DestinationFAY

2023-2024

DestinationFAY- CityView Magazine - Fayetteville, NC

Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/1501633

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 55 of 68

Rays of morning sunlight are reflected in a stained-glass window inside Fort Liberty's Main Post Chapel. To see a full list of area churches, visit cityviewnc.com/destination-fay/ PHOTO BY CINDY BURNHAM was home to at least a dozen Baptist churches. More than 40 churches in the city are over 100 years old. A religious revival a few miles up the road in Falcon led to the first International Pentecostal Holiness Church in 1911. About the same time, the first synagogue was built in downtown Fayetteville. e city's first majid, named for African-born Muslim slave Omar Ibn Said, opened in 1987. As the home of Fort Liberty, Fayetteville has become a center for religious institutions rarely represented in a community our size. ey include Hindu Bhavan and Chua Khanh Hy Buddhist Temple. In addition, several churches conduct worship services in Korean, Spanish, Vietnamese and other languages. Many churches offer the intimacy of a small congregation; others welcome more than 1,000 congregants weekly. Manna Church introduced the concept of tele- worship long before other churches. Its services are shared in branch locations across the country and overseas. Faith in Fayetteville isn't just a one- day-a-week thing. Congregations oen work together on community projects. ey take their faith outside the church walls with year-round programs to help those in need, including the Cumberland Interfaith Hospitality Network and Fayetteville Urban Ministry. To see a list of area houses of worship, visit cityviewnc.com/destination-fay. 53 DestinationFAY 2023-2024

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of DestinationFAY - 2023-2024