The Star Malaysia

Tiny village awaits megachurch

2,000-seat building will be Netherland­s’ largest place of worship for Christians

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YERSEKE ( Netherland­s): Standing in a green field surrounded by black and white cows, Dutch politician Jaap Sinke surveyed the plot where constructi­on of a new megachurch with space for more than 2,000 people will soon begin.

It will be the climax of a 15year battle for a new building to house his village’s rapidly expanding congregati­on, the likes of which many church leaders can only pray for. And it will become the largest church in the Netherland­s.

Sinke is the local councillor for the orthodox Calvinist Reformed Political Party in the small parish of Yerseke, population 7,000, nestling on the shores of the sea in southwest Zeeland province.

Known for its aquacultur­e and fishing, the village will soon become home to the new megachurch, which is entirely financed by the religious community with constructi­on due to start next year.

A church in central Opheusden will still have more seats at 2,850, but the overall surface area of the building in Yerseke will be larger.

It is a situation bucking the trend not just in the Netherland­s but across Europe, where hundreds of former churches are now being turned into accommodat­ion, event halls or put to other uses as people turn away from religion in droves.

The exception is Zeeland, located in a part of the country dubbed the Bible Belt thanks to its high concentrat­ion of Protestant­s and Catholics, where churches are being extended, buildings restored and new places of worship sought out.

Every Sunday, twice a day, more than 1,400 worshipper­s gather in Yerseke’s small church.

“We can’t go on like this. For

years now we’ve been adding chairs and benches to try to fit everyone in. The first row is glued up against the pulpit,” said Sinke.

Indeed, many others prefer to stay home and watch the proceeding­s on the television, knowing there will not be enough places to sit.

“Over the past half a century, Catholic congregati­ons in the Netherland­s have radically fallen. Many places of worship have closed and parishes have been merged,” said University of Nijmegen theology professor Peter Nissen.

But the story is completely the reverse among Protestant­s. About 20% of Protestant­s still regularly attend church, compared with just 6% of Catholics.

Among the orthodox communitie­s of the reformed church there are record attendance­s in places like Yerseke, where religion still represents “strong social ties”, said Nissen.

The Protestant community “counts more than 100,000 people in the Netherland­s and is growing every year by a few hundred”.

Indeed, Yerseke’s congregati­on has never stopped growing, and counts about 2,300 people today.

Since it was built in the 1960s, the original church building in the centre of the village, squeezed between neighbouri­ng houses and gardens, has been added onto several times.

An increasing local population is helping to drive congregati­on numbers, but education and tradition also play a role.

Children begin to accompany their parents to church at the age of three or four and when they grow up, they do the same with their own children, Sinke said.

For an orthodox community living according to the Bible, church attendance is also a given, he added.

Now after 15 years of delay, partly as the right spot was hard to find, the local council voted in 2017 to approve the constructi­on of the megachurch on a parcel of land, which the farmer agreed to sell.

There will even be parking for some 350 cars and an undergroun­d space to accommodat­e 700 bikes, Sinke said proudly.

But there is one last obstacle to overcome – opposition from about a dozen villagers who have taken their case to the country’s highest court, the Council of State.

A ruling is expected some time after the summer holidays, Sinke said.

But even those who were opposed appear to have given up the fight.

“I was against the project. There is a nature reserve just a few hundred metres from the area and we didn’t know what to do about all the traffic,” said Marien Weststrate, who attends a church in a neighbouri­ng village.

But the leader of the local Leefbaar Reimerswaa­l party said he had now realised “that more people are going to the church and younger people are increasing­ly being drawn”.

“I think that comes from the fact that people feel protected at church while the world around them doesn’t stop evolving,” Weststrate added.

Sinke also welcomed the fact that “more and more adolescent­s and young parents are coming to services”, with the church’s entrance buzzing with young people every Sunday morning.

 ??  ?? Big plans: The current church in Yerseke. Sinke (inset) says the megachurch set to replace it will include parking for 250 cars and an undergroun­d space for 700 bikes. — AFP
Big plans: The current church in Yerseke. Sinke (inset) says the megachurch set to replace it will include parking for 250 cars and an undergroun­d space for 700 bikes. — AFP

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