Established in 1958, St. Andrew Presbyterian Church in Iowa City moved into this striking space seven years ago.
The Rev. W. Robert (Rob) Martin, III, lead pastor and head of staff at St. Andrew Presbyterian Church in Iowa City, Iowa, has been at his current calling for 2½ years. That longevity places him among the senior members of the St. Andrew staff, which has welcomed nine new staffers since August.
The church building itself ā a beautiful and versatile structure in the growing east side of Iowa City ā is just seven years old. āSt. Andrew is a community deeply committed to mission. Itās part of its lifeblood,ā Martin said during an interview last week designed to outline ways the 725-member congregation is keeping the Matthew 25 commitment St. Andrew made in 2020. āThis building is a missional site for Iowa City. Our commitment is to use it in service to the larger community.ā
āSt. Andrew has always been a Matthew 25 church, even before we knew we should be calling it that,ā said Jeff Charis-Carlson, the churchās director of communications and media ministries. āThe church began in 1958 with a strong sense of mission with a capital āM.ā ⦠We identify that often in terms of Matthew 25 ā feeding the hungry, clothing people, visiting people in prison and going out and being a presence in the community.ā
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Judy Swafford and Clyde Seery work in a greenhouse in St. Andrew Presbyterian Church's Lettuce Feed Others Garden.
Martin explained that each year, the churchās Mission Outreach and Service Team selects a primary area of focus for the year. Last yearās was food insecurity, ministry that has continued into 2023. This year, the focus is on mental health.
St. Andrewās childrenās program, 25Live, is named for the Matthew 25 movement. Among many other activities, leaders practice mindfulness with the children to help them deal with stress, Martin said, and they help parents understand how their childrenās brains are wired.
āI have seen a number of children who were really struggling from a mental health standpoint who now feel much more grounded,ā Martin said. āWe also focus on folks 65 and up. We gather people to talk to them about the challenges they face and what we can do as a faith community to help them feel more buoyant.ā
The church partners with local agencies that work in the mental health arena. āThere are people on the street who struggle with mental health, and some who struggle with mental health silently,ā Martin said. āThey know we are a safe place to be, but we canāt just assume people know that about us. We have to be very clear about being a welcoming and safe congregation wherever you are on the mental health and economic spectrum.ā
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In two years, a community for people 55 and older will be constructed on this lot near the church.
St. Andrew sits āsmack dab in the midst of beautiful old farmland. When we came here, we were the only ones out here,ā Martin said. āWhen we built, we bought land so we could sell it to [organizations] we felt were doing good missional work.ā St. Andrew recently sold part of its land to a 55-and-up retirement community that will also offer memory care.
Parked outside the church is āa big old school bus,ā which takes children around the neighborhood to provide āAndyās ARKs,ā for acts of random kindness. St. Andrew children have been known to leave quarters at a laundromat or money at a neighborhood grocery for people who are short on cash.
āThe kids donāt know we focus on Matthew 25, but they learn it experientially,ā Martin said, pointing to kind acts recently done to victims of a tornado in nearby Coralville.
āI canāt tell you how many people have told me, āI want to come and be part of this community I donāt understand. I donāt understand why youāre loving me unconditionally and why you give me free food every week,ā Martin said. āIt hasnāt been us evangelizing or trying to encourage them to join. They want to see what we are up to. It means we meet people where they are and as they are, and we explain to them they are vital and important people.ā
āThis is the only congregation I have ever served,ā Martin said, where people who are unhoused ācan sit in the pews and nobody will move away. Thatās Matthew 25 at its core.ā
Mike Ferguson, Editor, Presbyterian News Service
Today's Focus: St. Andrew Presbyterian Church in Iowa City with a Matthew 25 focus
Let us join in prayer for:
PC(USA) Agenciesā Staff
Edwin Gonzalez-Castillo, Director & Associate, Disaster Response for Latin American and Caribbean, Presbyterian Mission Agency
Theresa Goodlin, Team Leader, Raiserās Edge Gift & Data Entry, Ministry Engagement & Support, Administrative Services Group (A Corp)
Let us pray
Lord of all peoples, you are continually gathering your people together in surprising and creative ways. We celebrate your call to find our unity through faith in your transformative power. Amen.