Friday, December 02, 2016

Bishop of Wellington ordains in Hope

Wellington Cathedral has been closed since New Zealand’s devastating earthquake over fears that a neighbouring building could collapse on top of it. 

So the Bishop of Wellington had just two weeks to find another venue for a planned ordination service.
 
The Diocese of Wellington had a bumper crop of 18 candidates to be ordained on Saturday (26 November) – and the Cathedral of St Paul was gearing up to host a congregation of about 800 friends and family from all around the globe.

But about 12.02 am on Monday 14 November [NZDT, 11.02am, Sunday 13 November, GMT] those best-laid plans began to unravel. That’s when Wellington was smacked by the shockwaves of 7.8 earthquake that struck the north-east of the South Island.

The cathedral came through unscathed. Which is more than can be said for its organ. More than can be said, too, for the eight-storeyed office building at 61 Molesworth St, which is the cathedral’s northern neighbour.

In the wake of a drastic aftershock on the Monday afternoon, council engineers decided 61 Molesworth St was in imminent danger of collapse – and ordered the immediate evacuation of the cathedral.

On the Friday afternoon (18 November), the cathedral staff team had it confirmed: there was no way they'd be back in the cathedral in time for the ordination service – which left them exactly eight days to find another church big enough to hold 800 people.

They did, too, thanks to The Hope Centre in Lower Hutt, who opened their doors and hearts to the diocese.

Saturday afternoon’s celebrations went off without a hitch – and with an unmistakeable and perhaps extra sense of joy, says Canon Simon Winn, who is the diocesan director of ordinands, and who led the team that turned the Hope Centre into a cathedral for the afternoon.

There was an unmistakeably Wellington culture about the proceedings, too: Bishop Justin Duckworth praying, personally, for each of the ordinands as the choir led the congregation in a swelling Taize- style chant in te reo.

Then, having been ordained, each of the new deacons being presented with a New Testament, by a child, and each of the new priests being presented with a Bible by a child. 

Thus equipped, the new deacons and priests would move to that place in the auditorium where their parish and whanau groups were waiting for them.

They’d greet their newly ordained brother or sister with a waiata, and vest them in their stoles.

Contractors have begun demolishing 61 Molesworth St – and say that job could take three months. 

The cathedral team continues to “hope for the best and plan for the worst”, says Simon Winn.

They’d love to be celebrating the Christmas services back in the cathedral. 

But until the cordons are lifted the cathedral congregation will continue to meet at St Mark’s Church, which is in the grounds of St Mark’s School 13 Dufferin St, Basin Reserve.