Before we can debate buildings, budgets, or strategy, it’s probably important that we address a simpler question: what did Jesus and the apostles actually mean by “the church”? The New Testament presents the church not as a place but as a gathered people—living, mobile, and shaped to meet the needs of the world they were sent to. In this episode of The Postscript, we step into first-century Christianity to explore how believers met, why homes were so common, what their gatherings focused on, and which patterns were the result of circumstance, and which were the result of biblical commands. The goal isn’t to copy the early church mechanically but to understand the principles that free churches today to adapt faithfully—so that our spaces serve the mission instead of defining it.
Our guest today is Pastor Dan Reneau, faculty professor of Biblical Studies at the Living Faith Bible Institute. Dan has served on the front lines of church planting and now finds himself helping support a new work in St. Louis, giving him both the perspective of a planter and the responsibility of helping church planters. Because of that experience, the question of meeting spaces is personal to how he understands the church's mission.
And don't forget to catch this week's episode of SoundMind!
Who should actually walk with you when life gets heavy? In this episode, Jonathan Kindler explores the concept of layered care—a biblical framework for understanding where different kinds of support belong in the process of healing and growth. Drawing from scripture, clinical insight, and real-life experience in counseling and church life, he explains why transformation ultimately comes from Christ, and how therapy, discipleship, community, and clinical care each play a different role in the journey.