Program areas at The Mission Collective
In 2014,the Mission Collective launched The daniel island fellowship, a new church in an urban development area of charleston. After a year of building relationships in neighborhoods and The city through various means (e.g. Outdoor services, home gatherings, prayer events and intentional days of Mission), The daniel island fellowship officially launched on september 13, 2015, with great excitement. A melting pot of individuals and families originally from new york city, boston, chicago, los angeles and The carolinas, The daniel island fellowship now has 555+ regular attendees.words cannot express The healing,hope,and life-change we are seeing through this new community of faith. Effective january 1, 2020, The daniel island fellowship (renamed one fellowship) was spun off into a seperate entity. The spin-off resulted in cash, building, land and other assets being granted to The new entity.
Through The meeting space element of The holy city Collective, The Mission Collective has created a platform for nonprofit organizations in charleston and beyond to gain exposure for their distinct missions. To date many nonprofit organizations have been served in this collaborative manner. From The dream center clinic of charleston, which provides free medical care to individuals 200% at or below The national poverty line, to life resources, which provides faith-based counseling and education to kids and families struggling with addiction, divorce and more, to young life of charleston, which seeks to help charleston teens discover and explore The christian faith, we are proud to serve and catalyze these organizations through our citycentric hub of Mission.
The Mission Collective also launched The holy city Collective, a coworking and meeting space for The common good of charleston and beyond. As a coworking space, entrepreneurs and startup organizations are able to foster intellectual, service and networking contributions for charleston and other cities through this cooperative workspace. Because of its early success, The holy city Collective is quickly becoming known as an incubator for good, even being asked to participate in city and regional discussions to help develop and attract young leaders for charleston's tech and manufacturing sectors. To date The Collective has served 170+ organizations, more than one third of which are nonprofit organizations.