Activist D.C. Church Embraces Transition in Name of Its Mission – washingtonpost.com

Here’s the link to the article that was linked in the post I echoed below about COS

Activist D.C. Church Embraces Transition in Name of Its Mission – washingtonpost.com

  Scott Hedges of Arlington County talks with Gordon Cosby, right, after Cosby's final sermon at Church of the Saviour.

Scott Hedges of Arlington County talks with Gordon Cosby, right, after Cosby’s final sermon at Church of the Saviour. (Photos By Kevin Clark — The Washington Post)

Gordon Cosby shares his final sermon at the Church of the Saviour. Cosby founded the organization and has pressed it to break into small faith "communities" with independent social justice goals and worship services.

Gordon Cosby shares his final sermon at the Church of the Saviour. Cosby founded the organization and has pressed it to break into small faith “communities” with independent social justice goals and worship services. (By Kevin Clark — The Washington Post)

The Church of the Saviour is based at 2025 Massachusetts Ave. NW in Dupont Circle. Members call the headquarters "2025."

The Church of the Saviour is based at 2025 Massachusetts Ave. NW in Dupont Circle. Members call the headquarters “2025.” (Kevin Clark – The Washington Post)

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The Church of the Saviour was never a conventional church. It has no pews, no Sunday school, not even a Christmas service. Instead, for 60 years this small, unusual group based in Northwest Washington has quietly fueled a revolution in faith-based activism.

Activist D.C. Church Embraces Transition in Name of Its Mission – washingtonpost.com

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