Tag archive for "Living In New York"

About Us, News, Our Story, Videos

LAUNCH SUNDAY: Sun Jan 23rd at Tribeca Cinemas

3 Comments 20 December 2024

Paul Andrew

We’d love you to join us for the launch of our weekly services on Jan 23rd. We’ve had monthly Gatherings since September, and now we’re ready to start Sunday services every week at the Tribeca Cinemas.

You can RSVP online at our Facebook Page here

Join us on the day and bring friends to be part of something new that God is doing in New York City. We’ve got a Guest Lounge and a great kids program. Find out more, get connected, be involved.

Guest Lounge opens at 10am, service starts at 10.30am. Tribeca Cinemas is a landmark in Lower Manhattan at 54 Varick St, and it’s right by the 1, 2 and A, C, E subway lines, and close to the N, R.

RSVP on Facebook here or fill in the form below.

Hope to meet you there!
Paul & Andi Andrew

RSVP here








News, Our Team

Video: Hear Raji’s Story

No Comments 10 December 2024

Paul Andrew

We’re continuing our new video series, where you’ll have the opportunity to hear from people who’ve become connected at Liberty Church.

Real people, real stories.

Find out more, get connected, be involved.

Liberty Church NYC

New York City

The Great West Village Food Tour

No Comments 23 November 2024

Camille Green

We all know that beyond the amazing restaurants, cafes, pubs and bars of New York, every visiting traveler always seems to be drawn to the infamous Pizza and Hot dogs. And for under $20 you can have it all (three times over) in one evening … Feeling sick yet? This is only the beginning…

With our favorite pub, The Spotted Pig, having a long wait for a table of 8 (as expected one Friday night) our hungry troop ventured the streets of the West Village in search of immediate satisfaction for our empty bellies.

It wasn’t more than 2 blocks before we happened across Bleecker Street Pizza where huge slices of pepperoni and cheese pizzas were devoured for $3.00 a slice. And of course… we wanted more.

Continuing down Carmine St we were drawn to the smell of Joe’s Pizza (equally as satisfying) where we ate yet again.

Now having our fill of the savory we were, of course, in need of something sweet. Nothing better than a cookie spot on West 8th open till all hours of the morning, appropriately called Insomnia Cookies.

But on our way however was the conveniently positioned Gray’s Papaya on the corner of 6th and West 8th, calling our names. Can you imagine? Of course we couldn’t leave it out. Serving up the tastiest, cheapest hot dogs with their well known papaya juice (2 dogs + drink for $4.95), the combination of sauerkraut, onions and ketchup somehow turns this simple feed into something so much more that just a hot dog.

And now onto the last leg of the tour … we finally made it to Insomnia Cookies. A “must have” are the Smores Cookies ($2.25 each). Melt in your mouth, gooey on the inside, marshmallows and chocolate chunks distributed evenly into every single bite … You think this place couldn’t get better but they even have happy NYU students that deliver to your apartment when you order online!

Our evening could not have been captured more clearly in one sentence … “We started out going to the Spotted Pig and wound up eating like pigs instead” (tweeted by a food tour participant).

News

Gathering – Dec 12th at Tribeca Cinemas

No Comments 15 November 2024

Paul Andrew

Well, we have one more monthly Gathering on Sunday Dec 12th, before we launch weekly services on Jan 23rd.

We’re excited to be using this landmark venue again after it was a huge success for us at our last Gathering.

Details:
* Tribeca Cinemas- 54 Varick St (cnr Canal St)
* Guest Lounge at 10am, kick off at 10.30am
* Right by the 1, 2, 3 and A, C, E lines, and near N, R - see map below for details

Liberty Church is not just an event or an institution. We are a community, a catalyst and a cause.

Hope to see you there!

You can RSVP below for more details via email.








News, Podcasts

“Turning The Church Inside Out” Paul Andrew - Podcast

No Comments 12 November 2024

Liberty Church NYC

Paul Andrew preached “Turning the Church Inside Out” at our second gathering on October 10th 2010. This is a message at the very heart of Liberty Church - that our mandate is to turn the church inside out by “equipping the saints for the work of the ministry”.

Subscribe in iTunes to the LibertyChurchNYC podcast to receive new teaching automatically.

New York City

On The Path To NYC’s Greener Side

1 Comment 21 September 2024

Greg Barker

The New York City Metro is assiduous, a complex arrangement of labyrinthine tunnels animated with gypsies, musicians and the vibrancy of diverse and unremitting crowds. I find it hard to imagine that the system actually began as a series of overhead rail networks and disconnected suburban train lines back in the 19th century. Today it’s an underworld, a city beneath a city where 1.5 billion people every year are pumped through its dark arteries like blood cells through veins.

I’m catching my train from 33rd street, that’s your first clue as to where I’m going. Leaning against a steel pillion covered in a patchwork of posters I can see the arthropodal frame of the connected carriages rattling down the tunnel towards me. A blustering fan hanging from the platform ceiling is trying to offer the crowd some relief from the humidity as we wait. The underground can be your friend or foe depending on the seasons that are so pronounced in New York, white winters and searing summers. The latter we’re emerging from now, weeks of wilting heat will in a matter of days become perfectly temperate before we plunge into snow storms that blanket the city like layer cake icing. I’ve never in one place experienced a more palpable set of four seasons.

The corner of this sprawling metropolis I’m heading to is home to some of New York’s most infamous icons. Frank Sinatra and baseball were both born here, but it’s not in Brooklyn or the Bronx. Today you’ll find the likes of ‘A-Rod’ and Eli Manning residing here, but it’s not downtown Manhattan.

NYC is inescapably multifarious. There are so many cultures and sub-cultures that if it weren’t for all the patriotic symbols and landmark buildings it might be difficult to decipher which part of the world you were in. The boroughs are both distinct and schismatic. Within each city slice are the villages and districts, unique and even territorial in the way they carve out their niches. Their borders are obvious demarcation lines, perhaps none more abrupt than 96th street where the Upper East Side, the pinnacle of the city’s wealth meets Harlem’s El Barrio, a mostly Hispanic community of working class families often struggling to stay above the poverty line.

The train’s carriage I’m standing in is a colorful petri dish of humanity. People from all walks of life are crammed into this steel cylinder, swaying to its motions as it winds it’s way beneath the Hudson. At one end of the carriage a couple of Mexican’s are strumming enthusiastically on their guitars and singing folk songs for our spare change. Opposite me is a tall black youth, his giant athletic frame huddled over a miniature ghetto blaster that is thumping out Lil Wayne. At the other end of the carriage is an evangelist, yelling out his salvation message, scolding people’s sinfulness and wielding his Bible like a sword. Part of me is inspired by his courage, another cringes a little at his confrontational style which makes me wonder where his distant predecessors the Apostles balanced their approach? It’s an interesting juxtaposition, those that want to be heard, and those that want to envelop their own personal space quietly.

My stop arrives and I move up the stairs amongst a river of people. As I reach the street level I’m greeted by a fresh breeze that rolls in off the Hudson and washes away the residue of Manhattan’s sticky gridiron. I’m soon walking along what is really this neighborhood’s Mona Lisa Smile, a tree-lined esplanade that runs the length of the village. It’s flanked on one side by a river front and finger wharfs covered in greenery, on the other are restaurants and bars that open up onto the view I’m taking in as I amble my way up town. I’m yet to find a better place to look out at the Manhattan city skyline. In one panoramic view you can appreciate most of the city’s famous buildings of which so many are monuments to the era they were erected in. The two that blow my mind today are 48 Wall Street and the American International Building, they’re imperialist skyscrapers crowned with palaces. But there’s obviously the Empire State and Chrysler buildings, enduring symbols of Art Deco and the 1920s and 30s, Town Hall from imperialist era, Seagram from International, Hearst from Eco. It’s a skyline second to none and it’s the backdrop of this lucky little locale.

Streets are wider here too, and flanked with terraces, open shop fronts, farmer’s markets, bars, restaurants and cafes. The band Franz Ferdinand renamed their song ‘Jacqueline‘ to include the name of this village. I’m not sure which is the better aphorism to take from the lyrics: “Sometimes these eyes, Forget the face they’re peering from”, or “It’s always better on holiday, So much better on holiday.” New Yorker’s with a pretentious streak might go with the former. For me? Well, the band renamed the song “Better in Hoboken“.

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Liberty Church is a Christian community in New York City with the audacity to believe that by His grace we could influence a city that influences the world. Find out more, get connected, be involved.

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