Located in Fresno, California, Mountain View Church is surrounded by the majestic peaks of Yosemite, Sequoia, and Kings Canyon national parks. Beyond its geographic borders, the church utilizes creative strategies to share the gospel globally through a dedicated missional focus.
In 2019, Mountain View established a presence in 29 countries through relationally driven, church-planting partnerships. According to Lead Pastor Fred Leonard, the church supported 219 “assets”—their unique term for missionaries—resulting in 250,606 salvations, 15,006 new churches, 8,959 trained leaders, and 125,392 baptisms. This commitment to a global church planting strategy remains central to their ministry.
‘It has grown relationally and miraculously over the years,’ Leonard says. ‘We don’t put our name on anything; we partner with local apostolic leaders to ensure sustainable growth.’ While thousands of churches have been planted through these efforts, the work is often done quietly behind the scenes. This approach frequently incorporates global outreach through disaster relief, demonstrating a steadfast commitment to serving diverse communities in need.
And that’s the way he likes it, because Mountain View tries to work under the radar and keep pride in check.
“Pride and selfish ambition destroy everyone’s life, and we all have to fight against that,” Leonard says. “Jesus is really clear that he won’t share his glory with another, and it’s really important to us that everyone realizes none of these things would take place if it weren’t for Jesus. Because we’re really not the smartest, the best, the brightest, the anything church. We’re just a church that keeps saying yes.”
Church multiplication is part of Mountain View’s DNA. Before planting the church back in 1994, Leonard and his wife were missionaries in Bogotá, Columbia, at the height of the drug wars there. When they returned to the U.S., they planted Mountain View with fewer than a dozen people. But even before their very first worship service, they’d already sent their first missionaries overseas to the Philippines. Shortly after they launched, they sent a couple to Lithuania.
Now, they dedicate 34% of their annual budget to missions, mostly international. That includes training, funding, visiting, encouraging, praying, strategy writing and infrastructure development.
“We’re a conduit, not a dam, so everything God has given us we just pass along,” he says. “That’s our goal. We’re going to live the mission.”
The goal is to eventually have church plants be self-sustaining as Mountain View slowly reduces its support. For a church in a developing nation, that might mean buying a pastor a cow that will sustain his family and church for life, or purchasing a plot of land for a pastor to farm. Most assets working with Mountain View are nationals in the places they’re reaching, usually in developing nations.
“There’s no shortage of opportunities and places to go,” Leonard says. “It’s just that all the easy ones have been taken. There are 6,500 unreached people groups in the world. About 2 billion people in the world don’t have a Christian friend or any access to the saving knowledge of the gospel, so we’re really excited to live the mission and go to every place God gives us the privilege of going.”
And Leonard says each opportunity to reach another people group with another new church is a blessing from God.
“We want to be generous because God is so generous to us,” he says. “As a church plant ourselves, we’re so grateful for what God has done, the way he’s been generous to us, provided for us so much. It’s just happened over time. Every yes makes the next yes easier. So we want to just keep saying yes to what Jesus brings us.”
—Jessica Hanewinckel
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MOUNTAIN VIEW CHURCH
Fresno, California
Lead Pastor: Fred Leonard
Twitter: @PastrFred
Website: MountainView.org
Founded: 1994
Denomination: Mennonite Brethren
