Hephzibah Southern Methodist

Hephzibah Baptist Church and Hephzibah Southern Methodist Church in Richmond County share more than a name—they share the very same sanctuary.

The original congregation, Hephzibah Baptist, was organized in September 1863, right in the midst of the Civil War. At that time, the community was known as Brothersville, and the church was called Hephzibah Baptist Church at Brothersville. Despite the hardship of war and the lean years of Reconstruction, the church endured. As local history records:

“The years following this war were sad and gloomy… Yet, under these difficulties this church prospered, and left a legacy that challenges the church to strive to attain its potential simper et ubique [always and everywhere]. Yes! The tragedy of war was felt by Hephzibah Baptist Church in the year of its founding, yet the church persevered through that war and through the years of Reconstruction. She never failed to open her doors.”

For 26 years the congregation worshipped in the chapel of the Hephzibah Baptist School. In 1888, it was decided that a new sanctuary should be built. Completed at a cost of $2,700, the new building was striking in design, and by 1894, membership stood at 95.

That very building, still standing today, has now been in use for over 130 years—but with a twist. In 1968, the Baptist congregation outgrew the structure and sold it to the Southern Methodist Church. Incredibly, the entire building was moved intact about a mile and a half to its present location. The relocation took two days, but the sanctuary survived the journey, ensuring its future as Hephzibah Southern Methodist Church.

The Southern Methodist denomination itself has a fascinating background. Born from the deep sectional divisions of the 1840s, the Methodist Episcopal Church, South separated in 1845 and thrived for nearly a century. When Methodist bodies reunited in 1939, not all agreed to join, and a group of laymen organized to preserve the older tradition. In 1940, at a convocation in Columbia, South Carolina, they formally organized what is now the Southern Methodist Church.

Thanks to the vision of both congregations, the sanctuary of Hephzibah continues to stand as both a place of worship and a monument to resilience. Few churches can claim a story quite like this—one building, two traditions, and nearly a century and a half of history.

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