Title: George WashingtonÂ’s Church To Tear Down Memorial Honoring First President Source:
From The Trenches/World Events and the Bible URL Source:http://fromthetrenchesworldreport.c ... onoring-first-president/210683 Published:Oct 29, 2017 Author:WEB Post Date:2017-10-30 11:01:13 by Deckard Keywords:None Views:304 Comments:3
WEB Notes: I spent a little bit of time researching this and trying to find out what was so offensive in the plaque. Unless I am missing something this is not an attack on the Presidents of the past, but an attack on God
Currently, simple stone memorials stand on either side of the alter in the church, honoring Washington and Lee. The memorials are engraved with gold lettering that say, In memory of George Washington. and In memory of Robert Edward Lee.Those plaques are now coming down, church officials have announced.
The article above and below both state the memorials in question are on either side of the alter and the article below details it is attached to the wall. Note the images below of the church and the memorials on the back of the wall.
I could not find the quote engraved myself if these are in fact the memorials in question.
Further when we zoom in we can see that the monuments are simply the Ten Commandments and what is commonly called The Lords Prayer.
If they are taking down these so called memorials because Washington and Lee at etched into it someplace this is an absolutely horrible abomination and an excuse to remove a bit more of God from the church.
Christ Church Alexandria The Ten Commandments
Christ Church Alexandria The Lords Prayer
George Washington was one of the founding members of Christ Church in Alexandria, buying pew No. 5 when the church first opened in 1773, and attending for more than two decades.
This week the church announced it was pulling down a memorial to its one-time vestryman and the countrys first president, saying he and another famous parishioner, Robert E. Lee, have become too controversial and are chasing away would-be parishioners.
While acknowledging friction over the decision, the churchs leadership said the twin memorials, which are attached to the wall on either side of the altar, are relics of another era and have no business in a church that proclaims its motto as All are welcome no exceptions.
The plaques in our sanctuary make some in our presence feel unsafe or unwelcome. Some visitors and guests who worship with us choose not to return because they receive an unintended message from the prominent presence of the plaques, the church leaders said.
Every record has been destroyed or falsified, every book rewritten, every picture has been repainted, every statue and street building has been renamed, every date has been altered. And the process is continuing day by day and minute by minute. History has stopped. Nothing exists except an endless present in which the Party is always right.
George Washington was one of the founding members of Christ Church in Alexandria, buying pew No. 5 when the church first opened in 1773, and attending for more than two decades.
They have the box pews there. During that era, families were expected to buy their own pews and support the church. And to be in those pews every Sunday, rain or shine.
This practice of selling pews to families raised a few controversies over the years. I knew a woman who was a member of a Free Methodist congregation. What is a Free Methodist? Historically, they opposed the sale of pews in Methodist churches and split off from the main Methodist denomination over that issue.
Today the Free Methodists have fewer than 100,000 members.
The name "Methodist" was retained for the newly organized church because the founders felt that their misfortunes (expulsion from the Methodist Episcopal Church) had come to them because of their adherence to doctrines and standards of Methodism. The word "Free" was suggested and adopted because the new church was to be an anti-slavery church (slavery was an issue in those days), because pews in the churches were to be free to all rather than sold or rented (as was common), and because the new church hoped for the freedom of the Holy Spirit in the services rather than a stifling formality.[6] However, according to World Book Encyclopedia, the third principle was "freedom" from secret and oathbound societies (in particular the Freemasons).