1 Peter 2:2-10
Construction Materials
James Sledge May
14, 2017
When
I meet people for the first time on a Sunday, no one ever asks me that standard
question, “So what do you do?” But when I meet people outside of church I do
get asked that. Sometimes when I say that I’m a pastor people will respond,
“What church?” When I say “Falls Church Presbyterian,” it almost always elicits
a shrug. I have to tell them that we’re on East Broad Street, but usually,
that’s still not enough. Finally when I say that we’re the stone church just
down from Applebee’s, I finally get, “O yeah, I know where that is.” Sometimes
they’ll say something about how pretty it is.
We
do have a beautiful stone building, so it’s not surprising that people have
noticed it even if they’ve never actually read our name. Buildings are an
important part of most churches. When a new church first starts, it may meet in
school or a movie theater, but that’s temporary. Even before the first worship
service at the movie theater, people are thinking about plans to acquire land
and build a building.
For
many people, a church building is what makes it feel like church. That likely
explains why I get a fair number of phone calls from people who attend other
churches but want to get married here. Sometimes they’re at one of those
churches meeting in a movie theater. More often, their church has a building,
but it’s a contemporary space that doesn’t look like a church. For their
wedding, they want a church building that looks like a church.
Church
buildings are important and so we have a committee dedicated to our building
and grounds. That committee has to worry about keeping up all our buildings and
property, making sure there are plans for when we need a new roof or a new
boiler or have to repave the parking lot. It takes a lot of work and a lot of
money to keep all our buildings in good, working order.
Not
that anyone thinks church is just the buildings. Many of you likely know the
old rhyme where you form a church building with your hands and fingers. “Here’s
the church and here’s the steeple. Open the door and see all the people.”
Without those people, a beautiful church building would be nothing but a
museum.
That’s
why along with that committee that makes sure our buildings are well cared for,
there are other committees focused on what people do in the buildings. People
discuss and plan for worship, Sunday School programs, youth groups, mission
efforts such as our Welcome Table program, fellowship events, and much more.
As
important as buildings are – providing a place for worship, Sunday School,
youth groups, Welcome Table, etc. – who we are as a church is more about what
people here do.