Wellspring Community Church
The church at the Mall. A place to call home. Join us Sunday at 10:00 am with Full Kids Ministry
Extra parking is in front by Marshall's
Our church location is in the Delta Plaza Mall. Our entrance is found on the entrance just around the corner from Marshalls and across the street from Aldi’s. We believe in gathering God's people together for worship and then scattering into our neighborhoods, work places and communities to live out the gospel by loving and serving those around us. Wellspring desires to reflect the light of Chris
06/21/2026
A father doesn’t have to be perfect, he just has to be present.
This Father’s Day, we were reminded that a dull pencil still writes; it just needs sharpening. God gives the strength, wisdom, and direction, we simply have to keep saying yes and moving forward.
Your kids do not need a perfect father. They need a present one moving in the right direction. Today counts.
“As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.” — Joshua 24:15
06/20/2026
Father's Day is complicated.
For some of you, it's a hard day. Your dad is gone. Or he was never there. Or he was there, and he's the reason you're still carrying something heavy.
For some of you, you're the dad now. And some days you feel like you're nailing it. Other days you wonder if you're quietly repeating everything you swore you never would.
Here's what I want every man to know.
God never disqualified you. Not the one who never had an example. Not the one who feels like he already messed it up. Not the one fighting the good fight every single day and wondering if any of it matters.
This Sunday at Wellspring, we're doing a message for the men. About the father you had, or didn't.
About the kind of man God built you to become. And about something the church does not talk about enough, that June is also Men's Mental Health Awareness Month, and far too many men are carrying it all in silence. You don't have to.
Come as you are. Bring your questions. Bring your wounds. Bring the guy you know who needs to hear this.
You can become the man God created you to be.
Every one of you. No exceptions.
Everyone is afraid of the seals breaking in Revelation.
Almost nobody asks the one question that changes the whole book.
Whose hand is breaking them?
This Sunday at Wellspring we open the most feared book in the Bible and find the most tender thing in it.
You do not want to miss this one.
10am / 7:15pm GOD HAS SOMETHING FOR YOU.
06/07/2026
The book of Judges can be summed up in one cycle:
Forget God → Suffer → Cry Out → Be Rescued → Repeat.
Yet every time His people wandered, God responded with mercy.
Judges ends asking for a Savior who can rescue us for good.
Jesus is that Savior.
The Rescuer lives, so the rescue lasts.
Love Is Why
05/31/2026
613 commands.
Most people close Leviticus and walk away.
But what if the whole book is answering one question:
How can a holy God stay close to unholy people without destroying them?
Leviticus is not about God pushing people away.
It is about a God who refuses to leave.
Every sacrifice whispered the same truth: sin costs something.
And every page pointed forward to Jesus.
“A holy God went to staggering lengths to stay close to an unholy people. The lengths had a name. His name is Jesus. Love is why.”
Good morning, Wellspring. Today in Love Is Why we are in Leviticus. One of the most skipped books in the Bible and one of the most important. Come find out why God gave us this book and how it points us straight to Jesus. Worship at 10am and 7:15pm. See you there!
Tomorrow morning we are in Leviticus. A book full of laws and offerings and rituals that most people find confusing. But underneath all of it is one question God keeps asking: how do broken people draw near to a holy God? Come find out the answer. 10am and 7:15pm.
05/30/2026
The Island of Misfit Toys
When I was a kid, my favorite part of Rudolph was never the part everyone remembers. It wasn’t the shiny nose. It wasn’t the foggy Christmas Eve or the big rescue at the end.
It was the island.
That quiet, faraway place where the broken toys lived. The ones nobody wanted. A train with square wheels. A cowboy riding an ostrich. A water pistol that shot jelly instead of water. A doll who didn’t even know what was wrong with her, only that she’d been set aside. Only that no one had picked her.
They weren’t bad toys. They weren’t useless. They were just different. And different, it turned out, was enough to get them left behind.
And then Rudolph made a promise. He said he would come back for them. He said he would find them homes.
I knew that island. I lived on it when I was a kid. I think a lot of us did, and a lot of us still do. We just got better at hiding it.
Nine years ago God broke something in me.
For years I had been climbing. Chasing metrics. Counting the things I thought a pastor was supposed to count. Seats filled. Numbers up. The right speakers, the right music, the right show. I had convinced myself that bigger meant better and busier meant blessed. And one day all of that abruptly died in me. It just went dark.
I don’t know how else to describe it. The thing I had been building my whole sense of worth around simply stopped breathing. And in that silence, with nothing left to perform, I went back to the Scriptures. Not to prepare a sermon. Not to find a point. Just to look. And I watched how Jesus actually lived.
I’m nowhere close to being exactly like Jesus. Let me say that plainly. But I saw something I had missed for a long time, something that had been sitting right there on the page the whole time.
Jesus didn’t build a social club.
He didn’t protect a history or guard a tradition. He didn’t worry about who would be impressed. He went straight to the people the religious had already written off. The tax collector everyone despised. The woman everyone whispered about. The l***r no one would touch. The ones left out. The ones left behind. The misfits.
He didn’t wait for them to clean themselves up first. He didn’t make them earn a seat. He just went to them, sat with them, ate with them, loved them right where they were.
And somewhere along the way the church stopped doing that.
It got good at putting on a service and forgot how to be of service. It learned how to fill a room but forgot how to find the one person standing alone in it. It polished the stage and tuned the lights while the people who needed Jesus most stood outside on the steps, certain they would never be welcome through the door. Certain there was no room for someone like them.
That breaks my heart. Because that was never the church. That was a building. That was a show. The church was always supposed to be the island that goes looking for the toys nobody else wanted.
So when God started Wellspring, He brought all of this back to my heart. Rudolph and the island and that promise. He reminded me what I had felt as a kid, watching those toys wait for someone to come back for them. And He let me carry it into who we would become.
We’re the island of misfit toys. We know we’re not for everyone, and we have made our peace with that. We are not trying to be the biggest or the shiniest or the most impressive room in town. But we are for every single misfit who ever wondered if there was a home for them.
So let me say it to you the way I wish someone had said it to me.
If you’ve ever stood outside the door wondering if there was room. If you’ve ever felt like the toy that got passed over again and again, set back on the shelf while everyone else got chosen. If you’ve ever been certain you were too broken, too different, too far gone to ever belong anywhere.
You’re not too far gone. You never were.
There’s an island for that. There’s a home. And the One who runs it has never once left a misfit behind. He came looking for you long before you ever thought to look for Him.
We’re still in the struggle. We don’t have it all figured out, and we’re not pretending to. But I would not trade who we are for anything in this world.
The misfits have a home here.
And His name is Jesus.
-Pastor Paul
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Address
301 North Lincoln Road
Escanaba, MI
49829
Opening Hours
| Monday | 9am - 4pm |
| Tuesday | 9am - 4pm |
| Wednesday | 9am - 4pm |
| Thursday | 9am - 4pm |
| Sunday | 8:30am - 12pm |
| 7pm - 8:30pm |