Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Nyesville Full Gospel Fellow Ship

The other day we took a short drive....this is taken the same day as the mule in the previous post. And probably no more than 5 or 10 minutes of slow driving apart.
I love seeing little country churches taken care of, and always wonder how they started. Was it started at what once was a small town/village or was it built in central location for the congregation.

Also, did anyone notice the way fellowship is spelled as two separate words in the sign?
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We are off to an appointment in Indy after while....so I may not get to visit everyone till later.

9 comments:

  1. I'm with you about little country churches...they fascinate me.

    Funny wording...but some folks think of the church as a ship in the sea of life so maybe it was deliberate: fellow ship.

    Either that or they need to get "Sign Spell-check."

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  2. A good "find" to shot. I like the full church view and the sign with the interesting spelling. It must be deliberate... would be my guess. Fine shots.

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  3. What a sweet little country Church. Funny, we both posted 'country churches' today. Quaint and beautiful. It just goes to show you don't need a fancy place to visit god.

    I am with you on the blogging bit. I am first interested in the pictures, sometimes the prose and sometimes not. MB

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  4. I wonder the same thing about some churches. We have a few out in the middle of nowhere but I guess they were once equidistant from several communities, none of which were large enough for its own church. This one is very pretty with it's white siding and red roofs.

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  5. Old wooden country churches are my favorite. I like the red accents and the windows are in my mind perfect church windows.
    I agree with Jacob on the spelling and it makes me think of the hymn Let The Lower Lights Be Burning - "send a gleam across the way, some poor fainting struggling seaman you may rescue,you may save."

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  6. This is a beautiful country church. Is there a village or town nearby? Perhaps some of the churches were located in a central location for the congregation. I did notice the spelling of 'fellow ship'.

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  7. Oh how gorgeous, Rose. I love seeing old country churches---especially when they are so well-taken-care-of like this one. Beautiful!!!!

    Wonder why/who spelled Fellow Ship??? Maybe there was a good reason?????

    Hope you have had a wonderful day with Bright Eyes.
    Hugs,
    Betsy

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  8. It's funny, my husband drove over the road for a few years and when I would go with him I always tried getting snapshots of little churches we would pass. Living in southeastern Iowa, we have many small township churches that have closed, but are still standing. I also get a kick out of small town post offices- some of those are the cutest, littlest buildings!

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