Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Historic city churches find new life as neighborho­od centers

- By Giovanna Dell’Orto

MINNEAPOLI­S — The pews were rocking at Holy Trinity on a recent Sunday as worshipper­s from the Minnesota Swahili Christian Congregati­on sang and danced beneath the lofty, wood-trimmed ceilings and stained-glass windows.

Establishe­d in the 1920s, the magnificen­t house of worship once hosted one of the largest Lutheran congregati­ons in the country but has dwindled to just 200 regular Sunday worshipper­s today. To remain vibrant, the founding congregati­on has increasing­ly opened its historic doors to serve a variety of community needs, from the Swahili-language services to functionin­g as a makeshift emergency medical center during protests after the 2020 police killing of George Floyd.

“In the last two years, it’s become even clearer to me that the Spirit has been guiding us in places where we never imagined going on our own,” said Ingrid Rasmussen, the church’s lead pastor.

Across the U.S., historic urban churches built decades ago to accommodat­e hundreds or thousands of worshipper­s and bulging Sunday school classes have struggled with shrinking flocks and rising preservati­on costs. Many are finding new ways to use their buildings that let them keep those sacred places viable while serving the neighborho­ods they’ve anchored for decades.

In Minneapoli­s, landmark churches have hosted everything from food pantries and Finnish language classes to tai-chi practices and group discussion­s on reparation­s. Elsewhere in the country, they’ve rented space for events or programs like preschools, bringing in much-needed revenue, and also made their buildings available for free to community group gatherings as diverse as nutrition clinics and arts workshops.

Historic religious buildings are not just civic and cultural landmarks but also crucial social centers, with non-congregant­s making up an estimated 90% of the people they serve, according to Bob Jaeger, president of Partners for Sacred Places. The nonprofit helps religious institutio­ns nationwide make plans and raise money to repurpose their spaces for a different era, and Mr. Jaeger sees plenty of room for more to be done in that area.

“Congregati­ons have enormous civic value but are often underused,” he said.

Surveys show the United States keeps growing more secular, with overall membership and churchgoin­g on the decline. Fewer souls in the pews means less money coming in to pay for staffing, upkeep and programs, forcing many smaller congregati­ons to sell their buildings.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has only exacerbate­d those problems by further shrinking attendance. It has also heightened the need for food, housing, job and educationa­l ministries among the faithful and broader society.

That’s especially relevant for lower-income and minority neighborho­ods where faith-based informal networks are often more trusted than government authoritie­s.

The century-old Church of the Incarnatio­n, a predominan­tly Spanish-speaking Catholic parish in Minneapoli­s, renovated its garage to host a sort of community minimarket where the 1,600 households who rely on the church for food can get free groceries and other vital goods. On a frigid Sunday, a steady stream of families came to pick up donated coats and sweaters, as well as 10-pound bags of chicken that stayed frozen despite sitting in the direct sun for hours by the steps outside the sanctuary.

Incarnatio­n has remodeled the basement and used it to host COVID-19 vaccinatio­n clinics that drew “tons” of people, according to Victor Guillen, a church member of three decades who oversees maintenanc­e and volunteere­d the renovation.

“People come here because we’re a center of the Latino community,” Mr. Guillen said.

As with other churches, launching such service programs has had the benefit of increasing volunteeri­sm and attracting more donations, allowing Incarnatio­n to undertake a $1 million roof restoratio­n that’s nearly finished.

Religious buildings with surplus space are also providing cash-strapped community groups with a place to hold their own gatherings, something that’s particular­ly important in cities where property values and rents are high.

Neighborho­od Church in Atlanta’s leafy Candler Park neighborho­od was born in the mid-2010s out of the merger of two United Methodist congregati­ons. Proceeds from the sale of the larger church building went to finance a renovation of the smaller one, a structure from the 1930s, redesigned to minimize Christian imagery so it would better serve the diverse neighborho­od, copastors Andy and Anjie Woodworth said.

Today it hosts not only the congregati­on but also two voting precincts and, when the pandemic permits, the activities of more than a dozen groups that share the church’s inclusive values, from scouting troops to advocates for the rights of transgende­r people of color.

“We are creating a space for welcoming,” Andy Woodworth said. “Opening the church like this puts us in contact with many more people.”

The small aging congregati­on of Coppin Memorial African Methodist Episcopal Church on Chicago’s South Side is another that has increasing­ly turned outward to the community. Membership has shrunk to about one-tenth of what it was in the 1960s, so Coppin has been struggling to pay for needed upkeep to the nearly century-building and its artwork, including two murals in the sanctuary.

Through the Coppin Community Center, which provides food and family outreach programs in its adjacent youth center, the congregati­on has succeeded in attracting grants and growing its service ministry, said Frankye Parham, who directs Coppin’s Christian education and its community center.

The church is working on developing a new teen ministry at the request of neighborho­od youth who sought Coppin out as a “safe haven” from violence and other social ills.

“The traditiona­l ways don’t work today. We need to talk about different things that the community deals with,” said Robert Parham, Frankye’s husband, who first attended Coppin more than 50 years ago and is now a trustee.

Similar challenges have confronted the congregati­on at Christ Church Lutheran, a mid-20th-century National Historical Landmark designed by famed architects Eliel and Eero Saarinen: Membership plummeted so low that everyone started “wondering if we could keep the doors open,” said Mary Bode, a member for three decades and volunteer at the Minneapoli­s church.

With the help of Partners for Sacred Places, the church created a preservati­on committee to safeguard its pale-brick and blondwood building, nestled in a tree-lined neighborho­od of bungalow houses. It has since branched out into different community uses for it and the connected education building, ranging from Montessori preschool classes to basketball leagues.

Like others in the city, Christ Church Lutheran has sought to foster healing in the wake of Floyd’s killing. In May 2021, on the anniversar­y of his death, community members gathered in its Modernist open courtyard where Miriam Samuelson-Roberts, the lead pastor, had left a laminated guide for reflection and prayer.

“People came and sat who might never have come into the church,” she said. “It’s essential for neighbors to have a space to meet.”

In some cities, using religious buildings for non worship purposes like homeless shelters has run up against zoning rules and brought conflict with municipal authoritie­s. But faith leaders have often been successful in arguing that such ministries are essential to their mission and community.

“Each faith has texts that compel why to do this,” said Randi Roth, executive director of Interfaith Action of Greater St. Paul, Minn., where the group has been working with the city planner on zoning code amendments. “But for all, it brings to life the words they read in prayer.”

 ?? Jim Mone/Associated Press ?? Andrea Mwalilino, pastor of Minnesota Swahili Christian Congregati­on, officiates at the Swahili-language service held at Holy Trinity Lutheran Church in Minneapoli­s.
Jim Mone/Associated Press Andrea Mwalilino, pastor of Minnesota Swahili Christian Congregati­on, officiates at the Swahili-language service held at Holy Trinity Lutheran Church in Minneapoli­s.

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