Case Study: Re-Imagining Oxford Terrace Baptist
Andrew and Alicia Meek
The 2011 Christchurch earthquake was a heartbreaking and unsettling moment in the life of Oxford Terrace Baptist Church. And yet, in its wake, it opened a space to reimagine not just buildings, but purpose.
Case Study: The House Church Network
Ambrose and Jo Blowfield
This case study will explore how these communities prioritise discipleship, shared leadership, and mission in everyday life, while remaining intentionally small and reproducible.
Communities Born of the Beatitudes
Dale Campbell
Jesus' sermon on the mountain overlooking the Sea of Galilee remains as resonant, provocative, and challenging as ever. In a cultural moment—both in the world and the church—drawn toward power, spectacle, endless pleasure, and status, what might it look like to form communities shaped instead by meekness, peacemaking, and lament?
Case Study: Pa Whakaoranga Aranui
Kevin Hapi and Zenn Rarere
Pa Whakaoranga Aranui is a reimagined Presbyterian community in one of Christchurch’s most challenged neighbourhoods, shaped by a kaupapa of healing, restoration, and deep local presence.
Mapping the Church, Multiplying Movements
Jonathan Dove
Over the past year, ACN (Auckland Church Network) has mapped nearly 3,000 churches across 861 regions in Aotearoa, exploring where the Church is flourishing and where it’s struggling.
Contemplative Prayer for Everyone
Maja Whittaker
Moments like the Asbury revival suggest a different kind of renewal—less marked by spectacle, and more by a quiet, contemplative return to the presence of God.
Re-Imagining Success
Richard Black
The Western Church is beginning to embrace a mixed ecology of church planting—an open space where legacy models make room for hyper-local expressions, house churches, missional communities, monastic orders, and forms shaped deeply by local context.
Discipleship Essentials
Mark & Kirsty Johnson
Tākaka is known for its strong counter-cultural and alternative spiritual community. Mark and Kirsty and their team have embraced this context, seeing it as a mission field rather than a barrier. After years building relationships, they have seen many people come to faith from new-age communities. They have shaped the parish into a missionary base—welcoming spiritual seekers, discipling new believers, and continuing to meet people where they are.
Christchurch - Main Hall
Looking for Lydia
Dave Mann
Mission often begins not with a programme, but with people. Drawing on the story of Lydia in Acts 16, this workshop explores how to identify and invest in the people God is already at work among through intentional one-to-one conversations.
Christchurch - Auditorium
Panel: Church Leadership in Crisis
The Western church is approaching a leadership cliff. Burnout and retirement are outpacing the development of new leaders, and many churches are struggling to raise the next generation.
Christchurch - Auditorium
Panel: Christian Community Development
Across the world, many Christian leaders are turning their attention beyond the walls of the church and into the life of their neighbourhoods—through community organising, social enterprise, and long-term presence among their neighbours. This panel explores what it looks like to seek the flourishing of our neighbourhoods and the coming of God's Kingdom.
Christchurch - Auditorium
Panel: The Planters
This panel brings together four experienced church planters from diverse traditions, each carrying hard-won wisdom from the front lines of mission. Together, they’ll reflect honestly on the tensions, failures, and breakthroughs that come with forming new gospel communities—and offer grounded insight for those discerning a call to plant, pioneer, or multiply.
Wellington - Pīwakawaka
Case study: St James, Mangere
Mark Barnard and Irene Farnham
How might our ministry be shaped if we attended deeply to ‘place’? Rev. Mark Barnard will consider how the story of St James Māngere Bridge has been formed by the whenua.
Wellington - Ngāke
Blended Traditions
Joseph Macauley
In this workshop, Joseph explores a generous orthodoxy that draws on the riches of the wider church—Catholic, Pentecostal, charismatic, and contemplative—and shares how these threads have been woven together in the life of St Luke's.
Panel: Fruitful Reconstruction
This panel brings together leaders who have wrestled with disappointment and emerged into constructive, hopeful, Spirit-led ways of planting new gospel communities.
Christchurch - Lounge
The Leadership behind Church Transformation: Lessons from Kiwi Pastors
Nathan Hughes
Many have tried to realign existing churches away from comfort and toward mission, but too often the change doesn’t last. Nathan draws on research with Aotearoa pastors who have led healthy, lasting transformation to uncover the leadership patterns that make the difference.
Christchurch - Foyer
Church Planting, Revitalisation and Missional Alignment - Catch Cohorts
Alongside hosting Little Revolutions, CATCH is continually training church planters and renewal leaders. Over the past three years, more than 60 Christian leaders have been equipped through CATCH cohorts in church planting, revitalisation, and missional realignment.
Christchurch - Foyer
Remaking Movements for Fruitfulness
Justin Duckworth
What if our systems are working against us—built more for stability than mission, and unintentionally stifling the life we long to see?
Christchurch - Auditorium
5Q and APEST
Alan Hirsch
This workshop introduces 5Q (APEST)—a framework drawn from Ephesians 4 that helps the church rediscover the full spectrum of Christ's leadership through apostles, prophets, evangelists, shepherds, and teachers.
Christchurch - Auditorium
Prayer Ministry
Whether you're tired, wired, or inspired, this is a space to bring the subtle invitations of the Holy Spirit into prayer with others. A team will be available to listen with you, pray with you, and help discern what God might be saying—and what your next steps could be.
Christchurch - Outdoor Room