Difference between revisions of "Bethany Christian Fellowship, Indianapolis, IN"

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(Created page with "There have been Brethren in the Indianapolis area since as early as 1878 with the exclusives, and as early as 1890 for the opens, with a total of at least 11 different assembl...")
 
 
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There have been Brethren in the Indianapolis area since as early as 1878 with the exclusives, and as early as 1890 for the opens, with a total of at least 11 different assemblies within the CSA. Bethany Christian Fellowship is the oldest open assembly within the metro, founded in 1915 by likely Dan Robertson, who also started a short-lived assembly in the neighborhood of [[Gibson Assembly, IN|Gibson]] in 1917 that met thru at least 1922.
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There have been Brethren in the Indianapolis area since as early as 1878 with the exclusives, and as early as 1890 for the opens, with a total of at least 11 different assemblies within the CSA. Bethany Christian Fellowship is the oldest open assembly within the metro, founded in 1915 by likely Dan Robertson, who also started a short-lived assembly in the neighborhood of [[Gibson Assembly, IN|Gibson]] in 1917 that met thru at least 1922.
  
The earliest location for BCF was at 328 N. Euclid Ave., where it met +1926-1927+, when according to the [https://omeka.religiousecologies.org/files/original/65888768f66b877a6a5f218a6d3d69931a2d5490.jpg 1926 USCoRB], there were 9 in fellowship (5 men, 4 women) including 1 S.S. teacher presiding over 10 children (for a total of 19). The Hall was a rented facility (with $187 in annual expenses), and $80 was additionally spent towards the Lord's work that year. From at least 1960-1991, the assembly was known as Bethany Chapel, then 1992-2003 as Bethany Bible Chapel before rebranded as its current name. Thirteen elders have served as correspondents including well-known itinerant Leonard J. Sheldrake.
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The earliest location for BCF was at 328 N. Euclid Ave., where it met +1926-1927+, when according to the [https://omeka.religiousecologies.org/files/original/65888768f66b877a6a5f218a6d3d69931a2d5490.jpg 1926 USCoRB], there were 9 in fellowship (5 men, 4 women) including 1 S.S. teacher presiding over 10 children (for a total of 19). The Hall was a rented facility (with $187 in annual expenses), and $80 was additionally spent towards the Lord's work that year. From at least 1960-1991, the assembly was known as Bethany Chapel, then 1992-2003 as Bethany Bible Chapel before rebranded as its current name. A dozen elders have served as correspondents including well-known itinerant Leonard J. Sheldrake.
  
 
=Locations=
 
=Locations=
The assembly has met in at least twelve locations since its founding, including two homes of correspondents.  
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The assembly has met in at least twelve locations since its founding, including two homes of correspondents.
  
 
* 328 N. Euclid Ave., Indianapolis +1926-1927+
 
* 328 N. Euclid Ave., Indianapolis +1926-1927+
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=Correspondents=
 
=Correspondents=
 
* Dan Robertson +1922-1936+
 
* Dan Robertson +1922-1936+
* Emile Corboz +1941-1948+
+
* Emile Corboz +1941-1948+, +1958-1966
 
* David Scheele +1950-1955
 
* David Scheele +1950-1955
 
* Richard L. Hammer 1956+
 
* Richard L. Hammer 1956+
* Emile Corboz +1958-1966
 
 
* Raymond R. Morgan 1967-1984
 
* Raymond R. Morgan 1967-1984
 
* Leonard J. Sheldrake 1985-1989
 
* Leonard J. Sheldrake 1985-1989
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* Jerry Nieten 1993
 
* Jerry Nieten 1993
 
* Brent Logan 1997-2003
 
* Brent Logan 1997-2003
* Steven Stapley 2004-current
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* Steven Stapley 2004+
* Tim Dunham 2007-current
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* Tim Dunham +2007-current+
 +
* Robert Rankin +current
 +
* Ryan Caldwell +current
  
 
=Also See=
 
=Also See=

Latest revision as of 01:42, 28 November 2024

There have been Brethren in the Indianapolis area since as early as 1878 with the exclusives, and as early as 1890 for the opens, with a total of at least 11 different assemblies within the CSA. Bethany Christian Fellowship is the oldest open assembly within the metro, founded in 1915 by likely Dan Robertson, who also started a short-lived assembly in the neighborhood of Gibson in 1917 that met thru at least 1922.

The earliest location for BCF was at 328 N. Euclid Ave., where it met +1926-1927+, when according to the 1926 USCoRB, there were 9 in fellowship (5 men, 4 women) including 1 S.S. teacher presiding over 10 children (for a total of 19). The Hall was a rented facility (with $187 in annual expenses), and $80 was additionally spent towards the Lord's work that year. From at least 1960-1991, the assembly was known as Bethany Chapel, then 1992-2003 as Bethany Bible Chapel before rebranded as its current name. A dozen elders have served as correspondents including well-known itinerant Leonard J. Sheldrake.

Locations

The assembly has met in at least twelve locations since its founding, including two homes of correspondents.

  • 328 N. Euclid Ave., Indianapolis +1926-1927+
  • Compton Hall, 2001 Winter Ave., Ind. (take Brightwood car) +1936+
  • 2417 Fernway, Ind. +1941-1947
  • home of Emile Corboz, 1833 Roosevelt Ave., Ind. 1948+
  • home of David Scheele, 706 N. Riley Ave., Ind. +1950+
  • 37th & Grand Ave., Ind. +1951-1960
  • 3670 N. Leland Ave., Ind. 1961-1972
  • Jordan YMCA, 8400 E. Westfield Blvd., N. Ind. +1973-1974
  • 4312 E. 116th St., Carmel 1975-2003
  • 11850 Brookeville Rd., Ind. 2004-2006
  • 1427 Southview Dr., Ind. 2007-2010+
  • 6455 Churchman Ave., Ind. +2012-current;

Correspondents

  • Dan Robertson +1922-1936+
  • Emile Corboz +1941-1948+, +1958-1966
  • David Scheele +1950-1955
  • Richard L. Hammer 1956+
  • Raymond R. Morgan 1967-1984
  • Leonard J. Sheldrake 1985-1989
  • Ron Morgan 1990-1991
  • Gary Emmons 1992
  • Jerry Nieten 1993
  • Brent Logan 1997-2003
  • Steven Stapley 2004+
  • Tim Dunham +2007-current+
  • Robert Rankin +current
  • Ryan Caldwell +current

Also See

Sources

  • AAB's 1922-2024