Years ago I read somewhere about the strange phenomenon, as we would think of it, of the Lutheran pastor in old-time Jerusalem Church, a "union church" (Lutheran and Reformed) just south of present-day Christ U.C.C. at the S-curve on South White Oak Street in Annville, Lebanon County, carrying on revival meetings. It was part of the "New Measures" movement among Lutherans emanating from some of the theological thinking then in vogue at the Lutheran Seminary at Gettysburg. Indeed, when I was a kid, I knew a woman at (then) First Lutheran Church on East Main Street, Annville, where St. Mark's now stands, who had been "saved" in a revival meeting in THAT church, which was built in 1871 when the Lutheran congregation moved to its own building from Jerusalem Church. The Reformed minister at Jerusalem Church was reported as becoming jealous of the increased numbers of people and began to conduct revival services as well, which so greatly displeased the Lebanon Classis, as the German Reformed governing body was then known, as to have the classis "yank the minister's collar." I thought I read this in Stein, Thomas, _Twentieth-Century History of the Lebanon Classis_, 1920, but upon borrowing a copy of the book, I can't find the report. Can anyone lead me to this report or any similar report of such a German Reformed response to Lutheran revival meetings in a union church, whether in Lebanon county or elsewhere? I'd be most grateful for your help. Dr. Karl E. Moyer 397-8035 1309 Passey Lane Lancaster PA 17603-6311