Washing the Disciples' Feet

Washing the Disciples' Feet
Author: George G. Suggs Jr.
Publisher: iUniverse
Total Pages: 118
Release: 2011-08-09
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1462041256

Washing the Disciples' Feet is a book of reflections upon my growing-up experiences in the White Oak Original Free Will Baptist Church in Bladenboro, North Carolina. As a teenager whose immediate and extended family provided not only the congregation's majority membership but also the leadership from the founding of the church until my departure for military service, I was positioned to observe, participate and, especially, to be influenced by church doctrine and practices, by church leaders and influential members, and by the general harmony and occasional conflict that occurred among its members. Like dozens of other young people--principally my cousins--whose families dominated the congregation, White Oak Church was instrumental in shaping my character as it did theirs. Through vignettes concerning life in the church during my youth, this book is intended to pay tribute to past members of a religious institution that continues to thrive though in a different age.

White Oak Pond

White Oak Pond
Author: Judith Kay Smith Cunningham
Publisher:
Total Pages: 475
Release: 2000
Genre: Cemeteries
ISBN:

Includes a reading of the cemetery belonging to White Oak Pond Cumberland Presbyterian Church, historical materials on the community and obituaries and biographical sources on individuals.

Greensboro's First Presbyterian Church Cemetery

Greensboro's First Presbyterian Church Cemetery
Author: Carol Moore
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing
Total Pages: 134
Release: 2006
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780738543109

Historic First Presbyterian Church Cemetery was established in 1831 and over time has survived vandalism, storms, an earthquake, and threats of removal. It is a lasting remembrance to the early citizens of Greensboro who carved a city out of the wilderness. Originally the cemetery was located on the edge of town, but because of Greensboro's growth, it is now nestled in the center of the cultural district behind the Greensboro Historical Museum. Those buried in the cemetery are from all walks of life-from wealthy to poor, those with doctorate degrees to the illiterate, the famous to those whose names are lost for all time, the newborn to the centenarian, the saint to the sinner, and the slave owner to the abolitionist. The early builders of the city and state and veterans of four wars now rest in the First Presbyterian Church Cemetery.