Christ Church, Nazareth

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Christ Church
File:Nazareth Christ church 1.jpg
Exterior View
Basic information
Location Israel Nazareth, Israel
Affiliation Anglican
Province Episcopal Church of Jerusalem and the Middle East
District Diocese of Jerusalem
Leadership Episcopal
Architectural description
Architectural style Gothic Revival
Completed 1871

Christ Church (Hebrew: כנסיית המשיח‎) is a Protestant-Anglican church located in the town of Nazareth, Israel. Due to financial troubles the church was never finished and lacked its intended spire. However a spire was finally added 143 years later, in 2014. Nearby lies the famous Basilica of the Annunciation.

History

The Christ Church in Nazareth is the last work of Swiss architect Ferdinand Stadler. Works at the site began in 1869, but unfortunately, when Stadler passed away in 1870, the building was unfinished. When the church was finished in 1871, it was the second Anglican church to be built in the Holy Land. The first is located in Jerusalem.[1] The building was consecrated by Bp. Samuel Gobat, and the Rev. John Zeller was the pastor at the time of its consecration. The Church Mission Society (CMS) provided many of the early missionaries who served at Christ Church.[2] It served as a mission center for the region and ministry also took place in Mujeidal (Migdal HaEmek, today), Reineh, and Cana of Galilee (Kafr Kana).

A number of influential pastors and missionaries ministered at Christ Church or were based there. These include Frederick Augustus Klein, Michael Ka'war, Seraphim Boutaji, and Khalil Jamal. The last of which was essential in founding the Protestant presence on the East Bank of the Jordan.

John Zeller (or Johannes Zeller, as he was sometimes called) described worship at the church in the late 19th Century with the following words:

One part of the hall is filled with girls of the boarding school and the women of the congregation; and the other is so closely packed with men, that every observer would wish to have a larger locality. The service is in Arabic, according to the liturgy of the Church of England. The responses are said by the whole congregation, and all heartily join in the singing, accompanied by a harmonium. [...] a stranger would at once be surprised to see their heads covered, either with the red fez or a little white cap, or a black handkerchief tied with a brown rope, in the Bedouin fashion; and yet he would be struck with the close attention expressed in almost every face at the time of the sermon.[3]

Today

As of 2013 the church has about 40 families as members, and the membership is almost entirely Arab. There is one Arabic-language service every Sunday morning. Excepting visitors, attendance is usually around 50.[4]

Gallery

References

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