Send Network church planter launched church during COVID-19, will speak at 2022 SBC Pastor’s Conference

By Diana Chandler

NORTH PEORIA, Ariz. (BP) – Mathew Mueller had suffered a military-career-ending car accident and his father’s suicide in the years before sharing with pastor Brian Bowman in Tramonto, Ariz., his call to Gospel ministry.

Church planter Mathew Mueller was called to the ministry after a car accident caused him to lose sight in his right eye and ended his military career as an Army combat medic. Submitted photo

“Well, I said, ‘Mat, you’ve never been baptized; let’s just start there,’” Bowman told Baptist Press. “We baptized him, and I put him in a cohort with a couple of other guys who were also pursuing ministry, and I met with him every week.”

After more than a year of discipleship and a stint as Valley Life Tramonto’s director of guest services, Mueller was tagged to plant a Valley Life Church in nearby North Peoria and became a North American Mission Board (NAMB) endorsed church planting missionary through Send Network. Their church was set to launch in March, 2020, about the time the COVID-19 pandemic hit the U.S.

“It was like a week before Mat’s big party in the park for his neighbors,” Bowman said. “The world shut down. So, we just had to basically adjust our expectations. What we hoped would be launching large and growing quickly, turned into just serve your neighbors. … Because at the time, people wouldn’t even come out of their houses.”

Mueller and his wife Tracy persevered in planting the church and in parenting their adopted newborn, Briella, now 3½ years old.

“Through the adversity of deployment, my car accident that almost cost me my life, my father’s suicide, infertility and miscarriages,” Mueller said, “the Lord was cultivating in my heart a right dependence on Him. In all the struggle and hardship, we can clearly look back and see God at work preparing my heart, my family and my grit for ministry.

“Tracy would often tell me that if God has indeed called us to this, He will see us through this.”

Mueller began online worship and found unique ways to bless the North Peoria community. They began with a feeding outreach. As the community revived, Valley Life began holding Sunday evening services at nearby Discovery Pointe Church, a fellow Southern Baptist congregation. In July 2021, the church moved to Zuni Hills Elementary School where it currently meets.

Mathew Mueller is a North American Mission Board (NAMB) endorsed church planting missionary who planted a church during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 in North Peoria, Ariz. Submitted photo

Mueller found community among a handful of area Southern Baptist church planters facing the same ordeal, developing a particularly strong friendship with fellow church planter Alex Dennis of Asante Church in Surprise, Ariz., whom Mueller calls his brother in the faith.

“With the isolation that came with COIVD, the need for fruitful relationships became even more evident,” Mueller said. “Luckily through (NAMB’s) Send Network, I was able to reach out to other church planters in the area.

“Through our relationships, we were able to encourage, support and pray for one another during what was one of the most challenging seasons of church planting.”

About 60 people attend Sunday worship and home-based community groups with Valley Life in North Peoria weekly, Mueller said, with a current focus on making disciples. As the COVID-19 pandemic is subsiding, Mueller will focus more intentionally on evangelism and eventually plant another church.

Mueller’s life experiences have benefitted his gospel outreach.

“The fact that I was baptized as an adult and then sent out shortly thereafter was celebrated, not judged,” Mueller said. “It communicated that, ‘If that can happen to that guy, what can God do in me?’

“When I was baptized and then discipled and sent out, there was nothing but love and support from my sending church. We have a mission to ‘Make Disciples. Plant Churches.’”

A member of his church’s core team sought advice from Mueller when a family member committed suicide, which gave Mueller an opportunity to lead to Christ a member of the extended family.

Pastor Mathew Mueller leads worship at Valley Life Church in North Peoria, Ariz., which was planted during the COVID-19 pandemic. Submitted photo

Evangelism and discipleship were not foreign to Mueller. While serving in the military, he had led small group studies with resources from pastor Francis Chan, the best-selling author of “Crazy Love: Overwhelmed by a Relentless God.”

A car accident that took the vision in his right eye ended Mueller’s military career, but he still did not have ministry in his plans.

“After retiring out of the military as a combat medic, I really thought that I wanted to run a hospital,” he said. “So as I was getting ready to apply for my MBA program, I felt God calling me into ministry. It was then that I sat down with my pastor, Brian Bowman, and he told me that he was already praying about me planting a church in North Peoria.”

Mueller, who will preach from Colossians 1:22-23 at the 2022 SBC Pastor’s Conference, has advice for other church planters.

He encourages them: to have a faithful group of men who will uphold them with Gospel truth, to lean into God with everything they do, to care for their families and to nourish friendships.

“The group of men who helped disciple me into being a pastor had the hard task of calling out sin, pointing out growth points, identifying insecurities and calling me to more,” he said. “Week in and week out, these men would invest in me, and while it was difficult looking back, these men were being very loving.”

Editor’s Note: This story originally appeared on Baptist Press.


Published March 2, 2022

Diana Chandler

Diana Chandler is senior writer for Baptist Press.