A Church for Internet Entrepreneurs Grace Presbyterian had a Web site before it even had Sunday services Tony Carnes
August 6, 2001 In Silicon Valley, many churches are taking as much advantage of new technology as start-up corporations. One new congregation in Los Altos, near Sunnyvale, had a Web site before holding its first worship service.
Drew Fields, pastor of the start-up Grace Presbyterian, quit his job at a Wall Street investment bank specializing in media, attended seminary, then joined the staff of Redeemer Presbyterian in Manhattan. But his latest passion is launching Grace Presbyterian as a church designed to specialize in outreach to Internet entrepreneurs. Once Fields decided to lose his New York suit, the Valley's infectious enthusiasm for the next new thing started to grip him. He was pleasantly surprised by how a Web site could create a church before it was ever founded. "We are doing a non-normal church-planting. So, we became like a typical dot-com. A buzz started before we even arrived," Fields tells CT. "We already had a gathering of people, though we didn't live here in the Valley." Former members of Redeemer Presbyterian had called Fields to tell him that a church such as Redeemer, which emphasized reaching young urban professionals, was urgently needed in Silicon Valley. Many Silicon Valley workers are curious about spiritual issues, although religion is not pursued with the same vigor as are money and pleasure. "Overall, what has impressed me is the unbelievable busyness of people," Fields says. "If you aren't there first with a business idea, then someone else will get there before you." If Silicon Valley residents are not working at "their really cool, cutting edge job," they want "really cool play," he says. A local anthropologist says that Valley residents are not so much irreligious as unconnected with a church community. "We had ...
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