A historic Salt Lake City congregation sold its meetinghouse, downsized and moved into another church’s space — an increasingly familiar trend.
It’s not that God or the church is going away, Elsdon says. People are just not looking for a traditional experience.
Still, the Utah-based faith is not immune to the vagaries of real estate and population patterns. So, through the years, the hierarchy has had to sell or demolish many properties. Now, the church’s general policy, with some exceptions, he says, is to sell a property with a church on it, but either demolish the structure before it changes hands, or require the buyer to do so.
On Jan. 22, 1865, the Rev. Norman McLeod, a Congregationalist pastor in Denver, preached what is believed to be “the first gentile [non-Mormon] Christian sermon ever delivered in Utah.” The third home on Foothill, built in 1965, was where Kimes worshipped and reared her three children, after moving to Utah with her husband. It was a center for the nurse and her growing family that included everything — from camps and concerts to blood drives and Bible studies, from Sunday school and interfaith services to baby baptisms and funerals.
Australia Latest News, Australia Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Could legal homeless campgrounds work in Salt Lake City?Could legal homeless campgrounds be a policy fix to the proliferation of makeshift tent sites across Salt Lake City? Some policymakers, advo…
Read more »
Could legal homeless campgrounds work in Salt Lake City?Salt Lake City Mayor Erin Mendenhall says the campgrounds could be a useful tool as housing availability and shelter space dwindle but prefers the state and county take the lead on getting it done.
Read more »
Could legal homeless campgrounds work in Salt Lake City?The nonprofit Colorado Village Collaborative operates a program called Safe Space Outdoor Spaces in the Mile High City. It supplies a clean, safe area for Coloradans experiencing homelessness to leave their things and get a night’s sleep.
Read more »
Editorial: Salt Lake City politicians feud over homelessness, but whose problem is it to solve?Editorial Board: “Homelessness is a statewide problem, demanding statewide solutions and, more bluntly, access to the state’s bank account.”
Read more »
Salt Lake County approves property tax increase to fund library systemA property tax increase will cost an additional $30 per year for average Salt Lake County home worth $560,000.
Read more »