This is not a Wikipedia article: It is an individual user's work-in-progress page, and may be incomplete and/or unreliable. For guidance on developing this draft, see Wikipedia:So you made a userspace draft. Find sources: Google (books · news · scholar · free images · WP refs) · FENS · JSTOR · TWL |
The Potter's House is a Christian church based in Stoke-on-Trent, England, UK. It was established by Phil Barber and a small group of leaders in 1992 out of the Swan Bank Methodist Church. It is part of the Methodist Church of Great Britain.
History
editThe church was originally called Birches Head Christian Fellowship and, upon being established, took residence in the hall of the upper site of Birches Head High School.[citation needed] In November 2005 the church succeeded in purchasing the school building where they were meeting and created a community, church and enterprise centre called The Bridge Centre. The Bridge Centre provides community and conferencing facilities which are available for hire.[1] In July 2006, the church leadership team made the decision to change the name of the church to The Potter’s House to reflect its mission as a city centre church and to symbolize its reinvention as a church ministering in the 21st Century. By January 2007 the work on the centre was mostly complete.[2]
Vision and Mission
editThe church mission statement is: ‘To lead people to become committed followers of Jesus Christ within a loving community of growing Christians.’ This is carried out by adopting the following strategy:
- A Bringing people — We seek to win people for Jesus (everyone is a missionary)
- A Belonging people — We seek to encourage Christian friendship and belonging (everyone is called to care in the name of Jesus)
- A Maturing people — We seek to help people become true Christian disciples (everyone is called to be holy)
- An Enabling people — We seek to empower people to discover and use their gifts and talents (everyone is in ministry)[3]
DNA
editThe Potter’s House aims to be a 21st Century Church with these characteristics:
- A large City church.
- The Lord’s house, guided, inspired and filled with the Holy Spirit.
- A house of prayer.
- A centre for the development of media, arts and creativity.
- Young at heart.
- Friendly and welcoming.
- Having high standards in all its activities.
- Inclusive and compassionate.
- Culturally relevant in the style of its activities.
- Reaching the lost relationally.
- Resourcing, mentoring and training people so they can fulfil their potential.
- Working in partnership and unity with other members of the Body of Christ in Stoke-on-Trent.[4]
Services
editThe church began by operating a single service at 10:30am every Sunday morning. This included Sunday school activities for anyone under the age of 13 which is known as The Lighthouse. In March 2009, the service reached full capacity resulting in the leadership team making the decision to create a second service. Currently the church operates two identical services taking place at 9:30am and 11:15am. The Lighthouse operates in the second service only.[5]
Leadership
editSince planting the church in 1992, Phil Barber has been the Senior Pastor. In November 2010, he announced to the congregation that he would step down from senior leadership at The Potter's House in September 2012 and that he intends to hand over to Paul Nixon, currently serving as the Associate Pastor.[citation needed]
References
edit- ^ The Bridge Centre, Welcome, September 2006, "[1]", 11 March 2011
- ^ The Potter's House, Who We Are, September 2007, "[2]", 09 March 2011
- ^ The Potter's House, Mission Statement, September 2007, "[3]", 09 March 2011
- ^ Phil Barber, DNA, September 2007, "[4]", 09 March 2011
- ^ Goliver, The Sentinel, 02 March 2009, "[5]", 09 March 2011
External links
edit