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Pike County GaArchives Churches.....Mountain Gap Church History
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File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by:
James Adams <jwaau@hotmail.com> Nov 2003


HISTORY OF MOUNTAIN GAP CHURCH
by, James Adams

     Mountain Gap Church, located some two miles south of Meansville, celebrated 
its centennial in 1998.  This church had its beginning in 1898 as the local component 
of a widespread spiritual renewal, principally in Methodist constituencies, that swept 
across the South and some other regions of the country as well during the 1890's.  
The major thrust of this movement was toward a return to primitive Wesleyan Methodism 
in faith and practice.
     The local leader and catalyst in this movement was the Rev. George W. Grice, an 
ordained Methodist minister from nearby Barnesville.  In the wake of an historic revival 
in the First Methodist Church in Barnesville in 1898, a local group led by the Rev. Grice 
organized a separate congregation,  first named Vega Holiness Church  (reflecting the 
movement's emphasis on the Wesleyan teachings of holiness in Christian life),  in the 
Vega community in southeastern Pike County.  Most of its founding members were formerly 
affiliated with the Century Nelson and Fincher Methodist churches with a few form 
Mt. Zion Baptist Church in the Piedmont community, all within the broader community.  
A list of its founders would include:  Rev. George W. Grice,  Ella S. Adams,  W. Jerry Adams,  
Ettie J. Adams,  John T. Adams,  Maude B. Adams,  Walter B. Brown,  Ollie E. Brown,  
George R. Brown,  Bell B. Brown,  Rev. A. Warren Brown,  Arthur O. Burnette, Sr.,  
Lizzie D. Burnette,  Alfred H. Jones,  Louisa H. Jones,  Robert B. Smith,  
Mattie B. Virden and Susie C. Yarbrough.
     The church was soon a flourishing new entity in the county's religious landscape.  
Within the first ten years of its existence, not only was a conventional wood-frame 
church building constructed at the Vega site, but the congregation also undertook the 
development and operation of a children's home on a fifty acre property nearby.  This 
latter operation was later discontinued.
     In addition, as a further outreach effort into the community, in 1900 the church 
began the practice of conducting summer revivals under temporarily constructed  "brush arbors" 
near the church site so as to accommodate larger attendance in it's evangelistic outreach.  
Thus began Mountain Gap's tradition of an annual summer camp-meeting style revival, culminating 
in the erection of a permanent, open air arbor, or tabernacle, such as exists today on the 
present Mountain Gap site.  Even in its brush-arbor days, the camp meeting flourished, drawing 
support from several other congregations in the County and bringing in crowds of worshipers by 
rail History of Mountain Gap Church to the Vega flag stop from as far away as Atlanta and Columbus.  
Many of the ardent worshipers came equipped to camp out in tents and other improvised accommodations 
for the duration of the camp meeting.  It was in the wake of a profound spiritual move in the brush 
arbor camp meeting of 1907 that the Mountain Gap congregation established its identity as 
Pentecostal in spirit and character, and in 1913 became a local affiliate of the Pentecostal 
Holiness Church, one of several Pentecostal denominations.
     In 1916, the church was relocated from only a short distance away to its present site at 
Mountain Gap, itself an historic site in the annals of Pike County, as Mitchell's history of 
the county bears out.  It was then that the church adopted  "Mountain Gap" as its name.  Because 
of the access this natural gap gave for crossing the Pine Mountain ridge between the northern 
and southern sectors of the county, it early on was traversed by a public road from the County's 
southeastern section to the county seat at Zebulon and later  (in the 1880's) by a railroad 
connecting Atlanta and Fort Valley.  In addition, this site was favored with a fine spring, 
which had historically served to refresh those traveling through the gap and which also became 
a convenient source of water for the church congregation at a time when plumbing in rural areas 
was virtually nonexistent
     One of the more memorable events of the church's history was a teenagers' birthday party 
in May 1919, that turned into a religious revival when the honoree, a sixteen-year old young lady,  
suggested that her guests engage with her in a prayer meeting as part of her birthday celebration.  
The revival that ensued swept the community and swelled the congregation markedly, not only with 
youth, but with many spiritually-aroused parents as well.  From this spiritual awakening, as well 
as others before and since, has come a host of those dedicated to Christian ministry as missionaries, 
ministers, teachers and evangelists.
     The marked spiritual stimulus of 1919 prompted the Church to act immediately in summer of that 
year to construct a permanent open-air arbor to better facilitate the annual summer camp meetings 
previously conducted under temporary brush arbors.  It was under this first permanent structure that 
nationally-know evangelist, Oral Roberts, and other prominent ministers preached camp meetings over 
the years.  The original structure was replaced with on slightly larger in 1950, and in 1977 the 
even larger present rustic, octagonal, cedar log structure was constructed on basically the same site.
     In 1947, the small wood-frame church building constructed at the Mountain Gap location in 1916, 
gave way to a more expansive masonry structure,  which in 1986,  underwent further renovation and 
expansion to better accommodate the church's programs.  Now at this writing, the church's attendance 
and program activity are pushing the limits of available space and further expansion of church 
facilities is under consideration.