Wednesday, June 25, 2008

The Closing of a Presbyterian Pulpit

Fellowship Canadian Reformed Church is in the community of Aldershot, in Burlington. It was 50 years ago that Aldershot village joined Burlington City. And as near as I can tell the Aldershot Presbyterian Church was built in 1957, the year before. The congregation had been formed a few years earlier: likely in 1954. The Canadian Reformed Church of Burlington South, now known as Fellowship Canadian Reformed Church rented the facilities for 17 years: fully 1/3 of the time since the inaugural service in January 1957. In January 2008, 51 years after the dedication of the building, the pulpit was closed, and the Presbyterian congregation merged with Knox Presbyterian in Waterdown.

The last times Fellowship congregation used this building was in April and June 2006. Rev. J.L. van Popta held his inaugural sermon there on the Sunday he was installed as the pastor of Fellowship church, and then in June, Rev. Chris Bosch led a Public Profession of Faith service there.

At the time we did not know that those two services would mark the passing of an era for Fellowship Church. The new pastor and the emeritus pastor both preaching there about six weeks apart.

In 2007 Fellowship congregation put an offer to purchase the building, but a developer was able to offer more.

Today the building is under the wrecking ball. One of our members who lives nearby told me that he could hear the excavator taking down the building, so I dashed over with my camera, to capture the closing of a chapter of Fellowship Canadian Reformed Church life.

It is a sad thing when Reformed and Protestant pulpits close. Fellowship Church hopes and prays that it can serve as that confessionally sound Reformed witness in Aldershot for many, many years.





3 comments:

elaine said...

Rev. John,

Dad and i were over at the church tonight as the sun set. All sorts of memories remain clinging to the walls, and drifting in the quiet air ... i took a few home with me, and i guess the rest will soon scatter as the walls and roof crumble.

It's an earthly house that's disappearing this week. The faith that built it and maintained it definately lives on though - in heaven with those Presbyterian founders and too still here in the people of Fellowship!

It's not a sad day

Thanks for the daytime photos

elaine

Anonymous said...

Somehow it doesn't seem right to destroy a church building. It seems a bit like the reflection of our times--the Christian relgion is on the wane. On the other hand, it's "just" a building, not a holy thing. We look forward to the new building, the new Jerusalem.

Jo

Anonymous said...

It doesn't seem right somehow, to destroy a church. It seems a bit like the sign of the times, that Christianity is on the wane. On the other hand, it's not a holy object and we look forward to a house made in heaven, the new Jerusalem.

Jo