
| Like Grasshoppers at the Door Sunday, Feb 5, 11:00 AM Rev. Donna Claycomb Sokol View Full Calendar |
It is so refreshing to be a member at a church where I look forward to going and feel uplifted when I leave. -- Stef M. |
Our History |
Mount Vernon Place United Methodist Church was founded in 1850 as a local church in Washington, D.C. for the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. What started with 50 members quadrupled in size until the Civil War when membership dropped significantly. After the Civil War, the church experienced a steady period of growth. The historic sanctuary was built in 1917 as the national representative church for the Methodist Episcopal Church South. In 1939 this denomination merged with the Methodist Episcopal Church and the Methodist Protestant Church, and we became Mount Vernon Place Methodist Church. In 1968, our denomination merged with the Evangelical United Bretheren Church, making us Mount Vernon Place United Methodist Church.
In 1995, Mount Vernon Place created a shared ministry with the Chinese Community Church of Washington. For nearly twelve years, the two congregations served together at 900 Massachusetts Avenue, NW. The Shared Ministry was created in part due to the space supply and demand of the two congregations. It was also believed that the two congregations had a common vision for ministry that was grounded in the Lordship of Jesus Christ and that the two congregations could better serve the needs of the city by serving together. The Shared Ministry continued until August of 2006 at which time the Chinese Community Church moved to the corner of 5th and I Streets, NW.
In 2005, Mount Vernon Place embarked upon a unique partnership with a developer and Wesley Theological Seminary, one of the thirteen United Methodist Seminaries in the nation. The congregation voted to sell a portion of its property, using the proceeds of the sale to completely restore the historic building. The restoration of the historic building was completed in 2008. In October of 2009, the developer finished a twelve-story building on the land previously owned by the church. Mount Vernon Place owns a portion of this building where we have our fellowship hall, several classrooms, a commercial kitchen, many gathering spaces and an office suite. Just above our offices, up to 17 Wesley students live in intentional Christian community, housed in eight dormitory rooms and three efficiency apartments. Wesley also uses the classrooms for seminary courses, making Mount Vernon Place its hub for urban ministry. In the past few years, our congregation has discovered again that the church is not the building but the church is the people. While we are grateful for our beautiful building, we believe that the congregation at Mount Vernon Place is what is |