Peachtree Presbyterian Church 4.16

3434 Roswell Rd NW
Atlanta, GA 30305
United States

About Peachtree Presbyterian Church

Peachtree Presbyterian Church Peachtree Presbyterian Church is a well known place listed as Landmark in Atlanta , Presbyterian Church in Atlanta ,

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Peachtree Presbyterian Church is a large church located in Atlanta, GA. Peachtree averages about 3200 in weekly worship at two venues on both sides of Roswell Road in the Buckhead region of Atlanta, and is one of the largest Presbyterian congregations in the United States of America.Peachtree began as a Sunday school for children in Atlanta founded in 1910. The church itself was chartered on 3 November 1919. The original church was a gray granite building built in 1926 at the corner of Peachtree Road and Mathieson Drive. The congregation grew steadily, and moved to its present location at 3434 Roswell Road in the Buckhead area of Atlanta in May 1960, where the church campus now covers 26acre. In September 1999 the church opened a large, modern recreation center which includes two basketball courts. The Gym at Peachtree offers a range of fitness and recreational programs, which the church sees as an integral part of the ministry.By 1992 the church had the largest Presbyterian congregation in the US. The senior pastor at the time, Rev. W. Frank Harrington, grew the church from fewer than 3,000 members in 1971 to more than 11,000 at the time of his death in 1999. In 1992, Rev. Harrington was runner-up in the election for moderator of the then-2.9-million-member denomination. In 2000 Dr. Victor D. Pentz became Senior Pastor. Pentz, from Southern California, had varied experience before joining Peachtree, including a chaplaincy to the crew of three Space Shuttle launches at Cape Canaveral, running an evangelistic beach ministry to Southern California surfers and speaking at conferences around the world.Pentz and Peachtree are considered conservatives within the theological spectrum of the PC (USA); Pentz and several other leaders of evangelical PC (USA) churches have proposed setting up alternate structures for conservative congregations if a proposed amendment to the denomination's Book of Order passes permitting ordination of anyone other than practicing heterosexuals.