After years of rejection from church members who disagreed with his support of gay marriage, the Rev. Oliver White has found a new spiritual home in a most unlikely place.
White's predominantly black congregation, Grace Community, now worships alongside the mostly white members of Clark Memorial Church in South St. Paul in an unusual partnership that grew out of both congregations' advocacy for gay rights.
"I have to scratch my head and wonder, 'Oliver, what are you doing there?' " said White, 71, during a recent interview. "Then I come to realize, we're all people and if I can be an advocate for the LGBT community, then why can't I be an advocate for bringing people together in one accord, which is what I'm trying to do."
Since joining up nearly a month ago, the two fledgling congregations — 20 or so of them black, nearly 50 white — have gathered on Sundays at Clark Memorial, with co-pastors White and Lisa Bodenheim taking turns sermonizing each week.
The two United Church of Christ congregations decided to try this joint venture because they needed each other, members say. Clark Memorial's aging membership was looking for younger followers and spirited worship to energize the nearly 125-year-old congregation. Grace was seeking a home after losing its church building.
Initially, White's congregation — the only UCC church in Minnesota with a mostly black congregation — was interested in worshiping at Clark Memorial at a different time. But both groups ultimately decided worshiping together would be more fulfilling.
"This is not a merger, where we blend and lose who we are," said Bodenheim. "It's a partnership, walking side by side in faith. … My vision is to see that perhaps we can be a role model to the community around us — how do we embrace the diversity and pluralism that we now live in? That's my lofty goal."
White's struggling, nearly 20-year-old congregation saw its situation worsen in 2005 when he voted with a majority of delegates in favor of a resolution supporting gay marriage at a national UCC assembly. His vote didn't go over well with most of the 320 Grace Community members, White said. Membership dropped to nearly 100, he says.