Faith & Community

Sunday, September 14, 2025 at 11:15 am

About the Event

Spiritual Growth

11:15 am | Shalom Hall
Format | Guest Speaker, Topical Lectures
Audience | Adult - Large Group
Led by | Bruce Elliott

What can our community leaders and influencers teach us as a people of faith? Join us for guest speakers each week who will cover a variety of topics to challenge us to live out our faith in community. We draw heavily on the arts, literary, social and spiritual issues as viewed from a faith perspective. 

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This Sunday

September 14, 2025
Location | Shalom Hall
Speaker | Lew Powell 
Topic | Memorabilia from the Tar Heel State

Former Charlotte Observer Editor and writer Lew Powell will be with us to talk about his long-standing passion for collecting memorabilia from around the Tar Heel state. He has collected hundreds of items that have historical and cultural interest covering a wide range of subject matter. Lew donated much of his collection to UNC-Chapel Hill’s Wilson Library where the items can be viewed by the general public. 

Lew has curated some of these items and will be telling us some of the stories behind them and how he came across them in his travels around our state. Join us as we open the 4th season of the Faith and Community Forum!

Next Sunday

September 21
We won't have class so that everyone can attend the Congregational Lunch and Conversation with the Transition Team

September 28, 2025
Location | Shalom Hall
Speaker | Tom Hanchett, author
Topic | Charlotte's Affordable Housing Shortage

Charlotte has undergone explosive growth in the 21st century—in 2000, Charlotte’s population was about 577,000. As of 2025, the population stands at 945,000. That’s a 61.2% increase in just two and a half decades. Charlotte’s housing builders have fallen far short in producing the housing necessary to keep up with this rapid growth. Charlotte has needed to build approximately 10,600 affordable housing units annually to keep pace. Since 2017, housing prices in Charlotte have surged by 72%, far outpacing income growth. 

Tom Hanchett, former Executive Director of the Museum of the New South (1999-2016) -- and Charlotte’s best-known historian, -- will discuss the various factors that have helped to cause this imbalance, proposals to boost affordable housing, and the success stories we have had so far. His new book, Affordable Housing in Charlotte: What One City’s History Tells Us About America’s Pressing Problem thoroughly addresses this issue and will be the basis for his talk with us. 

Dr. Hanchett enjoys working with community groups on neighborhood histories, museum exhibitions, and walking tours. Educated at Cornell, University of Chicago, and UNC-Chapel Hill, he is best known for his Charlotte history book Sorting Out the New South City.