Our Mission
Our Mission:
The Village Chapel exists to glorify God through the teaching of His word, through heartfelt worship, and by connecting people with opportunities to live lives of real significance, serving God and their neighbors as a local community of faith.
Our Goal:
To become a living platform for God's love, truth, grace, and forgiveness to be shared with the people of Nashville and the surrounding areas. To be a voice calling people to a right relationship with God and each other. To encourage people to live under and reflect outwardly God's justice, mercy and faithfulness.
Our Vision:
More Faithful Worshipers
More Flourishing Souls
More Kingdom Living
Our Fourfold Focus: The 4 "W's"
1. Worship:
Worship is the expression of our adoration, love and devotion to God. In the context of our worship services this is done through the use of music, the creative arts, the teaching of God's Word, and the sharing of personal life stories. We believe our worship of God should be fruitful. Therefore, we look for God's love to blossom in our relationships as the visible evidence that we have been authentic in our worship of Him. We desire the love of God to influence and affect the way we live as men, women, brothers and sisters, husbands and wives, fathers and mothers, sons and daughters, employers and employees etc. We believe our worship of God should be intelligent. Therefore, our worship times are designed with a great emphasis on the teaching of the Word of God, that we might be strengthened in faith, be reminded of God's amazing grace, and gain practical insights on how we can grow spiritually. We believe our worship of God should be spiritual. Therefore, we remain flexible and yielded to the leading of the Holy Spirit to direct everything we attempt to do as a local expression of the universal body of Christ. We believe our worship of God should be personal. Therefore, we involve each person by giving a place to congregational readings from the scriptures, to public prayer, and to the recitation of the creeds in our worship. We don't believe worship is something we watch, worship is something we do. We believe our worship of God should be sacrificial. Therefore, we intend to give of our time, talents, money, and other resources that God may be glorified and others will be helped and come to know His great love.
2. The Word:
The foundation for all that we believe about God, ourselves and the world in which we live is found in the ancient scriptures of the Old and New Testaments. Therefore, we give priority to the study of those time tested writings, seeking to arrive at an informed historical interpretation and a relevant contemporary application. We seek the guidance of the Holy Spirit to lead us into the kind of balanced truth that will encourage us to hope and challenge us to grow. As we study the Bible, we seek to know about God but we also seek to know God through what He has revealed about Himself.
3. Witness:
We desire to display through our words and deeds that God is alive and that He cares for each and every person we encounter. This happens as we take opportunities to share our faith verbally, live it out intentionally, and lovingly respond to the real needs of those within reach of our community. Therefore, depending fully on the Holy Spirit, we intend to develop hearts that are sensitive and aware of what is going on in the lives of those around us. As we talk with people about God's grace and love, we desire to be persuasive without being abrasive.
4. "Withness":
This is another way of saying we are a community. All Christians are members of the body of Christ and therefore we are spiritually connected and dependant on each other. Each of us has been gifted by God with spiritual gifts that were designed to be used in the context of community for glorifying God and for building each other up in the faith. Using the metaphor of the human body, some of us serve as hands, some as feet, some as ears or voices, some as shoulders etc. We do not gather simply for our own benefit and enrichment but we gather with the idea that by God's grace, He will change our self-centered nature, transforming it into a God-centered and others-centered nature.