golieb began renting the building, it was the Pelletier Loggers Restaurant.  The Pellitier’s are a family of loggers who became famous when they were featured on the Discovery Channel show American Loggers.


Woods & Water Shop opened July 1, 2017 by Matt Polstein. The storefront is for the sales of goods made in Maine but the primary service is making reservations for the New England Outdoor Center.

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