Some leaders hear “network” and assume it is a corporate concept. It is not.
Scripture presents a profoundly networked church.
- The Jerusalem Council in Acts 15
- Paul’s missionary journeys
- Financial collections across regions
- Shared letters and teaching
- Distributed leadership structures
Ephesians 4 describes apostles, prophets, evangelists, shepherds, and teachers equipping the saints. That is a networked leadership model, not a centralized hierarchy.
Networks reflect:
- Mutual collaboration
- Shared mission
- Distributed authority
- Collective discernment
Momentum’s collaborative structure between ILT and Church4Today formalizes this kind of partnership, aligning theological depth with practical revitalization experience.
The early church multiplied because it was connected.
Today, isolation weakens pastors, drains innovation, and slows Gospel expansion.
If we recover a theology of interdependence, we recover apostolic momentum.
Dr. Tracee J. Swank guides Kingdom-minded leaders, churches, and entrepreneurs to clarify their purpose, reimagine mission, and multiply hope—so they can lead entrepreneurial movements that transform communities and advance the Great Commission.