Ready
Readying, Renewing and Transforming Our Minds and Hearts with Spiritual Attentivity
Ready Aim Move are MicroCommunities of everyday people living as students and followers of Jesus. We believe following Jesus isn’t passive—it’s active, intentional, and transformative.
We gather to grow, align our lives with God’s direction, and move boldly on mission until neighborhoods, communities, cities and the world are transformed by the life of Jesus.
Leading people into a growing relationship with Jesus Christ by fostering authentic worship, building meaningful community, and equipping believers to serve others.
1. Small is Simple
By removing complexity, we can focus on priorities.
2. Small is Engaging
Everyone gets to play in RAM MicroCommunities. You get your needs prayed for. You contribute your voice to Bible Discovery. You exercise your spiritual gifts. Small welcomes involvement.
3. Small is Strategic
MicroCommunities don’t cost a lot of money. They don’t take a lot of resources. They utilize the people, the relationships and the spaces already there. So MicroCommunitues are accessible, contextual, sustainable, replicable, and therefore, unstoppable.
4. Small is Biblical
Give my greetings to Priscilla and Aquila, my co-workers in the ministry of Christ Jesus. In fact, they once risked their lives for me. I am thankful to them, and so are all the Gentile churches. 5Also give my greetings to the church that meets in their home (Romans 16:3-5 (NLT) emphasis added)
For other examples of house churches in the Bible, see also 1 Corinthians 16:19, Colossians 4:15, and Philemon 2.
If you had asked, “Where is the church?” in any important city of the ancient world where Christianity had penetrated in the first century, you would have been directed to a group of worshiping people gathered in a house. There was no special building or other tangible wealth with which to associate “church”, only people! - The Church of the Catacombs by Walter Oetting
The house church was not simply a pragmatic solution to the problem of space; it was an expression of the church’s self-understanding as the family of God. - House Church and Mission by Roger Gehring