Gainesville, Six Months In
In a few days, we will have been living in Gainesville for six months. Like most things in life, the time has passed very quickly – it seriously feels like a week ago that we moved here. Having unpacked boxes and an unsold house doesn’t help that feeling, but even without those things, this time has just blown by.
Life in Gainesville is really pretty great. The kids are in a great charter school – eighteen students per grade, and these teachers are amazing. Life here is generally slower than in the Atlanta suburbs – people actually go the speed limit for the most part, especially in those flashing-yellow-light school zones. The weather is awesome, though I’m sure I’ll be complaining come summertime.
All of that is like extra icing on the cake, though. What has made this time really amazing is what we’ve been doing with the church here. It’s hard to look back and see a night and day difference from where the community is now versus where it started, but there’s something that has grown among us that none of us would deny.
One of the benefits to how this group has been planted is that with most of us having moved here for this, we have far fewer ties to distract us from community life. While it’s important to be able to guide people out of those distractions and into a focus on the church body, I’m also learning that it is far more important to begin with a group that is absolutely and entirely singularly focused on Christ, and the sense that the church is his physical expression on the earth, and worthy of our full attention. Once you have that established, guiding newcomers into an appropriate focus on community life is far easier to do.
The other thing that has been very sweet is meeting, and being in community with, many different people with similar stories. How they came to Christ, but also how they struggled with the institutional church and how they came to a realization that they would have to leave institutions behind, but also making the decision to leave family and friends behind to pursue it. Nearly everything we’ve felt or had to deal with along the way is mirrored in other people here.
What we’ve found most encouraging, though, is the fierceness and intentionality of sharing a revelation of Christ that is going on here. As I’ve stated before, we’re being planted by leaders for whom this is not a new experience – they understand the necessity of a mind-blowing revelation of Christ, and they know how to share it. We are incredibly blessed to have these leaders among us. While the sacrifices of moving here were – and still are – very great, the blessings that we have experienced have made it worth doing ten times over.
Hello!
My husband and I live in Merritt Island. We’ve read Frank Viola’s Pagan Christianity and Reimagining Church, and are wondering if we can come and visit the Gainesville church? Even before ever having read Frank’s books, we had been desiring New Testament Christianity. We are discussing the possibility of opening our home up for the ekklesia.
If we can come and visit, what are the days/times that you meet?
Seeking the Lord,
Trish
No posts in almost 2 months?!
“The reason to re-purpose this blog is because I intend to post far more frequently about what’s been happening with us here in Gainesville, Florida, and our experiences with Frank Viola, Milt Rodriguez, and the rest of the amazing people God has led here to be a part of this.”
Yeah, seriously. Someone should get onto me about that!