Radical Hospitality Show

Mark Batterson on Building Churches That Transform Communities

Zeke Freeman

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0:00 | 32:09

In this episode of the Radical Hospitality Podcast, host Zeke sits down with Pastor Mark Batterson of National Community Church in Washington, DC, for a conversation about the spiritual weight of physical spaces. What began with three people meeting in a blizzard in 1996 has grown into a multi-campus church and a portfolio of community-driven places—Ebenezer's Coffee House (built in a former crack house), the Miracle Theater, the Dream Center, and the Capitol Turnaround, a 100,000-square-foot streetcar building stripped down to its 96 columns and rebuilt. 

Mark unpacks why he believes a church confined to its four walls "is a club, not a church," how honoring the history of old buildings shapes new vision, and why his team invested a million dollars reinforcing a roof deck they have no plans to build on—because the next generation might. Drawing on themes from his book Gradually, Then Suddenly, he reflects on long-game thinking, the boundaries that protect family and ministry, defining success as being respected most by those who know you best, and why leadership always begins with self-leadership.


What You'll Learn in This Episode

  • Why Mark Batterson believes physical spaces carry spiritual weight—and how a coffee house can do what a pulpit sometimes can't
  • The "rebuilder of broken walls" philosophy: tapping into a building's backstory rather than erasing it
  • How intentional design (like seating that faces inward rather than spotlighting a stage) creates communal worship instead of personality-driven worship
  • The case for activating church real estate 24/7 through event venues, childcare, and partnerships rather than letting buildings sit empty six days a week
  • "Third and fourth generation" thinking: making costly decisions today to set up people you'll never meet
  • Why he capped his speaking trips—and the wake-up call from his wife that prompted it
  • His definition of success: "when those who know you best respect you most"
  • A measured take on AI and technology as "theologically neutral" tools requiring discernment
  • What encourages him about the next generation's spiritual hunger—and his concern about binary, "us vs. them" thinking
  • Why the best athletes and leaders he's met excel first at self-leadership, rest, and recovery

Connect with Mark Batterson
Website: https://www.markbatterson.com/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/markbatterson/

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Connect with Zeke Freeman:
Instagram: @zekefreeman_rootarchitecture and @rootarchitecture
YouTube: @rootarchitecture
Facebook: @RootArchitectureandDevelopment
LinkedIn: Zeke Freeman
X/Twitter: @zfreemanroot

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