‘Promise’ was never that church wouldn’t expand
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John Huffman
Up to this point, I have resisted many an urge to respond to the
various well-thought-out opinions published during the last several
years of debate over our church’s endeavor to build a youth/family
center and add additional parking.
But I must now speak up clearly, because there is nothing more
important to me, as a minister of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, than my
personal integrity. If what Barbara Rawlings is alleging in her
Friday commentary in the Pilot, “A ‘promise’ that won’t be soon
forgotten,” is true, my spiritual credibility is gone, I should be
removed from the ministry for dishonesty, and St. Andrew’s would be
both unethical and immoral in its 10-year planning for its ministry
facility remodel.
For more than two years now, Rawlings, whom I still consider a
friend, has been accusing me of having promised, back in 1982, that
St. Andrew’s would never again add to its facilities. On several
occasions, even in public venues, I have tried to clarify for her
what I did promise at that meeting, and she is unwilling to accept my
version, even as I am unwilling to accept the factuality of her
memory of my commitment, as genuine as that may be on her part.
Sidestepping all of the many specific details she mentions in her
letter to the editor, some of which also could be debated, let me
address only that so-called “a ‘promise’ that won’t be soon
forgotten.”
There was no such promise that St. Andrew’s would never again
expand. Even at that time, we had hoped to include a youth center in
our early ‘80s building program. But we saw no way of paying for it,
as our building costs had so escalated in those years that she and
her colleagues had used every bit of political pressure possible to
derail that architectural plan, carefully worked out at the guidance
and direction of the Newport Beach Planning Commission. They had
requested that we have an open campus, with a building at the center
of our land that would go down into the ground and up into the air.
It is true that, at the last minute, then Mayor Jackie Heather
called a meeting to establish a compromise. We did accept it, at the
loss of close to $200,000 in architectural fees for a design that was
up for the National Church Architecture Award of the Year. At the
moment we made that compromise to go back to the drawing board and
redesign the whole project -- with the high-density sanctuary
structure to be positioned at the farthest point from the residential
neighborhoodRawlings and her colleagues expressed an additional
concern, which we took very seriously. Noting that the church had
purchased 10 homes on Clay Street, which were to be demolished to
provide the present 250 parking spaces we now have, they expressed a
great fear that we would continue to buy homes on the other side of
Clay Street, encroaching into their neighborhood. They asked for one
more compromise, a word of assurance from the church that we would
not continue to buy up properties on the other side of Clay Street.
As a pastor, I am not free to make unilateral promises that will
forever bind my congregation, unless they are formally agreed upon by
all parties and put into writing. We were, even at that meeting,
informed by the city that we should do everything possible to obtain
additional parking. What I did promise, with the permission of the
building committee members present, was that never would St. Andrew’s
in future land acquisition make any movement across Clay Street. We
would protect the residential neighborhood in that way.
That is the promise I/we made. Nothing more, nothing less. We have
faithfully kept that promise and will continue so to do, although
this letter to the editor is the first time that it has ever been put
in writing.
We all know that in any recollection of events by eyewitnesses,
there will be varying perceptions of what happened. I do not question
the sincerity of Rawling’s viewpoint. I simply say I could not for a
moment live with my conscience and have helped the church in its
10-year endeavor to build a youth/family center if I had made the
promise she says I made.
My hope and prayer is that such accusations of dishonesty can be
put aside forever. Every resident of our community is entitled to an
opinion as to the merits and demerits of this ministry remodel. St.
Andrew’s does want to be a good neighbor. We have been an integral
part of this community since 1948, and for 27 of those years, I have
been privileged to serve as the pastor. We, along with several other
Presbyterian churches, founded Hoag Hospital, Presbyterian. For 24
years we have served the larger community with our divorce recovery
workshops. For the last 10 years we have been investing as much as
$200,000 a year to fund Shalimar Learning Center for disadvantaged
children. Positioned as we are between Newport Harbor High School and
Ensign Intermediate School , we want to have an increasingly positive
ministry to the youth of our area.
We plan, with the Lord’s help and in the name of Jesus Christ, to
continue to minister in the community at our present site for many
years to come. I, personally, am coming to the last years of my
pastoral ministry. The easiest thing for me and our church’s present
leadership to do would be to be intimidated by such allegations,
lessen our vision, free ourselves of the thousands of hours of
planning, the hard work of fundraising and be content with the status
quo. Instead, we are attempting to provide for the next quarter
century the facilities that will best minister to persons of all
ages.
We have already compromised our plans by decreasing the square
footage by 40% and agreeing to many site usage limitations and
traffic flow patterns in order to improve the quality of community
life. We have compromised as much as possible without completely
gutting our remodel plans and hurting our present ministry.
Let me express our deep appreciation to so many of our neighbors
who have privately and publicly assured us of their support of what
we are trying to do. The physical shoe of our land limitation has
told the foot how large it can get. St. Andrew’s has been a 4,000- to
4,700-member church for the last 40 years. The goal is not to be
bigger. It is to be better, providing an ever-increasing quality of
ministry to the immediate neighborhood and the larger Newport Harbor
area.
* JOHN HUFFMAN is pastor of St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church of
Newport Beach.
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