The wood floors need refinishing. Pew cushions need upholstering. Furniture needs updating.
"When my ship comes in," Senior Pastor Roland Wells said pensively as he walked the halls of St. Paul's Church in the Phillips/Ventura Village neighborhood of Minneapolis.
Then he grinned. Wells knows his ship came in long ago.
Moving into his 26th year as spiritual leader of the granite church at 19th Street and Portland Avenue S., Wells has found his calling in an urban congregation that has much to celebrate. And celebrate it will, beginning this month.
That the Lutheran church is marking its golden jubilee doesn't set it apart from many churches reaching the 50-year milestone. But its back story surely does.
On March 22, 1964, church members hailing from as far away as Plymouth and Bloomington marched eight blocks from their previous location on 14th Avenue to reclaim the once pigeon-infested building with shattered stained glass and outdated wiring.
They came refusing to abandon the urban core for the suburbs, where many other churches were headed. This is where they were needed most.
Today, St. Paul's houses four culturally diverse congregations, as well as an internationally recognized missionary training program called the MissionShift Institute and an urban studies program doing cross-cultural outreach.