"The focus was really on the Americans coming here and then the Church expanded its ministry to all foreigners. We have a 90-year old member with a Lebanese background who has been part of the congregation for at least 75 years. But we also minister to local people. In fact, about 60 to 70 percent of the congregation are now either Filipinos or Filipino-Chinese," said Carol Aronis, wife of UCM Pastor, Rev. Dr. Alex Aronis. Carol was also director of UCMs womens discipleship.
The original Padre Faura building, however, didnt survive World War II. After the war, the people of Union Church took on the near-impossible task of rehabilitating the ravaged church building. With funds pouring from everywhere, the renovated building was as lovely as it was the first time it rose from the ground in 1907.
In 1958, it was unavoidable for UCM to look for a new site with the steady rise in its membership and the crowding of the Ermita area. The booming Makati district was also too attractive to resist.
The congregation decided to sell the Buendia property and sign a 50-year lease on a piece of land in Legaspi Village to build a new church. The church was a study in good design. From the imagination of Architect Jose Zaragoza who created a "salakot" style roof, the church immediately disinguished itself from the business skyline of Makati. The uniquely designed building served the congregation until 1999, when the congregation acted gain to ensure the propagation of the church into the next century.
The need for a permanent home started to manifest itself in 1994 when the congregation saw the halfway mark of the churchs 50-year lease approaching. The thought that after another 25 years, the UCM will be without either a church or land did not appeal to the congregation. Also, the law preventing ownership of land by foreigners was becoming moot because UCM membership at the time was more than 50 percent Filipino. The congregation decided to formulate a course of action that would give the UCM a permanent abode of worship.
The UCM held their services at the Equitable PCIBank theater while their church was being constructed. Midway through the construction, on Dec. 14, 2000, a banquet was held to raise money for the outfitting and interior requirements of the church. These werent included in the agreement with the Ayalas. The goal of P45 million was surpassed, and contributions continued to come in even after the fund raising period.
"We now have P64 million in the bank and this came from contributions between P100 to P5 million. The P100 person is just as important to us as the P5 million person," Carol said.
"I know the stories (behind these contributions) and they are beautiful. We see people coming in with great sacrifices, she added."
Finally on Nov. 4, 2001, the congregation moved into their new and permanent home. The formal dedication of the building was held on Dec. 9, 2001.
Now the UCM is more visible than ever because it now resides in a brand new building. The new structure boasts twice the usable space of the previous one, a sanctuary with a seating capacity of 800, several levesl that house facilities like a multi-purpose gymnasium, spacious fellowship areas, a resource center, a sala, chapel, a music practice room, administrative and pastoral offices, conference rooms, a library, and a kitchen among others. All of these are housed in a modern design that derives its aesthetic beauty from its simplicity.
"Going beyond the visions and dreams for their building and seeing it become a reality was the greatest challenge faced by a congregation. By Gods grace, we met the challenge," Carol said.