This translation is not completely accurate as it was automatically generated by a computer.
Powered by

A UMNS Feature
By Linda Bloom*
3:00 EST October 18, 2012
A stained-glass window is carried to St. George United Methodist Church
in Maxton, N.C., as part of the church’s renovation through the North
Carolina Conference construction ministry program. Web-only photos by
John Paul McGuire.
The United Methodist congregation in Maxton, N.C., a farming community of several thousand, was in a bind.
Its historic building — one of the first built for an
African-American congregation — was in such disrepair that it already
had been condemned by the denomination’s North Carolina Annual
(regional) Conference and the congregation was worshipping elsewhere.
“We really needed to restore that church, renovate it or tear it
down and build another,” said the Rev. Robert A. Fairley Sr., 75, who
was baptized at St. George and came back as a pastor in 1983. Because
local banks did not want to invest in the old building, the options
seemed limited.
A solution materialized through a unique construction ministry
program in the North Carolina Conference that offers loans and project
help blending professional subcontractors with volunteers and resulting
in lower costs. John Paul “J.P.” McGuire is the program’s licensed
general contractor.
Founded before the Civil War, St. George is one of the oldest
congregations in Robeson County, with this building dating back more
than a century. That legacy is one reason why the congregation voted for
restoration over demolition, said Vivian Brown-Morrison, head of the
building committee.
“When they brought me in to look at it, I said, ‘Absolutely, we had
to save it,’” McGuire recalled. “It was important both for the church
and for the community that we try to preserve it.”
When St. George re-opened its doors for Sunday worship Sept. 16,
the sanctuary was filled to capacity. The congregation also expects a
crowd at the Oct. 21 homecoming service, which will feature McGuire as a
speaker.
Construction as a ministry
Stained-glass artist Lou Ellen Beckham-Davis of LEB Glass works on a window at
St. George church.
The church construction ministry program
was started in 1990 after several rural churches had trouble getting
reasonable bids for their renovation projects, said Gary Smith, a
licensed contractor who was hired to run the program until the
conference’s Board of Missions Inc. was established as a licensed
general contractor within the state of North Carolina.
The priorities were rural churches,
ethnic minority churches and new church starts. Since then, the Board
of Missions has completed 40 to 50 projects, both large and small. “The
actual cost to the local church is about half what it would cost if
they went out and hired a third-party contractor,” explained Smith, who
is semi-retired and now reports to McGuire.
“It’s a labor of love,” he said. “I just can’t imagine getting up in the morning and not being involved.”
McGuire began his career as a residential contractor, but his later
jobs — with Habitat for Humanity, in Louisiana hurricane recovery and
as an outreach coordinator in South Carolina and California — have been
all about ministry. The South Africa native also is involved with
global mission projects.
The advantage to having the Board of Missions as a contractor, he
noted, is “we don’t have to tack on a lot of overhead to pay my salary
or salary of other employees. Our overhead is lower, so we are able to
lower our prices.”
When the work started at St. George in August 2011, McGuire kept a blog sketching the progress.
“Restoration or renovation is always harder than new,” he observed.
“We discovered things along the way that we didn’t expect or didn’t
know, but there was nothing insurmountable. We had great volunteer
turnout.”
In fact, the congregation was overwhelmed by the support it received from Maxton and beyond.
“We had many volunteers from our church and from the community and
from other surrounding churches,” Brown-Morrison said. “It became a
talking point in the town: St. George is being restored. It was like
everybody was pulling for us.”
A spring barbeque fundraiser drew many who wanted a peek at the
restoration in progress. “It was heart-warming to see so many people
showing their support for this church and its quest to preserve an
important part of our history,” McGuire wrote in his blog.
John Paul “J.P.” McGuire is the licensed contractor for the North Carolina Conference church construction ministry program.
Among the project highlights were:
- Restoration of 45 stained-glass windows by LEB Glass Studio of Greenville, S.C.
- Removal of layers of paint from two original interior doors, which
were re-hung and used as a model for new entrance doors of salvaged
antique heart pinewood, made by Triangle Wood Designs in Raleigh.
- Incorporation of new wood trim, done mostly by volunteer labor, including local-produced cypress wood ribbing in the ceiling.
- Installation of three handicapped ramps and a handicapped bathroom for increased accessibility.
“It was finished out in a beautiful way for a lot less money than a commercial setting,” McGuire noted.
The addition that delighted Brown-Morrison was a stained-glass “rose
window” in a place that had been framed originally but then covered
over. The window casts a new light into the sanctuary area and its
design, the cross and flame logo rising from the wings of a phoenix,
symbolizes the building’s rebirth.
“It’s the most beautiful sight I’ve ever seen in my life,” she said.
A ‘doable’ ministry for others
The North Carolina Conference does have some unique advantages for
its construction ministry program. In addition to support from the Duke
Endowment, the conference has a $5 million fund established in the
1950s for church building loans. Initially, the idea was to help
congregations that could not qualify for commercial loans, explained
the Rev. Sam Loy, chair of the Board of Missions.
Even without such advantages, Loy believes construction ministries
are “pretty doable” for other conferences. Volunteer help is a key
component to holding down costs. Loy still maintains a license as an
electrical contractor and supervises the volunteers who do electrical
work for projects.
The church interior awaits a final inspection and a dedication.
Volunteers are willing participants because “they know the value of
that help,” he pointed out, while members of the churches involved see
the value of volunteer construction programs, begin to grasp the “great
advantage” of being a connectional church and realize “the conference
really does care about them and has resources to help them with their
life and their ministry.”
McGuire suggests that conferences interested in such ministry focus
on finding at least a part-time licensed contractor, work up a loan
program and build a core of volunteers. The projects can start small, he
said, noting that many rural churches have problems with termites, rot
or roof damage. “There’s room for a lot of ministry in our conferences
just to handle that.”
In North Carolina, the construction ministry team already is at work
on a new project: Crossroads, a new church start in a fast-growing
section of suburban Fayetteville. A metal building formerly used by a
nondenominational church is being divided into three sections for a
sanctuary/assembly hall, coffeehouse and internet café and room for
“parents’ morning out,” McGuire said.
Members of St. George are enjoying their new facility and making plans for an official consecration service next year.
“We know that we did the right thing now. Everybody’s happy,” the
pastor said. “Had it not been for the Board of Missions, we would not
have been able to do it.”
*Bloom is a United Methodist News Service multimedia reporter based in New York. Follow her at http://twitter.com/umcscribe.
News media contact: Linda Bloom, New York, (646) 369-3759 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
About UMC.org
RSS Feed
Press Center
Contact Us