July Week 1- What is God up To right now?

We are committed to the process of being formed by God, together, for the sake of others. We believe this takes place as we take up our role as active participants in God’s story following Jesus to make disciples.

The following guide is meant to help you on your journey of hearing God’s voice and following the leading of the Spirit. Before we look ahead though, we want to pause and look around at what God is doing right now.

This week we invite you to plan out 60 minutes for some reflection on what God is up to right now. One author says that for every one thing we see God doing, he is up to 1,000 others in our lives. Watch the video below and then spend some time as an individual, family, or friends processing the reflective questions in this video together. Take some time with this practice and let it breathe.

Let God’s Spirit remind you of his kindness, goodness, and grace in your life over the last season.

Questions

  • How is God showing his goodness and beauty to you in this season of life?

  • Over the last few months where has God been at work in your life?

    • Where have I seen the work of God in making me new?

    • What has he been surfacing? (Old dreams, giftings, visions, desires…)

    • What insufficiencies, misplaced, hopes, idolatries is he showing me?

    • Where have I seen the fruit of the Spirit coming out?

  • What’s next: In light of what you’ve heard from God’s word, God’s spirit, and even God’s community- what is your next step of obedience in following Jesus?

Leading Your Students to Follow Jesus

As we Sabbath for the month of July don’t forget to cultivate rhythms of rest and worship for your students!

It can be easy to assume that our students are picking up what we are intending just by being around. Sometimes that happen. Many times it doesn’t. Here are three tips for discipling your kids over this month. And any month really.

1. Use your words.

How many times have you spoken this to your kids? Now it’s time for you to remember. Connect your actions to your intentions with words! Connect your rest with the gospel truth of Gods call an easy yoke. Connect your play with Gods design for enjoyment. Connect the pool party to God’s design of everyday disciples enjoying one another and his good gifts. Connect your communal serving to the reality of our gospel identities… you get the point.

2. You don’t have to know it all- but you have to open your Bible.

Pick out a few Jesus stories and use our four questions with your students. Don’t forget to listen to God’s voice together as you discern how you will each obey what Jesus has shown you! (Look back over our hearing Gods voice in the Word handout if you need a refresher.)

Here’s a helpful tool for how to structure a time with Jesus together using equal parts settling in, storying, and sending!

3. Use a BLESS grid for your July.

As a family come up with creative and simple ways to live out the BLESS rhythms together over the month.


Super Simple Assessment Tool

One of our ongoing responsibilities as disciples of Jesus is to follow the Great Commission and make disciples of Jesus. But how’s that experience going?

This tool is a familiar and simple tool to have that conversation as an equipping team, a Missio Community, family, or even on your own. Grab some coffee, carve out a few minutes, and ask yourself…

Where are we flourishing?

What are we battling?

Where are we experiencing frustrations?

What have our failures been?

Get a full copy of this short assessment at the link below AND use it in whatever context best suites you! Don’t forget that even if you fill this assessment out on your own- the conversations it evokes should be had in community!

I’m Praying for you as you are formed by God, together, for the sake of others!

-Kevin

10 Questions to Consider this Week

Last night we got together around tables, shared some incredible meals, and continued an essential conversation for our current cultural moment. We know that as a church we want to be faithful to play our role in Gods story in the places we live, work, and play- but what exactly does that mean?

Our current cultural moment is marked by change, polarization, a global pandemic, racial tension, confusion, and disruption- how do we even make sense of what the Spirit has been up to in us, around us, and through us?

To help us navigate this season David and I curated a short list of reflection questions that would be great to ask around your table, with your roommates, spouse, or even alone with a journal. We will give a chance for some group processing in the near future, but for now let’s start to think about…

  1. How has PRAYER been shaped?

  2. How has GENEROSITY been shaped?

  3. How has your IMAGINATION been shaped?

  4. How has your PASSION for sharing the good news with others been shaped?

  5. How has your JOY been shaped?

  6. How has your understanding of DISCIPLESHIP been shaped?

  7. How has your COMMUNITY been shaped?

  8. How has your sense of JUSTICE been shaped?

  9. What are the TREASURES you’ve discovered during this season? (With God, one another, yourself)

  10. What are the TRAPS you’ve uncovered? (Regarding your relationships with God, one another, your personal patterns and rhythms.)

Why do we EAT together?

We gather around the table as God’s family.

As followers of Jesus, we are more than just a Bible study, support group, or social club- We are a Family!

Families share life as they gather around tables and enjoy meals together. That’s why this week your Missional Community will be sharing a meal together. Meals have been essential to God’s people throughout the story. In the Old Testament the way people ate reminded them that they were God’s people. Meals were an essential part of Jesus’ ministry (Matthew. 9:9-17, Luke 10:38-42). The first churches did more than just gather at the Temple for some sermons, they met in homes to eat with one another, encourage one another, and point one another back to Jesus and his kingdom. “They broke bread in their homes and ate together with glad and sincere hearts.” (Acts 2:46)

WHY ARE MEALS SO IMPORTANT?

Meals remind us that we are needy humans.

You may be strong or weak, young or old, rich or poor, but eating together reminds us that we are all humans who get hungry and need food. We all have limitations and benefit from the gifts of others.

Meals remind us that God provides for our needs.

God is gracious to provide us with food; but, we want to remember that Jesus is God’s ultimate provision. He is the bread of life and welcomes us to his table as sons and daughters. (John 6:35, Luke 13.29-30)

Meals create space for community to grow.

God gathers individuals together, but he always places them in a community. The table is a space to share food, stories, joys, problems, and hopes with others (Romans 12:15).

The Well Story (In their own words)

Missio Dei Mesa is excited to support the work of Brittany and Noel in forming a new healing practice downtown Mesa. As a church we pray for the flourishing of ALL in our city and are giving our lives to see the men, women, and children of Mesa experience healing and Hope.

Here’s one story of how that is taking place. In their own words, here is Brittany and Noel-

We met at Missio Mesa a couple of years ago and were surprised to find out that we were both counselors and art therapists. Our friendship grew quickly and we spent many early mornings over coffee dreaming about more ways to help others in therapy. The vision for The Well was born out of those small but consistent encounters, over a high top table at Lost Dutchman. Incredible how God takes our open hearts and makes something beautiful out of them for the good of His city and His people.  

Often people have 2 options in therapy: community services or higher cost private practice. Therapists find themselves torn between helping those who so desperately need the support and burning out themselves from not having the support to take on those high needs or going into private practice where therapy becomes less accessible but they are compensated more to pay for all the training and schooling it took to get their license in the first place. As counselors and creatives we wanted to think differently about the possibilities for therapy and desired to carve another path out to help people gain more access to treatment in our local context. This is something a lot of counselors and helping professionals desire all across our Valley.

Graciously God gave Brit a vision years ago when she started out as a therapist for a type of “one for one” model that could help cover the cost for anyone who couldn’t afford quality therapy. Brit started to share this vision God planted in her with Noel and just as graciously, God started to (unexpectedly) stir a desire in Noel also. 

We are obnoxiously hopeful that God is generous, loves his creation, and has given us this city to cultivate heaven on earth while we wait in the brokenness and pain we all experience being human. The implication of this truth about who God is and what he does – left us exploring new ways of how that truth could be a reality in our city. 

Dreaming about new possibilities, we found ourselves in a carved path that God was clearly carving – not us. The Well was an image God gave to us that has been such a comfort and reminder that as we all seek healing and restoration - this side of God making all things fully new – we come to the same source for healing just as a community goes to the same well for water. And we are not the ones who heal, but indeed the One who created the heavens and earth IS and is One who offers healing so freely. 

That vision has become a reality already! We didn’t set out to make more money as counselors but instead to be a part of the abundance that we know is there if we work together as a community. A piece of every regular session fee goes towards covering someone else’s session fee who can’t afford the full price right now. It’s been really humbling and honestly incredible to see this play out over the past couple of months – 25% of our clients right now are being loved by others who they don’t even know. And they are all on the same journey of healing, from the same Source. 

Our art studio and group room space both opened this month and we have been overwhelmed by God’s provision as we completed those rooms also. These supportive spaces will witness many stories of pain – met with compassion, creativity, and connection. It might seem weird that God would love a little place like Mesa, but it’s been evident to us that God wants to see his creation flourish and heal – and through His Spirit who is present with us through it all - we get to be participants in that Story. 

-Brittany and Noel 

Scattered Sundays: This is not a how to guide. It's a story...

Scattered Sundays was a new phrase when we first started coming to Missio. Growing up in the church I had never heard of an idea such as encouraging your entire church to find ways to worship other than at the church building. For me, I was taught implicitly that worship was tied to the church gathering. A narrow view of worship I know...so when I first heard Missio talk about Scattered Sundays it was strange to me.

My gut reaction was “That’s nice. Everyone could probably use a week off from church.”

Narrow, I know....The reality is for me God was beginning a work of redeeming what rest is in His eyes through Scattered Sundays. He was beginning to give me a vision of what a holistic view of enjoying him tastes, feels, looks, and sounds like. What follows is by no means a one size fits all. It’s a story about a journey my family and I have taken to understand how to worship and rest well. It’s a story that we are smack dab in the middle of still...so please don’t read this as a how to guide. Read it as a story.

When we first started practicing Scattered Sundays we were part of an MC and we began doing Scattered Sundays with others in our MC.

This was extremely helpful as these families and individuals had been a part of Missio much longer than us and had been practicing Scattered Sundays more than us. So each month, we tagged along. Sometimes we ate meals at their homes, sometimes we hiked, sometimes we made pizza and watched a movie. Having community that invited us along on Scattered Sundays was extremely helpful because it gave us language and tangible experiences for those Sundays we didn’t gather at the building. There’s no handbook of do and don’ts for Scattered Sundays so I know for me, in the beginning of trying to practice, at times it felt like, “ahhh is this okay? Does this count as worship? This feels like cheating.” Having people show us what Scattered Sundays look like for them was beyond helpful.

After practicing it with others for a season, we began to practice on our own as a family.

Initially this was difficult, because as a family of four my wife and I tried to appease everyone in the early stages realizing we all enjoy/find rest in different ways. What rest and enjoying God looks like for me is very different than our 5 year old. So we tried lots of things....we took trips up north to hike in cooler weather, we grabbed doughnuts and went to new parks, we did true story scavenger hunts. We tried something different each week but there was one common thread among them all. We prepared. We would spend Saturday prepping for Scattered Sunday. We would make sure that laundry, dishes, yard work, lunches for Monday were made, everything was done and prepped so that we could lean into what God had for us rather than get distracted and busy. As we prepped on Saturday there began to be an excitement about what Scattered Sundays we’re going to hold for us as a family and as individuals. Like a gift you knew was coming, you just weren’t sure what it would be.

One of the rhythms we did for many Sundays, not just Scattered was that Albany and I would make focaccia. Bread making became an important practice for me during Scattered Sundays. Bread making is naturally a slow process and it forced me to slow down when I typically wanted to go go go on the weekends. Albany and I did this every Sunday for probably 8-10 weeks in a row. A lot of bread I know - but we found others to enjoy it with and to bless neighbors with. 

Looking back at when we first started to practice Scattered Sundays, I didn’t know what would give me rest.

Looking back at when we first started to practice Scattered Sundays, I didn’t know what would give me rest. The real rest - like the rest you feel in our soul because you’ve experienced something so life giving you feel refreshed. What gives my wife’s soul rest is different than what gives my soul rest - but the same Creator God provides that to both of us.

Now when we have a Scattered Sunday there is always one thing we incorporate regardless of what we’re doing - space. We’ve done our best to push aside everything else that there is (chores, phones, etc…) and to allow space to create, read, listen, and reflect. For us, it’s in space that we each have found rest and been able to worship Him.

May you find rest.

Nick Johnson

What can I bring on Sunday?

“What can I bring?”

This is the most popular question asked after inviting someone over to our house dinner. Sometimes it’s muttered with a sense of obligation, sometimes excitedly with curiosity of the menu, and sometimes there’s a genuine desire to bring more than yourself to the table with friends! Many of you have asked that very question after I’ve invited you over to our house. If you have asked us you’ve gotten one of a few answers. Sometimes its:

  • Bring yourself

  • You can bring _______

  • Bring what you want- I’m not sure what we are cooking yet, but I know we want you there!

Good story Kevin. Why you posting it? Here’s why.

As we start our Sunday gatherings back up, you are invited back to the proverbial table of shared worship. Sundays are moments to reorient in God’s story, be reminded of God’s Gospel, and experience the very presence of God himself. If you are asking “what can I bring” or “how can I come with more than myself to receive what others bring” here are a few thoughts.

First off I have to say, you are welcome even if you can’t bring anything more than yourself right now. This is true at my dining room table and its true of our gatherings. Friends who barely make it out the door are still welcome to enjoy a meal and are not second class citizens at my table or the table of God! I’ll say it again for those in the back: If you are struggling and barely making it to the gathering emotionally or physically, this is not a demand to do more to earn your spot.

Bring your tired self to the table, find rest, and then when you are rested jump into the shared work.

However, many of us have something to bring with us- we just didn’t know it was needed.

Over the last year a few people have been doing most the work and it’s been a joy to serve, but I’m thinking we could do better with more of us participating. I’m willing to admit that may be on us. We haven’t really asked many things specifically, but let people come forward as they had the desire.  We didn’t want to burn anyone out. We know that a life following Jesus in a world that denies him can be exhausting enough. But in not asking we not only limited the potential of burn out (which surprisingly we find other ways to do anyway by overworking- without a heavy church calendar) we also unfortunately limited the ways that you contribute the shared worship times on Sundays!

As we look into this summer and beyond, consider this the first of several asks. Take a moment and consider if you have the bandwidth (the time and space to serve) and the skills needed to help Missio continue to flourish. We’d love to work together with you discern how you can help serve Jesus by serving his family on Sundays weekly, monthly or bi-monthly. 

So…what do you want to do? Are there gifts that you have that you can share with us in our gathered worship on Sundays? 

A few ways that you can help if you have the bandwidth and the abilities: Click any of the links below to take the next step in using what God’s given you for the benefit of the whole body! (click any that you feel you can contribute to.)

Have another idea? Let us know! 

Music & Songs From Home

Musical Worship at Home 

This isn’t an exhaustive list, but hopefully it helps as you worship our Great God in Music and Song from your home. Or Car. Or Backyard. Or on Sundays together with the rest of the family! Enjoy.

  • Listen to and sing along to worship playlists on Spotify

“Missio Mesa: Summer Praises”

  • Youtube Worship Music, watch and sing along/aloud 

TRIBL Chanel - Maverick City Music 

  • Learn a Hymn as a Family or MC and sing it together in your home/small gatherings, at breakfast, around the couch, on a bike ride, as you pray for a meal.

BLESS ARTWORK Collaboration

As a church and individually, this season has been drawing us to focus on ways to BLESS others and pay attention to life differently. I'm not sure if you have felt this, but it may feel as if we are more naturally focusing on this  together, which is really cool and unique!

It seems like it would be naturally fitting for us to deepen our connection and focus on this through creativity and to remember this season as we enter the next.

If you love to create. . .

If you feel the desire, longing, need, urge to create more about the BLESS rhythms, we would love to hear from you.

We are hoping to have 1 artist from each medium to create a set of BLESS (5) pieces to represent each of them. So if you want to dive in let Noel know, and we will reserve a set for you. We will be working within an 11 x 14 space so we can use them in our online/live gatherings in the future to focus on these rhythms in daily life together.  I will providing canvases/boards to help frame and use, so let her know what you need. We will be taking June/July to create. Then Noel will gather them first week of August.

BLESS-

  • Bless.

  • Listen

  • Eat.

  • Speak.

  • Sabbath.

Mediums:

  • Watercolor

  • Clay

  • Photography

  • Illustration/Graphic Design

Following Jesus With You-

Noel

Our Unplugged Sabbath- Nate Rogers

Our Unplugged Sabbath

Ears to hear and eyes to see — both are gifts from the Lord.

Proverbs 20:12 (NLT)

My little girl, Nora, will turn seven tomorrow and one of the few things I can be certain about these days is that she’ll get a birthday gift she won’t use, or, at best, use it only for a short time after I threaten to donate it for lack of use. Sooner than later those gifts always disappear in a natural phenomena known as parental binge cleaning. 

It was very fortuitous that my wife & I had planned a short trip up to the mountains for the exact weekend that Pastor Kevin asked the church to have an “unplugged sabbath”. Some friends were kind enough to watch our kids too, so this would be a couple nights of kid-free rest, relaxation, and fishing near a semi-remote lake. Unplugging was going to be easy...until it wasn’t. 

Our goal was to make space for us to embrace the presence of God and each other with minimal distractions. I underestimated the size of Verizon’s network. In addition to still having cell service (albeit limited) in the woods, we had a lot of other campers in the area. So we mitigated those by heading to the lake and hiking around it to be on our own. We fished mostly silently (because people who talk constantly while fishing really aren’t trying to catch a fish) and often on our own.

Nailed it! Well, sort of semi-nailed it. It’s one thing to take yourself out of the distractions, it’s a whole other process to get the distractions out of you. My mind and soul were busy chewing on all that’s taken place this year. So I switched from lure fishing to bobber watching, lit a cigar, and watched the closer-than-normal clouds play in the wind. For a few moments I felt the presence & voice of God in me. Then time was up.

Soon people had filled in all the empty areas of the lake, the fishing got competitive, and paddle boarders broke every form of silence they could find. It was a great day, followed by a fun evening, and an easy morning of packing up the next day. A two night getaway was never going to be long enough to fully decompress from the first half of 2020. But what I had done was reconnect with gifts I hadn’t been using as often as I needed to: hearing and seeing the LORD.    

If you are in someone’s presence, they’re communicating to you. The communication can be heard, seen, felt, and perceived. Even the lack of those things - silence - is a form of communication. 

An ever-present God is continuously communicating. He is always revealing Himself, even in times of silence. Perhaps one of the reasons we often feel “out of the loop” with God is because we’ve neglected the Spirit-given gifts of hearing and seeing Him all around us. I believe God’s communication is constant, it never stops. Differs in forms, but never ceases. 

Like my daughter, I have to be reminded to use my gifts. Frustration, anxiety, and fear are some common symptoms for my gift of sensing God going dormant. With our neighborhoods, cities, and country in turmoil, the more we utilize these gifts the better we’ll be at being the peacemakers we’re called to be. It’s hard to make peace if you’re not in a place of shalom. 

Thankfully, the Father who gave us the gift of “ears to hear and eyes to see” won’t take them away for lack of use. Instead He’s given us directions (the Bible) and guides (the Holy Spirit and fellow Saints) to help us silence our souls and reconnect with our gifts. I pray that we use them, and use them often. For our sake and the sake of our neighbors.  

Shalom to you my brothers & sisters.   

Nate Rogers

A Seat at the table of Lament

Missio Mesa,
As a church family we are learning to lament. This is a new way to come before God for many of us. We feel awkward here. I get it. I can too. But embrace it. Press into it. God is present with us. He will not leave us.

I've been so encouraged by the spaces we've worked so hard to create together. Spaces to humbly welcome and be with children, women, and men who are sad, who are hurt, who are angry, who are confused, and who wonder if things could ever really change. Spaces that lead to healing and renewed hope.

Family, We know that power is often abused. Today we mourn the death of George Floyd. I know newsfeeds will be inundated for a few days. We will be overloaded with images and opinions. Some of them helpful. Many of them not. I know we will wonder can we really engage with one more area of suffering in a world currently confused, crippled, and constrained by responses to a disease. That the invitation to participation at this table, at this time, is one we may rather not accept. But I want to lovingly urge us to still take our seat at the table, but it may be a different seat than you expect.

I invite us to a seat that rejects the desire to put our heads in the sand of shallow doctrine AND the compulsion to self soothe by anxiously acting. I invite us to sit in the seat of consideration in the presence of God for a while.

As a pastor my invitation to our church is to...
Pause to consider. How do we marginalize others? How are complicit in the suffering of others? Friends, let's not deceive ourselves, none of us have waded in the waters of our idolatrous and racially divided American culture and not gotten wet in the process.

My invitation is to...
Let the Spirit of the living God meet us in that space- don't rush through it. Let us find ourselves moved to repentance and reoriented with a hunger and thirst for justice. Let him bind up the wounds, apply His healing salve, and give renewed energy. That may not be a quick process, but we must linger as long as it takes.

And then, dear God, let us act with an enduring hope that has one foot firmly planted on the death and resurrection of Jesus and another on the reality of new creation that is sure to come. Our hope is in Jesus and our hand is to the plow of justice in Mesa and beyond.

With you as your Friend, Pastor, & Fellow Repenter-

Kevin Platt

Here's a prayer from the book of common prayer that I urge you to pray with your roommates, families, and friends.

O God, who created all people in your image: We thank you for the diversity of races and cultures in this world. Show us your presence in those who differ from us, and enrich our lives with their fellowship, until our knowledge of your love is made perfect in our love for all your children; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
(Book of Common Prayer 2019)

4 Ways to Cultivate Gratitude and Hope in the days of Covid.

Hey friends,

Here are a few ways we can gather the beauty, hope, gifts of this season. Not all of these will fit all of us. Some may fit in a week or two, but let yourself notice which ones stand out to you and try them out as you can ☺. Give yourself time, but also be intentional in how you cultivate hope, gratitude, and peace during these times.

  1. Words

  • Write down or focus on words that give you hope, whether it be from a friend, from the Bible, or even social media.

  • Take them in, hold onto them. Let them last longer and sit with them, maybe even share them with others who need to hear hope. These words are meaningful and shouldn’t be moved passed too quickly.

  • Place these words in front of you- around the house, on your phone, in your journal. Keep looking at them.

2. Nature

  • Walk outside and gather the beauty, consuming with your senses. - What are 5 things that you are thankful for? Make note of them with pictures, journaling, or just in your memory.

  • Pay attention to the beauty of nature (trees, flowers, grass, fresh air) or just a chance to reflect differently in the fresh air. 

  • Enjoy the fresh air!  When you are alone in nature you expand your bubble to 12 feet of fresh air and enjoy that space.

  • Write down the beauty/gratitude you notice (phone, post it, phone), gather that experience for later.

3. Prayer

  • To be honest you’ve probably been praying while doing the first two, but this is intentional time in prayer with the God who is present even in the struggle.

  • Start by thanking God for what He has provided for you and others, what you notice of His provision, even if it feels small (I slept well, I could speak to my friend, I ate today, I have people to support me/support each other).

  • Move into lifting up the needs of others first, then your own. Both are important.

  • Sit in a position of receiving his love for a few minutes without words. This is so important. Let yourself be, without needing to do anything. This can be challenging at first, but very rewarding as you let yourself not do/serve/act but be in His presence and simply accept His love. Spend unhurried time with your God. He is waiting for you.

4. Share it!

  • Create a gratitude tree and have each person add to it each day by cutting out leaf shapes and writing one or more things you are thankful for

  • Post it wall: gather post its on a wall to share the things you are thankful for at a certain time each day.

  • Reach out to someone who has been a blessing to you each day and let them know what exactly you are thankful for. Kindness and gratitude go a long way in encouraging others.

There are so many little small steps that we can naturally include in these strange days.

With Gratitude and Hope-

-Noel -

Lets Talk About Sex

I was once told, “if you want to shrink your church talk about money, if you want to grow your church talk about sex.” So is our conversation about sex a church growth experiment? 

Yes AND No.

First of all Yes. 

I said on Sunday that I unapologetically want to see us grow up as mature followers of Jesus. I want to see us enjoy God’s presence more.  I want the good news of Jesus to inform more and more of our lives. And for our lives to continue learning to run the True Story as our iOS not just an app. This means we can’t NOT talk about sex.  If we are going to be faithful to the commission of the gospel in our cultural moment we MUST dialogue regarding our sexuality and how sex finds both it’s origin and purpose in God’s Story.  

But... Why? 

Great Question. First, we need it. Yes, us. The adults. That’s why on March 26th we are inviting everyone 16+ to be a part of this conversation. Many of us are struggling with sexual addictions, the haunting residue of our sexual history, and mourning the misinformation or lack of information we were given regarding sex. Single. Married. Dating. Human.

Many of us grew up in environments that were either extremely silent about sex OR that were significantly shaped by overt sexual sin. Many of us have learned about sex from ill informed friends, locker rooms, and secret internet searches. And this is destroying marriages, relationships, friendships, personal integrity, and joy in the presence of Jesus. But good news... There is a better way. 

Secondly, our kids need it.  We have 20-40 little image bearers who are being raised up in the ways of Jesus as part of our community right now.  We have a class full of 5-8 year olds about to graduate into a world most of their first exposure to pornography will statistically happen between the ages of 8-11.   A world telling a story where sending nudes is the norm for dating relationships in Jr. High. A sexualized story is ALREADY being told implicitly if not explicitly to our children. This isn’t to scare us, but is to open our eyes. What if their first exposure to sex wasn’t a website, but loving, shame free, conversations from people who love them? We have the opportunity to tell many of our kids story first and better. This conversation is part of the plan for us to step into that responsibility. 

What if we could give them the gift of shame free conversations about God’s design for sexuality? What if we could create environments of grace for failure BUT also a better picture for human sexuality than what they’ll find in the school books and internet searches?  What if we could be for them what so many of us wish we had as we disciple them in ALL the ways of Jesus? 
Yes, this is about growth.

But Here’s the No. When I was coached to talk about sex to grow the church it was gimmicky. It was about more people in seats, not more depth in the story.  It was a bait and switch.  Talking about sex to get more people to show up is part of the problem, not the solution. This isn’t to prove that we are hip, trendy, or cool.  This isn’t for more instagram likes, Snapchat stories, or facebook shares...

To be absolutely clear- this conversation is not clickbait, but is to better equip us as followers of Jesus and participants in God’s True Story.  I hope to see you there. 

Following Jesus With You-

Kevin 


House Worship

Here’s why we are engaging a fresh space to make time to slow down, be in scripture, sing some songs, and listen to the spirit together.

Why? 

It’ all started with our 24 hour prayer. After the 24-hour prayer time, we spent moments as a family speaking words of encouragement, truth, hope and love over one another. Words and truth we HEARD God speaking to us. That’s pretty amazing, right?! Because we stopped long enough to listen. One of the things I heard from Spirit over the next couple of weeks was a consistent reminder that I needed “space to listen”. If I wanted to hear Spirit speak, see Spirit move, be connected to my Missio family through Spirit’s presence...then I….we need to consistently and regularly be people who slow down and take time together to listen. 

What? 

House Worship will be a space to listen. Quarterly, we are going to have time as a family to intentionally perk our ears up together and listen close to what God is speaking over our community and our city. This will be a supplement to the regular rhythm of gathering on Sundays, not a replacement or a substitute.

The gathering we do on Sunday’s is done with intentionality – to be together in God’s presence, to remember Jesus, be invited to the table, and to be reoriented in the True Story.

House Worship will also be done with intentionality. We want to make space to listen. To respond. All our Missional Communities are invited together into this space. We will come together and lean in and intentionally orient our hearts together to what the Spirit is doing in and through us. We will sing, read scripture, pray and we will be silent – in hopeful anticipation that we will meet God because we know God is always eager and ready to meet us. 

I hope to see you there!

Brittany Johnson

 

**Kids who have graduated from 2nd grade are welcome to join us. As parents, check in with these older kids and make sure they are willing and ready to participate in this type of practice.  

The Collective is Joining Missio Mesa

Thanks for visiting for checking out the Collective Church. We have some exciting news we are finally ready to share with you! We are joining up with Missio Dei Mesa to continue seeing the good news of Jesus spread throughout the East Valley. Our leadership, missional communities, and ongoing desire to see people experience the gospel are coming with us, but we are gathering in a new place with a new(er) community.

We have enjoyed sharing life and ministry together as a faith family called the Collective, and are looking forward to this next season of growing together with Missio Dei Mesa to make, mature, and multiply disciples of Jesus.

E-mail us with any questions

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Summer in the Psalms 2019

Summer in the Psalms 2019


The Psalms.
Life is beautiful, yes, but it's also hard. You can't ignore that fact for very long and stay anywhere near emotionally healthy. But what do we do? What do we do with the questions, the frustrations, the guilt, the disappointment, and the incredibly joyful moments we experience? How do we navigate life together as God's people in God's world when it seems like things are broken. Not only things around us, but also things deep inside us. 

We don't have all the answers, but we've seen the Psalms have some of the best guides possible for navigating life according to the gospel. These lyrics served as the songbook of God's people for generations and continue to resound with good news today. They highlight the mighty works of of God, but don't shy from the questions of our souls. They range from anthems of victory to emo-like anguish poems. They should not be overlooked, so we stop here each year to spend some time in these chapters. 

Psalms 40, 63, and 131 are passages that wrestle with real questions for real life. They orient our hearts in worship while still allowing us to feel. Over the next three weeks we will dive into various psalms and linger in the presence of Jesus together there. 

We hope to see you soon.

Missio Dei Mesa