i don't know; i think one can be a light right where they are. It is likely that when you reduce Christ to a religious practice that you are doomed, anyway. If you can't find God where you are, whatever situation you are in, then i don't think finding some other group of religious practitioners is going to help much. It even amounts to seeking someone to "point" to the kingdom for you, in some other congregation, imo. Don't get me wrong, though, i think there is a time to find a new Right Pastor, when the Spirit leads you...but you should also at some point be driven into the wilderness, an experience that i think most believers avoid like the plague, just like we avoid most of the rest of Christ's explicit instructions in the Gospels, and replace these with debates about transubstantiation or eschatology, or any of a number of religious concepts, which you might note will always be about something that happened in the past, or are supposed happen in the future--these are signs.
Blindness to Scriptures that don't fit with your doctrines always accompany this, too, i have noticed. The reasoning is usually that the passage is being taken out of context, or was not meant for you, today, something like that. See, once you have "If a man will not work, neither let him eat" repeated to you a few times, with emphasis, then "Don't work for food..." cannot even be practically seen; there is what can only be termed a Law now, in your mind, that goes something like "If you want to eat (consume), you better have a job," and this becomes your doctrine, likely reinforced by your disgust at those who eat but do not work or whatever, reinforced by the 1% who are better or more clever at working, and thus consume at a higher level than you.
And so your doctrine, which started out as one half of a sound idea, becomes your master, and moving to another congregation is not going to help you there. Better to focus on the congregation inside of you, that is at odds, at war...and perhaps i am saying too much now, but a rope of three cords is not easily broken, and although one is generally described as "two" in the Book, we are actually 3 also, termed heart, mind, and gut (liver or kidneys, in Scripture parlance, with i guess some further distinctions available too), and there is a reason only "2" of the original Wanderers crossed the Jordan, and there is a reason the 3rd, Moses, "witnessed" from "a mountaintop." Which has a significant name, even. But i have got ahead of myself here, this comes after seeing that all those other Wanderers (thoughts, beliefs, doctrines) "didn't make it," but at the same time the same group of Wanderers still made it, only they were now "changed."