Today we are continuing the Listening in Place Project with Cassie Carroll (, 鈥16), which we feature monthly here on the Intersections blog. After graduating from 天美视频, Cassie launched , a venture in which she is collecting stories from church planters, practitioners, pastors, social entrepreneurs, and theologians throughout the United States who are practicing new, innovative, and compelling visions of what it means to be the church.
In this episode, Cassie talks with Jeff Richards, who pastors a church called the in Sacramento, California, which gathers in homes, coffee shops, and pubs as a reflection of the desire to be intimately connected to the surrounding community. And rather than a private office, Jeff also works out of a Sacramento co-working space (where he and Cassie recorded this conversation, which you can listen to below).
Cassie: 鈥淲hat you guys are doing is fun鈥攁nd really, not just fun, but important.鈥
Jeff: 鈥淭here鈥檚 hope that I can be about what the Kingdom is doing, here in a place where people who aren鈥檛 Christians but have this spiritual sense that what we can do together is greater than we are and maybe even points to something that is more true.鈥
Jeff shares his story of seeing the disconnect between the vision of community God was growing in him and the practice of church that was largely based on Sunday mornings. Now, he and the WordHouse community work to partner with people who are part of other churches and denominations, as well as people who have distanced themselves from any kind of church or ministry. Jeff talks about his desire to connect with and work with anyone who cares about the growth and renewal of their neighborhood, regardless of denominational or cultural boundaries that might separate them.
Jeff: 鈥淭hat ties into God鈥檚 kingdom, where we鈥檙e all one, where there鈥檚 no Jew or Gentile, there鈥檚 no male or female鈥斺
Cassie: 鈥淧resbyterian or Baptist.鈥
Jeff: 鈥淩ight! Those things maybe say something good, but those don鈥檛 have to be barriers. They can actually help color our world in a way that鈥檚 beautiful.鈥
Cassie and Jeff also talk about the desire to participate in what God is already doing in their neighborhoods, rather than feeling like they have to reinvent the wheel or accomplish something grand based on their own strength or merit鈥攅specially now that the social position of the church is not as prominent as it once was.
Jeff: 鈥淭he church in that sense has lost its sway and hold on society. That can be a scary thing, but that was not a healthy way of being. It鈥檚 actually kind of grotesque. As we learn to let go and have our hands open, and to learn from people and see what God is already doing, and to allow the Spirit to place things in our hands, we actually find ourselves in a more holy place than we could have ever imagined. And it鈥檚 beautiful. It鈥檚 like heaven on earth.鈥
You can learn more about the vision behind the Listening in Place Project , read more from Cassie鈥檚 time with Richard, including the top three things Cassie learned that day, over on the . And for more from Cassie, check out the presentation of her Integrative Project,
https://soundcloud.com/user-958825369/listening-in-place-project-jeff-richards/s-7SBCJ