Home Christian News Middle Church to Begin Meeting in Synagogue on Easter as It Awaits...

Middle Church to Begin Meeting in Synagogue on Easter as It Awaits Restored Building

Lewis also is looking forward to Stanton’s offer of his office, where she said she intends to sit on his antique couch and use the space he plans to clear for her on his bookshelf.

The congregations agree on COVID-19 protocols, which require those who attend in person to be masked and to have proof of vaccination.

The pastor said her congregation has received a $21 million insurance payout from the Collegiate Churches of New York and $2 million from her congregation and the community. She said the rebuilding project will likely cost $25 million. Lewis expects fundraising will provide the remaining money needed for the building — whose facade is still standing — as well as for the church’s “Freedom Rising” programs focused on justice issues.

The two clergy of the progressive congregations that will soon share the same building have previously been engaged in interfaith efforts and dialogue. Lewis has appeared on TV and at conferences with Muslim and Jewish leaders, and Stanton’s synagogue hosted the religious school of Cordoba House, a Muslim organization, for five years. Stanton was one of the founding co-editors of the Journal of Interreligious Dialogue, now the Journal of  Interreligious Studies.

East End Temple logo. Courtesy image

East End Temple logo. Courtesy image

He has participated in Middle Collegiate’s annual Revolutionary Love Conference, and Lewis also appeared in East End’s pulpit in what Stanton said demonstrated “solidarity with the Jewish community” after the 2017 Unite the Right rally by white nationalists in Charlottesville, Virginia.

There is precedent, if not widespread, for houses of worship to pool resources across faiths during times of crisis or in other circumstances when sharing space allowed congregations to thrive.

Central Synagogue, another Reform synagogue in Manhattan, hosted St. Peter’s Lutheran Church in the 1970s when the Christian congregation replaced its 1905 building. Later, after the synagogue suffered a fire in 1998, its congregants met in nearby churches until its restored building opened three years later.

A Maryland Reconstructionist synagogue meets in an Episcopal church and a Florida Reform Jewish congregation gathers in a United Church of Christ building, interfaith experts noted.

“We see many examples of congregations of two different faiths sharing a space,” said Amy Asin, vice president of congregational engagement and leadership experiences for the Union for Reform Judaism, in a statement to Religion News Service. “We also find that interfaith partners are among the first to offer assistance in times of difficulty. We saw multiple congregations offer their spaces to other faiths in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, the hostage taking in Colleyville TX and other incidents.”

Lewis views cooperation with East End as an important new level of connection between their houses of worship, especially at a time when antisemitism has been on the rise.

“This community is dancing, dancing with my community, loving on my community, looking for all the ways that we have something in common, despite the fact that the church writ large has too often been unfriendly, unwelcoming, unkind to our Jewish siblings,” she said.

“I honor that we have a shared base of faith in the one God who loves us all. And I’m just thrilled they are not only open to, but delighted to, open their doors for us.”

This article originally appeared here