Bernard L. Coffindaffer of Craigsville...
Illustration
Bernard L. Coffindaffer of Craigsville, West Virginia, is not exactly a household name. Nonetheless, if you travel throughout West Virginia and neighboring states you are apt to see his signs. At last count he had erected 235 clusters of three crosses each along the roadside. They are painted in symbolic biblical colors calling attention to the covenant people and the new Jerusalem.
The idea for the crosses came to Coffindaffer in a vision. One day when he awoke from a nap in 1984 he believed that God had spoken to him. He responded by erecting these crosses at strategic vantage points to bear witness to God's love revealed in Jesus' death upon the cross for all people.
God seems to reveal himself to sensitive people who are open and expectant.
George Eliot once wrote: "If we had keen vision of all ordinary human life, it would be like hearing the grass grow or the squirrel's heart beat, and we should die of the roar which lies on the other side of silence."
John was especially focused, and God granted to him one of the most sublime revelations of all time.
- Hasler
The idea for the crosses came to Coffindaffer in a vision. One day when he awoke from a nap in 1984 he believed that God had spoken to him. He responded by erecting these crosses at strategic vantage points to bear witness to God's love revealed in Jesus' death upon the cross for all people.
God seems to reveal himself to sensitive people who are open and expectant.
George Eliot once wrote: "If we had keen vision of all ordinary human life, it would be like hearing the grass grow or the squirrel's heart beat, and we should die of the roar which lies on the other side of silence."
John was especially focused, and God granted to him one of the most sublime revelations of all time.
- Hasler
