
Zen Monday is the day you experience the photo and give us your thoughts rather than me telling you what I think the photo's about. But this is Zen Tuesday so the rules are even fewer and farther between.
Say what comes to mind. That's what we're here for today.
A ready made merchandising opportunity, just add a cross or whatever.
ReplyDeletePrice is a tad steeple.
ReplyDeleteIt makes me sad to see the sold note for that wonderful church. Where are all the believers who could visit it?
ReplyDeleteIt seem to me that church building are being on sale.
ReplyDeleteRedemption for sale inquire within.
ReplyDeleteI wonder if the pastor made a deal with the 'devil'?
ReplyDeleteI wonder how long into his career it took Patrick to get to list a church!
ReplyDelete"Built in '50s but used only once a week since then."
ReplyDeleteI have always wanted to live in a house with its own belltower.
ReplyDeleteI wonder if this would do as a location shot for the re-make of ''Acrophobia''?
ReplyDeleteStick 'em up!
ReplyDeleteWant to start your own religion? Buy the building, and the followers will come.
ReplyDeleteChurch sells church building for church. Will he have to tithe 10% of his commission?
ReplyDeleteI should just do this every day. You guys don't need me.
ReplyDeleteI always wanted to live in a building that wasn't meant to be a house. I wonder if you could do that here. It's in a residential area (Villa at Craig), not far from the freeway and convenient to In 'n Out Burger.
J+P: oog. Just remember, you started it.
ReplyDeleteI want to buy it and host Pie Night there. The surest, most fulfilling road to piety.
Better yet, we could all chip in and open a pie shop named "Pie-Us."
If you wanted to turn it into a house, you'd have to deconsecrate it first by stabling horses in it for a day or two.
ReplyDeleteThe architect must have lost all his fingers.
ReplyDeleteWonder what it will become?
ReplyDeleteIf it becomes Pie-Us, maybe it'll get raptured, horses and all.
ReplyDeleteBut as is sometimes the case, Cliff has lost me with the fingers.
Here's the church, here's the steeple...
ReplyDelete:-D
That's a little Byzantine, Cliff.
ReplyDelete(… waiting for it …)
(Hello? You all asleep?)
J+P soared to the loftiest heights. Good post, P.
ReplyDeleteVW: tomor
To more (of such) tomorrow.
Merci, Tash.
ReplyDeleteOK, I'll drop the dime—it's less Byzantine than New England Traditional.
ReplyDelete… what, is a rimshot sacrilege? (I thought this was the architect's convention …)
In Vaneta Oregon there's an old church that was converted to a restaurant...they call it Our Daily Bread...(they did a tasteful job...and the food's quite good!)
ReplyDeleteChieftess, you reminded me of the church that's a house on Silverlake Blvd.
ReplyDeleteNo, I'm pretty certain it was Byzantine...
ReplyDeleteIs God included in the deal?
ReplyDeleteIf I buy the church does it come with God inside?
Dina...God comes inside, outside and all around the house, whether we buy it or not!!!
ReplyDeleteQuite a coincidence that someone just sent me these pics of an old church in England converted to a home... thought you all might find it interesting...
ReplyDeletehttp://mybirdie.ca/files/84ddb39e922dbb92bff867301e173243-8184.php
Chieftess, I love that. They even got the graveyard! And you really can't beat the bathroom.
ReplyDeleteShalom The Chieftess. OK, good deal!
ReplyDelete