Members Mourn Atlanta Church; Why Don’t They Talk?

Members Mourn Atlanta Church; Why Don’t They Talk? July 30, 2014

When a congregation has to leave its church building, it’s like moving away from home. Members remember all the things that happened there. They think of fun and funny anecdotes, and the crises they weathered. They recall what the church meant to the community.

All that is even more intense when the church is 152 years old, as is Friendship Baptist Church in Atlanta. Which makes a New York Times story on its last service all the more puzzling.

The story has not a single quote from any longtime members, although it says that up to four generations of members were at the farewell service. It offers some appetizers on the church’s influence, but doesn’t serve the main course. And even after three readings, I didn’t see a clear reason the building was to be demolished.

Not that the story lacks some telling details. The article notes ironically that the church is being displaced by the Atlanta Falcons’ new stadium, although the previous stadium was built only in 1992 and Friendship Baptist was born just after the Civil War. A sensitive passage has people weeping or “pumping a fist to the music” as the pipe organ plays — an organ that was recently refurbished for $300,000.

What’s missing, then? People

Read the rest here


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