acyou 4 months ago

Wait, don't I recognize that name? Wait a second... This is THE John Scalzi? When I was a kid I pulled a paperback off of my dad's bookshelf, Old Man's War. Great, take your brain out trashy sci fi, and I mean that in the most positive way possible, it left a big impression on me. Incredible writer, cool that he is still around and has a blog.

  • notatoad 4 months ago

    >take your brain out trashy sci fi, and I mean that in the most positive way possible

    that's the guy. he's got a new book coming out this month, and is a fun follow on social media too (now on bluesky). i feel like he would be flattered by your description.

  • fishywang 4 months ago

    He is also one of the authors that (almost) all his eBooks sold on Google Play are without DRM.

  • dmd 4 months ago

    > When I was a kid [...] Old Man's War

    Well, THAT just made me feel like an old man.

    • heliostatic 4 months ago

      Same -- I still think of Scalzi as a new(ish) SF writer since he started publishing after I was an adult SF reader. Woof, time marches on!

  • snibsnib 4 months ago

    Oh wow, i never would have made the connection. 'Lock In' was one of my favorite books growing up.

  • ubermonkey 4 months ago

    You're in for a treat if you haven't read him since OMW. He's one of the more prolific "popular SF" writers around, has won a ton of awards, and usually has a book out about every year or so.

    • loeg 4 months ago

      The Collapsing Empire series is particularly good.

      • wnoise 4 months ago

        Though the Deus Ex Machina is indeed a Deus Ex Machina, even when signposted.

  • jwr 4 months ago

    Yes, that's the guy and he has written a lot of good sci-fi since then. He's pretty active on Mastodon too.

  • thenewwazoo 4 months ago

    Yep, MetaFilter’s own jscalzi

tomcam 4 months ago

If you’re lucky enough to do something like this I can’t recommend it enough. I bought a second house in my neighborhood instead of renting an office and it made work a hell of a lot more fun. Felt healthier too, because I could open windows or take walks.

widforss 4 months ago

They use the sign outside for the most hilarious messages. On Google Maps you can see two versions, "IF YOU'RE LOOKING FOR A SIGN HERE IT IS", and "SORRY KIDS SCHOOL TIME AGAIN".

  • akie 4 months ago

    In case you're wondering, here it is: https://maps.app.goo.gl/nbWXb78AHC5oUjTw6

    • hn_throwaway_99 4 months ago

      It's really a beautiful building, so glad they kept the stained glass. Great that they were able to repurpose this and didn't tear it down!

    • vermilingua 4 months ago

      Completely off topic, this is the first time I've seen ordinary US streets outside TV/film, it's jarring to see so many flags.

      • widforss 4 months ago

        They certainly like their flag :)

        Growing up in Sweden, it was mostly immigrants and nazis who used the Swedish flag. Now I live in Norway, which is a lot more nationalistic (just an observation, not a judgement), and there are flags everywhere.

      • wscott 4 months ago

        Very small town in the midwest. The US is a big place and this is just one possible look.

JadeNB 4 months ago

He describes the renovations being done taking two years:

> A whole new roof, to start; now the building has a 50-year roof, which means it will almost certainly outlive me. The electricity was knob and tube and had to be redone. There was an outside retaining wall that had to be torn out and redone. The aforementioned balcony was actually not safe to be on; it was cantilevered out into space with no support and had a shin-high barrier that wouldn’t stop anyone from going over the side. That was fixed, and new floors and custom bookcases by a local artisan built in so I could have my library. The basement floor was redone; the kitchen space down there gutted and remodeled. We pulled up high-traffic industrial carpet glued to the sanctuary floor and reconditioned the hardwood floors underneath. New HVAC, and improved drainage for the maintenance room. The office and Sunday school room in the basement was turned into a guest suite. The structure was sealed against moisture and the walls were all replastered and repainted.

I live in a reasonably large city, and it took me much more than two years just to get some unsatisfactory work done on a couple of rooms. (Much of that time being trying to get the contractor to come finish up the work so I could finally give him money, an inducement which seemed to have startlingly little power.) I'd always thought that was just because I started peri- and post-pandemic, but Scalzi says that this work, too, was done during the pandemic, so that can't be it. I guess I'm just really bad at picking contractors.

hermitcrab 4 months ago

$75k. Wow. You'd be lucky to buy a 1 bedroom crack den on the worst estate in the UK for that.

Given the Methodist's reputation for being dour, I'm surprised how nice it looks inside.

  • panzagl 4 months ago

    In the US, Methodist is a relatively middle-of-the-road denomination, not nearly as dreary as I've seen UK Methodists described.

  • dnemmers 4 months ago

    From the extensive renovations listed, I’m guessing you can add another $200k onto that price point.

    • LoganDark 4 months ago

      Literally still cheaper than the vast majority of anything that could ever be called or made into a home.

magicmicah85 4 months ago

I thought I wanted a house with land, woods, garden with bunch of carrots and little sweet peas, but now I want a church to maintain.

f_allwein 4 months ago

Related: beautiful reuse of a former church in Copenhagen. They host events during the day and communal dinners at night. https://absaloncph.dk/en/

lookdangerous 4 months ago

Hmm, a six-necked guitar called the Beast on the Altar. That's a little on the nose.

bruce511 4 months ago

I've noticed something, and I don't know if it's too much of a generalization but I see it a fair bit, so maybe it's generally true.

Generally speaking, non-religious people understand church to be a building. Whereas religious people understand that the people are the church, the building is just a building.

Now granted some of them are really nice buildings, and some are really old, and you can be both religious and really like the building, but the two concepts are still separate.

In other words, to the religious, the use of the building for non-religious purposes is "shrug".

Whereas to the non-religious the idea of turning a church building into something else is some kind of desecration. (Obviously this isn't the case for this article, but I noted the first question as him getting that response, and also the immediate rebuttal that he's starting a cult.)

Anyway, I thought it an interesting, if tangentially observation. And as with all generalizations there will be lots of exceptions.

  • nyokodo 4 months ago

    > In other words, to the religious, the use of the building for non-religious purposes is "shrug".

    This isn’t accurate except for perhaps certain parts of Protestantism. To Catholics, Orthodox, probably portions of the Church of England etc, ie a majority of Christianity church buildings are holy and specially blessed. They hold the Eucharist in the Tabernacle which these Churches believe is the body and blood of Jesus under the guise of bread which is the most holy thing for them. In order for these buildings to be used for any other purpose all the holy things would need to be removed and the building specifically deconsecrated.

    • Barrin92 4 months ago

      Yup I'm gonna second this one. I grew up in Cologne and Christians here generally don't think the Cologne Cathedral [1] (which holds among other things, according to the Church the bones of the three magi) is "just a building" and if you wanted to argue to turn it into a mall next week you'd probably get a pretty strong reaction from members of the church

      [1] https://www.wandererscompass.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/...

      • williamdclt 4 months ago

        If you wanted to turn the cathedral of cologne into a mall you’d get a pretty strong reaction from _me_, who’s neither religious nor has ever been to Cologne!

      • NoMoreNicksLeft 4 months ago

        >if you wanted to argue to turn it into a mall next week you'd probably get a pretty strong reaction from members of the church

        Even us atheists should hope that the building would get a little more love and respect than that.

    • mock-possum 4 months ago

      Growing up Methodist, we learned it via church camp singalong:

      A church is not a building

      A church is not a steeple

      A church is not a resting place

      A church is a people

      I am the church

      You are the church

      We are the church together

      All who follow Jesus

      All around the world

      Yes were the church to-clap!-gether.

      I don’t believe in any of it anymore, but it’s still a nice sentiment - the only thing I really miss about Christianity is the community.

      • dingnuts 4 months ago

        same -- maybe you should look into the Quakers, they're basically a denomination that is only community and sans doctrine, is my understanding. I only haven't followed this advice for bad reasons

    • swat535 4 months ago

      The Church building is only considered Holy when Christ is considered present for Eucharist. Should it be removed along with the Altar, it only becomes a building, to Catholics at least. This is why abandon Churches can be converted to other things, in Montreal there are examples of these buildings.

      OP is correct here by saying that the Church is the people. It’s just that the word has two meanings, the church building and the Church of Christ.

      It’s also why sometimes you hear Christians say things like “your family is also your Church”

    • DiggyJohnson 4 months ago

      In the NT and early history of the [Catholic] church it was explicitly the people and not the building.

      • PaulRobinson 4 months ago

        Your interpretation of "people and not the building" is pretty unique to Protestantism in the Christian belief, and arguably the central tenet of Methodism. It is absent in much of the history of Christian (and most other monotheistic) beliefs.

        I recommend you look at (as an example), what the Catholic Church did since around the conversion of the Romans through to Vatican II. Even when I was a kid (some decades after Vatican II), attending Catholic school and regularly attending mass, the Catholic Church building was considered an incredibly special place by the congregations.

        In my school, the chapel (which held a tabernacle), was once used by some well-meaning but incredibly ill-educated pupils to hold a palm reading booth for a school fete fundraiser. When the more traditional Catholics in the faculty found out, they burst in, soaking the pupils and chapel with holy water and latin prayer (first time used in the school since Vatican II! Showed their colours that day!), claiming that to engage in the occult near a tabernacle was an incredibly offensive thing to do, because the space held a tabernacle, end of.

        The whole thing about Protestantism is to remove mystery. Research the early history from Luther through the English Tudors and the King James Bible, all the way through to the Mayflower and the reason why they were fleeing Europe to the New World, and you'll see that big and plain. It doesn't mean that a sense of mystery in terms of rituals and rites held in special designated spaces died and went away though, it just means it's less present than it once was.

        For many, many people (billions on Earth today), "holy spaces" remain exactly that: consecrated spaces that are in themselves holy regardless of whether a human congregation is present or not. And this is not limited to Christianity either.

        As this was a Methodist Church, I suspect most people who used it would consider it "just a building", albeit one with sentimental memories (weddings, funerals, weekly worship), but sure, it's bricks and mortar and balconies and pews and a broken organ. shrug.

        It's just that's actually quite an unusual viewpoint on a global scale, for most denominations.

        • apelapan 4 months ago

          Catholics abandon and sell church buildings all the time. Once you've removed a small handful of sacred items and done the de-consecration-ritual, it is "just a building" to them too.

          There are vast numbers of repurposed churches in Catholic countries. Just walk the streets in an Italian city.

          I'm not familiar with the specifics for catholics, but it is conceptually not too different from how protestants do it.

          With the caveat, best repeated in every post under this article, that of course very strong sentimental feelings can be attached to a church building. You could put a religious dimension on the morality of hurting peoples feelings by destroying or changing a beautiful thing I guess. But, it is not the house itself that is holy in a holy house.

          • PaulRobinson 4 months ago

            The piece you're missing is de-consecration. A consecrated space is holy whether the people are in it or not, within the Catholic tradition. Yes, you can deconsecrate it, and then it's just a building. However a loaded tabernacle makes it a holy space in the eyes of Catholics even if it's an empty space. It is conceptually very different to Methodism: the entire point of Methodism is to abandon such mysteries.

            • apelapan 4 months ago

              I think we agree, because I did mention the de-consecration as a crucial step.

              The Lutheran churches where I'm from do a similar thing.

        • giraffe_lady 4 months ago

          I'm eastern orthodox so not part of one of the groups you're talking about but we share a lot with catholics so maybe close enough.

          The reaction you're talking about with the palm reading seems like it could have mostly been because of the presence of a loaded tabernacle? I mean I doubt they would have been pleased about this without it but lay catholics I know take the tabernacle extremely seriously.

          I don't particularly, aesthetically, like to see churches used for secular purposes but if they've been properly desacralized I don't have any strong religious objections.

          > "holy spaces" remain exactly that: consecrated spaces that are in themselves holy regardless of whether a human congregation is present or not

          This is true but it implies a causality that is backwards I think. Spaces aren't holy because of the consecration, they're holy because of the people that come there to worship together regularly over many years. If they stop doing that the church doesn't immediately "lose its holiness" or whatever but it does change: it becomes a shrine or a relic or maybe just a building.

          • PaulRobinson 4 months ago

            > The reaction you're talking about with the palm reading seems like it could have mostly been because of the presence of a loaded tabernacle?

            Yes, I think the tabernacle was the crux of the issue here.

            > Spaces aren't holy because of the consecration, they're holy because of the people that come there to worship together regularly over many years.

            That's a more modern, and dare I say, Methodist view of the church. If a space has a tabernacle in it with the body of Christ in it, within the Catholic tradition, that space is holy and consecrated even when there isn't a human soul in the place, because by definition there is a belief that the soul of Christ is in that space.

            You can deconsecrate that space and remove that blessed sacrament and then it's just a building, but in the eyes of most Catholics the space itself has a mystery even in the absence of worshipping congregations.

            • giraffe_lady 4 months ago

              Like I said I'm orthodox and have never been much exposed to protestant theology other than it just being sort of in the air in western secular culture.

              I think you'd get interesting answers if you polled lay catholics with a question like "which is more holy, a consecrated but never-used church, or a parish recently desacralized after centuries of regular use."

              There's definitely one "correct" answer if you asked a bishop or a catholic theologian. But I have noticed that there is often a big difference between lay religious experience and hierarchically controlled official dogma. A poll a few years ago had less than half of american catholics believing in transubstantiation, for example.

              • PaulRobinson 4 months ago

                In the spirit of Father Ted (watch it if you've never seen it, it's fantastic), I think we are heading into the reaches of an ecumenical matter... :)

      • umanwizard 4 months ago

        Perhaps, but that was 2000 years ago and not necessarily identical to how people feel/believe today.

    • cvoss 4 months ago

      You're kind of proving the point. The building is not the real thing, as any sense in which it is holy (which is a word that means set apart for a special purpose) can be readily undone. The church doesn't cease to exist when that happens. It moves. The same way the Tabernacle (the ancient Tabernacle) moved, which happened on a semi-regular basis. The place is less important than who is there.

      • mock-possum 4 months ago

        It seems like this is confusing The Church with a church.

        Notre Dame Cathedral is a church, but you could burn it to the ground tomorrow and it wouldn’t have hardly any impact at all on the persistence of The Church.

        • NoMoreNicksLeft 4 months ago

          Such is claimed, but I suspect that this is a misleading truth. Christianity is an extremely successful religion, but if it were less popular and Notre Dame was one of only a few church buildings (even, just one of a few with that level of grandeur), then burning it to the ground would indeed have a profound impact on the persistence of The Church. For those religions with a single temple, the destruction of that building is more than merely traumatic, it is catastrophic. Christianity only avoids this by having so very many buildings, many of them as spectacular as Notre Dame.

      • ForTheKidz 4 months ago

        Surely if the church was just the people such a ritual of consecration would have fallen by the wayside a long time ago.

        Anyway, there are in fact many christians who view churches as sacred in themselves. Good luck painting christianity with any such a wide brush.

        • DiggyJohnson 4 months ago

          The inclusion of the word “just” makes this comment not so relevant to the discussion. Nobody is claiming that.

          • ForTheKidz 4 months ago

            I'm afraid i'm missing the point of the entire conversation, then. Nobody was claiming church was just a building to begin with either.

    • jes5199 4 months ago

      sure but a church building that hasn’t been used in years surely was already deconsecrated

  • saghm 4 months ago

    It's possible that this is generally true, but that's definitely not my perception. Growing up I remember hearing about stories like this [0] where people camped out in a church for over a decade to try to stop it from being closed. As someone who isn't religious, I still can't understand the level of attachment to the building itself, and it's hard to imagine that this would happen from people not ascribing some sort of religious significance to the building itself. That said, I know that there are some notable differences between Catholics and other Christians in terms of veneration, so maybe this perception is just due to my growing up in an area where other types of Christianity weren't as common, and elsewhere in the country where Catholics aren't as common, the generalization would hold more true.

    [0]: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/massachusetts-church-protest-11...

    • irrational 4 months ago

      I wonder if it is similar to people who camp out in trees to keep them from being cut down. Maybe it is the same sort of veneration in both cases?

      • mock-possum 4 months ago

        “No, stop, this important.”

  • syklemil 4 months ago

    > Generally speaking, non-religious people understand church to be a building. Whereas religious people understand that the people are the church, the building is just a building.

    The word "church" itself is used to refer to the building in several languages; some of the buildings get some fancier word like "cathedral" or "dom church" or just "dom", like the Kölnerdom or Nidarosdomen. It's a type of building the same way that you expect certain things of a Rathaus or office building or detached house.

    Of course, it is also used to refer to what in secular contexts would be called a club or organization, like "the church of $country". E.g. if you want Norwegian waffles abroad, Sjømannskirken (literally "The seamen's church") is very likely to have them. Norwegian churches-as-organizations run partially on coffee & waffles.

    The only other group I can think of off the top of my head that get called the same as a building is parliament? While with churches it's kind of as if we used just one word to describe a football field, the football team, and that football team's supporters. Homonyms can trip people up.

    So for people who aren't in the organization, but know that people associated with that kind of organization take umbrage at a lot of things that they can't easily predict, it's no wonder that churches-the-buildings have mental priority because that's what they actually experience in their daily lives: Buildings that exist in their vicinity, that often represent a sizable investment, and that they might even get invited to for some rituals like marriages and funerals. The … Jesus club is about as visible to them as a local role-playing club, or indoor sports club.

    • umanwizard 4 months ago

      > The word "church" itself is used to refer to the building in several languages

      Including English, for that matter.

  • mmooss 4 months ago

    > Whereas religious people understand that the people are the church, the building is just a building.

    Many (most?) religions invest enormous amounts in those buildings, some with staggering displays of wealth. Even in many/most towns, the religious institution is the nicest building around.

  • ubermonkey 4 months ago

    You're a bit off here.

    First, everyone (faithful or not) understands that "church" could mean physical structure or the body of people who attend. The word was frequently used both ways in my Southern Baptist youth, for example, and I'm familiar with similar use patterns from the Catholics I've known.

    HOWEVER it IS true that some flavors of Christianity DO see the physical building as blessed, consecrated, or whatever, and somehow important in and of itself. It varies WIDELY by faith; neither position is universal at all.

    My sense is that GENERALLY this distinction maps to the adherence to/belief in actual sacraments -- ie, rituals written out and led by specific clergy that lead to desirable spiritual goals.

    The Roman church, for example, has a number of these that are considered important to your spiritual life. For a faithful Catholic, Communion involves actual transubstantiation, and requires the priest. You're probably not truly married unless you're married in a Catholic ceremony by a priest in a church. Confession matters. Etc.

    By contrast, most mainline protestant churches don't really have any of these. Your relationship to God is between you and God; the pastor leads the church, but is not seen as someone with a hotline to the almighty.

    Many or most of them DO things that look like Communion, but it's entirely symbolic; the act itself has no special spiritual power, and there is no expectation of transubstantiation. It's done maybe quarterly largely because the Gospels say Jesus said to "do this in remembrance of me."

    Most protestant sects don't think a church wedding has any additional spiritual weight, and certainly don't require one. Marriage is between you, your spouse, and God. I went to a Baptist wedding on a golf course last fall where the officiant was the groom's nonclergy (but devout) uncle. That's normal.

  • graemep 4 months ago

    There are many meanings. Off the top of my head:

    1. church meaning a building 2. church meaning an organisation - e.g. "Roman Catholic Church" 3. church militant - all Christians on earth 4. church triumphant - all of redeemed humanity. If you are a universalist (someone who believes all of humanity is saved) this would be synonymous with all of humanity.

    I am sure I have missed things out, and there are lots of shades of meaning and different levels with regard to organisations.

  • irrational 4 months ago

    Is it the difference between a church building and a temple? The Romans would put a wall (or it could have been a ditch) around some ground. The wall was called a fanum. That which was outside of the fanum was called the profanum (pro = before) or profane. Inside the fanum was sacred or holy ground where the sanctuary was situated. We see this kind of think in Greek Temples, Egyptian Temples, the Temple of Solomon, etc. Perhaps some people view their church buildings similar to how ancients viewed their temples.

  • themadturk 4 months ago

    Where I grew up, in the non-evangelical, very mainline American Presbyterian tradition, the church was the building, and the Church was the congregation of believers, both those who worshipped in the church and those who shared their beliefs.

  • furyofantares 4 months ago

    It's just two different words, I feel like most people recognize both.

  • nickpsecurity 4 months ago

    Yes, the Word of God says the "church" is either the whole set of all believers in Jesus Christ or a local group of them. It's people who together make up His "body" while He is the "head." Example verses:

    https://www.gotquestions.org/what-is-the-church.html

    False teaching that contradicts God's Word often tries to elevate specific people or buildings while the Word elevates Christ. Over time, more religions started focusing a lot on their buildings. They identified as Christian even though their practices were getting further and further from Biblical examples. This caused much confusion.

    Our church would just call it an old building that used to house a church (group of people). Hopefully, the members are still gathering to worship God, read the Word, share Christ, and love each other. Those are what's important.

    • HeatrayEnjoyer 4 months ago

      This depends greatly on the denomination. Pious Catholics care greatly about their church buildings.

      • nickpsecurity 4 months ago

        I was only talking about Christians that put God's Word center. Catholicism is a different, church-centered faith that came later.

        For example, in Christianity, they only venerate God and pray to God through Jesus alone. Peter and Hebrews says we are all priests who have direct access to God, coming boldly, as His adopted sons and daughters. Jesus also represents us before God with nobody else really needed.

        Whereas, Catholicism taught people to venerate and pray to mere humans. They pray to Mary hoping she will represent them, too. That's idolatry in God's Word. It's also something we don't see Apostles or believers doing.

        I noted below numerous such reasons that Catholicism is a different religion which Jesus and the Apostles call false teaching. That is, anything that contradicts their Gospel of justification by faith in Christ alone worshiping God alone.

        https://www.gethisword.com/catholic

        Deuteronomy requires testing any person or claim that allegedly comes from God. They had to have supernatural power and never contradict God's Word. The Pope's fail that test while Apostles passed it. To be obedient, I tested it myself above.

  • pmezard 4 months ago

    > In other words, to the religious, the use of the building for non-religious purposes is "shrug".

    Try that in a mosque please.

    Also, a couple of years ago a French (Benjamin Ledig) youtuber/tiktoker/whatever was fined for filming himself dancing in a parisian catholic church.

    As you said:

    > And as with all generalizations there will be lots of exceptions.

  • lo_zamoyski 4 months ago

    > non-religious people understand church to be a building. Whereas religious people understand that the people are the church

    "Church" is equivocal [0]. It can mean "a church" as in a building used for liturgical worship (and specifically, the sacrifice of the mass). It can mean the institution founded by Christ, a divine and universal (hence "catholic" [1]) society, in which case we tend to capitalize it in English. In this latter case, theologically, we can speak of the human and divine elements, where the human (here on earth, the so-called Ecclesia militans or "Church Militant") is afflicted by the ravages of sin, while the divine dimension remains indefectible. The totality of the Church also includes the Ecclesia poenitens ("Church Penitent", "Church Expectant", or "Church Suffering") and the Ecclesia triumphans ("Church Triumphant").

    (As a footnote, people in countries with a Christian heritage sometimes commit fallacies of equivocation with respect to these two meanings. This leads to some absurd inferences. For example, proponents of secularism have sometimes called for the separation of "mosque and state" in Muslim countries in an attempt to mirror the liberal exaggeration of the Christian distinction between Church and State, but this is nonsensical. "Mosque" has only one meaning, namely, the building. There is no institutional "Mosque". Islam does not make a distinction between religious and secular authority (which has its roots in Matthew 22:21 [2]). In the Islamic worldview, there is only Islam - "submission" [3] - and the unconquered world of the infidels. Liberalism is, genealogically and as a matter of substance, a Christian heresy - something it shares with Islam - but one that is alien to the Islamic worldview. The secular/Islamic divide in the traditionally Islamic world is rather a result of Western geopolitical influence, an arrangement merely tolerated, for the time being at least, by devout Muslims.)

    > to the religious, the use of the building for non-religious purposes is "shrug".

    Perhaps for some Protestants, but Catholic churches are not simply meeting houses, but the successors of the Temple of Jerusalem where the perfect sacrifice of the mass is offered (the liturgy itself has the structure of the liturgy used in the Temple). It is most certainly not a "shrug".

    > Whereas to the non-religious the idea of turning a church building into something else is some kind of desecration.

    I don't understand. To non-religious people who do not recognize a religion's truth claims, it appears that there is nothing to desecrate. Catholics/Orthodox most certainly would consider the illicit use of a church as desecration (example: the man who recently climbed onto the main altar in St. Peter's Basilica).

    [0] https://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03744a.htm

    [1] https://www.etymonline.com/word/catholic

    [2] https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Matthew%2022%3A...

    [3] https://www.etymonline.com/word/Islam

berikv 4 months ago

Please don’t terrify your contractors. They fix your place, and you want them on your side doing a good job.

  • EvanAnderson 4 months ago

    I take "terrify" to mean "they know they will be supervised and their wkrk checked".

rsynnott 4 months ago

> and despite the actions of certain science fiction authors in the past offering precedent, I have no desire to start a cult

> I want to recondition the old pastor’s study, get the organ functional again, and we want to make the sanctuary level more easily accessible via ramps and such

I mean, he _claims_ not to want to start a cult, but I feel like, if starting a cult, these are exactly the sort of facilities one would be recommissioning. Especially the organ.

Granted, for a moment I thought this was Charles Stross (the other Very Online sci-fi author), which would be _far_ more worrying, considering.

  • c0brac0bra 4 months ago

    I think the frequency of organ-centered cults is lower than you might imagine.

    • biomcgary 4 months ago

      In the end, I suspect most cults want all your organs.

      • hermitcrab 4 months ago

        Or to do something to you with their organs...

    • rsynnott 4 months ago

      Is this an organ music joke?

      (Most cults probably don't have pipe organs, but I feel like it is unquestionably a _plus_ for your cult if you happen to have access to one.)

  • beAbU 4 months ago

    He also mentioned using the basement for "gatherings" and that immediately set off my cult-alarm bells!

    Pretty jealous to be honest, the building itself looks beautiful.

  • wnoise 4 months ago

    He also created the Githzerai/Githyanki, so other ways of creating cults seem easier.

kazinator 4 months ago

> What denomination used to be there?

Oh, baskets of mostly dollar coins, quarters, some dimes, ...

rfarley04 4 months ago

I don't want for much and don't need much more money than I currently have, I used to say before reading this

  • jasonthorsness 4 months ago

    The church cost only $75,000; because it is here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bradford,_Ohio

    If you work remotely, this seems a good example of why you might consider moving away from a major city.

    • rsynnott 4 months ago

      While he doesn't explicitly say it, I'm going to bet that the renovation, and likely even just the essential parts (roof, rewiring etc) of the renovation cost considerably more than that.

      • organsnyder 4 months ago

        Yeah, the renovations they describe are easily over $100,000—probably multiples of that.

        (I live in Michigan, so I'm assuming project costs would be similar to where I am)

      • loeg 4 months ago

        Yeah, but still. On the coasts that would be a $1.5M+ property.

        • astura 4 months ago

          Only in the most desirable of desirable areas. I live on the east coast (almost literally, only a few blocks from the ocean) and a similar church sold last year in the town next door for just over $300,000.

    • rfarley04 4 months ago

      I live in Bangkok. So I'm over here searching for abandoned Buddhist temples lol

    • viraptor 4 months ago

      If you wanted to actually use it day to day though, it would cost so much more. Just the temperature control for such area would be either super expensive or require a complete redesign of the space to split it into lower floors.

      • tengwar2 4 months ago

        It would, but that's partly a matter of size, and a large house will cost a lot to heat or cool as well. I'm in the UK (cool climate), and there are a lot of smaller chapels which have been converted to use as houses quite successfully.

    • bawolff 4 months ago

      So its about 45 minutes (by car) from a city of about 130,000 people.

      That's hardly the middle of nowhere.

      • TulliusCicero 4 months ago

        For a lot of people, "45 minutes by car to get to a city of any real size" is very much in the middle of nowhere.

        • pavon 4 months ago

          Branford is within 15 minutes of Piqua and Greensville which are both mid-sized towns that have everything you need for everyday life, and a lot of what you'd want. To me that is much more relevant than how far it is to a large city, which you would be visiting much less frequently. 15 minutes is a normal commuting time within a city, so not really the middle of nowhere.

        • bigstrat2003 4 months ago

          Those people very badly need some perspective, then. That is not remotely the middle of nowhere.

          • TulliusCicero 4 months ago

            It just depends on your perspective.

            Honestly, Americans are probably more tolerant and accepting of long distances compared to most peer countries. 45 minutes of driving to hit some kind of city is very far most of the time in Japan or most of Europe, where the population density is higher than the states.

            • jrmg 4 months ago

              Growing up in the UK, 45 minutes was about the ‘if we’re going there in the evening we’re going to need to get a hotel’ boundary. Now I live in the US it’s a short drive.

              It’s amazing how perspective changes. If you haven’t experienced it I suspect it’s impossible to understand, because this feels crazy to write. It’s true though.

            • froh 4 months ago

              that again depends on where you are in Europe... in most of Germany you're right. large parts of Norway Sweden Finland? not so much...

              • apelapan 4 months ago

                It is probably true that in a majority of those land areas (Finland, Sweden, Norway) you are more than 45 minutes of driving from the next proper city.

                However, the proportion of people who live like that is not very high. People mostly live where other people live.

              • bawolff 4 months ago

                Northern canada on the other hand is a very different story.

        • jes5199 4 months ago

          and yet plenty of people have a commute _within_ the city that is longer than that

          • TulliusCicero 4 months ago

            Oh for sure, but they're still 'somewhere' while commuting.

            • jes5199 4 months ago

              I would so much prefer an hour on a rural highway over an hour stuck in city traffic!

      • rsynnott 4 months ago

        All a matter of perspective, I suppose. I'd call that the middle of nowhere, but I've always lived either in a medium-sized (>1 million people) city or its suburbs.

        In particular it doesn't seem to have public transport at _all_, at least per Google Maps; I'd consider anywhere where your only option to get to a city was to drive to be serious middle of nowhere, though I gather that this is a more common condition in the US.

        • brendoelfrendo 4 months ago

          See, this in and of itself is an interesting perspective. The US only has 9-ish cities with a population over 1 million (according to Wikipedia and going by the population within city limits, if you go by "urban area" it's more like 45), so I would call a city of over a million people to be a large city, pretty definitively. But then, I never spent much time in million-plus-person cities growing up, so I'm just not accustomed to thinking about them that way. To me a medium-sized city starts around 500,000 people. To provide another possible perspective, this is of course peanuts compared to China, which has 11 cities with populations over 10,000,000 and over 100 cities with populations over 1,000,000 (again, Wikipedia numbers) and a fairly urbanized population as a whole. That's a country where I could see someone calling a 1,000,000-person city "medium-sized," and if anything they might be on the low-end.

      • globular-toast 4 months ago

        I lived in a place that was a 30 min drive from a similar sized place (Cambridge, UK). It totally felt like the middle of nowhere. It's not so much about the numbers but about the feeling of a place:

        * No transport links means total dependence on car,

        * No natural features of any note, in particular no rivers or hills,

        * Unknown to people outside of the very small population that lives there,

        * Hard to convince people to come and visit you and when they do they're disappointed.

mnemotronic 4 months ago

Do any talking cats live or have their offices there?

  • themadturk 4 months ago

    There are rumors that the church is haunted, but John claims no ghosts have made their presence known.

wewewedxfgdf 4 months ago

Disappointing he says he is not using it to start a cult. I'd start a cult. Church building first, cult second.

  • rfarley04 4 months ago

    If you're starting a cult, always build instead of buy!

    • bigiain 4 months ago

      Hmmm, if you're starting a cult as a way to tap into tax exemptions, I suspect your accountants and lawyers would have long heated arguments about exactly how to best structure the church building ownership or lease/rental. Is your cult's meeting place a capex or an opex?

      • krapp 4 months ago

        If you want to start a cult to get out of taxes, forget the church - you need a boat.

        • rsynnott 4 months ago

          I mean the most notorious example very much had both.

  • timmg 4 months ago

    If you wanted to start a cult, would you say you wanted to start a cult?

    "I just want to share my learnings with the good people of Ohio..."

  • 01HNNWZ0MV43FF 4 months ago

    Nah I think the Lean method would be to start the cult first, prove product-market fit, then get the church once you have around 10 members

    • red-iron-pine 4 months ago

      but you get the money before you even have any idea of your actual tenants and beliefs. slide deck -> money -> cult -> bodies -> church

  • mnemotronic 4 months ago

    Been done. It's called scientology.

myflash13 4 months ago

The idyllic life of small town America?

october8140 4 months ago

I live in Detroit and don't understand why everyone wants to work remove AND live in the most expensive places in the world. To me working remote means I can live anywhere I want. Why not live where you get a lot more for your money?

  • mmooss 4 months ago

    > Why not live where you get a lot more for your money?

    People live in expensive places not because they are required to, but because they find these places appealing. There are much more arts, culture, food, smart people, better schools, etc. Look at the prices people are willing to pay to live in NYC, parts of the Bay Area, etc. That is supply and demand.

    They are getting a lot more (of what they want) for their money. Others live in Aspen for the same reason - though they want different things. I hope you are fortunate enough to want things that aren't in quite so high demand.

    • hollerith 4 months ago

      If all the smart people in San Francisco who are there to be around other smart people moved to Columbus, Ohio, they could save a ton on housing costs.

      • jrmg 4 months ago

        But all the people moving there would drive up housing costs.

      • mmooss 4 months ago

        Either you are joking, or some people in SF are now even less likely to move to Columbus. :)

        • TulliusCicero 4 months ago

          Fun fact: last I checked on Numbeo, Columbus Ohio is more expensive to live in than Tokyo.

          Of course, the weak yen probably has something to do with that, and also the relatively smaller home sizes in Japan, but still, kinda crazy.

          • wavemode 4 months ago

            Japan is kind of a special case, as the country in general is depopulating.

            • klausa 4 months ago

              Tokyo isn't; and that's not why living here is (relatively) cheap.

    • keiferski 4 months ago

      That’s the stated reason, but it doesn’t factor in social trends and just general imitative behavior. In my experience the vast majority of people want to live in popular cities because other people want to live there, not because they’ve done a rational analysis of the differences in food, culture, etc.

      “Hacking” this by figuring out exactly what you want and finding it in a less in-demand place is a great move if you work remotely.

      • bawolff 4 months ago

        > In my experience the vast majority of people want to live in popular cities because other people want to live there, not because they’ve done a rational analysis of the differences in food, culture, etc.

        Isn't that the "culture" of the city? People want to live there because they want to be near the other cool people who live there. Culture means much more than if it has an art gallery.

        • keiferski 4 months ago

          I wouldn’t define culture as “I want to live in a place because other people want to live in a place.”

          Sure, absolutely larger cities have more cultural events going on, but in my experience most people aren’t analyzing the different options and aren’t utilizing all of those amenities when they actually live there.

          New York is a classic example. A lot of people say they move there to be closer to museums, but most only end up visiting them once or twice a year, at most. This is because they like the idea, the perception, of being a person that lives in a city with the MET and MoMa, etc.

          I really like NYC, for reference, so I’m not putting down the city or other large cities. But there is also a ton of hype and imitative behavior that makes people focus exclusively on the coastal cities. There are plenty of cities across America which have hip arts districts, coffee shops, great museums, nice architecture, etc. etc. but they tend to be glossed over.

          • mmooss 4 months ago

            > There are plenty of cities across America which have hip arts districts, coffee shops, great museums, nice architecture, etc. etc. but they tend to be glossed over.

            There are lots of people in smaller cities who say, 'we have ____ just like NY!' But it's not just like NY. There's a big difference between the innovation, skill, production, investment, etc. in those things. If you want world-class music, where will you live? Even if you just want regular opera, there are only a few US cities to live in.

            > there is also a ton of hype and imitative behavior that makes people focus exclusively on the coastal cities

            The same people also say NY is crazy, too liberal (i.e., too socially innovative), things are too odd and strange there. Where the 'crazy', innovative ideas - so far out that they are strange to most people - are accepted and encouraged and loved are in cities like NY. It's not the same.

          • jrowen 4 months ago

            At the end of the day, it's tough to live in a place like SF or NYC. A lot of people get weeded out. In my experience with living in SF, the people I know who continue to live there do so because they genuinely love it and wouldn't want to be anywhere else.

            Most people aren't going to continue to put up with the costs and challenges of big city life if they actually don't care all that much and could be just as happy in whatever places you're suggesting.

          • relaxing 4 months ago

            Well, you’re wrong. Culture is by definition social behavior first, and then institutions arise out of that.

            Beyond that key point, you’re making an error of assuming there is one fungible “culture experience” that can be had anywhere there’s a gallery and a coffee shop on the same street.

            The gap between the cultural opportunities in NYC and a second tier US city is as vast as the difference between cutting edge research at Alphabet and a small web shop putting together wordpress sites for the local businesses.

            The benefit of being in the city is not that you visit the MoMa every weekend - the rotating exhibits aren’t going to align with my interests that frequently. It’s that enough people around you are operating on a level where they could conceivably care about such things.

      • TulliusCicero 4 months ago

        I dunno, I've looked at cheap places and generally it seems like they're "cheap for a reason" to me.

        Not that they're always terrible or anything, but there's often certain things missing that I'd rather have around. But maybe someday.

      • mmooss 4 months ago

        Well we have evidence - 'the stated reason' - on one hand, and none on the other. As someone who likes those sorts of things, living in places like that is completely worthwhile if affordable.

        > “Hacking” this by figuring out exactly what you want and finding it in a less in-demand place is a great move if you work remotely.

        I referenced that in my GP comment - absolutely, don't imitate others, find what you want!

        That's easier in places like NY and SF, where people are receptive to that and they don't enforce conformity or think you are too outside the pale with some wild idea or behavior. You're startup idea might not get much support in much of the world.

  • sersi 4 months ago

    I've worked remotely for years and currently live in Hong Kong (a city where rent is close to Manhattan prices). Why do I live there? Because I appreciate the restaurants available, the variety of food, the regular theater performances from all over the world, the easy access to hiking trails and beaches while living in a densely populated city, access to museums and activities for my kid.

    I was raised in a tiny village, I hate the countryside, it's so utterly boring, I want a short commute to all the activities the city offers and I love public transport.

    • dsr_ 4 months ago

      My grandparents raised my parents in large cities. My parents raised their children in small towns. All of the children moved to large cities.

      I often describe the town I was raised in as "a great place to raise children and an awful place to be a teenager".

    • prawn 4 months ago

      First time I went to HK in the 90s, I remember being insanely impressed that I could go down the lift in our hotel and step out into an underground department store and food court full of stalls. And then from there, a tiny walk to countless other things. Not going to appeal to everyone but I can absolutely see why it appeals to some.

  • kulahan 4 months ago

    My city affords me, with a 20 minute drive, access to Michelin star quality restaurants, events that other people travel across the planet to attend, constant awesome concerts with the biggest stars, and hundreds (thousands?) of mom-and-pops. I friggin love it here, and it’s only like 40 minutes to some of the most beautiful natural landscapes I could hope for.

    I COULD live in $cheaperCity, but then I’m paying tons of money to go somewhere I actually want to be, not to mention needing to plan a whole trip for many of these things, which gets way harder when you’re one of millions trying to get to the city for that event.

  • irrational 4 months ago

    Location, location, location. Some parts of the country are nicer than others. Most people don't consider rural areas where the land is flat and mostly cornfields (with a possibility of tornadoes) to be a nice place to live. I live about an hour from the ocean and an hour from year round skiing in the mountains. Lots of hills and forests. I had to pay $250,000 for a 4,000 sq foot home on a wooded acre when I bought it three years ago, but I don't mind spendin that much when I am close into the city and so close to nature.

  • Yizahi 4 months ago

    Because corporations literally forbid people working for them and living in some cheap places. My corporation forbids this, I must live withing commute distance of any of our offices, despite working full remote for years. They also made a weak try to shove us back in the office in 2023, but that was universally ignored and not enforced thankfully.

  • crooked-v 4 months ago

    It's very simple: they like the benefits of living in the expensive places, as distinct from closeness to work in particular.

    • abound 4 months ago

      As a remote tech worker who moved from the Bay to a (much) cheaper place - I agree that the expensive places are expensive for a reason - but if one can articulate what specifically they're looking for, it's almost always possible to find it in a significantly cheaper cost-of-living area.

      • TulliusCicero 4 months ago

        I'm not sure that's true. I occasionally look around and can't really find anything all that cheap that fits my preferences, but maybe I'm too picky.

        * Politically blue or at least purple

        * Reasonably dense/transitable by something other than a car (public transit and/or bike)

        * Wide variety of restaurants/groceries (mostly in terms of ethnicities/cultures), especially Asian food

        * Low(-ish) crime rate

        The third one is maybe the hardest, because it basically requires a substantial population, though number 2 is pretty hard in the US as well.

      • mmooss 4 months ago

        > if one can articulate what specifically they're looking for, it's almost always possible to find it in a significantly cheaper cost-of-living area.

        Isn't that the basic essential of designing tech - the narrower your specs the less expensive your solution, so articulate them very specifically.

        I don't know that I buy "almost always" though. If your spec is world-class _____, you probably need to be in one of a few cities.

  • nottorp 4 months ago

    > To me working remote means I can live anywhere I want. Why not live where you get a lot more for your money?

    Sadly that only goes if you don't intend to leave your house for anything but grocery shopping.

    If you'd rather hang out with friends at a concert and a pub after, you're stuck with the wanted and expensive places.

  • TylerE 4 months ago

    > Why not live where you get a lot more for your money?

    Because I would have to spend a lot of my money to not be miserable, and ultimately still be worse off.

    Places that are cheap to live are cheap for a reason.

  • mock-possum 4 months ago

    Because I don’t pick where I live based on why I can get for my money. That’s like - the least of my concerns.

  • ProAm 4 months ago

    This is the definition of gentrification. And not a bad thing but this is where it starts...

twic 4 months ago

1919. Pfft! My cousin has bought and is converting a church where the oldest bits are 12th century (although the tower is 17th century, and it was extensively redone in the 1830s). At the rate he works, he's probably going to be working on it for the rest of his life.

throwawayk7h 4 months ago

Now, where's the sympathy for the effective altruists who bought a castle for the same financial reasons? They were widely mocked for their apparent exuberance.

  • krapp 4 months ago

    Effective altruism is a cult and it deserves to be mocked.

NanoYohaneTSU 4 months ago

[flagged]

  • dang 4 months ago

    Please don't do this here.

    • efilife 4 months ago

      what exactly?

      • dang 4 months ago

        Dyspeptic flamebait and generational slurs.

  • programmarchy 4 months ago

    He paid 75K which is not bad though.

    • mock-possum 4 months ago

      That’s somewhere in the neighborhood of an entire college tuition.

    • wlonkly 4 months ago

      And is firmly Generation X, too.

nbzso 4 months ago

Question from Eastern European: Which religion is prevalent in the USA? Masonic orders? Scientology? Atheism?

I noticed that there you have more masonic temples than churches in every city.

  • technothrasher 4 months ago

    It's Christianity by a wide margin (about 2/3rds of the population). I'm not sure where you get the idea there are more masonic lodges than churches. Just a quick check for my state, Massachusetts, shows about 300 masonic lodges and about 4000 churches.

  • jes5199 4 months ago

    culturally-Christian atheists, mostly, followed by a lot of the less-mainline versions of Christianity

    • tasty_freeze 4 months ago

      Pew polls show about 5% or slightly less identify as atheists. About 30% (including atheists) are non-religious. About 60% identify as Christian. Then a few other groups that are 1-2%: Jewish, Mormon, Buddhist, Muslim.

      Your statement of "mostly" is an extreme (10x) overstatement.

      The text above was from memory. I just looked it up and I was pretty accurate: https://www.pewresearch.org/religious-landscape-study/

      I take umbrage at another aspect of your statement: "culturally Christian atheists". I've heard this pointed specifically at me by people saying things like, "You are Christian, you just don't know it." That say that because I tend to be sensitive/kind/helpful/low ego. Yes, good Christians should be those things, but that doesn't mean that Christianity owns those traits or that those traits didn't exist and weren't valued before Christianity came along.

      • TylerE 4 months ago

        If you asked the typical American protestant (who does NOT go to church every week BTW) if they really believe in the whole god and heaven and hell thing, a lot of 'em are gonna hem and haw. It's closer to a social club than an old school religion.

      • jes5199 4 months ago

        I don’t disagree! but among Americans who do not go to church, most of them have parents or grandparents or great-grandparents who attended Christian church regularly, and some of that culture is still prevalent in subtle things like “protestant work ethic”

    • djur 4 months ago

      Evangelical Protestants, Catholics, and mainline Protestants make up 60% of the US population. Atheism isn't that common, maybe 5-10% of the population depending on definition.

  • gabruoy 4 months ago

    I’ll put it this way to contrast with the other post on Hackernews about Americans driving their kids to school:

    There is a much higher likelihood of a child being within walking distance of a church than they are to be within walking distance of a school.

  • Jtsummers 4 months ago

    > I noticed that there you have more masonic temples than churches in every city.

    This is nonsense. I doubt you've even been to the US if you're making claims like this.

    https://www.google.com/maps/search/churches+in+Boone/@36.206...

    https://www.google.com/maps/search/masons+in+Boone/@36.20686...

    One Masonic Lodge vs 18 churches. Repeat that experiment with a bunch of random cities and you'll find that outside of the very high population cities (NYC, Chicago, Atlanta, etc.) there are rarely more than one or two lodges, if they even have one at all.

  • rsynnott 4 months ago

    > I noticed that there you have more masonic temples than churches in every city.

    ... Eh?

    The US probably has more churches, as in physical buildings, per capita than anywhere else in the world.

    Freemasonry isn't a religion, though it has vague religious trappings, but in any case it's fairly absurd to suggest that there are more masonic buildings than churches in the US.