This is the second pipe organ in the church's 100+ year history. The first, Austin Opus 390 (1912), was damaged during the late 1950's as it waited for reinstallation in the church's new sanctuary. It was succeeded by a series of electronics. The new organ project was initiated in 1999. Two builders, Steve Hanson and Rick England, designed and built the organ with the assistance of family, friends, and volunteers from the church. The instrument is based on materials acquired through the purchase of two three-manual organs, a 29-rank original 1923 Tellers-Kent, and a much rebuilt Midmer and Son organ (1906), which contained recent pipework by Stinkens, Gebruder Kass, and A.R. Schopp's sons. A four-manual console by Casavant (1974) was donated to the project by another Southern California church.
All chests were stripped to their wood frames, rebuilt using new electro-mechanical components and an expanded bottom board system. Wind regulators were rebuilt with new tops, new oak spring rails, and new springs. Although the majority of the pipework is from the first quarter of the 20th century, a new façade of flamed copper contains the basses of the Grand-Orgue Violon16' and the Montre 8'. Unusual features of the organ are its full-compass celeste stops, a 49-bar Liberty Harp, and unison-only couplers. Each division except the Pédale has a unison-off coupler and is able to couple to most of the other manuals, thus enabling the reconfiguration of the console for convenient performance of French symphonic literature. The organ was voiced by Steuart Goodwin and Wendell Balantyne.