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Church of the Holy Transfiguration of Christ-on-the-Mount

Historic church in New York, United States From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Church of the Holy Transfiguration of Christ-on-the-Mount
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The Church of the Holy Transfiguration of Christ on the Mount is a modest, single-room, hand-built wooden church near the summit of Meads Mountain in Woodstock, New York, originally constructed c. 1891 by George Mead, his son, William Mead and his son's wife, Anna Della Mead. Services in the Sarum Rite of the Western Orthodox (Catholic) tradition are held each Sunday morning.

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The church is purported to be the repository of a Marian weeping icon. In the 1960s, Father Francis, the much-beloved "hippie priest", here welcomed hippies who had congregated in town during those years that culminated in the famous art and music festival. Fr. Francis began the practice of this lesser known branch of Catholicism, which acknowledges the Pope as an earthly spiritual leader but, unlike classical Roman Catholicism, does not consider the Pope to be supreme or infallible.

The church has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places,[3][4] due in meaningful part to the devoted efforts of Father Deacon John Nelson, an understudy of Fr. Francis and peer of contemporary spiritual leaders[5] who reverently maintained the Church until his death on August 1, 2017.[6]

Fr. John's remains were committed to the earth alongside the structure[7] following a traditional requiem Mass.[8]

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