The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Theirs was an arranged friendship

After meeting, it deepened their fellowship, faith.

- Gracie Bonds Staples

They say from the moment they arrived at Saint Luke’s and Dodd-sterling, their congregati­ons insisted they become friends.

And so having no choice in the matter, the Rev. David Lower, pastor at Saint Luke’s Presbyteri­an Church, reached out to the Rev. Eric Powell, pastor at Dodd-sterling United Methodist Church.

“Can we meet and talk?” he asked him.

Days later over plates of bacon and eggs at a local IHOP, the two men introduced themselves. For the next three hours, they talked about the blessing of the long relationsh­ip between their two congregati­ons,

all the while imagining what their friendship might become, what things their congregati­ons might do to deepen that relationsh­ip.

If the old adage that opposites attract holds true, there was little doubt that together they could, in fact, do a lot of good.

The relationsh­ip between Saint Luke’s and Dodd-sterling goes back more than two decades when they began building Habitat for Humanity houses together. Their congregati­ons insisted the two of them maintain that bond.

That’s the first thing that made this a decidedly odd tale. The second was that the two congregati­ons, indeed their pastors, could not have been more different.

Saint Luke’s, located in Dunwoody, numbers about 750 mostly affluent white members. Doddsterli­ng, located in southeast Atlanta, has some 75 members, all of whom are Black and as Powell put it “po’.”

Lower, 46, a former IT profession­al, grew up in Atlanta’s Morningsid­e neighborho­od. He has been in ministry since 2008.

Powell, 66, is an Army retiree who was born and raised in Chicago. Although licensed and ordained in 1976 in the Baptist church, he has been a United Methodist for the past 15 years.

Both were named pastors of their congregati­ons in 2016.

Their arranged friendship, Powell said, “was a loving recommenda­tion, an invitation of endearment.”

Whatever it was, it was happening two months after their arrival and during one of the most contentiou­s times in our nation’s history, marked by battles over religious freedom, immigratio­n, and racial injustice.

At Saint Luke’s and Dodd-sterling, it looked like God was trying to write a different story, one that promised, at least for

them, to address the centuries-old divide happening on Sunday mornings and foster racial reconcilia­tion in the process.

In short order, the ministers donned their robes and, in some cases, rolled up their sleeves and went to work alongside their members. They even traded pulpits with Lower preaching at Dodd-sterling and Powell delivering the word at Saint Luke’s.

On other Sundays, the congregati­ons worshipped together with their pastors delivering a collaborat­ive

homily, what they call tagteam sermons.

What has transpired over the past four years, as one member described it to me, is “a wonderful story” of how they came together to meet the challenges of the moment.

Powell recalled the time he wanted to dismantle a wall at Dodd-sterling to increase seating in the church’s fellowship hall. One call to Lower and he had a team of architects, contractor­s and other volunteers from Saint Luke’s at his disposal.

“I got as excited as a 6-year-old boy in a candy store,” Powell recalled recently.

The wall came down and in another instance a room that had become uninhabita­ble was converted into an office.

Powell would later explore that experience in a sermon he titled “The wall must fall.”

Just as the walls of Jericho came tumbling down, Powell encouraged both Saint Luke’s and Doddsterli­ng to commit to the work of dismantlin­g the walls of prejudice, insecurity and racial injustice in their communitie­s and in this nation.

Not even COVID-19 has gotten in the way of that or their efforts to help each other or those in their communitie­s who need them.

During the first weeks of the pandemic, members of both churches checked on each other in a virtual prayer breakfast. And when Dodd-sterling members shared their hopes of meeting the rising demand for food with enough to keep their neighbors fed and safe, Saint Luke’s stepped in to help.

“This is where the presence of God became undeniable,” Lower said. “The prayers and love that day moved members of both churches into action, mobilizing resources and people and connection­s.”

He called the nonprofit Urban Recipe. It agreed to help.

The food co-op, along with the Atlanta Community Food Bank, provided a biweekly food distributi­on of about 60 pounds of food to 125 families who otherwise might go hungry, a feat they have been fulfilling since last April.

“It exceeded our wildest dream,” Powell said. “We went into this to provide meat. What came from it was more than what was asked. It became a bounty of food.”

It was a solution that neither congregati­on could’ve accomplish­ed alone.

“What excites us is it not only crosses ecumenical lines, it crosses racial lines and, in this day and age, that’s significan­t,” Powell said. “I look at us as being the epitome of we shall overcome. We’re walking hand in hand.”

Both pastors and their congregati­ons are reaping the benefits that come from participat­ing in a relationsh­ip based on spirituali­ty, humility, mutuality and mutual respect.

In short, they are fulfilling Christ’s mandate to love each other as he has loved us, trusting that there is enough to go around for all of us and that living together as brothers and sisters will surely bring blessings not curses.

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 ?? COURTESY OF DARYL MOORE ?? Members of Saint Luke’s and Dodd-sterling pose after tearing down a wall at the Southside church.
COURTESY OF DARYL MOORE Members of Saint Luke’s and Dodd-sterling pose after tearing down a wall at the Southside church.
 ?? COURTESY OF DAVID KING ?? The Rev. David Lower (left), pastor at Saint Luke’s Presbyteri­an Church, is pictured with the Rev. Eric Powell, pastor at Dodd-sterling United Methodist Church, during a joint church service.
COURTESY OF DAVID KING The Rev. David Lower (left), pastor at Saint Luke’s Presbyteri­an Church, is pictured with the Rev. Eric Powell, pastor at Dodd-sterling United Methodist Church, during a joint church service.

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