Downtown Seattle's Daniels Recital Hall, with its soaring Beaux Arts
dome, intricate woodwork and stained glass, is about to become a church
again. The developer who saved it from the wrecking ball has signed a
long-term lease with Mars Hill Downtown Seattle, a resolutely
evangelical congregation that has been worshiping in a former nightclub
since its founding in 2008. With 1,500 members, the congregation outgrew
its old, less-than-ideal quarters, where for a time the congregants
used exotic dancers' cages as coat racks.
Christians in Seattle aren't alone in
wanting to reclaim the heart of their city as a place for worship.
Though the American evangelical movement is often stereotyped as rural
and provincial, it has actually had its greatest success in the suburbs
and exurbs, where entrepreneurial pastors found cheap land and plentiful
parking to build the "megachurches" of the past generation—think Willow
Creek Community Church in South Barrington, Ill., seating capacity over
7,000.
But a new generation of church founders believes that city centers
will be the beachhead of a new evangelization. While U.S. cities aren't
growing as fast as overseas metropolises like Lagos or Shanghai, their
renaissance since the crime-ridden 1970s is one of the cultural
headlines of the last generation, and it has been accompanied by
burgeoning urban congregations. On a Sunday morning in any American city
the signs of change come in literal form: placards on sidewalks and
corners announcing church meetings.
The growth in city-center churches is
in tune with the times, summed up by Harvard economist Edward Glaeser's
book "The Triumph of the City." News outlets like National Public Radio
have aired numerous stories on the boom in urban studies. And my own
employer, the evangelical magazine Christianity Today, has embarked on a
two-year series of cover stories and documentary films about the urban
Christian revival called "This Is Our City."
New York City pastor and best-selling author Timothy J. Keller helped
spearhead the movement more than two decades ago. In 1989, he moved
from rural Virginia to Manhattan and founded Redeemer Presbyterian
Church. With several thousand in worship every week, Redeemer
Presbyterian is perhaps the most celebrated city-center church story of
recent years.
"You go to the city to reach the
culture," Mr. Keller tells his congregation. This, he explains, is as
old as religion itself, and points to what New Testament scholar Wayne
Meeks called "the first urban Christians"—the first-century churches
founded in provincial cities all over the Roman world, and very quickly
in Rome itself.
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