Broadway United Church of Christ
Finney's Broadway Tabernacle
The Broadway Tabernacle (now Broadway United Church of Christ) [1] was opened in 1836 in lower Manhattan, New York City, to provide a platform for a famous evangelist from western New York, Charles Finney. Finney designed the new church himself; it held 2,400 people. Then a
The minister who followed Finney shared neither his anti-slavery attitude nor his ability to gather the large throngs that
Finney had. A dispute about this led to the church leaving the Presbyterian fold, through the purchase of the building by a
prominent member, David Hale. He reorganized the church as a
In the next decades, the church became a rallying point for those who were opposed to slavery, in favor of women
Leaders of the Church took a prominent role in raising a defense fund for the Africans who were captured aboard the ship
The church founded a newspaper, The Independent, an anti-slavery paper that had a circulation of 15,000, which helped to
spread the renown of
These years reflect a time when
Women were given the vote in the church in 1871. During the latter half of the 1800s, the Church supported mission activities around the world. It also carried out educational and religious activities in the poorer neighborhoods of the City, including Hell's Kitchen, where it established a branch, the Bethany Mission, in 1868.
1897-1930
Charles Jefferson became pastor in 1897, and continued in the role until 1930. He was a skilled preacher and organizer under whose leadership the Church grew. The City had spread beyond its former boundaries, and again a generous offer for the Church's property stimulated a move to 56th and Broadway, a corner where the streets were still unpaved. The Gothic building that was erected featured a parish house that was ten stories tall and had its own elevator. The "skyscraper church" functioned, as the Church had before, as a gathering place for many meetings, more than 1200 in the year 1910. During the World War I, it provided weekly canteens for men of the armed forces. During the Depression, it contained a theater, beginning a ministry to actors that lasted for many years.
Mission work continued to be a focus, leading among other things to the establishment of the Jefferson Academy in Tungshien, China. Pastor Jefferson also led the establishment of the New York Congregational Home for the Aged in Brooklyn in 1906. In the same year, Jefferson also proclaimed his interest in peace issues, as one of the founders of the New York Peace Society. Andrew Carnegie gave Jefferson and his colleagues a grant to develop strong relationships between clergy throughout the world. After the First World War, Jefferson became an advocate for the League of Nations and the World Court.
Postmodern era
In 1928, Broadway continued to break new ground by taking the rare action of ordaining a woman minister. Two years later, Jefferson left, and Allan Knight Chalmers was offered the job of replacing him. Women now demanded, and were given, the ability to serve as officers of the Church. Chalmers was a strong advocate of the Social Gospel; as the Great Depression deepened, he and the Church had many challenges to meet. One of the great public controversies of the time was the Scottsboro case, when a group of nine black men were charged with sexually molesting some white women in Tennessee. All except one were sentenced to death. Pastor Chalmers became the head of the national Scottsboro Defense Committee. The men were freed from prison; Chalmers was elected treasurer of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) in recognition of his work on the case.
Pastor Chalmers was also a leader in the pacifist movement. The Church's Young Men's Club
issued the Broadway Declaration in 1932, declaring that service in the armed forces was inconsistent with Christianity. Other
young men across the nation also signed it. When World War II came, eight Broadway members
became
On into the 1960s, the Church continued to fight for
Lawrence Durgin served the Church for two years before being named pastor in 1963. During this time, the church embraced the
ecumenical movement that was symbolized by the
One of Broadway's staff members, Aston Glaves, became a leader in developing affordable housing in the church's neighborhood,
formerly called
After twelve years at St. Paul's, Broadway moved to Rutgers Presbyterian Church, and then to St. Michael's Episcopal Church, each time moving further up the West Side. The Rev. Bonnie Rosborough was called during this time, and kept the church together during its various moves. Life as a "church without walls" began to pall after thirty years, so a relationship was formed with Advent Lutheran Church at 93rd and Broadway. Broadway would invest in the renovation and repair of Advent's building, and would be able to settle there for forty years. The congregation marched down Broadway to Advent Church in March of the year 2000, and were met on the steps by the Advent congregation singing its welcome.
In 1991, Broadway became an "Open and Affirming Congregation" of the United Church of Christ, officially welcoming all people regardless of their sexual orientation. Ministries to churches in South Africa as it threw off apartheid, to prisoners, to people with HIV and AIDS, and to women on welfare, among others, have marked the 1990’s. Broadway members provided their labor and financial support to Habitat for Humanity as the millennium turned. Broadway has joined Advent in preparing and serving food in its meal program for poor people in the neighborhood.
On March 1, 2006, the congregation voted to call the Rev. James P. Campbell, an ordained, openly gay minister of the United Church of Christ as its 10th pastor.
References
This brief history was adapted from Wade Arnold's A Brief Narrative History of the Broadway United Church of Christ, an unpublished manuscript by Alex Sareyan.
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