Comfort taking over in church
Perrysburg, Ohio ? Laurie Wuerfel and her two young sons slipped their coffee and hot chocolate into the cupholders, eased into cushioned chairs and waited for the sermon to start.
âÂÂWho wants to sit in church if youâÂÂre uncomfortable,â said Wuerfel as she sat in the burgundy theater-style seats at CedarCreek Church in suburban Toledo. âÂÂI grew up in a Catholic church, and I hated sitting on those benches.âÂÂ
Some denominations are increasingly moving away from rigid, wooden pews that have been around for centuries, manufacturers say. Chairs with cupholders, and plenty of space and padding are finding their way into churches where clergy say the seat can be as important as the message.
âÂÂFor many first-timers, the only way they make contact with the church is on their behind,â said Steve Korn, a teaching pastor at CedarCreek, a non-denominational Christian church. âÂÂIf theyâÂÂre comfortable, like the service and the building, theyâÂÂll probably come back.âÂÂ
The 1,400 seats in the churchâÂÂs 2-month-old building have 4-inch padding and cupholders.
Mike Wedel, president of Garnett Church Furnishings, which has been making pews since 1879 in Garnett, Kan., said pews also have been getting wider and more comfortable in recent years.
âÂÂI donâÂÂt know if itâÂÂs because rumps have gotten bigger or because of the demand for more comfort,â he said.
Theater-style seats are popular in large, new Christian churches, southern Baptist churches and synagogues, said Les Lundberg, worship sales manager for Irwin Seating Co.
Still, some denominations Ãi¿½” such as the Roman Catholic church Ãi¿½” prefer traditional pews, said Lundberg and other seat makers.
In early churches through medieval times, worshippers stood throughout services, said Duncan Stroik, an associate professor of architecture at Notre Dame University. Pews began appearing as sermons lengthened.
Stroik said the current trend of theater-style seating is a throwback to a movement in the mid-19th century, when Protestant churches in America modeled their buildings after theaters with sloping floors and individual seats.
Within a few decades, churches and architects wanted to return to a more traditional look and began designing simpler worship buildings.
The new boom in comfortable church seats has coincided with the growth in the past decade of mega-churches that seat thousands.
âÂÂThe theater has become the model again,â Stroik said.
Irwin Seating, one of the worldâÂÂs biggest seat makers, jumped into church seating within the last year after installing seats in places such as Carnegie Hall in New York and Atlanta Motor Speedway.
âÂÂWe expect weâÂÂll double our business in the next five years,â Lundberg said. The Grand Rapids, Mich.-based company, which only installs the theater-style seats, now works on up to 15 church projects a month, he said.
Part of the strategy of putting comfortable seats in churches is to attract those who may have been turned off by traditional denominations.
âÂÂTheyâÂÂre almost looking for a non-church look,â Lundberg said.
The company is hoping to expand its reach into denominations such as the Roman Catholic church.
âÂÂWeâÂÂre never going to sell there until we develop a kneeler option,â Lundberg said. âÂÂWhat you fight is really tradition.âÂÂ
Sauder Manufacturing of Archbold, Ohio, which says it is the nationâÂÂs largest maker of church pews, says its sales have increased over the past two years.
SauderâÂÂs designers and engineers work on making church pews that retain a traditional look while still providing comfort.
Leaders at Montgomery Community Baptist Church near Cincinnati decided on a compromise when building a new sanctuary in 1998 Ãi¿½” wooden pews with individual padding, made by Sauder.
âÂÂYou still see pews when you walk in from the back of the room,â said building supervisor John Sedziol. âÂÂFor some people, thatâÂÂs important.âÂÂ
St. MaryâÂÂs Roman Catholic Church in Auburn, N.Y., chose wooden pews without padding during a renovation in 1997.
Church leaders wanted the pews to retain the traditional look inside the sanctuary but didnâÂÂt want padding because they were worried it would muffle voices. The pews are better designed than older pews and provide better back support, said the Rev. Robert Schrader.
âÂÂIâÂÂve sat in churches where sometimes you canâÂÂt get comfortable no matter what you do,â Schrader said.

