Storychasing Easter’s Home and Affordable Housing

Members of our church in uptown Charlotte, North Carolina, Caldwell Presbyterian, have been working for many years to address the affordable housing crisis in a novel and courageous way. “Easter’s Home” is the former education wing of Caldwell Church which is now ALMOST ready to be opened (in fall 2025) as an efficiency apartment complex for 21 Charlotte residents in need of affordable housing. Roof Above is one of the primary partner’s in the Easter’s Home project, and already operates multiple housing complexes as well as housing shelters for Charlotte residents today.

Easter’s Home (Outside View – August 2025 (CC BY 4.0) by Wesley Fryer

One of the members of our congregation asked about a new virtual tour / walk-through tour of Easter’s Home, now that it is nearing completion and opening, and this prompted me to gather some of the photographs as well as videos I’ve taken of the Easter’s Home project since we joined Caldwell in January 2023. Here are links to some of the photos, videos, and news articles I’ve shared and found.

On July 2, 2023, members of our congregation went on a tour of Easter’s Home to view the progress of the renovation, and I recorded a 7.5 minute video to document part of what we saw and heard.

Multiple news articles since 2022 have shared updates and news about Easter’s Home, and I’ve collected those (11 links as of today) in a public / shared Wakelet collection.

Those links include the book by our Pastor, Rev John Cleghorn, “Building Belonging: The Church’s Call to Create Community and House Our Neighbors.” That book and it’s accompanying congregational study guide (a free PDF) offer an outstanding deep dive not only into the background and history of Easter’s Home in Charlotte, but also the efforts of other Christian and community leaders around the United States seeking to find innovative ways to address affordable housing with the land and property owned by many church congregations and denominations.

To date (as far as I could find today) I’ve taken 42 photos of Easter’s Home since January 2023, in various stages of construction and renovation. I’ve shared all of these in a Flickr album, and images are sorted in reverse chronological order, with the newest first. Here are a few highlights.

One of the wonderful features of the original “Price Education Building” at Caldwell church is the stained glass window over the entry door. The architects for the renovation of Easter’s Home were able to preserve it, so it is visible from the 2nd floor as well as the entry area on the first floor.

Entry and Stained Glass Window: Easter’s Home (August 2025) (CC BY 4.0) by Wesley Fryer

The story of the stained glass window deserves its own video and audio podcast to share it fully, but I’ll attempt to summarize from what I remember our pastor, John Cleghorn, sharing during our most recent tour on June 22, 2025. Emma-Ford Adams was a young girl in the Caldwell Congregation who died in November 2022 during the Spanish Flu pandemic. Her family commissioned this beautiful stained glass window, which beautifully filtered the outside sunlight into classrooms in the Caldwell education building for many years. It’s so special that this unique and important part of the history of the Caldwell family is preserved within Easter’s Home.

Stained Glass Window for Emma-Ford Adams in Easter’s Home (CC BY 4.0) by Wesley Fryer

Another important part of the story of Easter’s Home is the building’s history as a women’s shelter for women experiencing homelessness in 2013. The January 2023 Caldwell church newsletter shares some of that background. Caldwell member and elder, Jesca Yiskah-El, also highlighted that history in her testimony, sharing during our worship service on October 13, 2024. The Caldwell church community has been engaged in efforts to support and provide for those experiencing homelessness and hard times for many years, and those efforts continue today in the Easter’s Home project.

One sad footnote to this story of “storychasing” or documenting the renovation and construction of Easter’s Home regards some hand-drawn art and murals from the back stairwell of the Price Building. Back in May of 2025, members of our congregation took another short tour of Easter’s Home and Pastor John pointed out these inspirational works of stairwell art. I took two photographs of them at the time: “I Thought I Could” and “Ingredients for Success.” The artist depicted the journey of a caterpillar on its way to becoming a butterfly, making an analogy to the process of developing confidence and ability to escape poverty and homelessness.

I Thought I Could! – Stairwell Art in Easter’s Home (May 2025) (CC BY 4.0) by Wesley Fryer
Ingredients for Success – Stairwell Art in Easter’s Home (May 2025) (CC BY 4.0) by Wesley Fryer

Sadly, during our June 2025 tour of Easter’s Home, we discovered that the contractors had painted over these precious stairwell murals / art pieces. They had been specifically asked to PRESERVE them and not paint over them, but unfortunately sometimes instructions are not fully communicated and understood in renovation projects like this.

Painted Over Stairwell Art – Easter’s Home (CC BY 4.0) by Wesley Fryer

Perhaps this will become a sermon illustration down the road. Whether or not the stairwell art has been painted over, the STORIES, the HISTORY, and the ways the Price Building / Easter’s Home and the Caldwell Presbyterian Church community cannot ever be erased.

Shelly and I are thankful to be members of Caldwell and our “beloved community.” Truly we are striving to “build each other up in love – brick by brick.”

Our Beloved Community – Stewardship 2025 (CC BY 4.0) by Wesley Fryer

Ask for Signs and Directions!

These are some of my notes and “takeaways” from a sermon shared today on January 7, 2024, by Rev. Dorothy J. Killian at Caldwell Presbyterian Church in Charlotte, North Carolina. The sermon was titled, “Whose Star Are You Following?” and was live-streamed on YouTube and Facebook. It starts at the 44:00 minute mark if you’d like to view it yourself, and runs 16 minutes.

This Sunday is the celebration of the holiday of Epiphany, which in Christian traditions celebrates “the visit of the Magi, the baptism of Jesus, and the wedding at Cana.” Rev Killian reminded us that as a society and in our culture, “We also follow stars!” Whether pop stars like Taylor Swift of Beyoncé, or sports starts like NFL or NBA athletes, we often pay an undue amount of attention to these “stars.” However, it’s important to consider, “Where are those stars leading?” Who and what are these stars attempting to “point us to” in our lives? Where do these stars lead? By encouraging us to consider “Whose star we are following?” Rev Killian powerfully juxtaposed the sermon text from Matthew 2:1-12 with ominous headlines from contemporary news and popular culture.

“Whose star ⭐️ are you following?!” (CC BY 2.0) by Wesley Fryer

Rev Killian encouraged us to “NOT be afraid to ask for signs & directions.” We should be continually watchful for God, for He is present and at work all around us! We can see God in the beauty and wonder of His creation, but also in the ways we love and care for each other in this troubled world. God calls us to invite his Holy Spirit to provide us with directions for our lives, and he provides guidance when we seek Him in prayer, through Bible study, and through fellowship with other Christian followers of Jesus Christ.

Don’t be afraid to ask for signs & directions” (CC BY 2.0) by Wesley Fryer

Rev Killian received applause during her sermon when she pulled out an “old school” paper map, and reminded the congregation, “When we encounter the living God, we reset our GPS.” Whether we are using analog or digital tools to find our way in the world. encounters with God can have a powerful and positive re-directing and “re-orienting” influence on us. As an undergraduate geography major and someone who grew up learning about maps and orienteering in Boy Scouts as well as in Air Force survival training at the Air Force Academy, this analogy really resonated with me!

“When we encounter the living God, we reset our GPS” (CC BY 2.0) by Wesley Fryer

I also loved Rev Killian’s encouragement to “Look for God and listen for His voice.” For over 10 years now, I’ve been blessed to participate in “Spiritual Direction” with Curt Gruel, through HeartPaths OKC. Even after we moved to North Carolina in 2022, my monthly meetings with Curt have continued via Zoom! “Spiritual Direction” is all about “looking for God,” and meeting with a mentor who can help us identify, see, and interpret “God sightings” in our lives. This is an important message every day, but seems particularly appropriate as we start 2024 and a new calendar year with different ideas for resolutions and new habits to adopt.

Rev Killian’s final exhortations were to ask “Who are the ‘Herods’ in your life? Who is sowing fear in your journey of faith and life?” As I consider the ways I want to develop the “Heal Our Culture” project in the weeks and months ahead, these questions are both challenging and prescient. There are many voices on YouTube, in mainstream news, and in social media which encourage us to adopt a spirit of fear rather than an attitude of joy, hope, and abiding faith.

I want to follow the star of Jesus, and I’m thankful for these words of encouragement from Rev Killian today!

Sermon Points by Rev. Dorothy J. Killian” (CC BY 2.0) by Wesley Fryer