A great blessing in a historic church

Catholic Register, 23 December 2021

The majority of Indigenous peoples in Canada are Christians, hence Catholic-Indigenous relations are not a matter of the Church dealing with those outside the household of faith, but those within the family.

The topic of residential schools dominated this column in 2021, and too often that story is written as if Catholics and Indigenous peoples are two distinct parties, perhaps opposing or even hostile.

Yet the majority of Indigenous peoples in Canada are Christians, and a great number of them are Catholics. Hence Catholic-Indigenous relations are not a matter of the Church dealing with those outside the household of faith, but those within the family as it were. That is often forgotten.

Thus I consider it a great blessing to have offered the Holy Mass for the Fourth Sunday of Advent at Christ Church, on the territory of the Mohawks of the Bay of Quinte, not far from Belleville, Ont. The local congregation there gave me a warm welcome, even adjusting their usual Mass time to accommodate my schedule.

We have spent a lot of time talking this year across the country — with each other, at each other, even against each other. It was good to pray together. Had the pandemic not intervened, this past Sunday Indigenous leaders would have had their third of four meetings with our Holy Father, Pope Francis. I suggested to the Mohawk congregation that we might keep that encounter, now postponed, in the intentions that we brought before the altar.

The history of Christ Church and that congregation is a remarkable one, a demonstration that our Catholic heritage is much more complex — and much richer — than we usually think.

The church commemorates the ties between the Mohawk people and the British Crown. It is officially designated as “Her Majesty’s Chapel Royal of the Mohawk Historic Site of Canada.” There is a stained glass window that depicts the arrival of the Mohawks to Tyendinaga territory on the Bay of Quinte. Mohawks had fought for the British Crown during the American Revolution, and after the American rebels had triumphed the “loyalist” Mohawks were forced out and came north along with other United Empire Loyalists.

These loyal Mohawks built a log church upon arrival. The first Christ Church was built in 1843, a testament to both their Christian faith and their prized relationship with the British Crown. Royal gifts over the years are a manifestation of this unusually close relationship. In 1904 King Edward VII conferred the title “His Majesty’s Chapel” on Christ Church. For the centennial of that designation, Queen Elizabeth II designated it a “Chapel Royal” in 2004, one of only two in Canada to be so designated.

Over the years the Victorian Gothic has been restored several times, most recently in the last decade by the same expert artisans, Ecclesiastical Refinishing Group, which did the re-design of my own parish church, Sacred Heart of Mary on Wolfe Island. It was from Mark Gray and his gifted colleagues that I first heard about the treasure of Christ Church.

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