Area
Bookmark and Share text size: A A A

Wineka column: Bible, Methodist doctrines among items in capsule at Bethel United Methodist

Thursday, November 05, 2009 3:00 AM | Printer friendly version Printer friendly version | E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend |



Bill Gilland and Rev. Julie O'Neal , who is the current pastor at Bethel Methodist church, work to open the time capsule for people to take a look the contents. Photo by Jon C. Lakey, Salisbury Post.
Parishioners from Bethel United Methodist Church on Long Ferry Road removed a time capsule from behind the corner stone on the church on Sunday. The church building was built iin 1949 a metal box containing several items regarding the church were placed inside. 60 years later the church opened the box and then attended a cover dish dinner in the fellowship hall. Photo by Jon C. Lakey, Salisbury Post.
Bill Gilland gets some help lifting out the corner stone from on the Southeast corner of Bethel United Methodist Church on Long Ferry Road. A time capsule was placed in the wall after church building was built. Photo by Jon C. Lakey, Salisbury Post.
Parishioners from Bethel United Methodist Church on Long Ferry Road removed a time capsule from behind the corner stone on the church on Sunday. The church building was built iin 1949 a metal box containing several items regarding the church were placed inside. 60 years later the church opened the box and then attended a cover dish dinner in the fellowship hall. Photo by Jon C. Lakey, Salisbury Post.
This new Holy Bible shows signs of the passing of time while spending 60 years sealed in metal box behind the stone corner stone in the Southeast corner of Bethel United Methodist Church on Long Ferry Road. The time capsule was placed in the wall after church building was built. Photo by Jon C. Lakey, Salisbury Post.
A 1948 Methodist book of disipline was on of the items that spent 60 years sealed in metal box behind the stone corner stone in the Southeast corner of Bethel United Methodist Church on Long Ferry Road. The time capsule was placed in the wall after church building was built. Photo by Jon C. Lakey, Salisbury Post.
Church members watch the removal of the 1949 time capsule that was removed from behind the cornestone of Bethel United Methodist Church on Long Ferry Road. The time capsule was placed in the wall after church building was built. Photo by Jon C. Lakey, Salisbury Post.

DUKEVILLE — Bethel United Methodist Church qualifies as a country church.

On Sundays, its members park their cars along the driveway or completely in the grass.

Across from the front of the church is an open field. On the side, Dukeville Road stretches back to the Buck Steam Station, which after all these decades along the Yadkin River has a significant expansion under way.

Long Ferry Road seems to rise toward the brick church, built mostly by its members 60 years ago.

Duke Power donated the land for the new edifice back then, when most men in the congregation worked at the steam station or Spencer Shops.

To raise money for the new building, which cost about $45,000, the women of the church constantly cooked special meals, including oyster, chicken and Brunswick stews.

Bill, Bobby and Jim Gilland were youngsters then, living in a house just down the road from the church.

They helped in carrying brick and mortar during the church's construction. Bill recalls unloading a tractor-trailer load of brick from the Isenhour company in East Spencer.

The Gilland brothers were among the current and former members who celebrated the 125th anniversary of Bethel Methodist on Sunday and the 60-year anniversary of the church building.

It was All Saints Day at the church. Pastor Julie O'Neal gave the message, and the handbell choir — the Belles of Bethel — played special music.

At the end of the service, the congregation poured down the front steps to watch Bill Gilland, Larry Edwards and Bud McClamrock gently ease the 1949 cornerstone out of the building, so they could reach a "time capsule" planted there at the building's construction.

The capsule was really a modest, metal box bound together by duct tape. The box appeared as though it had been fashioned from left-over metal flashing, which had held up amazingly well.

The men asked for something to cut through the tape, and Bobby Gilland fished into his pants for his trusty pocketknife, which did the trick.

Pastor O'Neal and Bill Gilland sorted through the box, announcing their finds as they pulled out the items.

There was a Bible, of course — one of those zippered versions in a black cover. Next was a copy of the 1948 Doctrines and Disciplines of the Methodist Church.

"The discipline now is much, much bigger," someone mentioned.

The box also contained a list of Bethel church officers from 1948-49 and several copies of "The Christian Advocate." The last item was a photograph of District Methodist youth.

And that was it. Bill Gilland acknowledged he was a bit disappointed that the Bible included no inscription, message or words of wisdom for the present-day church.

Looking over the list of Bethel Church officers from then, Nancy McDaniel noticed her mother, the late Florence Welch, had been superintendent of the children's division. Her father, John, was a steward.

Ann Harris Mangum, who moved away from Dukeville when she was about 17 and now lives in the Lake Norman area, also looked for a mention of her parents, Margaret and Gilbert Harris.

Both Mangum and McDaniel were 5 years old when the church was built, and they had only vague memories of its construction. But their memories of growing up in Dukeville remain strong, as they relived their Tom Thumb weddings, a rhythm band, square dances and school.

"We got to do a lot, coming out of little, tiny Dukeville," Mangum said.

O'Neal ended the opening of the time capsule with a prayer, and the congregation set off for a big feed in the basement fellowship hall.

Before he joined the luncheon, Bill Gilland talked about attending the original church, which was located about a mile-and-a-half east on Long Ferry Road. The church cemetery is still there, but the congregation dismantled the 1884 structure and used its materials to build a house for somebody.

That old church cost $364 to construct, according to church records. It had two front doors and, after electricity was available, an exterior light in the middle. Inside, two woodstoves heated the building.

The men and women sat on opposite sides of the sanctuary on Sundays.

Wanda Gilland, Bill's wife, said discussions already have started about what to place in a new time capsule, which will go behind the cornerstone when it is put back in place.

Suggestions have included a 2009 penny, the annual budget, a list of church officers and a church directory, which includes photographs of all the members.

I would include an expansive exterior photograph of the church, as it looks from a distance on Long Ferry Road.

It makes you wonder. When that next time capsule is opened 60 or so years from now, will people still describe Bethel Methodist as a country church?

I hope so.




If you would like to subscribe to the Salisbury Post, click here.

Comments

Notice about comments:

Salisburypost.com is pleased to offer readers the ability to comment on stories. We expect our readers to engage in lively, yet civil discourse. Salisburypost.com cannot promise that readers will not occasionally find offensive or inaccurate comments posted in the comments area. Responsibility for the statements posted lies with the person submitting the comment, not Salisburypost.com. If you find a comment that is objectionable, please click "report abuse" and we will review it for possible removal. Please be reminded, however, that in accordance with our Terms of Use and federal law, we are under no obligation to remove any third party comments posted on our website.
DO NOT POST:
* Potentially libelous statements or damaging innuendo.
* Obscene, explicit, or racist language.
* Personal attacks, insults or threats.
* The use of another person's real name to disguise your identity.
* Comments unrelated to the story.

Full terms and conditions can be read here

Salisbury Post is proud to offer our users enhanced commenting features. You can now build user-to-user connections, follow friend's recent posts, add an avatar that fits your personality, and more.




Most Popular Stories
  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Forums
  • Blogs




  
Poll
What do you think of the legislature putting parts of Rowan County in three different congressional districts and two state Senate districts?
  • I like it; Rowan will have more members of Congress and the state Senate
  • I don't like it; it's hard enough to figure out who my congressman is
  • I don't care about politics, so it makes no difference to me



 
 
  
  
© 2011 Post Publishing Company, Inc. |