Browns Bridge Church

Browns Bridge Church
Browns Bridge Church logo
Coordinates: 34°15′36″N 84°05′13″W / 34.259890°N 84.087035°W / 34.259890; -84.087035
Location Cumming, GA
Country United States
Denomination Non-Denominational, Evangelical Christian
Website brownsbridge.org
History
Former name(s) Browns Bridge Community Church
Status Active
Founded 2006 (2006)
Founder(s) Andy Stanley
Architecture
Architect(s) Niles Bolton Associates

Browns Bridge Church (BBC) is a North Point Ministries church located in Cumming, Georgia. Andy Stanley is the senior pastor of North Point Ministries, and Adam Johnson is Browns Bridge's lead pastor.

Purpose

Browns Bridge Church is part of North Point Ministries. North Point Ministries serves as the parent organization of North Point Community Church, Buckhead Church, Woodstock City Church, Gwinnett Church, Decatur City Church, North Point Resources, and several strategic partners. The mission of the church is to lead people into a growing relationship with Jesus Christ. To this end, Browns Bridge strives to accomplish its mission by creating what it calls "irresistible environments."

History

Browns Bridge Church opened on October 8, 2006. This campus was fully programmed and showed NPCC prerecorded messages with the same technology used at the time by Buckhead Church. Browns Bridge has grown from approximately 1,500 adults on Sunday morning to over 3,500 and from two services to three. And the messages are now all simulcast every Sunday along with all six NPM churches. On occasion, each church will teach local messages that are not seen at the other locations.[1]

In June 2016, Browns Bridge Church announced their fundraiser for ¨Beyond Us¨, which would renovate the Transit and InsideOut spaces in the back section of the church. Plans included a new auditorium that would fit 1,000 students, and 30 classrooms or ¨small group rooms¨ A month later, work began on the project that would end in October 2017. The campaign would go on to raise $2.5 million. <ref>"Beyond Us". <ref>


References

  1. "Brief History of North Point Community Church". Archived from the original on 20 July 2011. Retrieved 10 May 2011.
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