The Church of the Future, with Kara Powell and Raymond Chang
Conversing with Mark Labberton
Release Date: 07/15/2025
Conversing with Mark Labberton
Church planting is thriving at the very moment the church faces a crisis of credibility. What if the problem isn’t too few churches—but too narrow a vision of what church is for? In this episode with Mark Labberton, Brad Brisco reflects on church planting shaped by Christology before strategy, mission before institution, and incarnation before programs. Together they discuss missionary imagination in the modern West, co-vocational ministry, alternative expressions of church, micro-church networks, church growth assumptions, vocation and work, justice and proximity, and what it means to...
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Christian faith has been politicized. Arguably, this is not new. But what we see in America and other societies has a jarring impact for those who seek a credible public Christian faith. To examine how Christian faith has been politicized in recent years, preacher and public theologian Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove joins Mark Labberton, asking what moral resistance requires in this authoritarian moment. “I couldn’t know Jesus in the fullness of who Jesus is without integrating faith and justice.” In this episode: Wilson-Hartgrove reflects on his Southern Baptist formation, his political...
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As violence erupts around the world, how must we respond to those who worship power? In Venezuela, global power has reshaped lives overnight, and Elizabeth Sendek and Julio Isaza join Mark Labberton to reflect on faith, fear, and Christian witness amid political upheaval in Latin America. “It made me question, if power is the ultimate good, then questions of morality or theology have no place. We have chosen our idol.” Together they discuss how experiences of dictatorship, displacement, and pastoral caution shape Christian responses to invasion and regime change; the relationship between...
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What happens when a long pastoral calling ends, friendships fade, and the church faces cultural fracture? Bishop Kenneth C. Ulmer (42 years in ministry at Faithful Central Bible Church in Inglewood, CA) joins Mark Labberton for a searching conversation about retirement from pastoral ministry, loneliness, leadership, and the meaning of credible witness in the Black church today. “Ministry can be a lonely business.” In this episode, Bishop Ulmer reflects on the stepping away after four decades of pastoral leadership, navigating aloneness, disrupted rhythms, and the spiritual costs of...
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Can joy be anything but denial in a rage-filled public life? Michael Wear joins Mark Labberton to reframe politics through the kingdom logic of hope, agency, and practices of silence and solitude. As 2025 closes amid political discord, we might all ask whether joy can be real in public life—without denial, escapism, or contempt. "… Joy is a pervasive and constant sense of wellbeing." In this conversation, Michael Wear and Mark Labberton reflect on joy, hope, responsibility, and agency amid a reaction-driven politics. Together they discuss the realism of Advent; the limits of our control;...
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What if taking Mary seriously actually deepens, rather than distracts from, devotion to Jesus? Art historian and theologian Matthew Milliner joins Mark Labberton to explore that possibility through history, theology, and the Incarnation. In a searching conversation about Mary, the meaning of Marian devotion, and the mystery of the Incarnation, they draw from early Christianity, Protestant theology, and global Christianity, as Milliner reframes Mary as a figure who deepens devotion to Christ rather than distracting from it. “I don’t see how anyone cannot understand this to be the revolution...
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How should Christian faith shape work in an era of pluralism, fear, and systemic inequality? Sociologist Elaine Howard Ecklund (Rice University) is presenting new insights for faith at work through data, theology, and lived experience. “People love to talk about individual ethics … but what was really hard for them to think about was, what would it mean to make our workplace better as a whole?” In this episode, Ecklund joins Mark Labberton to reflect on moving from individual morality toward systemic responsibility, dignity, and other-centred Christian witness at work. Together they...
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As global powers double down on militarism and defense, Daniel Zoughbie argues that the most transformative force in the Middle East has always come from citizen diplomacy. A complex-systems scientist and diplomatic historian, Zoughbie joins Mark Labberton to explore how twelve US presidents have “kicked the hornet’s nest” of the modern Middle East. Drawing on his work in global health and his new book Kicking the Hornet’s Nest: U.S. Foreign Policy in the Middle East from Truman to Trump, Zoughbie contrasts the view from refugee camps and micro-clinic networks with the view from the...
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Rabbi Michael G. Holzman joins Mark Labberton to explore the formation of his Jewish faith, the pastoral realities of congregational life, and the multi-faith initiative he helped launch for the nation’s 250th anniversary, Faith 250. He reflects on his early experiences of wonder in the natural world, the mentors who opened Torah to him, and the intellectual humility that shapes Jewish approaches to truth. Their conversation moves through the unexpected depth of congregational ministry, the spiritual and emotional weight of the pandemic, the complexities of speaking about God in contemporary...
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In this Thanksgiving reflection, Mark Labberton opens up about a period of darkness and despair, when as a younger man he considered ending his life. But when he was invited to share Thanksgiving dinner with a local couple, his eyes were opened to concrete acts of hope, friendship, and joy—all embodied in the simple feast of a community “Friendsgiving” potluck. Every year since, Mark calls these friends on Thanksgiving Day, in gratitude for and celebration of the hospitality, generosity, beauty, friendship, and hope he encountered that day. Here Mark reflects on the emotional and...
info_outlineAre the best days of the church behind us? Or ahead? Kara Powell and Ray Chang join Mark Labberton to discuss Future-Focused Church: Reimagining Ministry to the Next Generation, co-authored with Jake Mulder. Drawing on extensive research, practical frameworks, and decades of leadership at Fuller Seminary and the TENx10 Collaboration, Powell and Chang map a path forward for the church—one rooted in relational discipleship, kingdom diversity, and tangible neighbour love. In a moment marked by disaffiliation, disillusionment, and institutional fragility, they offer a hopeful vision: churches that are brave enough to listen deeply, lead adaptively, and partner with the next generation in mission. This conversation unpacks their “Here to There” framework, the role of human agency in ecclesial change, and why honouring young people isn’t pandering—it’s planting seeds for the future of faith.
Episode Highlights
- “We believe the best days of the church are ahead.”
- “Leadership begins with listening.”
- “Unless strategy emerges out of culture, or unless the culture is changed, it’s really hard to lead.”
- “Everything rises when we focus on young people.”
- “Agency is the intersection of knowing, being, and doing.”
Helpful Resources and Links
- Future-Focused Church by Kara Powell, Jake Mulder, and Ray Chang (InterVarsity Press)
- Fuller Youth Institute—Research and innovation for youth ministry
- TENx10 Collaboration—Movement to help faith matter more for ten million young people over ten years
- Asian American Christian Collaborative—Equipping Asian American Christians for faithful public witness
- ”Churches and Change: Adaptive Leadership”—Heifetz on adaptive vs. technical change (Harvard Business Review)
- Rethinking Church in the 21st Century (Fuller Seminary)—Ongoing work in contextual theology and church innovation
About Kara Powell
Kara Powell is the chief of leadership formation at Fuller Seminary, executive director of the Fuller Youth Institute, and founder of the TENx10 Collaboration. A leading voice in youth ministry and church innovation, she is author or co-author of numerous books including Sticky Faith, Growing Young, and 3 Big Questions That Change Every Teenager. She is co-author of Future-Focused Church: Reimagining Ministry to the Next Generation.
About Ray Chang
Ray Chang is executive director of the TENx10 Collaboration and president of the Asian American Christian Collaborative. A pastor, activist, and writer, Ray’s work focuses on racial justice, next-gen discipleship, and building churches that reflect the diversity of God’s kingdom. He is co-author of Future-Focused Church: Reimagining Ministry to the Next Generation.
Show Notes
- Kara Powell is chief of leadership formation at Fuller Seminary and executive director of the Fuller Youth Institute
- Ray Chang is executive director of the TENx10 Collaboration and president of the Asian American Christian Collaborative
- Future-Focused Church offers a framework for adaptive change, grounded in Scripture, research, and practical leadership
- “Leadership begins with listening”—Kara shares the importance of appreciative inquiry and asking youth what matters to them
- Ray describes today’s church as “a church actively trying to define and redefine itself in tumultuous and complex times”
- Simple but powerful framework: Here to There—understanding where we are and where God is calling us next
- Three checkpoints of a future-focused church: relationally discipling young people, modelling kingdom diversity, tangibly loving our neighbours
- “Everything rises when we focus on young people”—churches flourish when the next generation is centered
- Data shows only one in three senior pastors rank young people among their top five priorities
- Kara: “I wish the problem was that young people were overly prioritized—sadly, it’s the opposite”
- Church innovation isn’t just strategic, it’s adaptive: “Culture eats strategy for breakfast.”
- Ray explains why Covid exposed the difference between technical and adaptive change in the church
- Kara: “We overestimate what we can accomplish in one year and underestimate what we can do in three to five.”
- Biblical foundations explored—Paul’s epistles blend being and doing; Galatians 5 offers a model of fruitful action
- Human agency as divine invitation—Ray: “God invites us to partner in God’s work for the flourishing of humanity”
- Kara’s church story: youth sat in the front, fully engaged—“They prioritized us”
- Simple action steps from churches include showing up to youth events and publicly celebrating young people’s milestones
- Mark Labberton challenges the idea of “pandering” to youth—Kara responds with data and theological reflection
- Ray reflects on the complex dynamics in immigrant and second-gen Asian American churches—“placelessness” and a search for belonging
- Importance of community: following Jesus together, across generations, cultures, and neighbourhoods
- Kara reframes giving: “Young people want to give to people and to purpose—not to perpetuate programs”
- “Culture is where values are held; unless strategy aligns with culture, it will be resisted”—Ray on organizational change
- Intergenerational relationships are critical—older adults model faith and love through presence and commitment
- The book offers not just direction but formation: process, practice, and people matter as much as the goal
- “If there’s ever a moment to care about the church—and young people—it’s now.”
Production Credits
Conversing is produced and distributed in partnership with Comment magazine and Fuller Seminary.