Wayside Chapel

The Wayside Chapel

The Wayside Chapel is a charity and Parish Mission of the Uniting Church in Australia in the Potts Point area of Sydney.[1] Situated near Sydney's most prominent red-light district in Kings Cross, the Wayside Chapel offers programs and services which attempt to ensure access to health, welfare, social and recreation services.[2] The centre assists homeless people and others on the margins of society.[3]

Description

The Wayside Chapel's mission is described as 'creating a community with no 'us' and 'them'.[2] Their motto, developed during the leadership of Rev Graham Long is that of 'Love Over Hate'.[2]

Rev. Graham Long described The Wayside Chapel's approach in a 2014 interview as not having "any interest at all in solving problems".[4] Rather, The Wayside Chapel characterises its approach in the following way:

"I don’t want you to be a problem that I have to fix. I want you to be a person that I can meet. And I think if we meet you’ll change and so will I. You’ll move towards health and so will I. That’s how it works."[4]

History

The Wayside Chapel was established in the Kings Cross area of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia in 1964.[5][6] Ted Noffs was the founder of the Wayside Chapel, which was at the time a Methodist ministry (Uniting Church from 1977). At that time, it was only a single room with a dozen chairs in a block of flats at 29 Hughes Street, Potts Point. Within twelve months of his arrival, Noffs had transformed it into a chapel, coffee shop drop-in and community resource centre. The expectations of the church hierarchy—that Noffs's experiment would fail and become obscure and irrelevant—were not realised.

The centre grew until it occupied the entire building at No. 29. Later it grew still further and occupied the block of flats adjacent to the first block. A crisis centre was established in 1971 to handle crises which might arise at any time of day or night, including drug overdoses and possible suicides. More conventional church activities such as weddings were also carried out and the Wayside Chapel became one of the most popular wedding venues in Sydney, along with St Mark's at Darling Point.

In the late 1990s, Pastor Ray Richmond and others established a "Tolerance Room", where people who inject drugs were able to do so in a supervised environment, as an act of civil disobedience.[7] This eventually led to the creation of the legal Medically Supervised Injecting Centre in Kings Cross.

The current pastor is Graham Long who has served in the position since 2004.[8][9][10]

New building

In July 2009, the Wayside Chapel received a grant of $2 million from the state government for the purpose of rebuilding its physical facilities. An additional grant from the federal government for $3 million was received in late 2009. The balance of funds were raised by private donation. Graham Long said that rainwater had been penetrating the brick walls and causing bricks to fall out. Forty per cent of the existing buildings had already been condemned, but moves were afoot to start a renovation and rebuilding worth $7.5 million.[11]

On Saturday 19 May 2012 Wayside held the Grand Opening of its newly redeveloped building, designed by Environa Studio. The product of an $8.2million investment, five years of fundraising and 22 months of construction. The purpose-built facility features a community service centre, café, dedicated program space for The Aboriginal Project and Day-to-Day Living (a program for people with long-term mental health issues), community hall, offices and meeting spaces for groups such as Alcoholics Anonymous. The new building also includes a rooftop garden with over 50 varieties of vegetables, fruit, flowers and herbs, along with a bee hive, worm farm and compost.

Service development

Ted Noffs intended the Wayside Chapel to be a place where action came before preaching and engagement with the community was more important than going to church on Sunday. Successive ministers have endeavored to uphold this tradition. Noffs pioneered a number of far-reaching and innovative developments in social welfare at The Wayside Chapel:

Raymond Richmond was responsible for;

Graham Long has been instrumental in developing the mission of 'creating community with no 'us and them'. Long described his approach as telling the people the Chapel helps they are not 'problems' to be solved but rather 'people' to be met.[12] Under Long's leadership the following programs have been implemented:

Current programs and services

References

  1. "Uniting Church - Parish Missions". The Uniting Church in Australia - NSW/ACT Synod. The Uniting Church in Australia.
  2. 1 2 3 "Wayside Chapel Annual Report, 2013-14". The Wayside Chapel Annual Report. The Wayside Chapel. 2015.
  3. http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-09-05/a-history-of-tying-the-knot-at-the-wayside-chapel/7813904
  4. 1 2 Peppercorn, Duncan (2014). "Vision, mission or just wishing',". SVA Consulting Quarterly. Social Ventures Australia.
  5. "The Wayside Chapel, Our Story, Our History". The Wayside Chapel.
  6. Mark Dunn (2008). "Wayside Chapel". Dictionary of Sydney. Dictionary of Sydney Trust. Retrieved 11 October 2015.[CC-By-SA]
  7. "Alex Wodak - The Tolerance Room Ten Years Later".
  8. http://www.abc.net.au/queensland/conversations/stories/s1916157.htm
  9. http://www.smh.com.au/news/national/let-he-who-has-not-sinned-133/2008/12/26/1229998733265.html?page=fullpage
  10. http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/newslocal/city-east/wayside-chapel-pastor-graham-long-to-release-book-after-a-decade-in-kings-cross/story-fngr8h22-1226688311313
  11. Daily Telegraph, 7 July 2009, p. 8
  12. http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/entertainment/books/life-lessons-from-the-wayside-chapel-in-sydney8217s-kings-cross/story-fni0b82n-1226689650007

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