Our Story

Our Story

In the summer of 2017, Jim and Meg realized that they were both feeling stuck in ministry. Things were solid at the church they were leading, yet they each independently felt something stirring in their hearts for more. Talking about this together, they discerned a longing in their hearts and an invitation from God for them to live more radically for Jesus, to lean more deeply into taking risks for the sake of God’s kingdom; they didn’t want the sirens song of security to lull them asleep so that they missed the costly way of Jesus. Their first inclination was to move into a more ethnically and socioeconomically diverse neighborhood, yet all these opportunities closed. So they pressed in to the founding vision of church planting. Over the next several years of trusting in the slow work of God, three threads of God’s activity began to emerge.

Three Threads

First, the outward vocational dimension. By God’s grace, they had already helped launch two other successful church plants and a third that failed to thrive and closed. Jim began to talk with other leaders who were trying approaches mingling together the best of satellites and traditional church planting. As great as these options were, all of them still were slow, expensive, and fell far short of the need. Simply put, the opportunity was too great. But through their involvement overseas, they began to hear stories and meet leaders who were experimenting with approaches that bore a striking resemblance to the Gospels and Acts, and with similar results. But nothing had yet taken root in the West. So they watched and waited, reading, reflecting and praying.

Second, the inward devotional dimension. God began to speak compellingly to Jim, in particular, about the need to slow down and focus. Through dreams, visions, prayer and reflection on scripture, God began to invite Jim to a posture of simplicity, a radical trust in God’s provision and a radical focus on the priorities of God’s kingdom mission. God also began to speak to Jim from scripture to not just settle for what was expected as normal, but rather to do a new kind of work and ultimately to become a new kind of leader. 

Third, the pandemic. While the church they served remained stable organizationally, Jim and Meg began to see all the ways that the pressures of the pandemic exposed the weaknesses in the prevailing model of church that they’d inherited. Discipleship, community, mission, all struggled. Covid didn’t create the problems, but it did make them worse. 

A Grain of Wheat

All these came together in the spring of 2021. Reflecting on Jesus’ words in John 12:24, “Unless a grain of wheat falls into the ground and dies, it remains by itself alone. But if it dies, it bears much fruit.” Jim and Meg realized their dreams of disciple multiplication and mission movement wouldn’t come without death. Jim and Meg had to ask themselves the question: “What are we willing to die to in order to see the fruitfulness of God’s kingdom that we’re dreaming of?” The answer was simple and clear: they would die to their job as pastors and their experience of church as they had come to know it.

Six months later they transitioned out of leadership at the church they had pastored for twenty years to begin catalyzing a decentralized network of replicating simple churches for every neighborhood in Detroit and beyond. You can read more about their vision here.

 

Who We Are

Jim grew up in metro Detroit, the only child of a single mom and later the second of four siblings. He graduated from the United States Military Academy at West Point with a degree focus in European and Middle East history, and Trinity International University with a Master of Divinity. In addition to several years in the Army and National Guard, he’s installed custom closets (though not very well), been a barista and has a wide range of pastoral experiences: as an intern and interim; planted and pastored a local church; assessed, sent, trained and coached church planters; closed, merged and now transitioned churches. He’s served as a regional church planting coordinator in the Great Lakes, co-founded the Vineyard Ethiopia partnership, and served on the missions leadership team for Africa and the Middle East. Jim is an avid hiker, and loves adventure, stories and cheesy underdog movies.

Megan is a fellow pilgrim on the journey. She is a native of Chicago and the oldest of three siblings. She holds a BSN in Nursing and found her fit in Hospice care. She has been a trained Spiritual Director since 2015. Along the way she fell in love with the life of Ignatius of Loyola and the way he followed Jesus. This led her to being trained to accompany others through the various adaptations of his Spiritual Exercises, including both the 18th and 19th annotations. Leading others through this extended meditation on the life of Christ brings her much joy, as the Exercises have been very transformative in her own pilgrimage with God. She is currently pursuing additional training in supervision as a way of accompanying other Director’s in their vocation, and is also growing in her Spanish language skills. Meg feels most alive when she is curled up fireside with her dog and a good book, spending time noticing nature, baking sourdough or traveling internationally with her husband Jim. One of life’s highlights was their 40 day, 500 mile pilgrimage along El Camino Frances. Together they parent one adult son and three teenage daughters. She is always pursuing the Magis and delights in being God’s beloved.

Jim and Meg have four kids: their oldest son at college and three teenage daughters. Partnering with God, they launched the Bamboo Initiative in December 2021. Together they love coffee, mornings, poetry, reading, travel, and outwitting each other at Scrabble.