Church planting involves people, prayer, and the teaching of God’s word—but sooner or later—every church planter runs headlong into a very practical question: where do we actually gather? In a city like London, that question isn’t a footnote—it’s a weekly dilemma. Do you invite strangers into your home or relegate meetings to public spaces until trust is built? When does a Bible study become a church family, and what kind of space helps that happen? And what do you do when historic church buildings are closing, but you’ve been priced out? Today’s conversation is about that tension: staying faithful to evangelism and discipleship while navigating a city where “space” is scarce, expensive, but important.
Our guest is Brian Clark, an experienced church planter who previously planted a church in London in the Chislehurst area—and by God’s grace, that work is now healthy and autonomous. Brian and his family are now stepping out to plant a second church, but even with experience and a deep knowledge of the city, he’s facing fresh uncertainties: how to build fellowship, how to move from street evangelism to intimate community, and how to think creatively about meeting spaces when traditional options feel out of reach.
And don't forget to catch this week's episode of SoundMind!
Has therapy quietly become the default answer to every kind of pain? In this opening episode of the Confessions of a Therapist series, Jonathan Kindler steps inside the tension many people feel but rarely say out loud. Blending scripture, personal story, and lived clinical insight, Jonathan explores the difference between help and healing, why distress is not always dysfunction, and how modern culture may be asking therapy to carry weight it was never meant to hold.