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cover art for Mike Coulson: Six Shifts (part 3 of 3) Church planting and equipping for effective evangelism, both digitally and in person

The Ralph Moore Podcast

Mike Coulson: Six Shifts (part 3 of 3) Church planting and equipping for effective evangelism, both digitally and in person

Season 5, Ep. 50528

Mike is a scrappy guy.

 

He left a job as a financial advisor to pastor a very old congregation in Leighton, Pennsylvania.

 

Having helped breathe new life into the congregation, he’s exploring creative avenues that are sure to interest you.

 

He leads two English language services in a tiny building and planted a Spanish language service because he saw a need though no one in the church spoke Spanish at the time.

 

While the 130-year-old congregation snowballs with growth, they’ve planted a separate online church which has planted a brick and mortar church hundreds of miles away in Georgia and another in India.

 

The online church is not to be confused with its streaming video from the home base.

 

The Echo Online Campus exists to create a fully digital congregation whereby people from across the country and the world join others via emerging technology.

 

The digital campus mixes virtual reality, Discord, Zoom and a mixed salad of other apps and gadgets to reach people. That congregation is now nearly half the size of the Pennsylvania location and stretches across several states and two different countries.

 

The operation utilize an “apprentice maker” discipling model developed locally and soon to appear in a book by Michael.

 

On another front, Michael currently presses to generate passive income enabling him to return most of his salary to the church. The latest project is an internet app about to go live.

 

To be sure, these people are building the plane as they fly it. If you’re inventive and working in the digital space, you’ll be challenged and encouraged by pure inventiveness in this podcast.

 

For more information, contact mike at peoplesec@gmail.com. The website is https://www.peoplesecchurch.com/.

BTW, don't forget to check the free online courses at ralphmoore.net.

 

 


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  • 50539. Jervie Windom: Hub and Spoke in Action - part 3 of 3

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    I met Jervie Windham a few years ago at an exponential event and was immediately impressed.  Here's a guy who started three churches while he was a career military officer: one in Korea and two in the United States. So, he was a seasoned man with big ideas about planting a conventional church.  We talked about what we were beginning to call micro church at the time. To date, he's planted a hub church with micro churches all around his community of Texas City, Texas. They utilize unique locations in the city and in rural areas beyond it. A large group meets on Sunday morning, but there are far more people meeting in the small spaces.  In this podcast, he describes churches in barber shops. He started one microchurch in a barber college, got involved in counseling the young students there, and was invited to set up microchurches in three barber colleges and a beauty school. Now, those who graduated are starting little churches in their barber shops. They're doing evangelism and they're discipling their members.  As this caught on, they've got a crazy thing going on at a deer rescue ranch that will surprise you as he talks about it.  He goes on further and talks about personal problems and the pains that go on in ministry. He details the struggle in his own household when raising one of his kids was really, really tough. However, that story ends nicely. His “problem child” just graduated from medical school as a young doctor bent on using his medical practice as a way of bringing the Gospel to people.  This is an exciting, encouraging and encouraging podcast. If you're discouraged, this is for you. If you're encouraged and up, you'll be excited and encouraged that much further.You can connect with Jervie at Resonate Church or jervie.windom@gmail.com.
  • 50538. Jervie Windom: Hub and Spoke in Action - part 2

    19:29
    I met Jervie Windham a few years ago at an exponential event and was immediately impressed.  Here's a guy who started three churches while he was a career military officer: one in Korea and two in the United States. So, he was a seasoned man with big ideas about planting a conventional church.  We talked about what we were beginning to call micro church at the time. To date, he's planted a hub church with micro churches all around his community of Texas City, Texas. They utilize unique locations in the city and in rural areas beyond it. A large group meets on Sunday morning, but there are far more people meeting in the small spaces.  In this podcast, he describes churches in barber shops. He started one microchurch in a barber college, got involved in counseling the young students there, and was invited to set up microchurches in three barber colleges and a beauty school. Now, those who graduated are starting little churches in their barber shops. They're doing evangelism and they're discipling their members.  As this caught on, they've got a crazy thing going on at a deer rescue ranch that will surprise you as he talks about it.  He goes on further and talks about personal problems and the pains that go on in ministry. He details the struggle in his own household when raising one of his kids was really, really tough. However, that story ends nicely. His “problem child” just graduated from medical school as a young doctor bent on using his medical practice as a way of bringing the Gospel to people.  This is an exciting, encouraging and encouraging podcast. If you're discouraged, this is for you. If you're encouraged and up, you'll be excited and encouraged that much further.You can connect with Jervie at Resonate Church or jervie.windom@gmail.com.
  • 50537. Jervie Windom: Hub and Spoke in Action

    20:22
    I met Jervie Windham a few years ago at an exponential event and was immediately impressed.  Here's a guy who started three churches while he was a career military officer: one in Korea and two in the United States. So, he was a seasoned man with big ideas about planting a conventional church.  We talked about what we were beginning to call micro church at the time. To date, he's planted a hub church with micro churches all around his community of Texas City, Texas. They utilize unique locations in the city and in rural areas beyond it. A large group meets on Sunday morning, but there are far more people meeting in the small spaces.  In this podcast, he describes churches in barber shops. He started one microchurch in a barber college, got involved in counseling the young students there, and was invited to set up microchurches in three barber colleges and a beauty school. Now, those who graduated are starting little churches in their barber shops. They're doing evangelism and they're discipling their members.  As this caught on, they've got a crazy thing going on at a deer rescue ranch that will surprise you as he talks about it.  He goes on further and talks about personal problems and the pains that go on in ministry. He details the struggle in his own household when raising one of his kids was really, really tough. However, that story ends nicely. His “problem child” just graduated from medical school as a young doctor bent on using his medical practice as a way of bringing the Gospel to people.  This is an exciting, encouraging and encouraging podcast. If you're discouraged, this is for you. If you're encouraged and up, you'll be excited and encouraged that much further.You can connect with Jervie at Resonate Church or jervie.windom@gmail.com.
  • 50536. Russell Joyce - Hope Brooklyn NY & Faith Center, Eugene OR (Part 3 of 3)

    22:38
    Russell Joyce planted Hope Brooklyn and now leads Faith Center Eugene, one of the most significant churches in Oregon. My friend Bill Gross discipled him as a young man at Hope Chapel Apex, NC. After graduating from seminary, he and a small team planted a church affiliated with Drew Hyun, Edwin Colon and New City Network. Part of Russell’s story involves Edwin’s generosity when he offered free meeting space (a rare commodity in New York) to a church centered a location just two blocks away. That generosity characterizes New City Network.Around the time the Spirit began nudging him to hand off the Brooklyn church, he was asked to assume the leadership of Faith Center – during COVID.He describes the strength he gained via the trials of the pandemic and its attendant isolation, along with the charge from the previous pastor, Steve Overman, him to be his own man rather than give place to the giants who had gone before him. Besides leading the Eugene congregation, Russell heads “Foursquare Multiply” the church planting arm of that denomination. He describes their efforts as a trellis to aid others as their vine grows to fruitfulness. A mutual friend brought us together, so I first met Russell in this interview. But it felt like meeting an old friend partly due to shared values but also because our lives were shaped by some of the same people. Russell pastors the church planted by my friend and “older brother” Roy Hicks Jr. It was Roy who set the bar for church planting in our early years in Hermosa. Steve Overman, who followed Roy and now supports Russell, is an admired friend. Bill Gross came up in Hope Chapel Hermosa during my last few years there – and he continues to influence me when we interact.You may ask yourself, “Isn’t a lot of name-dropping happening here?” There is!It’s because meeting Russell so underscored how we’re “no longer strangers and foreigners, but fellow citizens with the saints, and are of God’s household, having been built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Christ Jesus Himself being the cornerstone, in whom the whole building, being fitted together, is growing into a holy temple in the Lord, in whom you also are being built together into a dwelling of God in the Spirit.”You can connect with Russell through the email at faithcenter.org. his Instagram or foursquaremultiply.com. 
  • 50535. Russell Joyce - Hope Brooklyn NY & Faith Center, Eugene OR (Part 2)

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    Russell Joyce planted Hope Brooklyn and now leads Faith Center Eugene, one of the most significant churches in Oregon. My friend Bill Gross discipled him as a young man at Hope Chapel Apex, NC. After graduating from seminary, he and a small team planted a church affiliated with Drew Hyun, Edwin Colon and New City Network. Part of Russell’s story involves Edwin’s generosity when he offered free meeting space (a rare commodity in New York) to a church centered a location just two blocks away. That generosity characterizes New City Network.Around the time the Spirit began nudging him to hand off the Brooklyn church, he was asked to assume the leadership of Faith Center – during COVID.He describes the strength he gained via the trials of the pandemic and its attendant isolation, along with the charge from the previous pastor, Steve Overman, him to be his own man rather than give place to the giants who had gone before him. Besides leading the Eugene congregation, Russell heads “Foursquare Multiply” the church planting arm of that denomination. He describes their efforts as a trellis to aid others as their vine grows to fruitfulness. A mutual friend brought us together, so I first met Russell in this interview. But it felt like meeting an old friend partly due to shared values but also because our lives were shaped by some of the same people. Russell pastors the church planted by my friend and “older brother” Roy Hicks Jr. It was Roy who set the bar for church planting in our early years in Hermosa. Steve Overman, who followed Roy and now supports Russell, is an admired friend. Bill Gross came up in Hope Chapel Hermosa during my last few years there – and he continues to influence me when we interact.You may ask yourself, “Isn’t a lot of name-dropping happening here?” There is!It’s because meeting Russell so underscored how we’re “no longer strangers and foreigners, but fellow citizens with the saints, and are of God’s household, having been built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Christ Jesus Himself being the cornerstone, in whom the whole building, being fitted together, is growing into a holy temple in the Lord, in whom you also are being built together into a dwelling of God in the Spirit.”You can connect with Russell through the email at faithcenter.org. his Instagram or foursquaremultiply.com. 
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  • 50533. Kenneth Makuakāne: Joining Hawaii's First Spiritual Awakening to Its Most Recent - Part 4 of 4

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