Soturdovy June 21, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven GENESIS OF ANN ARBOR Sharing mor than a roof By BETH NISSEN "For my house shall be called a house of prayer for all peoples." The Book of Isaiah It is Friday evening; the sun is setting bahind a small modern glass and brick building. Inside, the shabbat candles are lit, the Torah is read and a congregation if Jews greet each other with a warm "good shabbat". Thirty-six hours later, the Sunday morning sun is rising over the building; inside, a congregation of Christians cele- brates Holy Communion together. Outside the building stands a steel cross and a star of David of equal height; they are reflected side by side in the win- dows. Both St. Clare of Assissi Episcopal Church and Temple Beth Emeth Re- formed Congregation hold services in the building at 2309 Packard. It is the only building in the United States that serves as a place of worship for both a Christ- ian and a Jewish congregation. church first suggested that we build an addition onto their building and that we begin talking about joint ownership. A few months later, we agreed." "Sharing facilities, we were able to have a building much cheaper than it would have been to start from scratch," snid Temtple member Sheldon Berry, who helped draft the financial agreement be- tween the two groups. The merger was civic as well as prac-. tial. "A goad section of land in Ann Ar- bor is taken up by the University, and isn't taxed," explained Berry. "By shar- ing land, we avoided taking additional lend off the tax rolls of the city." St. Clare's held full ownership of the building; in order to achieve 50 per cent equity, Beth Emeth gave a cash down- payment, assumed all existing mortgag- es, and agreed to construct an addition onto the present structure consisting of 11 classrooms, a library and an extend- ed social hall. Making the sharing of one building holy and exclusively for Christians. Most of or congregation was very comfort- abl sharing the building. But when the idea of a legal merger came up, it was hard for some of them. They had to give up ownership of their own obuilding and an ultimate exclusive clnim to the sanctuary." "Members of the Temple congregation had a different problem," continued Evett. "Some had had personal direct experiences with Nazi Germany and sim- ply felt that the Christian community was untrustworthy." Although the final vote by both con- gregations was almost unanimously in support of joint ownership, there was some disagreement with the proposal on both sides. The Temple lost no member- ship as a result of the merger, but an estimated 8-10 families left the Episcopal congregation in protest. Sheldon Berry, a Temple member de- scribed the different situations of the two congregations. "We had already been tenants for three years," he ex- plained. "And we had some people with strong feelings about a church and a synagogue being in the same building. But we discussed this emotionally, fin- ancially and in religious terms. The peo- ple were already coming here to pray. For us, the merger was a formaliza- tion. "But it was harder for the Christians, I think. A lot of them couldn't help thinking, 'They're not just renting any- more; now they own it.'" After the approval of the merger of the two separate ecclesiastical corpora- tions into one holding corporation, t h e first problem the two congregations fac- ed together was what they should be call e, As a title, 'St. Clare's Episcopal Church/Temple Beth Emeth" was hard- ly succinct. "We discussed 'Christians and Jews, Inc.'," said Beth Emeth President Young, "And then 'Jews and Christians, Inc.' For a while, we were 'CJIVV' - 'Christians and Jews, Inc., and V i c e Versa.' Then we serve the problem to the priest and the rabbi and told them that solutions were their job." T h e combined ministerial and rabbinate re- sources created "Genesis of Ann Ar- bor." While the two congregations are joint- ly run by one corporation, they remain distinctly separate. "We're not trying to create a third religion, or take the best of the two and combine them," said Rev. Evett. "Part of the purpose is for each con- gregation to further define itself. We "The church interior easily trans- the large cross is folded up and forms into an acceptable synagogue. swung out of sight, rested atop a To metamorphosize the sanctuary, black free-standing wall." The Beth Emeth congregation has used church facilities in the Episcopal Church since 1971. They moved to St. Clare's as tenants after their membership doub- led and they outgrew the facilities they were using at the First Unitarian Church in Ann Arbor. "In looking for a place to settle, our primary criterion was that it not look like a church for our services," recalled Steven Young, President of the B e t h Emeth -congregation. "Once we found that place, we were concerned with the receptivity of the con'regation. St. Clare's was glad to help us out; they didn't even want to accept rent from us. From the start, they were j u s t fantastic." The church interior easily transforms into an acceptable synagogue. To meta- morphosize the sanctuary, the large cross is folded up and swung out of sight, rested atop a back free-standing wall. A crucifix on the wall is discrget- ly covered with a Chagall print. T h e Christian flag is replaced with the flag of Israel. The panelling behind the altar is pulled aside to reveal the Torah. For Christian services, the Torah is concealed, the Chagall print removed, the flag changed and the cross swung to an upright position. The entire trans- ition takes less than ten minutes. The actual sharing of the building be- gan when the Jewish congregation held their first service there; the decision to make the sharing legal and financially equitable was made this year. "We found that we needed still more pace e.secially for educational func- tions," said Young. "We were looking for a few acres of land. I think the official was more complicated for many members of both congregations than a tangle of mortgages, equity and who would pay what bills. "It's easy to say that it's more blessed to give than to receive, but it's hard to do," said Reverend Douglas Evett, Rec- tor of St. Clare's. "When Jewish services were first being held here, we had some members who found it hard to allow 'non-believers' to use the sanctuary, a place they considered to be uniquely St. Clare/Beth Emeth: the only place in the U.S. that serves as a place of worship for both a Christian and a Jewish congregation. expect the Christians to remain Christ- ians, and the Jews to remain Jews - not only that, but for the Christians to remain Episcopalian and the Jews to re- main Reformed. The separate identities are carefully maintained, and there are distinct differences. Jews are always de- finad as a people, as an ethnic group. Episcopalians aren't; even Christians aren't." "This is not a constant Brotherhood Week," emphasized Sheldon Berry. "We are two separate groups who worship apart in the same building." There are jointly attended non-worship functions, particularly adult education classes team-taught by the priest and Photography by Pauline Lubens rabbi for the purpose of better under- standing the theology of their building- mates. During the Vietnam war, the tradition of a peace seder was started; it is held annually during Passover and before Easter, and is attended by members of both church and synagogue. Both groups are now legally - a n d emotionally - committed to a continua- tion of their unique relationship. When the Episcopal rector preceding Evett left the congregation, church mem- bers made one of the criteria for his suc- cessor the acceptance of the Jewish con- gregation using the church facilities. The Temple also recently changed rabbis; they too demanded acceptance of their co-existence with a Christian congrega- tion as a criterion for their new leader. Most members of both congregations are comfortable with the sharing ar- rangements; some are enthusiastic. "It bothered me at first to sing the traditional Hebrew songs and see the Torah when I knew there was a cross just out of sight," said a young Jewish woman at evening Shabbat services. "But when I thought about it, I realized that it was just a symbol. Now that I've been to classes with some of the church mem- bers, I know a little more about their symbol, and while it doesn't mean as mch to me as it does tolthem, it does mean something to me, too. We share a great deal." "I grew n with manv common prejud- ices about Jews," admitted a St. Clare's rarishioner after the Sunday folk mass. "But I have learned a lot from simply attending here. We are all one people uaner God, I guess." The joining of the Temple Beth Emeth and St. lare's Episcopal Church is prac- tical, efficient, sensible, economical, ecological, educational and inspirational. Two very different peoples in back- ground, belief and custom have found that they can share much more than a common roof under which to wership. "Part of the purpose is for each congregation to further define itself," said Rev. Evett. "We expect the Christians to remain Christians, and the Jews to remain Jews."