Christ's Church Cathedral (Hamilton)

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Christ's Church Cathedral, Anglican Diocese of Niagara, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Christ's Church Cathedral, Anglican Diocese of Niagara, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

Christ's Church Cathedral, Hamilton, Ontario, is the cathedral church of the Anglican Diocese of Niagara.[1] Built in 1835 (but see further below), it predates the existing Anglican cathedrals of Toronto,[2] Kingston,[3] London, Ontario,[4] Halifax,[5] Fredericton[6] and St. John's[7] and as such is the oldest extant Anglican cathedral in anglophone Canada and the second oldest in all of Canada: only Holy Trinity Cathedral in Québec City predates it.[8].

Contents

[edit] Construction history

The building has an unusual construction history. Originally a stuccoed wooden Palladian-Baroque structure designed by Robert Charles Wetherall[9], it was incrementally transformed into stone Decorated Gothic, initially to an 1848 design by William Thomas, with Thomas’s chancel and the first two bays of his nave being added to Wetherall's existing wooden church, the resulting hybrid being dubbed “the humpback church.”[10] The stone gothic nave was completed to a further design by Henry Langley (the architect of some 70 Ontario churches, including Metropolitan United Church, Toronto and the bell tower and spire of St. Michael's Cathedral, Toronto (Roman Catholic))[11] in 1876[12], the original wooden portion having been demolished in 1872 to clear room for it[13] and, inter alia, the chancel extended in 1924-25.[14] Meanwhile, Thomas, in a state of indignation over the perverse use to which the Anglicans had put his design, took it to the Presbyterians, who built the still-standing St Paul’s Church to Thomas’s plan for Christ’s Church.[15]

Christ's Church has ornately carved west doors and fine stained glass windows.

[edit] Music and arts

The Cathedral is a notable arts, concert, recital and recording venue in Hamilton; its Gallery 252, operated by the Cathedral’s arts committee, mounts monthly exhibitions of oils, pastels, charcoal drawings, photography, silk screening and stitchery as a means of introducing to the public artists not yet sufficiently established for commercial galleries. In the 1970s its organist was the renowned choral conductor Donald M. Kendrick.

[edit] Controversial matters

The parish has taken notably liberal stands on socially and theologically controversial issues; in 2003 the Dean performed an irregular wedding for a lesbian couple while the national church was debating the issue of blessing of same-sex unions (as it continues to do) and without the diocesan synod having reached any conclusion on the matter, provoking censure by the Bishop.[16] (The diocesan synod did subsequently approve blessing of same-sex unions in 2004 though the Bishop withheld his consent[17] notwithstanding which the local Roman Catholic diocese withdrew from an annual service with the Anglicans and Lutherans to renew and reaffirm recognition of one another's baptismal vows.[18]) It is considered a gay-friendly parish and Integrity, an Anglican/Episcopalian gay and lesbian organisation, conducts monthly worship services in the Cathedral.[19]

[edit] External links

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Christ's Church Cathedral home page.
  2. ^ Welcome
  3. ^ Welcome
  4. ^ St. Paul's Cathedral HomePage
  5. ^ The Cathedral Church of All Saints
  6. ^ Christ Church Cathedral, Fredericton
  7. ^ The Anglican Cathedral of St. John the Baptist
  8. ^ Cathedral of the Holy Trinity
  9. ^ Marion MacRae and Anthony Adamson, Hallowed Walls: Church Architecture of Upper Canada (Toronto: Clarke, Irwin, 1975), pp.87-88.
  10. ^ MacRae and Adamson, pp.148-49.
  11. ^ MacRae and Adamson, pp.168, 171, 174.
  12. ^ http://www.waynecook.com/ahamilton-wentworth.html Historical Plaques of Hamilton-Wentworth
  13. ^ MacRae and Adamson, p.90.
  14. ^ http://www.waynecook.com/ahamilton-wentworth.html Historical Plaques of Hamilton-Wentworth
  15. ^ MacRae and Adamson, p.149.
  16. ^ Anglican Journal
  17. ^ http://www.anglican.ca/news/news.php?newsItem=2004-11-15_samesexniagara.new
  18. ^ http://www.ecumenism.net/archive/revue/2005_06_en_bref_en.htm
  19. ^ Proud Anglicans - Hamilton-Niagara area