Sunday, July 26, 2009

House of Worship








This one-room chapel stands on a forest knoll in western North Carolina. Though only a short distance from the highway, it's invisibly isolated above it among ferns, trees and mountain laurel. It can be reached only by walking up a steep trail. Built around 1872 and made of hand-hewn poplar with hand-pressed glass window panes, until recently it was solidly monochromatic, with weathered, unpainted wood, but the soffit and fascia have been replaced in the last year. The austere lines are very appealing to me. Even a headstone on the grounds reflects the triangular pediments, all pointing toward heaven. Though the hard pews seem uninviting, there's an uncompromising integrity throughout that reflects the sensibility of the settlers who built it. The site, the sunlight through green, the wildlife all around - it's a place that inspires reverence.

5 comments:

  1. Is it maintained by a historical society or still used? Reminds me of one I saw up in the Smokey Mountains a long time ago.

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  2. I think it's private property, and that the owners maintain it. I know they recently let the local historical society meet there, so kudos to them for sharing this treasure.

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  3. I really like the framing of the windows inside matching the exterior. And like you said, the headstone. Very interesting.

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  4. The repeated triangles are beautiful. Do you think they refer to the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost? Or is that only in the Catholic faith?

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  5. I think it's most likely that the triangles refer to classical Greek architecture, but everything about this building seems deliberate. Yeah, given the context, I do think it's about the Trinity.

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