Historic Church Serves Big City explores what a small congregation can do with the blend of developmental leadership and societal needs within their own backyard. Each chapter traces specific historical needs in Denver that were addressed with educational or healthcare solutions. The book also reveals the interweaving of the church’s internal spiritual nurturing melded with the external vocation of the church at work in the world. "Phyllis has given us a unique insight into a unique congregation which still plays an important role in Denver today. The book is full of the wonderful characters who have played such important roles in its history, especially The Order of the Holy Family." --William Frey, Episcopal Bishop of Colorado, 1973-1990 "Phyllis Kester's book comes out of years of dedicated research and a love for St. Andrew's Episcopal Church and its compassionate response to God's call to service in Denver. It is a testimony to the gospel imperative to serve the poor by a congregation steeped in the values and practices of the nineteenth-century Anglo-Catholic movement in England." --John Wengrovius, Colorado Episcopal Church historian "To know St. Andrew's is to understand the heart and soul of the ideal Episcopal Church. The people of St. Andrew's not only pray together but live out their faith as evidenced through their actions over the course of their history." --James Jeffrey, Denver church historian "St. Andrew's Episcopal Church is a small church with a huge history. It is a treasure that has evolved into a core city sanctuary. This is a church that practices what it teaches!" --Thomas Noel, Professor of History, University of Colorado Phyllis Kester is a lifelong freelance writer with a degree in journalism. During the past decade, she has focused on church history. She has served in lay leadership positions in six mainstream Protestant congregations over her lifetime. Her writing reflects her perspective of commonalities across denominational lines of what it means to be the church at work in the world.