Revelation 7:9–10
At first glance, the painting looks like scattered dots. But step back and you see something breathtaking. George Seurat’s A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte is a masterpiece, not because of any single color or brushstroke, but because of how they all work together. That’s what makes it beautiful.
That’s also what makes the Church beautiful.
God never designed His Church to be made up of people who all look, act, and think the same. From the very beginning, He built us for unity in the middle of diversity. One God in three Persons. One body made up of many members. Every culture, every language, every background has a place in the masterpiece He’s painting.
And one day, we’ll see it in full. Revelation 7 gives us a picture of that day. A great crowd from every nation, tribe, people, and language stands before the throne of God, worshiping in one voice. That’s where we’re headed.
But what if we didn’t wait until heaven to experience that kind of unity? What if we could live out a glimpse of that picture right here in Houston?
At LifeBrook, we want to be a living mosaic of the city around us. Not just racially, but generationally, culturally, and economically. That kind of community doesn’t happen by accident. It takes humility. It takes grace. And it takes commitment. But it’s worth it—because it reflects the heart of God and the hope of heaven.
We believe the gospel unites what sin once divided. At Babel, people were scattered. At Pentecost, they were brought together again. That’s what Jesus does. He breaks down walls. He makes strangers into family.
So we ask, can LifeBrook become a place where Revelation 7 feels real? We believe it already is, and we believe there’s more to come. A place where everyone belongs. A place where your story matters. A place where Jesus is the only banner we gather under.
It’s not always easy, but it is always beautiful. And it starts with us. Right here. Right now.