Reimagine Church Los Angeles

Reimagine Church Los Angeles Reimagine is a digital content church.

Mission, values & beliefs
Our mission statement is simple: “To follow the way of Jesus as a community of calling, cause, and creativity.”
Our values include being outwardly focused, embracing diversity, utilizing practice-based spiritual formation We meet every week online and in-person monthly in your neighborhood.

1st Sundays - Online Experience
2nd Sundays - Westside LA Venue
3rd Sundays - Northern CA in Marin County
4th Sundays - Eastside LA Venue in Silverlake

07/04/2025

The first time I heard this song, I wasn’t prepared. It wasn’t a worship song, it wasn’t written for church, and it definitely wasn’t marketed to spiritual communities. But it hit me like scripture—because in that moment, I saw Jesus in a whole new way. Not as a concept, not as a doctrine—but as someone who was radically present, tender, and beautifully disruptive.

This metaphor didn’t just reframe my faith, it reframed my approach to people. It made me question how I show up to conflict, how I sit at the table with difference, and how willing I really am to listen with my heart open. What if we stopped waiting for the “holy moments” and realized they’re already happening—through music, through each other, through surprising metaphors that sneak past our defenses and pierce the soul?

07/03/2025

We all know what it feels like to be in the heat of disagreement—voices rise, walls go up, and peace feels like a distant fantasy. But what if the real power isn’t in being right, but in being whole? What if the secret to navigating deep conflict is found not in dominance… but in forgiveness?

Jesus didn’t avoid tension. He stepped into it with clarity and grace—and in one of the most counterintuitive moves, he extended peace where judgment was expected. This isn’t about backing down. It’s about rising above. Real leadership, real growth, real transformation happens when we lead with mercy and move with purpose—even toward those we disagree with.

07/02/2025

She came into the moment with tension, questions, and conflict. Everything about the encounter said it should’ve ended with rejection. But instead, Jesus flips the script. He sees her, hears her, and then offers something radical in today’s world—peace. Not punishment. Not correction. Just… peace.

We’re trained to brace for the worst when there’s disagreement. But what if spiritual maturity is measured not by how loud we argue, but by how deeply we listen? What if peace is possible, even when nothing else gets resolved? Jesus didn’t just change her story. He challenged the entire system.

07/01/2025

When opposites sit down together, something powerful happens. Walls crack. Labels fade. The conversation becomes less about winning and more about understanding. It’s not easy. It’s uncomfortable. But it’s also the only way we heal the divides that are tearing us apart.

In a world where it’s easier to block, cancel, or shout over each other, staying in the room is a radical act of hope. It’s where we discover that even the person we disagree with the most is still, somehow, human—still worthy of being heard.

06/30/2025

Religion loves to keep receipts—counting every failure, every sin, every moment you didn’t measure up. But Jesus steps into the middle of that shame and tears up the record. He doesn’t weigh your worth by your past mistakes; He simply says, “You are forgiven.”

That’s grace: the kind that shocks the room, silences the critics, and restores your soul. You don’t have to earn it, prove it, or pretend to be perfect. You just have to let Him love you right where you are.

06/29/2025

We often think our “best” is about being polished, impressive, or perfect. But Jesus flipped that idea upside down.

In this story, a woman’s raw, broken, messy love became the truest gift—far more valuable than pride or performance. Maybe the “best” we have to give is actually our vulnerability, our tears, and our willingness to let go of comparison.

06/28/2025

We don’t realize how often we stack our "goodness" next to someone else’s worst moment. It’s subtle, almost invisible—until someone like Jesus walks into the room and asks, “Do you see her?” Not what she’s done. Not her shame. Her.

Humility doesn’t come from being right. It comes from releasing the need to win the moral scoreboard. That’s why Jesus didn’t shame the Pharisee—but he didn’t let him look away either. When we stop comparing, we start seeing. And when we truly see someone… something sacred happens. That’s where real transformation begins.

06/27/2025

History remembers the battles, but often forgets what truly ended them. At the conclusion of the bloodiest war in American history, General Robert E. Lee didn’t just surrender to Ulysses S. Grant—he surrendered to Abraham Lincoln’s kindness. That quiet, unshakeable grace did what violence could not: it reached across the chasm of hate and division and built a bridge.

In a world obsessed with being right, we’ve forgotten the power of being kind. Not soft, naive kindness—but the kind that disarms pride, listens deeply, and dares to see dignity in those we disagree with. What if kindness isn’t weakness, but a force fierce enough to end our modern wars of words, politics, and ideology?

06/26/2025

Most people avoid the tension. They ghost the hard conversations. But these three ordinary people—one Muslim, one Jew, one Christian—did something radical: they stayed in the room with difference. They didn’t just “tolerate” each other. They leaned in. They listened hard. And in doing so, they became a map for the rest of us.

I thought I knew what it meant to build bridges. I didn’t. Not until I met them. Their courage exposed how shallow our conversations have become—and how hungry we are for a deeper kind of connection. Not one based on agreement, but on presence. Real presence. They didn’t come back to say “you should’ve seen what I saw.” They came back with a map.

06/25/2025

What happens when an entire city refuses to be divided by fear?

In Peoria, Illinois, something radical happened. At a time when Islamophobia was spreading like wildfire, over 1,000 people—including the mayor, the CEO of Caterpillar, and countless everyday citizens—stood shoulder to shoulder with their Muslim neighbors and said, “Not here.” This wasn’t just a statement. It was a movement. A line drawn in love. And from that movement came lessons we all need now more than ever.

These 3 lessons from Peoria are not just about politics or religion—they’re about how we choose to see each other. In a world splitting apart at the seams, this small midwestern city just might show us the map back to each other.



Tools

06/24/2025

We don’t just disagree anymore—we dehumanize.
Every scroll, every sound bite, every "us vs. them" post feeds a habit we’ve all picked up without realizing: Othering. It’s the subtle act of turning people into labels—liberal, conservative, woke, anti-this, pro-that—before we ever look them in the eye. And it’s quietly tearing us apart.

What if the real problem isn’t the issues we argue about, but how we’ve learned to see each other? This video isn’t about politics—it’s about a soul-deep blindness we’ve normalized. The hidden habit of minimizing, mocking, and mistrusting those who don’t look, vote, worship, or think like we do. And until we face it, we stay stuck in a war we claim to want to end.

Address

Los Angeles, CA

Opening Hours

10am - 11:30am

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