Church of Saint Alphonsus | |
---|---|
1°19′19″N 103°50′34″E / 1.321812°N 103.842786°E | |
Location | 300 Thomson Road, Novena, Singapore |
Denomination | Roman Catholic |
Religious institute | Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer |
Website | http://www.novenachurch.com |
History | |
Consecrated | 25 October 2017[1] |
Architecture | |
Style | new Gothic |
Completed | 1950 |
Construction cost | S$ 54 million |
Administration | |
Archdiocese | Archdiocese of Singapore |
Deanery | City District |
Clergy | |
Rector | Victorino A. Cueto, CSsR[2] |
Vicar(s) | Terence Wee, CSsR [2] |
Priest(s) | Peter Wee, CSsR Simon Pereira, CSsR Vincent Low, CSsR Paul Pang, CSsR Clement Lee, CSsR Terence Wee, CSsR Gerard Louis, CSsR Simon Tan, CSsR |
Laity | |
RCIA coordinator | Simon Tan, CSsR |
Youth ministry coordinator | Sikstus Bapa Atawolo, CSsR [3][4] |
The Church of Saint Alphonsus, or Novena Church as it is more popularly known, is a Catholic church in Singapore located at 300 Thomson Road. It is not a parish church and is under the care of the Redemptorists.[5] The name Novena Church refers to the novena prayer devotion,[6][7] for which this church is famous. At the Church of Saint Alphonsus the Saturday novena services usually attract more people than the Sunday Mass services (Catholics generally go to their own parishes to attend Sunday Mass).[8] Having popularised the novena devotion sessions in Singapore, it draws people from the entire country and beyond. The devotions gave name to the surrounding area, Novena.[9]
History
The Church of Saint Alphonsus was founded in 1935.
The current church was built in 1950 and was designed by the architectural firm Swan and Maclaren. Porticoes were added in the late 1950s to cater to the large and growing number of devotees coming for the Saturday novena devotions. The side walls that existed earlier in the main church hall were removed and grilles added.[10] After being closed for three years for further renovations, the church reopened on 29 September 2017.[11]
Novena devotions
The novena devotions to Our Lady of Perpetual Help is a popular novena devotion held each Saturday and which regularly draws thousands of devotees from all faiths to the Church. They were started by the Redemptorists in 1949 in a small chapel and initially saw only a handful of people attending the sessions. However, news of the devotion and reports of many answered petitions soon led to the rapid rise in the number of devotees attending. News of the devotion were mostly spread by word of mouth, but there were the few car stickers distributed by the Church with the caption "Have You Been To The Novena?".[12][13] The increase in the number of devotees required the church building to be expanded and the porticoes at the sides of the main Church building were added as a result. Currently, there are 10 half-hourly sessions held each Saturday with each session drawing on average 3,000 devotees, with it not being uncommon to find a sizeable number of non-Catholics among the many devotees.[14]
Annual procession
The annual procession was started on 21 June 1953 and it has been held every year since on the 1st Sunday of September in honour of Our Lady of Perpetual Help.[15] It is so popular that it regularly draws devotees from all faiths and backgrounds in the tens of thousands, with there being 30,000 devotees at one point in 1970.[16] The church celebrated its 61st Annual Procession at the present site before the church closed for redevelopment.
Redevelopment plans
In 2011 it was announced that the existing Church building would undergo major renovations, with the Church being expanded in order to be able to cope with the numerous faithful that turn up for the novena devotions every Saturday.[17] The total cost for building the New Church, the Pastoral Centre, the New Admin Block and the underground carparks was $55.4 Million (SGD). The church closed on 1 October 2014, and reopened on 29 September 2017. The Blessing and Opening of Novena Church was Celebrated by Archbishop William Goh on 25 October 2017.[18]
References
- ↑ "History of Novena Church and the Devotion – Novena Church, Church of St. Alphonsus, Singapore".
- 1 2 "Church Council – Novena Church, Church of St. Alphonsus, Singapore".
- ↑ "Youth and Young Adults – Novena Church, Church of St. Alphonsus, Singapore".
- ↑ "THE TEAM". home.
- ↑ Erbin Fernandez Catechesis in the Archdiocese of Singapore: A Multiple Case Study ... - 2007 - Page 118 "The Church of St. Alphonsus is a Church of devotion dedicated to Our Lady of Perpetual Help and is administered by the Redemptories Congregation. It is popularly known as the Novena Church and literally thousands of Catholics and ..."
- ↑ Phyllis Ghim-Lian Chew A Sociolinguistic History of Early Identities in Singapore: From ... 2012 - Page 68 "Insular Southeast Asia, of which Singapore may be said to be its nexus, did not allow it to be close-minded. ... In the Roman Catholic Church, Chinese syncretism appears in the form of novena practice where many Chinese offer prayers and ..."
- ↑ Lynn Pan, The encyclopedia of the Chinese overseas Chinese Heritage Center (Singapore) - 1998 "In Singapore and Malaysia, indigenous Malay animism is acknowledged and affirmed in Chinese Religion by the presence of ... Buddhist temples (Theravada, Vajrayana and so forth) and even the Catholic Saint Alphonsus (Novena) Church."
- ↑ Peter C. Phan Christianities in Asia -- 2011 Page 90 ... the Mother of Jesus (the weekly Saturday novena liturgies in Singapore are more popular than Sunday liturgies).
- ↑ "Novena Church History:Urban Redevelopment Authority".
- ↑ "Conservation of Built Heritage". 24 June 2012. Archived from the original on 24 June 2012.
- ↑ hermes (16 September 2017). "Novena Church reopening".
- ↑ "THOUSANDS FIND THE COURAGE TO LIVE AT THIS CHAPEL ON THE HILL". eresources.nlb.gov.sg.
- ↑ "PRAYER CAN DO WONDERS'". eresources.nlb.gov.sg.
- ↑ "30,000 of various religions flock to Novena". eresources.nlb.gov.sg.
- ↑ "Novena Church, Church of St. Alphonsus, Singapore". novenachurch.com.
- ↑ "30,000 at Catholic ceremony in Novena church". eresources.nlb.gov.sg. Retrieved 12 July 2021.
- ↑ "CatholicNews". www.catholicnews.sg.
- ↑ "Novena Church, Church of St. Alphonsus, Singapore - Online". Novena Church, Church of St. Alphonsus, Singapore. Retrieved 15 May 2017.