5 Reasons to Start a Fresh Expression—Even in Chaotic Times
Author
Shannon Kiser
Date
December 8, 2025
I’ll never forget the conversations my spouse and I had about whether to have a child. Were we ready? Did we have enough saved? What about our busy schedules? There were plenty of reasons we could rattle off that would suggest we wait. But here’s what we realized: if we waited for the “perfect time,” we’d never take the leap.
New life is never born out of perfect circumstances. Rather, it’s born out of love, courage, and trust that God will provide what we need along the way.
The same is true for the church. With cultural shifts, financial uncertainty, and so much change in the air, it might feel like now is the worst time to try something new on the edges of your current mission and ministry. But in reality, it may be the best time. Here are five reasons why:
1. People are spiritually hungry.
If you’re in church every week, it can feel like the only people who care about God are the ones already there—the faithful few who show up, serve on committees, and keep things running. From inside the walls, it may look like nobody else is interested.
But step outside, and you’ll see a different picture.
Spiritual hunger is everywhere. It’s the young professional who scrolls through mindfulness podcasts late at night because she’s desperate for peace. It’s the neighbor who keeps a crystal on his desk because he’s looking for healing and energy. It’s the retiree who spends hours on ancestry sites because he’s searching for connection and meaning. It’s the college student asking, “What’s my purpose?” while nursing anxiety over the future.
These are people longing for hope, belonging, and something deeper than what they’re finding. They may not be coming to church—but that doesn’t mean they aren’t hungry for God.
The question is: are we willing to meet them in their hunger?
2. Passions can be what makes faith come alive
What if the things that make you come alive—whether it’s hiking, painting, cooking, or playing cards with friends—weren’t “extras” to squeeze in after “real life,” but places where God’s Spirit is inviting us to sink in and explore with others.
We live in a dis-integrated world, where we are not sure how our work life, family life, free time, and faith connect. But Fresh Expressions weave together the things that bring you joy, the God who is the source of that joy, and the people around you who may discover faith through those very same passions. What if God never meant for life to be so divided?
In a fractured world, Fresh Expressions bring wholeness. They remind us that God doesn’t just show up in sanctuaries—God shows up in our everyday passions. And when we share those passions with others, they can become doorways for people to encounter Jesus in ways that feel authentic, integrated, and deeply human. We become more alive, and they do too.
3. Good conversation changes lives.
If our world needs anything right now, it’s honest, hopeful conversation.
Too often, people only encounter church as a one-way monologue—someone speaking from a pulpit. But what many are longing for is dialogue. They want a safe space to wrestle with questions, share their stories, and make sense of a changing world. Around a table, with a cup of coffee or a shared meal, conversations can open doors that sermons alone can’t.
Fresh Expressions create those spaces for dialogue—where the gospel can be shared not just in words, but in relationships and mutual conversation.
4. Playfulness breathes new life.
One of the overlooked gifts of Fresh Expressions is their spirit of playfulness.
And that playfulness is contagious. It reawakens joy in Christians who have been burned out by institutional maintenance. It helps congregations remember that following Jesus is not just about duty or obligation—it’s also about delight.
What if we began hosting a neighborhood dinner, not as a “program” but as a chance to laugh, share stories, and savor food together.? What if instead of chasing the middle schoolers out of the parking lot after school, we cranked up the music and started enjoying popcorn and cornhole together?
Playfulness creates space for delight, and delight creates space for connection. And when we invite others into this kind of shared life, faith doesn’t feel like an obligation—it feels like joy catching hold. We begin to see Jesus not as the taskmaster of our duties but as the playful Savior who delights in setting people free.
In a world that feels heavy with anxiety and division, Christians who live with playfulness, curiosity, and generosity shine like sparks in the dark. And those sparks? They have a way of catching on.
5. We can reframe church for a new generation.
If there’s one word that describes our culture right now, it might be cynicism. Generations are growing up in a world of broken promises—institutions that fail, leaders who disappoint, divisions that deepen, and a constant stream of bad news in the palm of their hands. Cynicism feels like a shield: if you don’t trust, you can’t be hurt. But shields also keep out the very things that give life—love, hope, and belonging.
This is why reframing faith for a new generation matters so much right now. Cynicism doesn’t just make people skeptical, it slowly erodes the capacity to imagine a better future. It leaves people resigned, tired, and disengaged. If you can’t trust anyone or anything, then what’s left to build your life on?
And here is where the gospel speaks with surprising urgency. An encounter with the living God cuts through cynicism in a way nothing else can. Fresh Expressions arrive not with easy answers or trite slogans, but encounters with the disruptive, healing presence of Jesus. Imagine what happens when someone discovers that God is not a manipulative authority figure looking to entrap them, but the One who loves them without condition, whose mercy is from everlasting to everlasting.
For a flourishing future, we don’t need more clever spin or moral guilt-trips. We need a generation who has tasted the goodness of God for themselves—who have found a hope sturdy enough to withstand the world’s brokenness and a love strong enough to build new communities of belonging.
The Bottom Line
If you’re waiting for the “perfect time” to start a Fresh Expression, you’ll wait forever.
But if you take a step of faith now—imperfect as it may feel—you might just make room for God to birth something new.
And here’s the surprising thing: when you take that leap, it’s not only your community that comes alive. You come alive. Your leaders come alive. Your church comes alive.
There will never be a perfect time to start a Fresh Expression. There is only now.

About the Author
Shannon Kiser
Shannon Kiser serves as the Senior Director of Fresh Expressions North America, leading a team of mission strategists and trainers to equip churches for innovative, missional engagement. She is also on the pastoral staff of Riverside Presbyterian Church in Sterling, VA—a bilingual (English/Spanish) congregation that embodies hospitality through Ridgetop Coffee and Tea and several fresh expressions of church. An ICF-certified coach, Shannon supports ministry leaders and church teams through adaptive change and mission-focused coaching. She lives in Springfield, VA, with her husband and enjoys time outdoors, pickleball, gardening, traveling, and her neighborhood swim club.











