- St. John's Evangelical Lutheran Church (Corning, Missouri)
Infobox_nrhp | name =St. John's Evangelical Lutheran Church and Parochial School
nrhp_type =
caption = St. John's Evangelical Lutheran Church circa 1894
location=Corning, Missouri
lat_degrees = 40
lat_minutes = 14
lat_seconds = 52
lat_direction = N
long_degrees = 95
long_minutes = 27
long_seconds = 16
long_direction = W
locmapin = Missouri
area =
built =1893
architect= Rev. John Proft; Peter Thull
architecture= Gothic Revival, Other
added =January 4 2008
governing_body = Private
refnum=07001339cite web|url=http://www.nr.nps.gov/|title=National Register Information System|date=2008-04-15|work=National Register of Historic Places|publisher=National Park Service]St. John's Evangelical Lutheran Church is an historic
Lutheran church located at 112 Walters Street inCorning, Missouri . It was founded as a Confessional Church, adhering to the Unaltered Augsburg Confession. It is currently a member of theLutheran Church - Missouri Synod (LCMS).On
January 4 2008 , it was added to theNational Register of Historic Places as St. John's Evangelical Lutheran Church and Parochial School.History
The congregation was founded as the "Deutsch Evangelish Lutheraner St. Johannes" by German immigrants to Northwest
Missouri in the spring of 1860. This congregation built its first church structure, a wooden building nicknamed the "Church in the Timber," in October 1860 at Hemme's Landing next to theMissouri River , approximately two miles from Corning. By 1872, the congregation began outgrowing this structure and purchased the land in Corning on which the current structure now stands.The current brick building was constructed in 1893 by Pete Thull of
Rock Port, Missouri and has been in use ever since. The wooden, parochial, one-room schoolhouse was constructed behind the church in 1912. It held regular classes in German until 1917. The parish hall addition was constructed in 1953.The church survived damage inflicted in the Great Floods of 1951 and 1993.
Description
The current brick structure was designed in the
Latin cross design (complete withnarthex ,nave ,transept s, and choir) and with pointed-arch windows, both characteristic of churches in theGothic Revival style.The
stained glass windows were installed in 1943 and were made with blue glass fromCzechoslovakia . They depict various Judeo-Christian symbols, including theLuther rose , aneagle in a boiling cauldron (both symbols for St. John), acrown of thorns , athrone , aBible , and theArk of the Covenant (among others).The interior also houses the original hand-stenciled
pipe organ and three murals (one of Christ the Good Shepherd, one ofJesus preaching at theSea of Galilee , and one ofHeaven ). A white, woodenaltar -pulpit with a large hand-made representation of theKingdom of Heaven as it is described in theBook of Revelation rises 24 feet from the floor.References
External links
* [http://www.lcms.org/ca/www/locators/nchurches/c_detail.asp?C204705 LCMS congregation profile]
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