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St. Mark's Episcopal Cathedral (Minneapolis)

St. Mark's Cathedral in Minneapolis

Saint Mark's Episcopal Cathedral in Minneapolis is one of two cathedrals in the Episcopal Church in Minnesota. The church was founded in 1858 and designated as a cathedral in 1941. Its current building dates from 1910. In 2020, it reported 764 members, 315 average attendance, and $1,021,278 in plate and pledge financial support.

History

1907 postcard showing St. Mark’s

St. Mark’s Church was founded in 1858 as a mission of Gethsemane in downtown Minneapolis.[1] It was first located in North Minneapolis at Washington Avenue and 27th Avenue North.[1] In 1863 the original building was moved to the city center (4th Street and Hennepin Avenue) on a sled pulled by oxen.[2] It was incorporated as a parish on June 19, 1868,[3] and occupied a new building on 6th Street between Hennepin and Nicollet Avenues from 1870 to 1908.[4] Today's St. Mark's, designed by architect Edwin Hawley Hewitt (who was a parishioner), was built in 1910 on Hennepin Avenue overlooking Loring Park. The cornerstone was laid on November 15, 1908, and the Parish House was built first, with enough space to serve for worship while the actual church structure was being erected next to it.[5] By the late 1930s, Bishop Samuel Cook Edsall had moved his residence to Minneapolis from the Cathedral of Our Merciful Saviour in Faribault, and had begun referring to St. Mark's as a "Pro-Cathedral".[6] St. Mark's was officially designated the diocesan cathedral in 1941; the Cathedral of Our Merciful Saviour retained its cathedral status as "the historic cathedral".[7]

Ministry and outreach

The main altar at the cathedral

St. Mark’s Cathedral is a partner of the Community of the Cross of Nails, based at Coventry Cathedral in England, a global organization committed "to work and pray for peace, justice and reconciliation".[8]

St. Mark's has been an active presence in the community, hosting numerous ecumenical and interfaith services. Among these have been an interfaith service of healing following the collapse of the Interstate 35W bridge in Minneapolis[9] and a memorial service for the victims of an April 23, 2005, shooting rampage at the Red Lake Indian Reservation in northern Minnesota[10] The cathedral also offers an afternoon service each year on the final day of the Twin Cities Pride Fest, held across the street in Loring Park.

Outreach ministries to the community include Sunday Night Supper, Monday Night Supper, Warm Space, and Sandwich Ministry.

Outreach abroad has included participation in several mission trips to Cuba as part of groups from the Episcopal Church in Minnesota.

The Cathedral Book Shop carries an assortment of religious and select secular books and gifts.

Music at St. Mark's

Bell tower at St. Mark's

Music is a vital part of worship at St. Mark's, as well as an outreach ministry to the wider community. Resident choral groups include the Choir Cathedral Choir, the Cathedral Choristers, and the Small Singers. The Cathedral Choral Society draws singers from St. Mark's as well as the wider community. St. Mark's pipe organ had a major rebuild in 2012. The St. Mark's Music Series offers a variety of concerts and recitals featuring music from the Cathedral Choir and Choral Society, Canon Musician Raymond Johnston, and other artists and performing groups.

General Conventions

Three General Conventions of the Episcopal Church have been held in Minnesota.

Some events of the 1895 General Convention (headquartered at The Church of Gethsemane and the first General Convention west of Chicago) were held at St. Mark’s downtown Minneapolis building.[11]

General Convention met in Minneapolis next in 1976, again, with some events at St. Mark's. That General Convention officially accepted the ordination of women as priests[12] and adopted the current Book of Common Prayer used in the United States.[13]

St. Mark's once more hosted some events at the 2003 General Convention in Minneapolis, at which the election of the Rev. V. Gene Robinson as Bishop of the Diocese of New Hampshire was confirmed,[14] making him the Episcopal Church's first openly gay, noncelibate bishop.

World Congress

St. Mark's Cathedral hosted the first World Congress of the Anglican Communion to be held outside of the United Kingdom in 1954.[15] The Compass Rose embedded in the floor at the crossing commemorates that gathering, and it was at the World Congress at St. Mark’s that the Compass Rose was adopted as the symbol of the Anglican Communion.[16]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b St. Mark's: A Parish Church and a Cathedral. Minneapolis, Minnesota: The Cathedral Church of St. Mark. 1953. p. 3.
  2. ^ St. Mark's: A Parish Church and a Cathedral. Minneapolis, Minnesota: The Cathedral Church of St. Mark. 1953. p. 5.
  3. ^ St. Mark's: A Parish Church and a Cathedral. Minneapolis, Minnesota: The Cathedral Church of St. Mark. 1953. p. 6.
  4. ^ St. Mark's: A Parish Church and a Cathedral. Minneapolis, Minnesota: The Cathedral Church of St. Mark. 1953. p. 8.
  5. ^ Sicilia, Mary (1991). Building Honestly: The Foundations for the Cathedral Church of St. Mark. Minneapolis, Minnesota: The Cathedral Church of St. Mark. ISBN 0-9630643-2-0. p. 70-71.
  6. ^ Sicilia, Mary (1991). Building Honestly: The Foundations for the Cathedral Church of St. Mark. Minneapolis, Minnesota: The Cathedral Church of St. Mark. p. 153. ISBN 0-9630643-2-0.
  7. ^ Sicilia, Mary (1991). Building Honestly: The Foundations for the Cathedral Church of St. Mark. The Cathedral Church of St. Mark: The Cathedral Church of St. Mark. pp. 152–153. ISBN 0-9630643-2-0.
  8. ^ "Cross of Nails Partners".
  9. ^ Barksdale, Susan (August 6, 2007). "Minneapolis interfaith service for bridge victims draws more than 1,400". Episcopal News Service. Retrieved 22 November 2014.
  10. ^ Bjordal, Joe. "Red Lake memorial service a gift of healing". No. Diocesan Digest, May 5, 2005. Episcopal News Service. Retrieved 22 November 2014.
  11. ^ Wilkinson, William (1895). A history of the general convention of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States : held in Gethsemane Church, Minneapolis, in October, 1895. Minneapolis : Printed for the author by Hall, Black & Co. Retrieved 22 November 2014.
  12. ^ General Convention, Journal of the General Convention of...The Episcopal Church, Minneapolis, 1976. New York, New York: General Convention. 1977. p. C-52.
  13. ^ General Convention, Journal of the General Convention of...The Episcopal Church, Minneapolis, 1976. New York, New York: General Convention. 1977. p. C-11.
  14. ^ General Convention, Journal of the General Convention of...The Episcopal Church, Minneapolis, 2003 (2004 ed.). New York, New York: General Convention. p. 222.
  15. ^ "World Congress". Retrieved 21 November 2014.
  16. ^ Davies, Matthew. "Laying the Groundwork". No. October 8, 2007. Episcopal Life.

References

  • St. Mark's: A Parish Church and a Cathedral 1953, The Cathedral Church of St. Mark, Minneapolis, Minnesota.
  • Sicilia, Mary, Building Honestly: The Foundations for the Cathedral Church of St. Mark. 1991, The Cathedral Church of St. Mark, Minneapolis, Minnesota. 0-9630643-2-0

44°58′05″N 93°17′14″W / 44.96806°N 93.28722°W / 44.96806; -93.28722