Does Anyone in the United States Care about Presbyterianism?

The oldest presbytery in North or South America is moving. Actually, the offices are relocating since it is hard to move a jurisdiction or the congregations within it. But the Presbytery of Philadelphia (PCUSA), founded in 1706, is moving from its Center City location at 22nd and Locust to the Mt. Airy neighborhood in the northwest section of the city.

One curious aspect of this move – aside from giving up a very handsome building and reasonably good location – is that no one seems to notice or care. A search at Google for news stories reveals that no editors, even religious ones, have the New World’s oldest presbytery on their horizon. But when the Mormons plan to build a Temple in Center City, well, now you’re talking news copy and readers.

Another consideration is what this move may indicate about the declining fortunes of the mainline Protestant churches. Back in 1989 the United Churches of Christ moved from its Manhattan offices to Cleveland. Nothing wrong with the latter city, and maybe the UCC staff were able to enjoy Lebron’s exploits (they sure beat the Knick’s recent performance). But I’m not sure an NBA game makes up in stature for headquarters in the Big Apple. Tim Keller likely agrees.

Presbyterians had actually begun the trend of denominational downsizing by leaving New York City’s high overhead and big britches reputation to bridge the gap between bureaucrats and regular church folk. After the 1983 merger of the UPCUSA (North) and the PCUS (South) into the present iteration of the PCUSA, the mainline denomination in 1988 gave up its New York City address for Louisville, the biggest city in the old border state of Kentucky. (Another consequence of the merger was that the denomination could not maintain both archival centers, the one in Philadelphia at the Presbyterian Historical Society and the one in Montreat, NC, at the Montreat Historical Society. In 2005 the denomination decided to move the southern materials to Philadelphia, where they are in very good hands but farther from the hands most willing to sort through them.)

Now the denomination’s oldest presbytery is moving its offices from the center of Philadelphia to one of its peripheral neighborhoods. The presbytery’s website gives no reason but the “for sale” sign on the old location suggests that cheaper real estate is a factor. Mt. Airy is a fine neighborhood but it is not Center City nor was it part of William Penn’s original boundaries for his “Holy Experiment.” The move is a significant development in the life of New World Presbyterianism. But no one seems to care. They don’t even know.

4 thoughts on “Does Anyone in the United States Care about Presbyterianism?

  1. (Another consequence of the merger was that the denomination could not maintain both archival centers, the one in Philadelphia at the Presbyterian Historical Society and the one in Montreat, NC, at the Montreat Historical Society. In 2005 the denomination decided to move the southern materials to Philadelphia, where they are in very good hands but farther from the hands most willing to sort through them.)

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    Secondary to the topic of this post, but of interest to some, is the fact that the local church and presbytery records that were formerly at Montreat did end up staying in the South. It looks like they are now housed at Columbia Theological Seminary in Atlanta. Too bad Columbia is no longer in Columbia, SC.

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  2. And now for some over-interpretation using demographics:

    “Overall, same-sex couples were most concentrated in areas of eastern Center City (including Bella Vista, Washing West, and Northern Liberties), West Mount Airy, and Graduate Hospital.” (April 2007 Philadelphia LGBT Assessment, http://www.dvlf.org/newsite/documents/Philadelphia-LGBT-Assessment-final-version-April-2007.pdf)

    Since the presbytery office was in western Center City, it appears that in addition to lower rent, they’re moving to an area with a higher lesbian concentration. Coincidence or political statement?

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  3. Machen used to make the front page of the New York Times daily with his goings on at Princeton. It slowed down, but continued even after he “lost” and started WTS. But when he split again a year after the “fundie” split, the public was successfully able to write him off as a split-happy-jerk/schismatic. If the PCA, OPC, RCUS and URC could get together, then we might deserve the headlines once again. Until then, we’re just provincial and pharisaical, and even the heathens can see it.

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  4. Perhaps some think that denominations are irrelevant because of
    Marty and Schmidt’s errant “2 party system” that transcends denominations aka
    evangelicals vs liberals. Given that and the fact that mainline denoms
    don’t exert the influence they once did in the public square, I can see
    major news publishers not taking notice.
    On another note, maybe this a move to the suburbs versus holding the inner
    city where mainline Protestants have dropped since the WWII period?

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