Here, in the entertainment district of Irving, a once-ordinary commercial building has become a landmark built on something rarer than glass and steel: shared intention.
Inside, everything is “designed to help you.”
What emerges in Destination: Scientology, Dallas—the Scientology Network travel series episode that takes viewers inside this Church—is a portrait of a metroplex where independence meets uplift, and where Texans’ famous can-do spirit finds a spiritual home. In a region defined by expansion and what staffer Monique Davison calls “the Texas swagger,” the Dallas Church is framed as a calm in the storm—a place where uncertainty, family pressures and even a deadly fentanyl crisis meet practical solutions and a community determined to stand its ground together.
Viewers see how longtime Scientologists Hildegard and Byrd Jessup “shopped quite a few buildings” before rallying parishioners in a shoulder-to-shoulder effort that turned the most architecturally interesting structure they’d found into “a really big beautiful Church.” Inside, everything is “designed to help you,” Davison says—from a vast Public Information Center to courses that, as photographer Holt Haynsworth notes, deliver exactly what they promise and give him “a calm in the storm” he can carry into his work and family life.
Leatherworker Ed Davison recalls growing up picked-on and miserable before Scientology helped him discover he was the source of his own happiness—a vital change that led to “a happy, long, loving marriage,” a thriving career and the ability, as he puts it, to face any problem squarely—“just look at it, see the truth, the simplicity, and deal with what comes up.” Beyond its walls, the Church is an “essential member” of Irving’s interfaith alliance and a driving force behind the Truth About Drugs campaign, which city leaders call crucial in confronting fentanyl in North Texas.
In a place where a cabin became a trading post and a trading post became a city, Destination: Scientology, Dallas reveals another Texas-scale transformation: A hillside Church where Dallas’ motto—“live large and think big”—now means lifting neighbors, families and futures.
Watch the episode and see how, in the heart of the metroplex, Texas swagger finds its still point—and its purpose.