Planting outside your kingdom
“At the end of the day, it’s not about our particular badge or denomination.”
Craig Macartney
Spur Ottawa Writer
Ottawa churches have a rich legacy of working together. They collaborate on outreaches and conferences, but some groups are even helping plant churches outside their own denomination. One recent example is the new Southeast City Church.
After seminary, David Hood dreamed of being part of a church that sees everyone as missionaries in their local community. His vision was fueled when he connected with a local network of church planters and pastors, called The Incubator.
“Simultaneously, the Lord started opening our eyes to our neighbourhood, how many needs there are and how much potential there is,” Hood says. “There are just not enough churches trying to reach the 47,000 people in our area.”
Hood participated in a church-planting program run by Sea to Sea (C2C). At the end of the two-year program, C2C encouraged Hood to apprentice with another church before stepping out to plant on his own. He turned to Ryan Dawson, the lead pastor of Sequoia Church in Barrhaven, who he had met through The Incubator.
“There was never any pressure to betray our convictions. There was never any pressure to become like them, either.”
Although the two men approach certain doctrinal issues from a different perspective, Dawson says, “We were open to the idea from the start because we really want to be a Kingdom church. That’s not about building our brand. Our desire is to make Jesus famous and help other churches.”
Hood spent a year at Sequoia as a member of their leadership team. He says they agree on all the issues that are “truly important”. Even when addressing areas where they disagree, Hood says he didn’t find the experience difficult.
“There were a lot of areas where we agreed. Where we disagreed, there was the freedom for Diane [Hood’s wife] and me to be different. There was never any pressure to betray our convictions. There was never any pressure to become like them, either. It was very refreshing.”
Sequoia is part of the Canadian National Baptist denomination. Southeast City Church launched as part of the Mennonite Brethren. While Sequoia has helped plant four other churches since its inception, this was the first from another denomination.
At the end of August, Sequoia commissioned Hood and his team and helped them financially as they launched.
“It’s about Jesus, His kingdom, and impacting people with the good news of Christ. We have to stand together to get the job done.”
“The time we spent there was good for us,” Hood says. “They have really set us up for success. The way we were treated and the way we were blessed, I want to take that with us. We want to do what they did for us, in the future. They modeled it for us perfectly.”
The two churches remain in contact and are talking about how their relationship will continue. Both are clear the experience was positive and both want to help plant more churches inside and outside their denominations, in the future.
“At the end of the day, it’s not about our particular badge or denomination,” Dawson states. “It’s about Jesus, His kingdom, and impacting people with the good news of Christ. We have to stand together to get the job done.”
Dawson says he is encouraged by seeing young Christian leaders building on the decades of work toward Christian unity in this city.
“What I’m seeing now, which is really cool, is the younger leaders are less denominationally wired than the older leaders. They have their denominational tribes and have their distinctive, but the reality is that they aren’t that locked into that. What can God do with it when we really work together? I think it bodes well.”
Similar Articles
Pastors gather to discuss racism
More than 100 pastors and Christian leaders joined a videoconference to hear Ottawa’s black pastors share their experiences of racism. The call was a first step in a broader initiative to seek God’s heart for racial reconciliation […]
At-risk youth drawn into a better life at Ottawa Innercity Ministries
For more than a decade, Ottawa Innercity Ministries has been supplying at-risk and street-engaged youth artists with a safe place to express themselves. They call it the Innercity Arts Program. Every Wednesday and Thursday evening, marginalized […]
Music festival outreach targets Vanier
The Dunamis Army is preparing for a major outreach targeting young people in Ottawa. The street-evangelism group, led by Israel Gimba, is hosting a free music festival August […]
Hearts of Beauty organizes in-person women’s retreat
Hearts of Beauty is planning an in-person retreat to help Christian women rest, experience God, and reconnect with each other. Based on Captivating, a best-selling book by John and Stasi Eldredge, Hearts of Beauty has […]
Ministering in Ottawa’s strip clubs
It’s dark out, as a small group of women gather in the parking lot and head toward one of Ottawa’s strip clubs. They are familiar faces at the door, but these women are not dancers—they are members of Fight 4 Freedom and they changing lives among Ottawa’s most vulnerable women […]
Students and youth pastors partner to run Alpha in Ottawa schools
The three high school students sat in the empty classroom as the lunch hour ticked by. The stack of pizzas they had bought—enough for about 20 people—was getting cold. It was their first week leading Alpha Youth at their school, and no one had shown up. “You can […]