The Future of Church Starts Here.
SUNDAY 5pm GATHERING
SUNDAY 5pm GATHERING
Jesus is calling Assembly to THOSE who've given up on church—or never saw the point to begin with. Assembly exists to challenge the committed follower of Jesus and engage the curious.
At Assembly, we believe your story matters. Not just the polished parts. The questions, the detours, the wounds, the weird turns-all of it. Because God doesn't wait until your life makes sense to start showing up. Jesus meets people mid-story-not at the end of a chapter, but right in the mess of the plot twist.
Assembly doesn't exist to escape the world, but to enter it more fully—with Jesus at the center, joy in our hearts, and love that looks like action.
The next chapter of the church won't be built on personalities or platforms—it will be fueled by everyday people, activated and set loose. Every follower of Jesus becomes a difference-maker. Not spectators.
You don’t walk away impressed by Assembly—you walk away changed by the resurrection.
This is a community where skeptics and the curious feel welcome, and those who are committed to following Jesus are continually challenged to grow.




At its core, the church should be the most creative, redemptive, life-giving force on the planet. Not a copy of culture, but a collision with it.
At Assembly, we see all of Scripture through the life, words, and work of Jesus. He's the lens we read it through. The Gospels—Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John—show us what God is like in real time.
In a world obsessed with being right, we'd rather be people becoming like Jesus. In a culture that cancels or conforms, we're committed to something harder—community.
Jesus didn't die to build fanclubs but to raise a movement of ordinary people filled with extraordinary power.
The future of the church will not be built by institutions. It will be built by people. People with skin in the game. People with stories that don’t wrap up neatly. People who still believe Jesus changes everything- and are willing to live it.
The real danger isn't that the church in our world is losing people—it's that the church is losing purpose. We're building better stages but forgetting the mission.
This generation isn't waiting for the church to perform-they're aching for a revolution worth joining. And if the church has the courage to be that again, the world will never be the same.
The church was never meant to be tame or safe. It was born in the wild-in upper rooms and public squares. The first followers of Jesus weren't polished professionals or religious insiders. They were ordinary people with an imagination too alive to be managed.
Jesus didn't come to launch a new religion. He came to restore what was broken—in us, around us, and through us.