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Centenary News

The Centenary United Pastoral Charge is selling their building on Fortune Street in Point St-Charles, but the congregation will live on at St. Columba House.

The following is a brief history of this formerly Methodist, now United Church congregation (from the Société d’Histoire de Pointe-Saint-Charles).

“In 1864, Point Saint Charles’ first Methodist church opened on the corner of Wellington and Charon Streets. In 1891, a new, bigger church was built and given the name Centenary Church in honour of the centenary of the Methodist Church in Canada. It cost $32,000 and could seat 950. The congregation counted 400 families and its Sunday School was Montréal’s largest. The Hope Chapel on Ryde St was also built, served for ten years and, then was sold. It is still standing today.

Centenary joined the United Church of Canada in 1926.

In 1950, fire ravaged the church. It was rebuilt on a smaller scale, with only 250 seats and at a cost of $70,000.

The Mount Zion Seventh Day Adventists bought the church for $300,000 in 1990. The front and side walls date from 1891.

Since the church’s sale, Centenary United Church has been holding religious services in the presbytery at 585 Fortune St.”

A new chapter for Centenary began, appropriately, we would say, at Easter. Sunday services are now being held at St. Columba House, 2365 Grand Trunk in Pointe-Saint-Charles. SouthWest United wishes them all the best!

The Centenary we know on Fortune Street will soon be sold.

The Centenary we know on Fortune Street will soon be sold.

The congregation’s new home, St. Columba House on Grand Trunk.

The congregation’s new home, St. Columba House on Grand Trunk.

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Pastor Beryl's Blog: 2nd Sunday in Easter

It’s the Sunday that Thomas gets a lot of bad press.  He lives down through history as “Doubting Thomas”.  I don’t think he deserved it.  Thomas, like so many of us, just wanted to touch Jesus.

Some years back, I was invited to listen to a CD called Love + Anger, a production of Wild Goose Worship Group, from the Iona Community.  One of the worship songs had a chorus which went like this:

I need to know that God is real
I need to know that Christ can feel
the need to touch and love and heal
the world including me

That's something that Jesus' followers most definitely needed as they gathered in this Sunday's gospel. They were gathered secretly, behind locked doors, "for fear of the Judeans."

So the question on the minds of Jesus' followers, in the dark and confusing days immediately following Jesus' execution at the hands of Roman soldiers and the instigation of the Judean authorities, was probably not so much "will we be next?" but, "how long do you think we can last?"

However, someone was missing in that group – Thomas.  He was not there when Jesus appeared.  He did not see Jesus.  He did not experience Jesus breathing on them and he did not receive the commission which Jesus gave the others.

We know that Thomas wanted to touch Jesus…

Thomas was the disciple who wanted to touch Jesus.  But he was also the disciple who was not locked away in fear. When he finally experienced the presence of Jesus, perhaps the biggest mistake he made was in thinking that the body he wanted and needed to touch, the body of the risen Christ, was the body that had been nailed to the cross. But, perhaps it's not like that at all.

If Thomas was out in the world, he was in precisely the place Jesus wanted him to be. If Thomas was out in the world, he didn't need to hear Jesus' commission to the others “to go out into the world and forgive as Jesus forgives”, because he was already following it.

So let the gospel come alive
in actions plain to see
in imitation of the one
whose love extends to me

I need to know that God is real
I need to know that Christ can feel
the need to touch and love and heal
the world including me

Thanks be to God!

Pastor Beryl

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