Christ Church Highbury

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Christ Church Highbury
March, 2009 photo of Christ Church Highbury
51°33′09″N 0°05′55″W / 51.55248°N 0.0987°W / 51.55248; -0.0987
Location155 Highbury Grove,
London
CountryEngland
DenominationChurch of England
ChurchmanshipOpen evangelical
Websitechristchurchhighbury.com
Architecture
ArchitectThomas Allom
Years built1847–1848
Administration
DioceseDiocese of London
ParishChrist Church with St John and St Saviour
Clergy
VicarThe Revd Andrew Chrich
Assistant priestThe Revd Prakash Thankachan (associate vicar)
Laity
Reader(s)Polly Arthur, John Gilbert
Director of musicJames Buckham

Christ Church Highbury is an Anglican church in Islington, north London, next to Highbury Fields.

Architecture and construction

The site was given by John Dawes, a local benefactor and landlord, and the church was built by Thomas Allom in a cruciform shape with a short chancel, transepts, and nave from 1847 to 1848. Bridget Cherry and Nikolaus Pevsner write that Christ Church Highbury 'is a successful and original use of Gothic for a building on a cruciform plan with broad octagonal crossing. The cross-plan with broad nave and crossing was popular for churches in the low church tradition where an effective auditorium for the spoken word was preferred to a plan designed for an elaborate liturgy.'[1]

Since then, several changes have been made to the church, including the addition of a balcony in 1872, and new rooms for children's work and fellowship in 1980.[2]

Opening

The church was opened in 1848 by Reverend Matthew Anderson Collision, son of Irishman Daniel Marcus Collision and his wife Catherine.

A special service booklet was published to celebrate the occasion: "On the Consecration of the New Church at Highbury, Dedicated to the Saviour as 'Christ's Church'", Reverend M A Collision.[3]

Reverend Collision died on 18 October 1864 at Highbury Grange, aged 58 years. His congregation, numbering ~750, testified their esteem for the deceased by going generally into mourning and subscribing £3000 to purchase an annuity for his widow. Deceased also left twelve children, most of whom are partly provided for.[4]

Today

After the July 2005 bombings in central London, clergy at the church published a prayer and invited the congregation to pray, 'O Saviour Christ, in whom there is neither Jew nor Greek, East nor West, black nor white, we pray for all, of whatever nation, who are suffering after the explosions in London.'[5]

The former Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, visited the church on 10 March 2006, to help alongside the regular volunteers at the church's night shelter for the homeless. According to the Diocese of London web site, Dr Williams 'got on with the job in hand, serving food, making beds and chatting to the guests using the shelter'.[6] Each winter the church provides shelter, a hot meal, bed and breakfast for homeless people of the local area.

The parish of Christ Church Highbury with St. John and St. Saviour in the Archdeaconry of Hackney in the Church of England's Diocese of London.[7] The church standing in the open evangelical tradition and its patron is the Church Pastoral Aid Society (CPAS).[8]

Music

References

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