Emmanuel United Reformed Church, Cambridge
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Downing Place United Reformed Church, Cambridge is a church in Cambridge, United Kingdom, that is part of the United Reformed Church. It was formed in 2018 in a merger between St Columba's Church, Cambridge, and Emmanuel Church, Cambridge. The church occupies the former St Columba's building in Downing Place, which is close to a site occupied by Emmanuel's congregation before 1874. In the recent past prior to the merger of the two congregations, activities have included regular Sunday worship, a programme of music concerts, hosting an NHS group therapy centre and hosting a night-time drop-in centre hosted by Cambridge
Street Pastors Street Pastors is an interdenominational network of Christian charities that operates worldwide, composed of members who spend time in their communities in order to assist people who they feel are in need of help, and to spread their religion throu ...
. The refurbishment has been designed to facilitate similar activities.


History


Emmanuel Church

Originally a
congregational church Congregational churches (also Congregationalist churches or Congregationalism) are Protestant churches in the Calvinist tradition practising congregationalist church governance, in which each congregation independently and autonomously runs its ...
, Emmanuel voted to join the new United Reformed Church in 1972. Emmanuel had been known by different names over the years, first as the 'Hog Hill Independent Church' and then the 'Emmanuel Congregational Chapel' or 'Emmanuel Congregational Church'. The Emmanuel congregation was founded as the Cambridge 'Great Meeting' in 1687, at Hog Hill, the original building being there, on what is now the Old Music School in
Downing Place Downing may refer to: Places * Downing, Missouri, US, a city * Downing, Wisconsin, US, a village * Downing Park (Newburgh, New York), US, a public park * Downing, Flintshire, Wales Buildings * Downing Centre, Sydney, New South Wales, Austral ...
. From 1691 the minister was
Joseph Hussey Joseph Hussey (1660–1726) was an English Calvinist and congregationalist minister. Life Hussey was born in Fordingbridge, Hampshire. After studying with the Great Ejection, ejected minister Robert Whitaker, he attended Charles Morton (educat ...
; he was commemorated in the stained glass in the apse of the Emmanuel church building alongside
John Greenwood John Greenwood may refer to: Sportspeople * John Greenwood (cricketer, born 1851) (1851–1935), English cricketer * John Eric Greenwood (1891–1975), rugby union international who represented England * John Greenwood (footballer) (1921–1994) ...
, Henry Barrow, Oliver Cromwell,
John Milton John Milton (9 December 1608 – 8 November 1674) was an English poet and intellectual. His 1667 epic poem '' Paradise Lost'', written in blank verse and including over ten chapters, was written in a time of immense religious flux and political ...
and
Francis Holcroft Francis Holcroft (1629?–1693) was an English ejected minister. Life He was son of Sir Henry Holcroft, born at West Ham in Essex. He matriculated at Clare Hall, Cambridge in 1647. John Tillotson was his chamber-fellow about 1650. While at Cambr ...
. Hussey's congregation split in 1696, with some going to the meeting in Green Street, Cambridge, and again after he had left for London, in 1721, with a group founding the precursor of St Andrew's Street Baptist Church, Cambridge. The church was rebuilt on the same site, opening as Emmanuel Congregational Chapel in 1790. The move to the new church on Trumpington Street, called the Emmanuel Congregational Church, came in 1874. The old chapel was put to use from 1881 as the Balfour Biological Laboratory for Women, for female science students in the University of Cambridge. Prior to September 2020, Emmanuel United Reformed Church occupied the Trumpington Street building. It was built to a design by the architect
James Cubitt James Cubitt (1836–1914) was a Victorian church architect specialising in building non-conformist chapels.Grade II In the United Kingdom, a listed building or listed structure is one that has been placed on one of the four statutory lists maintained by Historic England in England, Historic Environment Scotland in Scotland, in Wales, and the Northern Irel ...
in 1996. The building was sold to Pembroke College to form part of the college's Mill Lane development project. In the years leading up to the merger, Emmanuel organised regular
Sunday worship The Lord's Day in Christianity is generally Sunday, the principal day of communal worship. It is observed by most Christians as the weekly memorial of the resurrection of Jesus Christ, who is said in the canonical Gospels to have been witnessed al ...
and a programme of community activities in the recent past: a volunteer-staffed fairtrade cafe, a series of lunchtime music recitals and a share in Hope Cambridge's Churches Homeless Project. The Cambridge branch of the Open Table Network was founded here in July 2018.


St Columba's Church

St Columba's was originally a Presbyterian church. A Presbyterian congregation was first registered in Cambridge in 1689, at that time based in Green Street. The congregation of St Columba's was formally established in 1881, initially worshipping in Cambridge Guildhall. The St Columba’s church building, on the corner of Downing Place and Downing Street, was built in 1891 in the Early English style to the designs of Scottish architect John Macvicar Anderson. As well as being a congregation of the Presbyterian Church of England and, from 1972, of the United Reformed Church, St Columba's was also the Chaplaincy for the Church of Scotland to the University of Cambridge; the minister's appointment as chaplain being with the concurrence of the Kirk's Presbytery of England. In the years leading up to the merger, St Columba's, the church's programme included regular Sunday worship, hosting a group therapy centre, and a night-time drop-in centre hosted by Cambridge Street Pastors.


Merger to form Downing Place United Reformed Church

On 9 June (St Columba's Day) 2018, St Columba's Church and Emmanuel Church united to form Downing Place United Reformed Church. The combined congregation occupies the former St Columba's building in Downing Place. The St Columba’s site has been extensively renovated as part of a £3.3 million project led by Archangel Architects. The Emmanuel building was sold to
Pembroke College, Cambridge Pembroke College (officially "The Master, Fellows and Scholars of the College or Hall of Valence-Mary") is a constituent college of the University of Cambridge, England. The college is the third-oldest college of the university and has over 700 ...
across the road in Trumpington Street, who intended to retain it as a lecture and performance area as part of their Mill Lane redevelopment. The final service in the Emmanuel building took place on 26 July 2020 and all church activities at Trumpington Street have ceased. While the St Columba's Church building was closed for major building works, regular worship took place in Westminster College, Cambridge. The newly restored building was rededicated in November 2021.


People

Ministers of Emmanuel Church have included: * 1738–1754
John Conder John Conder D.D. (3 June 1714 – 30 May 1781) was an Independent minister at Cambridge who later became President of the Independent College, Homerton in the parish of Hackney (parish), Hackney near London. John Conder was the theological tutor ...
* 1767–1788 Joseph Saunders * 1806–1817 William Harris * 1848–1854 George Burder Bubier (The most relevant text is on pp. 246-247.) * 1859–1865 Thomas Campbell Finlayson * 1871–1872
James Ward James Ward may refer to: Military *James Ward (Medal of Honor, 1864) (1833–?), American Civil War sailor * James Ward (Medal of Honor, 1890) (1854–1901), American Indian Wars soldier *James Allen Ward (1919–1941), New Zealand pilot and Vi ...
* 1894–1901
P. T. Forsyth Peter Taylor Forsyth, also known as P. T. Forsyth, (1848–1921) was a Scottish theologian. Biography The son of a postman, Forsyth studied at the University of Aberdeen and then in University of Göttingen, Göttingen (under Albrecht Ritsc ...
* 1902–1909 William Boothby Selbie * 1910–1942 Henry Child Carter * 1974-1982 Anthony (Tony) Coates * Derek M Wales * 1997-2003 Paul Quilter * -2014 Lance Stone * 2017-2020 John Bradbury Ministers of St Columba's Church: * 1893-1901 Halliday Douglas * 1902-1909 G. A. Johnston Ross * 1910-1919 Robert Strachan * 1919-1925 Innes Logan * 1926-1937 George Barclay * 1938-1943 T. Ralph Morton * 1944-1960 Albert Cooper * 1961-1981 Ronald Speirs * 1982-1996 Ernest Marvin * 1997-2008
Keith Riglin Keith Graham Riglin is an Anglican bishop in the Scottish Episcopal Church. Having ministered from 1983 within Baptist and Reformed churches, he took holy orders in the Church of England in 2008. In January 2021 he was elected Bishop of Argy ...
* 2010-date Nigel Uden Among the other people who have been associated with the two churches over the years, Michael Ramsey, who later became Archbishop of York, worshipped at what was then Emmanuel Congregational church as a child, where his father was a deacon. Among those listed on the Roll of Honour of Missionaries valedicted from St Columba's Church are two notable ecumenists, William Paton to India in 1919 (first general secretary of what is now the National Council of Churches in India), and Lesslie Newbigin to India in 1936 (becoming one of the first bishops of the new
Church of South India The Church of South India (CSI) is a united Protestant Church in India. It is the result of union of a number of mainline Protestant denominations in South India after independence. The Church of South India is the successor of a number of Pr ...
in 1947). Agnes Smith Lewis and Margaret Dunlop Gibson, biblical scholars sometimes known as the "Westminster sisters" attended St Columba's Soskice, Janet (2009), ''Sisters of Sinai: How Two Lady Adventurers Found the Hidden Gospels.'' London. , p.282 and are commemorated by a plaque.


References


Further reading

* This gives the history of both the congregations that merged to form Downing Place United Reformed Church in . The section 'Independents' describes the history of what would later become Emmanuel United Reformed Church; the section 'Presbyterians' describes what would later become St Columba's United Reformed Church.


External links

* {{Authority control 1687 establishments in England 19th-century churches in the United Kingdom Religious organizations established in the 1680s Congregational churches in Cambridgeshire 17th-century Calvinist and Reformed churches United Reformed churches in Cambridge