Once condemned, Shutesbury Community Church shines anew after years of upgrades

By SCOTT MERZBACH

Staff Writer

Published: 03-30-2023 2:26 PM

SHUTESBURY — A member of the Shutesbury Community Church for 30 years, Chris Footit is relieved to be back participating in and attending services, something he can do after a three-stop lift was installed at the 1827 meetinghouse on the town green.

“Only recently, as my disability has increased and my mobility has decreased, have I not been able to climb the steep stairs safely,” Footit said. “I was not able to attend throughout last summer into the autumn.”

With the building now fully accessible for the first time, all members of the congregation and visitors are ensured they can more easily get to the second floor’s sanctuary.

Pastor Mark Ellis said each Sunday, with services at 9:30 a.m., three or four people depend on the lift, a fact of life in his ministry.

“It’s an aging congregation, no question,” Ellis said.

The lift is to be dedicated during a ribbon-cutting service on Saturday at 1 p.m. at the 6 Town Common Road church. Tours of the building will run from 2 to 4 p.m., and refreshments will be served.

During the service, in the second-floor sanctuary, John Hicks Mackenzie, an Orange resident and pastor of Mission Grace Church of Lancaster, will speak. Hicks Mackenzie, who became paralyzed in 2006 when he was injured in an automobile accident at 17 years old, has preached at the church a number of times, but always in the first-floor hall.

Besides the lift installation, parishioners are celebrating the painting work that was done throughout the interior, including the walls, floors and ceilings, and the exterior. That was completed through the inmate worker program offered by the Franklin County Sheriff’s Office. Aside from the steeple and peaks, every aspect of the building has gotten a fresh coat of paint.

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Saturday’s event marks the latest in a comeback story for a church that was shuttered for a few years in the early 2000s after dwindling to just two parishioners. The building was condemned after the church closed in 2006.

Veronica Richter, clerk and worship arts director, recalls that a small community prayer group that met in members’ homes began an effort to reopen the church. Those people then gathered volunteers to do repairs and called Mark Lawrence of Chicopee, now pastor of Stony Brook Community Church in South Hadley, to serve as interim minister. In 2009, a summer-long effort by more than 100 volunteers, including members of With His Hands Ministry from South Hadley’s Second Baptist Church, successfully restored the building’s interior, Richter said. Worship services resumed on site that Nov. 1.

Now, with about 30 members, the church is serving people from Shutesbury, as well as South Hadley, Westminster, Ware, New Salem and Athol, where Ellis lives.

“It’s a God thing,” Ellis said. “People come here because he leads them to where they need to be.”

The church, the only one in Shutesbury, is affiliated with the American Baptists. On the first floor is the multi-purpose hall used for fellowship gatherings, Christian education programs and a nursery, but for several years it has also served as a sanctuary because of difficulties some parishioners and visitors had climbing the stairs.

The three-stop exterior lift was installed by 101 Mobility of Marlboro at a cost of about $70,000. The congregation had originally looked at an interior lift for $34,000 more.

“The effort to get a lift in has been a little more than a decade in the making,” Richter said.

Despite its small size, major projects have been accomplished, including in 2012 when the steeple and roof were reinforced, adding a new copper dome on the steeple, and repairs and painting were done to the building’s exterior. A $70,000 capital fund drive in the community achieved that.

Four years later, under the leadership of interim Pastor Joe Green, the church’s dilapidated 1884 parsonage on Leverett Road was restored, with help from many volunteers. Some of those were a mission crew of construction workers from several churches in North Carolina. An $18,000 donation from those churches gave the congregation the means to gut the house’s interior and prepare it for restoration. In 2020, though, with that project incomplete due to limited resources, the congregation sold the house and put the proceeds toward the cost of the three-stop exterior lift.

The congregation is now undertaking a new fundraising campaign to paint the church steeple and the peaks. The cost of the work has been estimated at $10,000. It is accepting donations to Shutesbury Community Church, P.O. Box 679, Shutesbury, 01072. Longer term, Ellis said he wants to make the bathrooms fully accessible.

Still, having the lift makes the weekly services more convenient and welcoming, and means more events can be held. For instance, Ellis said Police Chief Kristin Burgess is being invited to talk about scams, and anyone can participate in the event.

“We can now comfortably say that everyone can come,” Ellis said.

Scott Merzbach can be reached at smerzbach@gazettenet.com.

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