Santa Fe New Mexican

Crystal Cathedral reborn

In California, Catholic diocese’s conversion of iconic glass-paned church nearly complete

- By Amy Taxin

AGARDEN GROVE, Calif. n iconic glass-paned church in Southern California that once housed a booming televangel­ist ministry has been transforme­d into a cathedral to give the region’s Catholics a long-awaited and much larger place to congregate and pray.

The landmark, with a facade made up of nearly 11,000 glass panes, was long known as the Rev. Robert H. Schuller’s Crystal Cathedral.

It appears unchanged from the outside. But the cavernous house of worship is covered on the inside with quatrefoil window shades that send sunlight cascading across a stone altar, wooden pews and prominent steel crucifix.

The changes are part of a $77 million makeover to convert the space for Roman Catholic worship by adding features such as the bishop’s chair and the geometric window shades that draw in light while keeping the 2,100-seat building now known as Christ Cathedral cool and airy under the glaring afternoon sun.

“Our hope is that through the beauty of this place people will be drawn closer to the divine,” said the Rev. Christophe­r Smith, episcopal vicar and rector of Christ Cathedral. “Every time people have walked in here since we’ve opened it up to people to see it, that is exactly what’s happened.” The July 17 dedication of the building opens a new chapter for the diocese of Orange, which was formed in the 1970s when the county’s population was much smaller. Since then, Orange County has grown into a densely-populated and diverse region between Los Angeles and San Diego that is home to more than a million Catholics.

For years, the diocese was planning to build a new cathedral to have a central place for special events such as ordination­s. Auxiliary Bishop Timothy Freyer said he recalled being given a capped number of invitation­s when he was ordained three decades ago due to the limited seating at the county’s much smaller cathedral.

The proposal, however, carried a steep price tag, and when Schuller’s Crystal Cathedral went bankrupt in 2010 the diocese instead opted to buy the sprawling campus in Garden Grove for $57.5 million. In addition to the cathedral, the campus has a school, cemetery and offices surrounded by scenic gardens and water features.

“It would have cost hundreds of millions to build from scratch, and this was a godsend when we were able to get this in bankruptcy,” Freyer said.

The building was designed by architect Philip Johnson and completed in 1980. At the time, it housed the ministry founded by Schuller, an Alton, Iowa-born pastor ordained by the Reformed Church in America who began preaching at a California drive-in movie theater in 1955 with his wife Arvella.

Schuller started the Hour of Power in 1970 to spread his message that “possibilit­y thinking” and love of God overcome hardships. The program had millions of viewers at its peak but the church filed for bankruptcy after a disastrous leadership transition and a decline in viewership and donations.

Schuller died in 2015 after a battle with cancer. His grandson is a church pastor and has a television ministry in Orange County.

The new cathedral will be open for weekend Mass but closed weekdays until next year while the Hazel Wright pipe organ, the world’s fifth-largest, is voiced and tuned.

 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Nuns get a first look Monday at the newly renovated Christ Cathedral in Garden Grove, Calif. The 88,000-square-foot Catholic church has undergone a $77 million renovation.
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/ASSOCIATED PRESS Nuns get a first look Monday at the newly renovated Christ Cathedral in Garden Grove, Calif. The 88,000-square-foot Catholic church has undergone a $77 million renovation.

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