metronews.ca
.

x

Decline in places of worship now evident

  RIKARD LARMA/METRO

Lux Rivera, a former parishioner at Saint Boniface, pictured behind her and vacant since 2006, had the front door of her house carved out of a pew from the church.

“To take away these buildings is to take away from the fabric of the community.” –Patrick Hildebrandt

Published: October 24, 2010 9:33 p.m.
Last modified: October 24, 2010 9:38 p.m.
                  Text size
Hallowed grounds in many Philadelphia neighborhoods are not what they used to be — like Catholic churches put on up for sale and left vacant to synagogues converted into condominiums.

More secular than perhaps ever before, the city's population is now witness to a sell-off of places of worship by many denominations, most notably the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, which, according to one real estate consultant recently, has about 20 buildings up for sale.

One observer of the city's churn toward fewer religious sites said the fabric of certain neighborhoods are torn loose by such sell-offs.

“These buildings aren’t just a building,” said Patrick Hildebrandt, facilitator of the Philadelphia Church Project, a website on religious architecture in decline. “They are a living history, of a person, of a family, of a neighborhood. To take away one of these buildings is to take away from the fabric of the community.”

The Church of the Assumption on Spring Garden Street is the most prominent example: the city Historical Commission voted Sept. 10 to permit demolition of the twin-steeple building which Cardinal John Neumann helped consecrate in 1854. The Archdiocese declined to comment for this story.

"Every denomination in the city is suffering the same issue," said Bob Jaeger of Partners for Sacred Spaces, a national nonprofit that helps maintain historic religious properties.

End for churches

North Philadelphia has been hit hardest by church closings, especially Catholic churches. Lux Rivera, who with her husband owns and operates a laundromat on Diamond Street, attended St. Boniface at Diamond and Hancock streets for eight years before it was shut down. When it closed, items from the interior were sold or given away.

Rivera said her daughter's godfather purchased the church's Stations of the Cross for $100 at a parish sidewalk sale and Rivera had a new door to her home crafted from its wooden pews.

"It's very sad that the church closed," said Rivera who now attends Mass at other Catholic sites like a Spanish chapel at 19th and Spring Garden streets.

More about religion


Add your comment  

_

Comments are not reviewed before posting. If you believe a comment has violated the commenting guidelines, please alert a moderator using links provided.

Facebook
Twitter
Stumble upon
RSS

F E A T U R E D   S P O N S O R S

X