Sacred Places Autumn/Winter 2017-18 | Page 15

LIMINAL LEADERSHIP: Congregational Life in the 21st Century by Chad Martin Chad Martin, Director of the National Fund for Sacred Places, recently sat down with The Rev. Katie Day to discuss her book, Partners for Sacred Places’ Economic Halo Effect study, and the importance of understanding the relationship between congregations and their neighborhood contexts. Chad Martin: Your book, Faith on the Avenue: Religion on a City Street, is a unique contribution to congregational studies and a deep dive into one particular place. Can you describe what you hoped to achieve with the project? Katie Day: Germantown Avenue is a historic street. It cuts through Philadelphia for eight and a half miles. It goes 15 • SACRED PLACES • AUTUMN 2017 through the wealthiest neighborhoods and through some of the poorest in the city. The whole range of religious experi- ence of Philadelphia is captured on this one street. The project unofficially began when I grabbed a friend and said, “Let’s go take some photos and throw them to- gether in a slideshow,” for a seminary student orientation. At that point I had gone up and down Germantown Ave- nue for years. I work there. I had lived off of Germantown Avenue. My kids’ school was on Germantown Avenue. I thought I knew it. And then, when we started capturing images, I started seeing things in a new way and realized that there was so much that I had missed. That led to my doing a deeper analysis. The research, from the time I started until when the book was published, took 10 years. During that time I went SACRED PLACES • AUTUMN/WINTER 2017-18 • 15