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St John's Renfield Church

Coordinates: 55°53′10″N 4°18′24″W / 55.8861°N 4.3066°W / 55.8861; -4.3066
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Interior of St John's Renfield Church

St. John's Renfield Church is a parish church of the Church of Scotland, serving Kelvindale in the west end of Glasgow, Scotland. It is within the Church of Scotland's Presbytery of Glasgow.

Location

The church building is situated in Beaconsfield Road, Kelvindale (within the G12 postcode area). The church is visible from the Great Western Road. Gartnavel General Hospital, Gartnavel Royal Hospital and the Glasgow Nuffield Hospital are located nearby.

History

The history of the present St John's Renfield Church of Glasgow has its roots in three separate congregations reflecting the ecclesiastical, industrial and demographic fortunes of nineteenth and twentieth century Scotland.

St John's Parish Church

The opening phase in the story dates back to 1819. Glasgow like other industrial towns was confronted with the appalling, overcrowded and insanitary living conditions[1] engendered by the rapidly increasing population[2]. A new Church, St John's Parish Church, was built on the corner of Bell Street and Macfarlane Street to serve the deprived Calton area*. Its first minister was the young Dr Thomas Chalmers who already had a considerable reputation as moral reformer and evangelical preacher[3] and whose leadership during the Disruption in 1843 was to make him, in the words of Carlyle, “The chief Scotsman of his age.” Chalmers had managed to persuade[4] the Provost and Magistrates to appoint him as Minister to the new church in order to allow him to put into practice his unorthodox, evangelical ideas for alleviating the material and spiritual squalor[5] generated by industrialism. Thanks to this approach, which became a model in its time,[6] he hoped to bring about a moral change by fostering independence and by privileging personal contact, parochial care and schooling.[7] Chalmers' Ministry had considerable success[8] but was relatively short, for, in 1823, he was appointed to the chair of moral philosophy at St Andrews University. He was replaced first by Dr Patrick MacFarlan, and then by Dr Thomas Brown[9] and the Church continued to prosper with a growing congregation until the great schism caused over the issue of "spiritual independence" and "patronage" which lead to the Disruption and the creation of the new independent Free Church of Scotland*. On May 14, 1843, Dr Brown preached his last sermon in Macfarlane Street, and then, with the support of 1151 out of 1175 members of the congregation,[10] left the church. Three days later, a new congregation was formed under the name of "Free St John's". Initially, without a place of worship, the congregation found a temporary location in Blackfriar's street, until, thanks to a subscription, sufficient funds were collected for a new Church to be built in George street in 1845, where "Free St John's" continued to prosper until 1922.[11]

Renfield Church

In the same year, 1819, a few hundred yards away new congregation was formed. It was a lay overflow congregation from the "Old Light Church" in East Cromwell Street, consisting of some 30 members and led by 2 elders: a weaver and a currier.[12] The first services were held in rented accommodation in Albion Street, until the acquisition of a permanent site in Renfield Street in 1820 by which time the congregation had grown to 236.[13] The Renfield Church, as it became to be known, was formed to meet the needs of the Western suburbs and Calton. For two years, until the appointment of the Rev. Michael Willis in 1821, there was no permanent minister. The membership of the congregation continued to rise slowly, however, it was decided in 1855, because of shifting patterns of residence, to sell the Renfield site and move West to expand the missionary work in the destitute areas of Glasgow. A new Church was built in Bath Street with seating for 1200. After the death of the Rev Duncan MacNab, the Ministry remained vacant for a period of 12 months. Finally, and despite the reticence of some of the more intransigent purists of the congregation,[14] Dr Marcus Dods was finally inducted in 1864. This resulted in a very memorable Ministry[15] and made Renfield's name as a centre for religious life in Glasgow.[16][17] Again, because of population shifts, it was decided that it would be advantageous for the congregations of Free St John's and Renfield to unite, which was finally accomplished in 1923. As the Renfield church was both more modern and more convenient, it was this building that was adopted to house the new congregation, "Free St John's – Renfield". In 1924, the Rev. G.H.C. Macgregor was inducted as Minister.

The Hyndland Congregation

A few miles to the East a third congregation had evolved, under the name of the Hyndland Congregation. It was originally formed in 1852 when the Wellington Street congregation changed location. It was a small congregation of about 30 laymen which, finally in 1853, was taken in hand by the Rev. William Miller.[18] More suitable accommodation was found in Cheapside street in 1856 and the congregation, whose membership had by this time increased to 100 was dedicated under the name of "Mitchel U.P. Church"[19] . Following the appointment of the new Minister, Dr John Wilson, in 1861 there was a rapid rise in membership and, in 1873, a new site with seating for 1000 was opened in Breadalbane Street under the name of "Sandyford U.P. Church". At the request of the Presbytery however, the church moved West to serve the developing areas of Hyndland . The project to build a new church in Novar Drive was blocked by WW1. After the war it was decided to unite with "St John's – Renfield" and so a new congregation was formed, the "St John's Renfield and Hyndland congregation" in 1927[20] . The church was transported ( i.e. relocated) to the new church building in Beaconsfield road in 1931.

Building

The church seen from Beaconsfield Road.

The church was dedicated in January 1931. The new building was planned by the United Free Church of Scotland, but by the time of completion the UF Church had already united (in 1929) with the Church of Scotland. On 15 December 1970 the church was designated as a Category B listed building.[21]

The church was designed in a Gothic revival style by the architect James Taylor Thomson (1887–1953).[22] He won the competition to design the church in 1927; it was built between 1929 and 1930. Thomson's wedding took place in the church in 1931. The church also includes elaborate oak carvings and stained glass by Douglas Strachan and Gordon Webster. Also in Glasgow, Thomson designed High Carntyne Parish Church and was involved in designing the chapel of the University of Glasgow and much of the 1937 Empire Exhibition site in Bellahouston Park.[23]

Ministry

The minister (since 2009) is the Rev Fiona Lillie, who was previously minister at Stromness Parish Church, Orkney. The previous minister, the Rev Dugald Cameron, is now minister in Oban.[24]

A former minister (1966–1976) was the Very Rev Dr James A. Simpson, who subsequently moved to Dornoch Cathedral and became Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland in 1994. His successor was the Rev Colin McIntosh, who subsequently became minister of Dunblane Cathedral (in 1988).[24]

The Very Rev Dr Sheilagh M. Kesting, the first woman minister to be Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, was a Probationer for the Ministry at St John's Renfield (prior to being ordained and inducted to Overtown Parish Church in Lanarkshire).[25]

See also

Other churches nearby

References

  1. ^ A Brief History of Glasgow. )
    Glasgow was … " possibly the filthiest and unhealthiest of all the British towns".
  2. ^ Agnew (2014)
    Increases caused essentially by the immigration of unskilled and often illiterate workers fleeing rural poverty from Ireland and the Highlands. A 10 fold increase between 1801 and 1901.
  3. ^ Thomas Chalmers. http://www.nndb.com/people/959/000104647/ William Wilberforce is reported to have commented on Dr Chalmers' visit to London. "all the world is wild about Dr Chalmers."
  4. ^ St John's – Renfield Church 1969, p. 4
  5. ^ Symons. Parliamentary Report (1839) "I did not believe until I visited the wynds of Glasgow that so large an amount of filth, crime, misery and disease existed on one spot in any civilised country.’’
  6. ^ Discussed amongst others (unfavourably) by Karl Marx. https://books.google.fr/books?id=HjWEac3_aqEC&pg=PA131&lpg=PA131&dq=hollander+marx+chalmers&source=bl&ots=L264zhpt6W&sig=J9Nry-9NSw2vWl6BA6ioc86tonw&hl=en&sa=X&ei=sImjVb_JA4r8UrrzruAB&ved=0CDkQ6AEwBA#v=onepage&q=hollander%20marx%20chalmers&f=false
  7. ^ St John's – Renfield Church p. 5.
    Within 18 months 24 schools were opened
  8. ^ St John's – Renfield Church p. 5
  9. ^ St John's – Renfield Church p. 7
  10. ^ St John's – Renfield Church p. 8
  11. ^ St John's – Renfield Church p. 9
  12. ^ St John's – Renfield Church p. 14
  13. ^ St John's – Renfield Church p. 15
  14. ^ Carnegie Simpson 1909 Vol. 1. pp. 109 - 111 Dr Dods was a progressive in theological terms and suffered on-going criticism from conservative Presbyterians for his alleged unorthodox and heretical leanings. He was criticised essentially on 2 counts: a) for his outspoken defence of modern biblical criticism and his rejection of the notion of the inerrancy of the gospel, b) for suggesting that the Edinburgh Botanic Gardens should be open to the public on Sundays.
  15. ^ St John's – Renfield Church p. 24.
    The celebrated evangelist and lecturer on natural science Henry Drummond who was teaching at the time at Free Church College, Glasgow frequented Renfield Church and collaborated with Dods
  16. ^ The Times, London. 23 December 1947.
  17. ^ St John's – Renfield Church p. 23
  18. ^ St John's – Renfield Church p. 27
  19. ^ St John's – Renfield Church p. 27
    The Rev. Mitchel was the first Minister of the Wellington Street Church.
  20. ^ St John's – Renfield Church p. 27
  21. ^ http://hsewsf.sedsh.gov.uk/hslive/hsstart?P_HBNUM=32301 Historic Scotland: description of listed building
  22. ^ http://www.scottisharchitects.org.uk/architect_full.php?id=202897 DSA Biography of Scottish Architects website
  23. ^ St John's. List.Co.uk. Accessed August 12, 2012.
  24. ^ a b Church of Scotland Yearbook, 2008-9, ISBN 978-0-86153-387-9
  25. ^ http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/6103200.stm BBC News, 31 October 2006

55°53′10″N 4°18′24″W / 55.8861°N 4.3066°W / 55.8861; -4.3066