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WHAT
MAKES A PRAISEBUILDING?
By
Stephen Ferrandi, Director, KLNB Regious Properties
In
1858, the Great Church of Saint Aloysius Gonzaga,
an Italianate cathedral style church built in Washington,
D.C. that seated 1,500 members, replete with gilded
ceilings, marble altars and more than a dozen magnificent
stained glass windows, cost just $100,000 to construct.
So great a church was this that at the dedication
Abraham Lincoln, Senator Stephen A. Douglas, and the
majority of the United States Supreme Court were in
attendance. The New York Times described the magnificent
sanctuary as the finest ever built in America. In
1970, the great church was closed when the dwindling
congregation could no longer afford the normal operating
expenses. White flight and decades of office building
construction consuming the once German, Italian and
Irish neighborhoods that once surrounded the church
had reduced the membership roster to a handful of
faithful worshipers. The next twenty-five years took
a severe toll on the great church. It was simply too
expensive to heat the massive structure with its seventy-foot
plaster walls and its ornately decorated ceilings.
While
the congregation of St. Aloysius had found itself
unable to afford the heating bill and the expenses
of basic maintenance, twenty-five storefront churches
had sprung up in the intervening years within walking
distance of the grand sanctuary. Along New York Avenue
and its intersecting side streets, storefront sanctuaries
with crudely scrawled signs proclaiming "Jesus
Saves" and " Worship
Temple" dotted the inter-city landscape. These
buildings were basic worship spaces with little more
than folding chairs and a second-hand pulpit. Still,
they had earned the faithful attendance of the African-
American members of the surrounding neighborhoods.
These churches had become the center of the community.
Their clergy had earned their degrees not from the
finest divinity schools in the land, but were in many
cases self-taught storefront preachers. The members
who tithed each Sabbath were not the owners of businesses,
the power elite of Washington, D.C., or scholars who
taught in the many prestigious universities that call
our nation's capitol home, but factory workers, welfare
moms and high school drop-outs earning a meager living.
The comparison here is that architecture does not
make the church or PraiseBuilding. People make the
PraiseBuilding. As Jesus said in Matthew 18:15-20,
"Where two or three are gathered in my name,
I am there among them".
The
term PraiseBuilding simply refers to any structure,
either new or converted from an existing structure,
used for worship. The term does not discriminate as
to the faith, style of worship or method of construction.
A PraiseBuilding can be as simple as several bamboo
logs lashed together to make a crude temple or the
architectural magnificence of Saint Peter's Basilica.
Masjid Al Aqsa (The Dome of the Rock), a bombed out
synagogue in Krakow, Poland and Buddhist temple outside
of San Francesco are all PraiseBuildings. So to is
a storefront church in Harlem, a converted barn outside
of Sioux City, and a warehouse transformed into Baptist
church in Salem, Massachusetts.
Although the purpose of this text is to help congregations
build a beautiful functional PraiseBuilding that is
able to meet the needs of its inhabitants, giving
homage can be done anywhere.
Stephen
Ferrandi is the Director of KLNB Religious Properties,
a real estate firm serving religioius clients in Maryland,
D.C., Pennsylvania, and Virginia. He is one of the
top experts in land development in the region. Mr.
Ferrandi frequently contributes real estate related
articles to both print and online publications.
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