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Thursday, May 26, 2011

LUTHERAN CHURCH AT VICTORBUR, OSTFRIESLAND

The Victorbur Evangelical Lutheran Church is old – very old. The first and largest part of the church was built in the 11th century, well before the people of East Friesland, Germany even thought of building the dikes that hold the sea at bay. It naturally began its life as a Roman Catholic Church and was under the rule of several Earls, government officials and royal families. The second part of the church was built only about three or four hundred years ago.
Chancel artwork
The organ in the balcony
The building of the churches in the Ostfriesland area may all have been accomplished using the same method as was described to me by Jurgen Hoogstraat on May 2, 2011. Jurgen has been pastor of the Victorbur church for 20 years. He said that a hill (sometimes man-made) was chosen as the church site. Teams of horse-drawn wagons would go to the sea shore at low tide and gather wagon loads of sea shells. When they brought them back to the church site, a fire was used to burn the shells until all that was left was chalky dust. This dust was then mixed with water and used as mortar. On close inspection of the exterior brick work, one can see evidence of tiny pieces of sea shells mixed in with the mortar.


The door in the wall
The walls of these old churches are about four feet thick. Pastor Hoogsgraat said the walls are filled with rocks and covered with bricks and this mortar. That was made clear to us when we were shown a door about 10-12 feet up on the wall where a steep, narrow set of stairs was carved into and up the wall. These stairs lead to a space above the relatively new wooden ceiling so that the actual roof of the church can be inspected. I estimate the height of the church at about 60-75 feet.

 Several years ago 54 people – some elderly, some younger – from the Victorbur Church went on a tour of The Black Forest in South Germany. They were in the mountains when the brakes went out on their bus and the bus landed on its side. The driver couldn’t get the side door open. However, the back door could be opened but it was a long ways to the ground and probably people would have had broken limbs had they jumped. Suddenly a man in a red car appeared. He got the side door open, helped all of the people out of the bus, told them to find shelter in the forest and then drove off. Moments later the bus exploded since gas was leaking out – lots of it – because the tanks had just been refilled.

Gott hat geholfen
They were so excited they forgot to thank the man so they put out advertisements in papers far and near. They even described the red car.  But no one ever responded either for the man or his car. Some thought an angel had passed by and rescued them.  They had an artist carve a cross and put the words on it, “God Helped Us!”  It will remain in the sanctuary now for hundreds of years as a testimony to the incident where they believe God intervened and saved their lives.

Thanks to Gene Straatmeyer
 for his words about
the bus accident.
JES

1 comment:

  1. Jean,

    I enjoyed reading this blog post. My name is Ashley and I am a sophomore at Augustana College in Rock Island, IL. I was wondering if you could please help me out. I am doing family tree research and I have traced my family back to the marriage of two people in Victorbur, Ostfriesland, Germany in 1840. I think this might be the church they were married in, and I would like to contact the church if possible. If you could please email me at wolfe.ashley11@gmail.com and tell me how I could get in touch with this church I would appreciate it.

    Take care,

    Ashley

    ReplyDelete