When
we stayed in London earlier this month, our hotel was right near (same block
as) Westminster
Chapel, a rather Victorian building (a variant on faux Romanesque). It had
services on Sunday at 11 and 5:30, and other programs were advertised on the
church doors, like Comedy Night on Mondays.
I
looked up the church online – door to door from our hotel to the church, it
might have been all of 90 seconds. And I discovered that this was the church
where G. Campbell
Morgan and David
Martyn Lloyd-Jones had been pastors. The church had a long history of
evangelism and outreach.
And,
as it turned out, it still does.
On
our last Sunday in London, I went to the 11 a.m. service. Keep in mind where
this church is – three blocks from Westminster Abbey and Parliament, three
blocks from Westminster Cathedral, three blocks from Buckingham Palace, and
about two blocks from Scotland Yard. The area is called St. James Park, and it’s
an interesting area for a church to be surrounded by all that royal,
ecclesiastical and government power.
The
interior of the church is what I would call “plainly beautiful” – a royal blue
ceiling with white crossbeams (see the photo), unstained leaded glass windows,
double balconies that curve like horseshoes around the interior until it reaches a
beautiful and large pipe organ.
There
were about 250 people waiting for the service to begin. The building could hold
more – likely 1,500 or so.
The
preacher that Sunday wasn't the regular minister but a member of the staff (who
confessed during the sermon that he was a former attorney).
The
worship service was contemporary, which for some odd reason didn't seem out of
place int hat old building. I think the reason was the congregation.
To
be alliterative, I would call the congregation demonstrably demographically
diverse.
Young.
Old. Children, Babies. Singles. Families. Various racial backgrounds. In fact,
likely all of the major racial backgrounds. The congregation was not homogeneous by any stretch of the imagination.
Some
of the hymns were familiar (if a Chris Tomlin song can be considered a hymn).
Some weren't familiar at all. The minister, in blue jeans and open collared
shirt, was a gifted preacher.
But
what I found most remarkable was the prayer time, two of them, in fact.
The
individual prayers were not silent. They were spoken aloud. Gradually, as more
and more people prayed – aloud – the murmuring grew collectively louder. And it
seemed to combine and become one, a fusion of many voices of many people
becoming one voice.
A
voice called the church.
Related:
Glass,
no stain (poem)
3 comments:
Wow! A contemporary service in such an old edifice. As contemporary worship is all I do now, I know I would have loved this.
And, yes, I think we can consider Tomlin's songs to be hymns. :)
Blessings, Glynn!
Beautiful and moving, Glynn..
But I must take issue with Martha from Orlando: in Britain a Victorian church is anything but an old edifice; it is not even approaching middle age!
This sounds really...really really good.
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