Deborah L. Richardson-Moylan serves as a lead pastor and church planter in north central Massachusetts. She is the founder and executive artistic director of City on a Hill Arts, a community theatre committed to cultivating creativity, compassion, and justice through the arts. In addition, Richardson-Moylan hosts Pull up a Chair, a storytelling podcast produced under the Dinner Theatre . . . Church? banner, where conversations invite deeper connection and community.
""Deborah L. Richardson-Moylan offers in this book a new creative imagination for how the church can continue to express itself in and with community. In this book, Richardson-Moylan invites us into her own community through her gifts, the stories and voices of her beloved community, and thoughtful reflections on what she's learned as they reimagined church together."" --Cindy S. Lee, Affiliate Assistant Professor, Fuller Theological Seminary ""As a former professional actor, now an ordained minister, it has been my long-held belief that the craft of theater sits at the intersection between high art and a sympathetic exploration of the human condition. The study of acting is a platform from which to understand the compassion necessary, not only to play a stage role believably, but also to comfort pastorally those who suffer. Deborah's book encompasses that unique ministry with grace and insight. Further, it opens the door toward faith for those who feel they have been left behind by traditions who often seem to exclude them."" --Wil Darcangelo, Minister, First Church of Lancaster, Unitarian Universalist, Massachusetts ""Deborah L. Richardson-Moylan offers in this book a new creative imagination for how the church can continue to express itself in and with community. In this book, Richardson-Moylan invites us into her own community through her gifts, the stories and voices of her beloved community, and thoughtful reflections on what she's learned as they reimagined church together."" --Cindy S. Lee, Affiliate Assistant Professor, Fuller Theological Seminary ""As a former professional actor, now an ordained minister, it has been my long-held belief that the craft of theater sits at the intersection between high art and a sympathetic exploration of the human condition. The study of acting is a platform from which to understand the compassion necessary, not only to play a stage role believably, but also to comfort pastorally those who suffer. Deborah's book encompasses that unique ministry with grace and insight. Further, it opens the door toward faith for those who feel they have been left behind by traditions who often seem to exclude them."" --Wil Darcangelo, Minister, First Church of Lancaster, Unitarian Universalist, Massachusetts