| [Originally published in the United Church of Christ News] In the wake of misleading attacks on its mission and ministry, Chicago’s
Trinity United Church of Christ is being lauded by United Church of Christ
leaders across the nation for the integrity of its worship, the breadth
of its community involvement and the depth of its commitment to social
justice.
“Trinity United Church of Christ is a great gift to our wider church
family and to its own community in Chicago,” says UCC General Minister and President John H. Thomas. “At
a time when it is being subjected to caricature and attack in the media,
it is critical that all of us express our gratitude and support to this
remarkable congregation, to Jeremiah A. Wright for his leadership over
36 years, and to Pastor Otis Moss III, as he assumes leadership at Trinity.”
Thomas says he has been saddened by news reports that “present such a
caricature of a congregation that [has] been such a great blessing.”
“These attacks, many of them motivated by their own partisan agenda,
cannot go unchallenged,” Thomas emphasizes. “It’s time for all of us to
say ‘No’ to these attacks and to declare that we will not allow anyone
to undermine or destroy the ministries of any of our congregations in
order to serve their own narrow political or ideological ends.”
Located in the heart of Chicago’s impoverished Southside, Trinity UCC’s
vast array of ministries include career development and college placement,
tutorial and computer services, health care and support groups, domestic
violence programs, pastoral care and counseling, bereavement services,
drug and alcohol recovery, prison ministry, financial counseling and credit
union, housing and economic development, dozens of choral, instrumental
and dance groups, and diverse programming for all ages, including youth
and senior citizens.
Thomas, a member of Pilgrim Congregational UCC in Cleveland, has attended
worship at Trinity UCC on a few occasions - most recently on March 2 -
and says he is “profoundly impressed” with the 6,000-member congregation.
Among Trinity UCC’s crowning achievements,
Thomas says, is its work with young people.
“While the worship is always inspiring, the welcome extravagant, and
the preaching biblically based and prophetically challenging, I have been
especially moved by the way Trinity ministers to its young people, nurturing
them to claim their Christian faith, to celebrate their African-American
heritage, and to pursue higher education to prepare themselves for leadership
in church and society,” Thomas says.
Exceedingly gracious
The Rev. Steve Gray, the UCC’s Indiana-Kentucky
Conference Minister, describes Trinity UCC as a “jewel.”
“It’s everything a Christian community is supposed to be,” says Gray,
who has been working with Trinity UCC for the past three years to develop
a new UCC congregation in Gary,
Ind. “Trinity has given well over $100,000 in support
of its partnership with us, and in 15 months of regular meetings with
Jeremiah Wright, we always found him to be a man of gracious hospitality,
humor, generosity, who paid attention to detail but also a man who does
not call attention to himself.”
Trinity UCC has been involved in planting more than 15 new congregations,
according to the UCC’s Evangelism Ministry in
Cleveland.
Gray, a member of First Congregational UCC in Indianapolis, has worshiped several times at Trinity
UCC and is most impressed by the overflowing sense of welcome it extends
to visitors.
“When you’re Euro-American, the people [at Trinity UCC] are so exceedingly
gracious, warm and welcoming. They hug you and say, ‘Welcome to our church!’”
Many, including Gray, point with appreciation to Trinity UCC’s generous support of denominational and ecumenical ministries.
From 2003 to 2007, Trinity UCC gave more than $3.7 million to Our Church’s
Wider Mission, the UCC’s shared fund for connectional
mission and ministry.
Extraordinary outreach
The Rev. Bennie Whiten, retired Massachusetts Conference
Minister who prior served for 15 years as associate director of Chicago’s Community Renewal Society, says, “Trinity
was one church that we could always rely on to respond almost immediately.
They have been very, very involved in the community in so many meaningful
ways.”
Noting the church’s work in health care, early childhood education and
economic development, Whiten says, “The scope of their concern and outreach
is extraordinary. It’s really just an outstanding congregation.”
Whiten, a member of Pilgrim UCC in Oak Park, Ill., is especially
taken with Trinity UCC’s commitment to the need
and importance of quality theological education. More than 60 members
of Trinity UCC are currently enrolled in seminary and pursuing masters-level
degrees. Moreover, the congregation pays for students’ tuition costs.
“They firmly believe in the UCC’s commitment
to an educated, seminary-trained clergy,” Whiten said, “and they have
probably had more people feeling the call to ministry than any other church
in the denomination.”
The Rev. Susan Thistlethwaite, president and
professor of theology at UCC-related Chicago Theological Seminary, says
Trinity UCC is a model church in the way it supports its people in discerning
and cultivating their gifts for ministry, both lay and ordained.
“Another thing I really appreciate about Trinity is that its ministries
are always directed both inward, toward the congregation itself, and also
outward in supporting other congregations ecumenically and supporting
community organizations that are dedicated to lifting up the wider society,”
Thistlethwaite says. “We have had so many fine students come
through Chicago Theological Seminary who were helped to discern their
call to ministry through this church’s dedication to serving the wider
church.”
Jesus and justice
The Rev. Kenneth L. Samuel, pastor of Victory UCC in Stone Mountain, Ga., says he
is impressed that Trinity UCC “promotes spirituality and piety while also
being emphatic about social justice.”
While Trinity UCC is the denomination’s largest congregation, Samuel’s
5,300-member church is the UCC’s second largest.
Founded in 1987, it joined the UCC in 2004.
“Trinity was really one of the churches that inspired me to want to affiliate
with the United Church of Christ,” Samuel said. “My church was originally
National Baptist and Southern Baptist, but it was the critical-thinking
that [Trinity] brought to this work, the justice work, that helped me
to want to become a part of the denomination. I have no regrets about
that.”
Samuel says that, during Wright’s 36-year ministry at Trinity, Wright
has not been afraid to tackle difficult topics, while staying equally
committed to preaching “Jesus and justice.”
“There have been two major sins in the Black church that many Black churches
will not address - homophobia is one and sexism is another,” Samuel says,
“and Jeremiah Wright has been one of the articulate, courageous voices
that has not been afraid to address these critical issues. If he can do
that and still maintain his close connectivity to the Black community,
and stay grounded in the Black ethos, that’s what has inspired me.”
Speaks well for us
Carol Brown, national president of United Black Christians and a member
of Cleveland’s Mt. Zion UCC for
more than 50 years, describes Trinity UCC as “the flagship church of the
United Church of Christ.”
“I think it’s very interesting that a minority group within a denomination
can have the largest church, support the most ministries and give the
largest number of OCWM [mission] dollars,” Brown says. “That speaks well
for us as an accepting, open and affirming denomination. Especially, as
a justice-oriented church, [Trinity UCC] sets a standard for all the denomination
that all are welcome.”
Brown, who worships at Trinity UCC when in Chicago for meetings, says she is most taken by its exuberant spirit.
“It’s certainly a very welcoming church, and it’s certainly very reaffirming
of the faith when people join in such large numbers when there’s an altar
call,” Brown says. “It’s something that you don’t see in the average church.
God is certainly at work there, and it’s exciting when you see that many
people stand up to witness to their faith and step forward.”
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