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HomeMy WebLinkAboutX2023-006-015yy- Hallowed Shrines Salem Church, pictured on the cover, is one of hundreds of rural churches built in Canada in the last century. Situated on a side - road in'Castern Ontario's Bay of.Quinte Conference, it has not had regular services for 90 years. Built of wood in 1849, Salem was originally a chapel of the Wesleyans, the largest Methodist group in Canada. The'work was done by members of the congregation. The accounts were kept in pounds, shillings and pence.,: the currency of the time. It was representative of Canada's rural churches when Canada became a nation in 1867. The fabric was bricked over in 1880. Ten years later the church was closed, and its members transferred to another church. Since then it has been lovingly tended and cared for. A commemorative service is held in it every year. The cemetery with its distinctive gravestones tells of those who found- ed the church. Most of them came from Ireland, driven out by the Potato Famine of 1845-47. As refugees from privation and hunger, they found CAada a land of new opportunity and hope, as have thousands from many different codr teies in our own time. Rural churches like this would likely have anyone of a dozen favourite Biblical names — Shiloh, Ebenezer, Pisgah, Sharon, Bethesda, Bethany and Olivet. Perhaps most of them have now been closed and torn down. In many cases their sites have been forgotten. Upon a township map I saw Mount Carmel's sacred name, Salem,., Bethel, Zion, too, each -!one -of Seriptaral fame, „ They mark the little churches"sites where through the passing years The faith that grew in Palestinetwas giv'n to Western ears. These shrines of the past are unfamiliar to many people to -day. Small and commonplace as they were, they mayje a mighty contribution to the moral and spiritual development of Canada,. It is well that some of them, like Salem, should�be preserved., to remind us of our past and the way by which we have come.. Photo Credit. Kenneth'A. Moyer .