Sharing God’s Love, Welcome, and Justice

On our Corner, in Our City, and in the World

Join us for Worship every Sunday at 11:00 AM

1751 Sacramento St, San Francisco | Free Parking | Kid Friendly |  Get Directions  

       Join us in our weekly worship and service 

Click here for online streaming worship

Click here for Sunday's bulletin

Click here for a recommended daily devotional guide - D365


Click here to sign up for food bank

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We Choose Welcome

Old First Presbyterian Church enthuiastically invites all people into  our community!

This church was the first Protestant congregation established on the west coast of the U.S. during the gold rush.  And we are  proud now to continue sharing Christ's love, justice, and welcome to modern seekers who arrive in San Francisco now 175 years later. We have taken a leadership role both locally and nationally welcoming LGBTQIA+ Christians into full participation in the life and leadership of the Presbyterian Church. We strive to bring hope, joy and justice reaching out to people of all ethnicities, incomes, races, and life situations, and like Jesus, we always try to offer a smile and welcome the outcasts.

We hope you will come visit and consider becoming part of our community. We want to know you and share your own particular gifts, experience, and insights with us on our corner, in our city, and in our world.

Old First Presbyterian Church is an Open and Affirming Church

Donate to Old First here 

Volunteer for Old First here

Worship & Music

We worship every Sunday at 11:00 am both in person in our beautiful sanctuary and on line via YouTube livestream. We celebrate communion on the third Sunday of the month. Worship is our joyful praise and thanks to God - our celebration of God's Love.

We have a wonderful choir singing a mixture of classical and modern music and singers are always welcome.  Our organ is one of the most renowned in the city.  We founded and support an amazing variety of new artists each week in our Old First Concerts programs.  

Service

Bringing God's love,  welcome,  justice, in our neighborhood, city and world and working to make the world a better place for all are important to us. We are a founding member of the weekly interfaith food pantry every Saturday and host a free community meal on the 4th Saturday of each month. We work with many local, national, and international groups to promote racial justice, LGBTQ+ equality, and other human rights, to end gun violence, and to help immigrants.

We feed the hungry, comfort the afflicted, and work for justice. We always need volunteers to help with all of these projects.

Learn More

Education

We believe that learning and growth are important for all ages. We offer regular book studies, Bible studies, theological discussions, and topical classes for adults on issues important in our culture.  Small groups meet on Zoom and in members' homes for study and support. We make time and space for children in worship and offer regular, broadly graded children's church school every 1st and 3nd Sundy. We also have excellent childrens' and adults' libraries.

We love to read and support the Little Free Library on Sacramento Street.  Bring you books to share with the community. 

We PC(USA) folks are part of wider church. I am thankful for those connections that speak for us all when I do not have the words. A statement like the one below keeps my heart open to hope and justice. -Maggi

Statement on the US Detention of Refugees

Scripture calls us to welcome the stranger and protect the vulnerable, and to honor the dignity of those who seek refuge among us.

The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) Office of Public Witness is deeply concerned by reports that refugees who have been lawfully admitted to the United States are being detained. Families who have already been welcomed into safety and passed extensive screening should not be uprooted again, separated from the communities supporting them, or made to live under renewed fear and uncertainty. Scripture calls us to welcome the stranger and protect the vulnerable, and to honor the dignity of those who seek refuge among us. We believe our nation must not undo the safety it has already promised, but instead uphold justice, compassion, and the rule of law for our newest neighbors.

On January 9, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services announced Operation “Post-Admission Refugee Reverification and Integrity Strengthening” (PARRIS), which reopens and intensively re-examines certain refugee cases after resettlement. The operation’s initial focus is reported to be approximately 5,600 refugees in Minnesota who remain in refugee status while awaiting green cards. In recent days, refugee-serving organizations have reported that refugees, including children, have been detained, with limited public information about the standards being applied, the scope of enforcement, or the due process protections available.

This is not a routine administrative review. It is a sweeping action that undermines the promise of protection the United States makes when it resettles refugees. It is unjust to detain people who are here legally, and it is especially cruel to subject families to detention and secrecy after they have already survived persecution and displacement.

Just as importantly, these actions risk communicating to the world and to refugee communities that the United States will not honor the protection it has promised. They reflect a deeply troubling and cold-hearted turn toward a refugee policy shaped more by suspicion than by compassion, and they weaken the moral credibility of our nation’s commitment to welcome those who have fled persecution.

The United States has made binding commitments under international law to protect refugees; this operation contradicts those commitments.

Our denomination’s stance is clear and longstanding. Presbyterians have repeatedly affirmed the call to welcome refugees, to support their resettlement, to seek family reunification, and to oppose policies that endanger refugees or return them involuntarily to harm. Across decades of General Assembly action, the PC(USA) and our predecessor denominations have urged the United States to uphold humane refugee policy, uphold the rule of law, and resist cruelty and discrimination.

The Office of Public Witness calls on the administration to:

  1. Immediately halt detentions of lawfully resettled refugees connected to Operation PARRIS
  2. Guarantee due process, including access to legal counsel and clear, timely procedures
  3. Provide transparency about the legal authority, criteria, and implementation of this operation
  4. Protect family unity and ensure refugees are not isolated from their communities and sponsors
  5. Reaffirm the U.S. commitment to refugee protection, rather than weakening it through fear-based enforcement

We urge Congress to conduct immediate oversight, demand public answers, and ensure that refugee policy is carried out humanely and lawfully.

We call on Presbyterians and people of faith to continue to stand with refugees, support resettlement communities, and live out Christ’s call to love our neighbors. In this moment, we urge our nation to choose welcome over suspicion, truth over secrecy, and hope over fear.

What's Happening at Old First

February 1

Annual Meeting of

Old First Congregation

Old First Presbyterian Church will hold its Annual Meeting to elect new elders and deacons to serve the church, to hear an overview of our budget for 2026, and to approve the pastor’s compensation package. The Presbyterian form of government gives all important decisions like choice of officers and the pastor's compensation for the entire congregation to review and approve.  Please plan to attend and participate in this governance of your church next Sunday, February 1 at the end of our 11:00 am worship service.  The meeting will be brief, but essential.

February 15

Cooking for

the Interfaith Winter Shelter

These cold and rainy nights in San Francisco are difficult for those in our city who are unhoused. Each winter, faith communities come together to provide warmth, shelter and food to those who need it.  Old First will be preparing and delivering the meal for the Interfaith Winter Shelter to be held at St Mark’s Lutheran Church on Sunday, February 15. To learn more about how and when you can help, click below to contact Courtney Blake, Randy Smith or Andrea Segura Smith who will coordinate our effort.

Click here to help with winter shelter

February 18 - April 2

The Season of Lent Begins

Ash Wednesday 

The liturgical season of Lent begins on Ash Wednesday, February 18. Lent is a 40-day solemn Christian season of prayer, fasting, and giving, representing Jesus's time in the wilderness. Beginning on Ash Wednesday and lasting until Easter, it is a period of repentance and spiritual preparation for the resurrection of Jesus. Old First will have special worship services and devotional materials for us to use during this holy season.  Watch for more information.