To bring others into a relationship with God in Christ through our witness, mission and service.

The rebuilt east end window at the Church of the Holy Innocents, Mt Peel. The renovations have been shortlisted for a heritage award.
Photo Credit: Anglican Life
 

More than half of the finalists in an award recognising “commitment, investment or a unique solution to earthquake strengthening which has saved or will now protect a heritage building” in Christchurch, New Zealand, are Anglican churches and a school. The six buildings have recently re-opened following extensive renovation and repair work after the devastating 2011 earthquake in the city. They are amongst 290 Anglican properties in the Diocese of Christchurch under the care of the Church Property Trustees. Some 234 of them sustained damage as a result of the quake, the most notable being Christ Church Cathedral.

Holy Innocents, Mt Peel was re-opened in September last year, seven years after the earthquake partially destroyed the gable on the buildings east-end. A building technique used by the Etruscans in Italy, five centuries before the birth of Jesus Christ, was used to precision-fill newly drilled holes in the stonework with a mixed grout of silicate and lime to strengthen the building so it will withstand another large earthquake.

Anglican -Life _chancel -church -holy -innocents -damaged _460x 613

The damage to the east-end gable of the Church of the Holy Innocents in Mt Peel  is plain to see in this photo (above); but there is no trace of the tremor in this post-renovation photo (below).
Photos: Anglican Life

Anglican -Life _Chancel -church -holy -innocents -completed _460x 259

St Bartholomew’s Church, Kaiapoi opened in 1855 but within four years the entire building was moved from a sandhill to a more solid base. During the earthquake reconstruction, the entire building was again moved so that contractors could lay new quake-proof foundations before it was rolled back into position. “More than any other church I can name, it’s a church on the move,” Bishop Victoria Matthews said when she re-opened the building in July last year.

St Paul’s Church, Tai Tapu is a category one heritage-listed building, designed by Cecil Wood and built in the 1930s by Sir Robert Heaton Rhodes in memory of his wife who died in 1929.

St Barnabas Church, Fendalton, was closed for six years while workers repaired its basalt stonework and mortar. Repairs were also carried out to sections of the roof and tower which moved separately from the rest of the building in the tremor.

St Cuthbert’s Church in Governor’s Bay is described as one of the country’s most iconic stone churches. It was built by the first settlers in 1860 and many well known people are buried in its churchyard. The church re-opened in June last year.

St Michael’s Old Stone Building is today part of the oldest school in New Zealand’s Canterbury region. Work was completed last March to repair stonework and rebuild newly strengthened gable ends.

Other buildings nominated in this category are the Statue of Captain Robert Falcon Scott (Christchurch City Council); Dean’s Farm Buildings at Christchurch Boys’ High School (The Building Intelligence Group); Christ’s College – kitchen and tower (Wilkie + Bruce Architects); the Former St Luke’s Vicarage (Maiden Group); and Mona Vale Homestead (Christchurch City Council).

Judges whittled down some 70 entries for the biennial Canterbury Heritage Awards into 36 finalists across seven categories. The winners will be announced on 15 June during a ceremony at the Isaac Theatre Royal, itself a winner of the last awards in 2016.

Repairs to Christ Church Cathedral were held up after unsuccessful legal challenges to the Church Property Trustee’s plans to demolish the ruins and replace it with a modern designed building. Last year the Diocesan Synod agreed to the more expensive option of re-instating the Cathedral, after local and central government teamed up with heritage campaigners to pledge funding towards the costs. Work is yet to begin as the legal and formal structures are put in place to give effect to the agreements.

Anglican -Life _Christchurch -Cathedral -01_460x 307

The nave of Christ Church Cathedral after the 2011 earthquake.
Photo: Anglican Life

Bible Moment: “God is with You”

I hereby command you: Be strong and courageous; do not be frightened or dismayed, for the Lord your God is with you wherever you go. Joshua 1:9 A Moment to Ponder The familiarity and relative safety of the wilderness was at his back, while the Promised Land lay before him, but before Joshua set out,…

New Rural Dean for St. James & Hanover

The Very Rev. Andrew Reid, Rector of the Church of the Holy Trinity, Westgate, Montego Bay, is now Rural Dean for St. James and Hanover. His appointment follows the retirement of the Very Rev. Annett Brown who served in that capacity for four years. A graduate of the United Theological College of the West Indies…

Bible Moment: God cares for the vulnerable

“Make sure that you do not look down on the little ones, on those who are further behind you on the path of righteousness. For I tell you: they are watched over by those most beloved messengers who are always in the company of my Father in heaven.” Matthew 18:10 (The Voice) A Moment to…

Children’s Hymn (2018)

Tune: My Hope is built – CPWI #456 ) Words: Rev. Douglas Barnes Music/Tempo Train up the child God’s love to own Show them the way His hand to hold God’s perfect will, must be their goal Help them to give to God their all CHORUS: Train up the child to know God’s grace And…

The Bishop’s Message for Children’s Sunday 2018

Our theme for Child’s Month, and especially Children’s Sunday is Train Up the Child taken from Proverbs 22:6, … This verse of scripture is often quoted by parents as a justification for discipline, especially corporal punishment….. Read more below Children’s Hymn 2018

Intentional Discipleship Training Begins

The first of three regional weekend seminars to train congregational leaders for the next phase of the Intentional Discipleship programme in their churches takes place this weekend. Some 35 members from the Montego Bay Region will meet from Friday May 4 to Sunday May 6 at the Hillcrest Diocesan Retreat Centre in Brown’s Town, St.…

Bible Moment – God’s PROMISE

Exodus 6  5Moreover, I have heard the groaning of the Israelites, whom the Egyptians are enslaving, and I have remembered my covenant. 10Then the Lord said to Moses, 11“Go, tell Pharaoh king of Egypt to let the Israelites go out of his country.” Take a Moment to Ponder In a time when the prosperity gospel is very popular…

Season of Intentional Discipleship sparks growing worldwide movement

Anglicans around the world are joining in a movement of discipleship, equipping each other to spread the power of the Gospel. The co-ordinating group for the Season of Intentional Discipleship is meeting this week in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia amid growing excitement. As they gather, a film highlighting the Season of Intentional Discipleship has been released. (Sous-titres…

Intentional Discipleship Training

Intentional Discipleship is a deliberate yet empowering and flexible relationship of trust in which one individual assists or works along with another to understand and appropriate the grace of God in their lives – Rev. Douglas Barnes TRAINING DATES: Montego Bay Region: Hillcrest Diocesan Retreat Centre May 4-6, 2018 Mandeville Region: Auchtembeddie Camp Site, Manchester May…

Sisters and Brothers in Christ, I write to update you on the following: Appointments The following persons have been appointed Deanery Youth Coordinators effective the 6thinstant: Trelawny:        Aunty Shanique Smith, Church of Saint Peter, Falmouth Portland:          Uncle Sheldon Failey, Church of Saint Luke, Comfort Castle St. Ann:           Aunty Joyce Headlam, Church of Saint Mark, Brown’s…

Bible Moment – Wait on God!

When the people saw that Moses delayed to come down from the mountain, the people gathered around Aaron and said to him, ‘Come, make gods for us, who shall go before us; as for this Moses, the man who brought us up out of the land of Egypt, we do not know what has become…