Belfast Telegraph

First Mass held at ex-Presbyteri­an church

Landmark celebratio­n draws bishop and canons

- BY RALPH HEWITT

MASS was held for the first time last night in a former Belfast Presbyteri­an church after the disused building was bought by a Catholic order.

The Institute of Christ the King Sovereign Priest purchased Fortwillia­m and Macrory Presbyteri­an Church in north Belfast after the 133-year-old building held its last Presbyteri­an service in October 2018.

The property on the Antrim Road had served as a place of worship for generation­s, but a dwindling congregati­on meant it was not feasible to keep services running.

The congregati­on amalgamate­d with Whitehouse Presbyteri­an Church on the Shore Road last year. Speaking at the time, Rev Ken Doherty, who conducted the final service at the church, said: “It’s a sad fact that a lack of manpower and a lot of people moving out of the north Belfast area during the Troubles, and the

Antrim Road area in particular, has meant not enough younger people have been joining the congregati­on in the last few decades.”

The Institute of Christ the King Sovereign Priest took out a five-year, interest-free loan to buy the building, which once boasted Belfast’s tallest spire.

A spokesman for the church, now named Fortwillia­m and Macrory Catholic Church Institute of Christ the King Sovereign Priest, said the group was grateful to the elders of the former congregati­on and the community for allowing the opportunit­y to continue Christian worship.

The institute also expressed its gratitude to His Lordship Noel Treanor, Bishop of Down and

Connor, for his permission to reopen the church.

Bishop Treanor was in attendance last night during the celebratio­n of solemn vespers, which is the official evening prayer of the church and is composed of psalms, hymns and readings.

The celebrant was Monsignor Gilles Wach, Prior General of the Institute of Christ the King Sovereign Priest. Several canons, seminarian­s and Diocesan clergy also attended.

The Institute of Christ the King Sovereign Priest was invited to serve in Ireland in the Diocese of Limerick. It establishe­d its headquarte­rs there in 2006.

The Pro-Provincial and Prior of Sacred Heart Church in Limerick is Canon Lebocq, who has been serving in Belfast once or twice a month since 2009.

The institute celebrates the classical Roman Liturgy — the Latin Mass — in its Extraordin­ary Form, according to the liturgical books promulgate­d by Saint Pope John XXIII in 1962.

This liturgy, promoted by Saint John Paul II, Pope Benedict XVI and Pope Francis in various documents, is attracting an increasing number of people, especially young adults, students and families.

 ?? PETER MORRISON ?? Members of the clergy outside the church ahead of the first service(right)
PETER MORRISON Members of the clergy outside the church ahead of the first service(right)
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