The Culture We’re Building
You ever notice how everyone’s trying to “build a culture” these days?
Companies have “culture decks,” influencers have “brand cultures,” and your favorite coffee shop has “a culture of inclusion and oat milk.”
That’s cute.
At Heritage Church, we’re not building a culture to fit in — we’re building one that stands out.
Because if the world can set trends, the Church should be setting truth.
A Culture of Love (The Real Kind, Not the Instagram Kind)
We’re not talking about the love that posts a heart emoji and ghosts you three minutes later.
We’re talking about the love that stays, even when it’s uncomfortable.
The kind that forgives before the apology.
The kind that hugs people who still smell like the life they’re trying to leave behind.
We don’t do “love when convenient.” We do “love when it costs something.”
Because that’s what our Father does — and the family resemblance should show.
A Culture of Honesty
Let’s be real — church folks have sometimes majored in the art of pretending.
But around here, we’re trading fake smiles for real stories.
We’d rather be honest and healing than polished and hiding.
So yes, we’ll talk about the messy stuff.
We’ll talk about addiction, depression, doubt, and everything the enemy says should keep you silent.
Because confession doesn’t make you weak — it makes you free.
And freedom is kind of our family business.
A Culture of Humility
We’re not impressed with ourselves — and thank God for that.
We don’t need more Christians acting like they’re the bouncers at Heaven’s gate.
We need people who say, “Come in, there’s room.”
We’re not gatekeepers; we’re greeters at grace’s door.
If you’ve ever felt like church was a place where you had to fake it to make it, come to Heritage — we’re way too tired for fake.
A Culture of Passion
We don’t do lukewarm.
If you’re gonna clap, clap like you mean it.
If you’re gonna sing, sing like you’ve been set free.
We don’t worship like we’re paying bills — we worship like we’re cashing in promises.
The world gets hype for everything from concerts to tacos.
Why can’t the people who’ve been rescued act like it?
A Culture of Invitation
Here’s the thing — We’re not full. We’re not finished. We’re not famous.
But we’re building something worth walking into.
We’re shaping a space where the lost can be found, the lonely can belong, and the skeptic can sit in the back and just breathe for a minute.
You don’t have to believe everything to walk in the door. Just be willing to let hope take a seat next to you.
Because if there’s anything Heritage Church wants you to know, it’s this:
You belong before you believe.
We’re not out to impress the world — we’re out to change it.
Not with a spotlight, but with a steady light.
Not with noise, but with love that never quiets down.
This is the culture we’re building.
And there’s still room at the table.
A Place For Every Heart,
Rev. John Roberts!

Thank you—I need this encouragement!
What a wonderful reminder that church should be welcoming and accepting! A hospital for broken people—and all of us are broken in some or many ways. How warm it feels to come to a place that accepts you for who and what you are. Leave it to God to work on improving us—and he certainly will, at his own pace. I am thankful for all that God does to remodel my heart!