With united hearts and voices, Martin Luther King Jr. Community Presbyterian Church in Springfield, Massachusetts recently celebrated what it called “The Return of the Remnant”: the rebuilding and dedication of a sanctuary burned five years ago by an arsonist.
Watch the celebration here. The 2-hour, 40-minute service was held in the beautifully restored sanctuary and was led by the church’s pastor, the Rev. Dr. Terrlyn L. Curry Avery.
Numerous guests, including the contractors who helped make the project possible, Springfield-area faith leaders, presbytery and synod representatives, and others made for a warm and lively celebration, held in a reconstructed sanctuary that features a labyrinth on the floor.

“I want you to look around at this wonderful tapestry of God’s people,” Curry Avery told those gathered. “Your testimony here today is a living testimony that we are united in hope.”
“We’re here, y’all, and we’re not going anywhere,” she said. “We are reclaiming our space.” Throughout the service, Springfield artist Erin Washington, who grew up in the church, painted some of the sights those in worship were experiencing.
“Today is a testimony to what it means when we say, what you have meant for evil, God has used for good,” said the Rev. Dr. SanDawna Gaulman Ashley, who leads the Synod of the Northeast. The synod “is so proud of your witness here in this community. We look forward to seeing what God will do next.”
A pair of church deacons came forward to remember the work and energy of church members active throughout the past few years but who passed before the project was completed.
Shannon Rudder, president and CEO of Springfield-based Martin Luther King Jr. Family Services, said the agency was “born of this very church. Here, a courageous congregation believed that even the smallest seed in God’s hands could grow into a mighty work of service, compassion and justice in action. Martin Luther King Jr. Family Services is the fruit of your faith.”
“We are proud to stand forever as partners in this work, in this ministry and in hope. This is your new chapter, and today we rise together in joy and in purpose in your new chapter,” Rudder said. “I know it was great sorrow and complexity, but I want to acknowledge how you held fast to God’s providence.”

“This is more than a reopening,” Rudder said. “It is a rebirth and a joyful rising.”
The Rev. Dr. Shannan Vance-Ocampo, general presbyter of the Presbytery of Southern New England, offered God thanks for “the opportunity to be part of your church — the church of liberty, justice, peace and wholeness.”
“We remember the saints and ancestors who surround us, for everyone who worked so hard to get us to this place: for the people who showed up on the day of the fire, the day of arson and terror; for good people in federal agencies who continue to labor.”
“We give you thanks that even though this building burned, you protected life. No one was hurt, and we give you thanks for that small mercy,” she said. In addition to thanking PC(USA) ministries including Presbyterian Disaster Assistance, Vance-Ocampo offered thanks for the church’s session and deacons and for “former leaders of this church, some who are part of the great cloud of ancestors around us.”
Curry Avery took obvious delight in inviting three key contractors forward so those gathered could thank them for their hard work. “It was clear it was a labor of love. You understood this assignment went well beyond the walls of this church,” she said. “More than anything, when I made a request for something, your response was always, ‘I’ll try, pastor,’ and you always came through.”
“In the three of you, we have seen the Lord who provides, the God who heals, and the God of peace. Thank you for letting the Lord use you,” she said. “We are deeply, deeply grateful.”
Mike Ferguson, Editor, Presbyterian News Service (Click here to read original PNS Story)
Let us join in prayer for:
Katherine Pierce, Strategic Knowledge & Project Manager, The Board of Pensions
Tracy Pou, Vice President, Marketing & Communications, Engagement & Church Relations, The Board of Pensions
Let us pray:
Thank you, Lord, for the privilege of seeing the transformation in our community and in our own hearts as we walk out your love in a different way. We praise you, God, for giving us your second great commandment — to love our neighbors as ourselves. Amen.











