January 20th, 2009 · Events
New City Resources in partnership with Regent College is proud to present our Winter 2009 Seminar:
Webs, Calls, Texts, and Tones: Practicing the Presence of God in a Wireless World
Jennie McLaurin, Medical Doctor and Associate Professor of Bioethics and Dean of Students at Regent College, will be our guide as we explore what it is to practice the presence of God in an ever increasing world of ubiquitous communication. Details and registration information for this event are as follows: [Read more →]
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An Essay on Knoxville Culture
By Kenny Woodhull
Occasioned by a Request to Contribute to Knoxville Salt & Light Guidebook (2009)
Describing the culture of Knoxville is akin to asking the proverbial blind men to describe an elephant. One man, grasping the trunk, says an elephant is like a large hose. Another, holding the tail, declares an elephant resembles a stiff rope. A third, clutching a leg, says an elephant is like a sturdy tree. A fourth declares that the other three are altogether wrong: an elephant, he explains, is an immovable wall of skin and muscle as big as a house.
Point of view is everything. Let me acknowledge at the outset that this perspective on Knoxville culture is one man’s limited assessment of a monumental issue, a subject so large and diverse that no single person or perspective can hope to do it justice. [Read more →]
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July 5th, 2008 · Events
New City Resources and Regent College present our Fall 2008 Seminar: Worldview at Work. Our principal speaker will be Paul Stevens, Professor Emeritus from Regent Collge, Vancouver, Canada. In addition, several local professionals will contribute and share their case studies.
[Read more →]
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New City Friends,
After ten years of fruitful ministry in Knoxville’s Old City, New City has entered anew season.
Since 1998, by God’s grace and with the help of an amazing army of artists, musicians, and volunteers we were able to cultivate a sense of Christian community in the heart of a struggling section of downtown among a diverse group of people. Long before the word carried much traction, our project was decidedlymissional. For some time New City had prepared to relocate under a new name in the context of a new center-city initiative. In the end, and with a measure ofdisappointment, this move did not materialize. What has developed however is an abiding sense of a strategic calling to cast the missional vision that marked the Café.
Today, more than a decade since New City folk first walked through the Old City looking for a suitable site for the Café, our commitment is to come alongside local, regional, and national projects and help them achieve missional authenticity. What this means is that New City is now principally concerned to inspire the Church with a vision for missional living and equip God’s people to flesh out a life of faith, hope, and love as embedded witnesses within an alien Culture. Of course, an emphasis on missional Arts will remain at our core.
Significant changes to the website will be forthcoming in the weeks and months ahead as we unpack New City’s new season of equipping and encouragement. As before, we value your prayers and ideas for enriching the kingdom.
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Dear Friends,
After nearly ten years of work in Knoxville’s Old City District, New City is pleased to announce a merging of interests in the form of a new partnership in historic downtown Knoxville’s Market Square, opening Fall 2007.
Since 1997, and in two different locations, New City has cultivated a sense of community among faith-based artists and their audiences and also worked to equip people for marketplace integration. It has been a wonderful decade rich in relationships and bridge-building. We remain overwhelmed with God’s presence and provision through the years. We are especially grateful to you: the many people who brought life to New City through thousands of hours of volunteer help, sacrificial financial support, enthusiastic participation, and Spirit-inspired creativity. [Read more →]
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