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Charlotte's Seigle Avenue Church, Atlanta's Open Door
From
PCUSA NEWS <pcusa.news@ecunet.org>
Date
15 Jun 1998 20:53:49
Reply-To: wfn-news list <wfn-news@wfn.org>
14-June-1998
GA98022
Charlotte's Seigle Avenue Church, Atlanta's Open Door
Community Receive Witherspoon Awards
by Midge Mack
CHARLOTTE, N.C.--Two Presbyterian communities of faith that chose
intentional, radical Christianity were recognized at the Witherspoon
Society's annual luncheon Sunday,
June 14.
The annual Congregation Award, given since 1992, went to Seigle
Avenue Presbyterian Church in the Piedmont Courts area of Charlotte,
organized with 35 members in 1945, and described as "a church ahead of its
time."
It opened a day nursery and a kindergarten long before even
kindergarten was cool, along with boys and girls clubs and a well-baby
clinic, said the Rev. Jane Sumney, of the Myers Park church, who made the
presentation. Myers Park, she said, is a large congregation that has always
been supportive but now has a formalized sister relationship with Seigle
Avenue.
Sumney traced the church's history, including growth to some 300
members prior to integration legislation which created massive white flight
in Charlotte. The Seigle Avenue church chose to stay and become an
integrated church, though its membership fell to 35. Sunday's Charlotte
Observer's headline, "Church vows to bridge racial divide," would have
been as appropriate 30 years ago as it is today," she said.
Since pastor Charlie Summers arrived in 1985, Seigle Avenue has
experienced "miracle of transformation" as an integrated congregation
moving ever ahead in serving its community. A recent project is Helping
Empower Local People (HELP) which drew 1600 community residents, totally
mixed racially, in age, and religion, to its first event.
Receiving the annual Witherspoon Award, given since 1974, the Open
Door Community was founded in 1981 when a group of Christians made a
decision to do an intentional ministry of presence with hungry, homeless,
despairing, and imprisoned persons. The group incorporated and bought an
apartment house. The 30 men and women in residence are also mixed
racially, religiously, in age, and also in educational and social-economic
background.
Part of their ministry is serving nearly 300 breakfasts every
weekday, maintaining a soup kitchen, open restrooms and a large bathroom
with soap and towels, providing showers and clean clothing twice weekly,
providing telephone access, offering a safe haven and resting place for
homeless. Monthly they provide transportation to families of prisoners and
form the core of the Southern Prison Ministry of which the principal
mission is to advocate for abolition of the death penalty and for the
rights and dignity of women prisoners.
Open Door residents are supported by the Presbytery of Greater
Atlanta, a regular corps of citywide volunteers, donations of needed
staple goods, and occasional visitors who spend a few days working with
them.
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