Times Standard (Eureka)

‘Church of Presidents’ etched in history again

- By Elana Schor

The Rev. John C. Harper had been rector at the historic St. John’s Episcopal Church for less than a year when the 1963 March on Washington began taking shape. A lay leader in the congregati­on urged him to steer clear of it — but instead he embraced it.

Harper held a service the morning of the march, welcoming a diverse crowd of more than 700 people at the church across from the White House. Black Episcopal choir members sang alongside the St. John’s choir, and the service ended with worshipper­s holding hands to sing the iconic civil rights movement song “We Shall Overcome.”

“The church has too long been silent on this important issue,” Harper wrote to church members that month. “Now at long last Christians like ourselves are aroused by the injustice of discrimina­tion in any form and by any kind of segregatio­n on the basis of a man’s color.”

The summer of 1963 left a lasting legacy at the yellow-walled house of worship, consecrate­d in 1816 and often referred to as “the Church of the Presidents” for having hosted every leader since James Madison at least once.

Core principles such as support for equal rights, community engagement and eschewing partisan politics while not shying away from the pressing issues of the moment have guided St. John’s for decades and continue to do so today, after the church once again found itself at the center of an American awakening over racial injustice following George Floyd’s killing.

On the night of May 31,

the basement of St. John’s parish house suffered fire damage during protests against police brutality and racism. The following day President Donald Trump staged a photo-op outside after police forcibly cleared the streets of demonstrat­ors, putting the church’s apolitical ethos to the test.

The Rt. Rev. Mariann Budde, Washington’s Episcopal bishop, expressed outrage at Trump’s use of the church immediatel­y afterward. But true to the St. John’s way, it did not become a symbol of repudiatio­n of the president in the ensuing weeks.

Instead St. John’s has sought to maintain the spirit of the volunteer effort that sprouted organicall­y the morning after the fire, when parishione­rs and others showed up to comfort the community — what church leaders called

a “ministry of presence” in messages to parishione­rs.

“What Rev. Harper did was avoid the temptation to be pulled on one side or another, but to just be a graceful place in the middle of it all, and I think that’s exactly what we were doing,” said the Rev. Rob Fisher, rector at St. John’s since last year.

“You could get into thinking about sides,” Fisher added, “but what we were able to do in those moments was be face-toface.”

St. John’s has been a home for parishione­rs and presidents of all political stripes since Madison, who was in office from 1809 to 1817, famously selected a pew that was then set aside for later commanders-inchief.

Abraham Lincoln attended his first service in Washington as presidente­lect there and would later

become an occasional visitor, exiting quietly before services ended, according to Richard F. Grimmett’s history, “St. John’s Church, Lafayette Square.”

Lyndon B. Johnson asked Harper to hold a private service the day after John F. Kennedy’s assassinat­ion. Franklin D. Roosevelt ushered in a tradition of attending private church services Inaugurati­on Day morning, and six subsequent presidents including Trump followed his lead by doing it at St. John’s.

“Everybody checked their partisan politics at the door,” recalled the Rev. Luis Leon, who served as rector from 1994 to 2018.

“There are sharp elbows in Washington, highly opinionate­d people … but not once did they say, ‘That’s not something you should address from the pulpit,’” Leon said.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Police form a line near St. John’s Episcopal Church in Washington on May 30 as demonstrat­ors gather to protest the death of George Floyd.
ALEX BRANDON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Police form a line near St. John’s Episcopal Church in Washington on May 30 as demonstrat­ors gather to protest the death of George Floyd.

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