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Zacharie René

Citizens of the Celestial City, A Church Formed Across Borders

January 29, 2026 by Cindy Angela

By Zacharie René 

Editor’s Note: Citizens of the Celestial City was a recipient of a Mosaic Conference Church Plant grant in 2025.  

Across Mosaic Conference, new communities of faith often emerge not from buildings or strategic plans, but from Scripture, relationships, and a longing to follow Jesus faithfully. Citizens of the Celestial City (CCC) is an emerging Mennonite fellowship shaped by migration, resilience, and discipleship.

CCC did not begin with the intention of planting a church. Its roots stretch back more than a decade, to a small Bible club formed in Haiti in 2013. What started as a small gathering for children and youth to read Scripture and pray together, slowly expanded into multiple Bible classes across five different communities. Known as the Hope and Love Ministry, these gatherings combined biblical teaching with worship, life-skills learning, and moral formation, reflecting a holistic vision of Christian nurture.

Participants in the Hope and Love Summer Ministry in 2016. Photo courtesy of Zacharie Rene.
Participants in the Hope and Love Summer Ministry in 2016. Photo courtesy of Zacharie Rene.

As leaders walked closely with the youth, especially young teenage girls, deeper needs became visible. Many lived in precarious circumstances where even basic hygiene items were inaccessible. In a context where help often came with harmful expectations, these vulnerabilities exposed young people to serious risks. In response, the ministry began providing monthly hygiene kits and practical support such as replacing worn sandals. These acts were not seen as only charity but as pastoral care through concrete Gospel-grounded expressions of dignity and love.

Over time, the children grew up. Some remained in Haiti; others migrated to Brazil, Mexico, the Dominican Republic, and the United States. Life scattered them across borders, but the spiritual bonds remained.

In 2023, after leaving Haiti, I remained in contact with several former participants. One former member reached out and asked if we could continue Bible study online. That simple request reopened a door I did not realize God had been preparing for years. I began leading online Bible studies again, and soon felt prompted to invite others former members, friends, believers seeking depth, and people longing for community.

What emerged has become more than a Bible study. It is a spiritual home for a dispersed Haitian people longing for Scripture, connection, and shepherding amid isolation, displacement, and vulnerability.

Today, Citizens of the Celestial City has participants in Haiti and across the diaspora. Many face disabilities, social marginalization, economic hardship, or immigration uncertainty. These realities have deeply shaped the community’s identity and practices.

Because of distance and accessibility challenges, gathering online is not a convenience—it is a necessity. Teaching and worship are conducted in Haitian Creole, ensuring clarity, dignity, and full participation. CCC is not built around performance or location, but around presence, mutual care, and faithfulness to Christ.

The community’s name reflects this theological grounding. Citizens of the Celestial City affirms that before belonging to any nation on earth, we belong to the Kingdom of God. It expresses the conviction that the Church is not merely an institution, but a people shaped by heaven’s values while living faithfully on earth.

Many members have experienced loss, displacement, and exclusion, sometimes even within traditional church settings. CCC emerged as a space where people are not reduced to their limitations, but recognized as bearers of God’s image. Faith, resilience, and communal survival are deeply embedded in Haitian culture and naturally align with Anabaptist commitments to shared life, mutual aid, and discipleship.

Worship within CCC follows a Mennonite spirit and rhythm. Gatherings include simple, reflective singing, Scripture reading, teaching, prayer, and open sharing. There is room for silence, testimony, and communal discernment. Worship is unhurried and relational. Participants are invited to pray, reflect, and speak as the Spirit leads.

Though the community is not physically together, members experience God’s presence through consistency, prayer, and pastoral follow-up. To strengthen connection beyond weekly gatherings, I have launched an online radio ministry and mobile app. The radio offers teaching, encouragement, worship, and Scripture throughout the week, serving as a spiritual companion that sustains communal life beyond scheduled gatherings.

Our challenges include limited resources, health concerns, immigration uncertainty, and the complexities of serving a largely disabled and marginalized population. We navigate these challenges through patience, flexibility, prayer, and shared leadership. We move slowly, listening carefully, refusing to build faster than people can grow.

My encounter with the Mennonite church through Mosaic Mennonite Conference deeply shaped this ministry. Values such as peace, community, simplicity, mutual care, and discipleship are not theoretical, they are lived realities in CCC.

Several pastors now participate in our studies and have expressed a desire to transform their own congregations into Mennonite-style communities. I have begun working with some of them separately, accompanying them in discernment and formation as they await further guidance and structure.

Our hope is not rapid expansion, but faithful formation. We dream of a rooted, healed, and discipled Haitian Mennonite community, locally and across the diaspora. We envision accessible spiritual formation, leadership development, and communities shaped by peace and mutual responsibility.

We invite the Mosaic Conference to pray for:

  • wisdom and discernment in leadership,
  • spiritual and emotional healing for members,
  • provision for those living with disability and instability,
  • unity across distance,
  • and faithfulness as we continue to listen for God’s leading.

Citizens of the Celestial City exists because God met a scattered people through a simple question: Can we keep studying the Word together? From that question, a church was born that bears witness to the truth of Ephesians 2:19: “So then, you are no longer strangers and aliens, but you are citizens with the saints and also members of the household of God.”


Zacharie René

Zacharie René is a pastor, biblical teacher, and Christian formation leader committed to the Gospel, discipleship, and spiritual and communal transformation within an Anabaptist perspective. He is a member of Lakeview Mennonite in Susquehana, PA. Married to Roodeline Jean Louis and the father of four children, he views family as a gift from God and a vital place of faithfulness, perseverance, and prayer.

Mosaic values two-way communication and encourages our constituents to respond with feedback, questions, or encouragement. To share your thoughts or send a message to the author(s), contact us at communication@mosaicmennonites.org.   

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Citizens of the Celestial City, Zacharie René

“Here I Am, Lord”: The Call Story of Zacharie René

January 22, 2026 by Cindy Angela

From an early age, God has been writing his story in my life. I grew up in Haiti, where my mother taught me the Word of God and instilled in me a love for prayer and Scripture. At the age of twelve, in 1996, I fell into a deep coma caused by an epidemic that tragically claimed the lives of hundreds of children. After several days between life and death, I woke up with a renewed conviction: my life belonged to Jesus. That experience marked me deeply, and I promised to follow Jesus faithfully. On July 20, 2002, at eighteen, I was baptized and publicly declared my commitment to Christ.

From that point on, my passion for the Gospel grew. At age 13, my mother had invited me to lead family prayers and share reflections. Without realizing it, God was already shaping me into a servant leader. I discovered joy in teaching, sharing the Scriptures, and encouraging others in their faith.

For the past 23 years, I have dedicated my life to ministry. I have walked from village to village to serve others, tell the Good News, and encourage families. I have learned that God’s call is often confirmed not by extraordinary signs but by daily obedience, perseverance, and a love that never tires of serving others.

A verse that has guided me throughout my journey is Isaiah 6:8: “Then I heard the voice of the Lord saying, ‘Whom shall I send? And who will go for us?’ And I said, ‘Here am I. Send me!’”

Each season has been an opportunity to respond again to that call, sometimes with trembling, sometimes with joy, but always with the assurance that God equips those he sends.

Now as I join the Mennonite church through Mosaic Conference, I see God’s faithfulness unfolding in new ways. What draws me to the Mennonite tradition is its strong emphasis on biblical teaching, community living, and peace witness. I believe evangelism is not only about preaching but about embodying Christ’s love in community, sharing life, supporting one another, and serving the world together.

Zacharie René anointed at the 2025 Assembly by his Leadership Minister, Stephen Kriss.

My call has not always been easy. But each trial has become a testimony of God’s provision. I have learned that ministry is not about my strength but about God’s grace. My family, especially my wife and children, has been a constant source of encouragement, reminding me that ministry begins at home.

As I look toward the future, my prayer is to be a bridgebuilder in the body of Christ. I want to see churches working interdependently, communities transformed by love, and young people discovering their worth in Christ. My call is not just to preach but to live out the Good News in every sphere of life.

I also carry a vision for my country of origin, Haiti, a nation torn and divided, longing for healing and renewal. My desire is to see Mennonite beliefs firmly established there, bringing with it the values of peace, reconciliation, and discipleship. I believe this witness can spark a great revival among the evangelical sector and serve as a testimony of God’s power to rebuild what is broken.

In the words of the Apostle Paul: “But by the grace of God I am what I am, and his grace to me was not without effect” (1 Corinthians 15:10). It is by grace that I stand today, ready to continue saying, “Here I am, Lord. Send me.”


Zacharie René

Zacharie René is a pastor, biblical teacher, and Christian formation leader committed to the Gospel, discipleship, and spiritual and communal transformation within an Anabaptist perspective. He is a member of Lakeview Mennonite in Susquehana, PA. Married to Roodeline Jean Louis and the father of four children, he views family as a gift from God and a vital place of faithfulness, perseverance, and prayer.

Mosaic values two-way communication and encourages our constituents to respond with feedback, questions, or encouragement. To share your thoughts or send a message to the author(s), contact us at communication@mosaicmennonites.org.   

Filed Under: Articles, Call to Ministry Stories Tagged With: Call to Ministry, Lakeview, Zacharie René

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