In Roadside Religion, his recent book about this expedition, Beal writes that these are examples of what he calls outsider religion because most are mounted by individuals and churches that are outside the religious mainstream.
Some unusual ones include the World's Largest Rosary Collection, the World's Largest Ten Commandments, and what's called the Holy Land Experience. Beal calls the last of these, in Orlando, Florida, a fundamentalist Magic Kingdom theme park and a Disneyesque alternative to Disney World, complete with costumed characters, including make-believe Roman Centurians and a man dressed, pitiably, as a leper.
Beal agrees that some of the sites are off-putting, including one with big letters that read: YOU WILL DIE. HELL IS HOT HOT HOT. Still, he says, these outdoor outposts reveal personal religious experiences in a very open and vulnerable way.
Wide open in the case of Noah's Ark, where the wind still whistles through the steel framework more than 30 years after the project began.
Roadside Religion: In Search of the Sacred, the Strange, and the Substance of Faith, by Timothy K. Beal, is published by Beacon Press in Boston.
Read more of Ted's personal reflections and stories from the road on his blog, Ted Landphair's America.