Cedar Valley Church is a wonderful Church full of kind and loving people. I've been attending online and in person for a little over a year now. I've always felt welcomed. There's always someone at the door greeting inside and outside the Church. No one walks alone here! I came here by myself and felt led by the holy spirit. I felt welcomed and not alone when I first came here. And that says a lot for being an introvert!!
They offer so many classes to connect and have events to help others be the Church. The focus here is to help others, share the word of God, and make disciples. You can learn more on their website. The teaching here is powerful. If you're looking to fill your spiritual cup, this is the place!
Nathaniel Smith
3 months ago
Not a good church. My wife went inside their with her granddaughter in 2017 looking to find a church for our family and a Sunday school. She was not welcomed or helped with the open arms that christ teaches in the Bible. My wife was told to leave after she waited their over an hour to be helped to be given the proper information. Practice what you preach church.That's what my God teaches me.
Krystal Gonzalez
3 months ago
I came to this church after leaving the Catholic Church, hoping I had finally found a place that felt like home. I even brought my family and extended family here because I truly believed this would be the right community for us. But with everything happening in this state—the growing hostility toward brown and colored people, the fear that so many of us are living with—I expected this church to at least acknowledge what we’re going through, or offer some kind of support.
Instead, it’s been the opposite. It was heartbreaking to sit at home watching the service on TV because we were afraid of going out and possibly being targeted or arrested by ICE. With everything happening right here in Bloomington, I kept waiting for a word, a prayer, anything that showed awareness or compassion. But there was nothing.
For a church that calls itself “multigenerational” and “multicultural,” the silence was devastating. We can’t ignore the reality we’re living in. And after all this, we’ve decided we won’t be coming back.