Our Values

We are committed to living out the values of the gospel of Jesus Christ. Our mission is to love God, love others, and share the good news of Jesus Christ. 


Love

We are committed to loving God and loving others, and to be known for our love for one another.


Worship

We strive to glorify God through worship that is rooted in scripture, and that draws us closer to Him.


Service

We are called to serve our community and those in need, through both physical and spiritual acts of love and kindness.


Evangelism

We seek to spread the good news of Jesus Christ to all people, and to share the gospel through both deed and word.


Discipleship

We prioritize the practice of discipling others in the faith, helping them to grow in their understanding of the Bible and their relationship with God.


Stewardship

We strive to be wise stewards of the resources God has given us, using them to meet the needs of the church and community.


Unity

We seek to foster unity in diversity, standing together as a church family united in our purpose of sharing God’s love.


Holiness

We strive to be a holy people, living in obedience to God’s Word and in surrender to the transforming power of the Holy Spirit.


Mission

We seek to fulfill the Great Commission, making disciples of Jesus Christ in our region and beyond.

Our Beliefs

We invite you to explore our beliefs and join us in our pursuit of living out our faith in boldness and passion.

  • God’s Goodness

    We believe that God's nature is unwavering goodness, fully revealed in the person of Jesus Christ. Jesus shows us exactly what God is like—never cruel, never distant, always healing, reconciling, and restoring. Even when life presents pain or mystery, we look to Jesus as the full expression of the Father's heart. We reject the idea that God's justice stands apart from His love—God's justice is His love in action.


    📖 John 14:9; Colossians 1:15; Hebrews 1:3

  • The Trinity

    Our origin and destiny are found within the eternal love relationship of Father, Son, and Spirit. We are not outside observers but participants in Their union through Christ. This divine fellowship is not exclusive—it is the womb of all creation and the blueprint of human belonging. Salvation is not about escaping earth, but awakening to our inclusion in the eternal embrace.


    📖 John 14:20; Ephesians 1:4-5; 2 Peter 1:4

  • Identity

    We affirm that every person is known, loved, and purposed by God before the foundation of the world. Like Jeremiah, our true identity was established in Christ long before our earthly experience began. Sin distorted our perception of who we are, but it never changed who we've always been in the eyes of the Father. The Gospel is not about becoming something new, but recovering the truth of who we've always been in Christ.


    📖 Jeremiah 1:5; Ephesians 1:4; Romans 8:29-30

  • Grace

    Salvation is not something we earn or achieve. It is the unveiling of the grace already given in Christ, where we awaken to our union with Him and live from the abundance of His finished work. We do not strive for acceptance—we begin from it. Grace reveals that the Gospel is not a contract to sign, but a love story we were born into through Jesus.


    📖 Ephesians 2:5-8; Titus 3:5-7; 2 Timothy 1:9

  • The Kingdom

    We believe Jesus fulfilled the old covenant and inaugurated an eternal Kingdom. Matthew 24 speaks of the end of an age, not the end of the world. We are not waiting for the Kingdom to come—we are learning to see and live from the reality that it's already here. The future is not one of fear, but of increasing glory.


    📖 Matthew 24:1-3,34; Luke 17:20-21; Isaiah 9:7

  • Restoration

    Jesus came to restore everything, not just individual souls but all of creation. We live with hope in His ultimate reconciliation of all things—heaven and earth reunited in Christ. The end goal is not escape but renewal. His love will not rest until every lost thing is found, every broken thing is healed, and every lie is replaced with truth.


    📖 Acts 3:21; Colossians 1:20; 1 Corinthians 15:24-28

  • Jesus

    Jesus is the eternal Word made flesh. The Bible points to Him, and in Him we see perfect theology. We honor Scripture, but we do not equate it with God Himself. Jesus is not a verse to be interpreted—He is a Person to be encountered, the lens through which all Scripture finds its meaning.


    📖 John 1:1,14; Luke 24:27; Hebrews 1:1-3