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Dean Forde installed in St Anne’s as 14th Dean of Belfast

The 14th Dean of Belfast, the Very Rev Stephen Forde, was installed in St Anne’s Cathedral in a joyous and uplifting service of Choral Evensong on Sunday February 4.

  • Church Leaders welcome the new Dean of Belfast, the Very Rev Stephen Forde, after his installation in St Anne’s Cathedral on February 4.
  • Dean Stephen Forde with Her Majesty’s Lord Lieutenant for the County Borough of Belfast, Mrs Fionnuala Jay-O’Boyle.
  • Dean Stephen Forde and Bishop of Connor, the Rt Rev Alan Abernethy, outside St Anne’s Cathedral.

Dean Forde, formerly Archdeacon of Dalriada and rector of the Parishes of Larne and Inver with Glynn and Raloo, was also instituted as Incumbent of the Cathedral Parish.

The service was attended by the Bishops of Connor and Down and Dromore, representatives of community life in the city, visiting Bishops and leaders of the other main denominations in Northern Ireland. Family and friends and many former parishioners from the Larne area was also present.

The service followed the order for Choral Evensong, and was led by the Cathedral Choir and the Larne Concert Choir with the St Cedma’s Singers (Larne Parish). Members of the Brass section of the Ulster Orchestra helped to make a joyful noise. The former Dean of St Patrick’s Church of Ireland Cathedral, Dublin, the Very Rev Victor Stacey, read the first lesson, and the second lesson was read by the Deputy Lord Mayor of Belfast, Councillor Sonia Copeland. The preacher was the Bishop of Connor, the Rt Rev Alan Abernethy.
During the service, the Dean–elect was presented for institution into the Cathedral Parish by the Archdeacon of Belfast, the Ven George Davison, and the Act of Institution was conducted by the Bishop of Connor. Archdeacon Forde was installed as Dean of Belfast by Archdeacon Davison, accompanied by the Bishop of Down and Dromore, the Rt Rev Harold Miller.

He was then presented to the people by the Bishop of Connor, and welcomed by the Very Rev Martin Graham, Administrator of St Peter’s Cathedral, on behalf of all the church leaders.

The formal institution and installation of the new Dean was followed by the commissioning when the Dean was presented with symbols of the teaching, pastoral and sacramental ministry of an incumbent. These included a Bible (to preach the Good News of Jesus Christ), a container of water (recognising that the Cathedral is a place of Christian baptism), a Book of Common Prayer (demonstrating the primary role of the Dean to lead public worship and encourage a life of personal devotion), bread and wine (the elements of holy communion), oil (symbolic of healing and reconciliation), the key to the Cathedral (as a reminder that the Cathedral is a place to be kept open for all people) and a towel (as a reminder of Christ washing his disciples’ feet and of the ministry of service and support of those in need and in trouble). 

Prayers of thanksgiving and intercession were offered by clergy from the Larne area: The Rev Dr John Nelson, Ballycarry Non–Subscribing Presbyterian Church; the Very Rev Aidan Kerr, PP, Larne; the Rev Chris Skillen, Larne Methodist, Fr Conor McCarthy, curate Larne; and the Rev Dr Colin McClure, First Larne Presbyterian. The Benedictine Monks of the Holy Cross Monastery, Rostrevor, sang the responses.

During the service, there was a collection for Belfast Cathedral’s Black Santa Sit–out.
Speaking ahead of the installation, Dean Forde said: “With the redevelopment of the Cathedral Quarter, and the arrival of 10,000 students at the University of Ulster, this is a time of new beginnings and new horizons.

“I hope the Cathedral will be a place where people who are rushed and hassled by life’s demands will find rest and refreshment, a place of peace in a world of many pressures. I also hope the Cathedral will be a place of ecumenical encounter, a place where bridges are built and barriers dismantled. Above all, I pray this will be a place where people discover how much they matter, because they will discover how much they matter to God.

“While I am excited at these new opportunities, I am also conscious that being Dean of Belfast is a massive challenge and a daunting task. I approach this new role, knowing that will I need the prayers and support of so many others: The staff at the Cathedral, the Cathedral community who call this place their spiritual home, and also support from the wider community in Belfast, as well as from the clergy and people of the two dioceses that this Cathedral serves.

Above all, I pray this will be a place where people discover how much they matter, because they will discover how much they matter to God.

“Yet I know that the God who calls is also the God who equips. All I can ask is that people will pray for me, and work with me, to achieve God’s ambitions for this great Cathedral and to embrace all the opportunities of God’s future.”

In his sermon, the Bishop of Connor said St Anne’s was a holy place. “It is such a joy that everyday prayers are said and sung in this sacred space. As many come and go from here, our prayer is that they will experience the presence of this loving God who seeks that we might discover our joy and freedom as children of God.”

To the Dean–elect, he said: “Stephen it is to this place you have been called and you bring your special God given gifts to enable this space to continue to touch the lives of many.”

Bishop Abernethy’s said those gifts included the Dean–elect’s joyful faith, his ability to enable creative liturgy and music, to help others discover and use their gift and to understand and follow procedures and processes. He said the new Dean would imaginatively use the buildings as tools for the Kingdom, and had a keen awareness that mission and ministry has to be self–sustaining.

The Bishop added: “This is a holy space and place and today we celebrate a new chapter and pray for all as we journey together to ensure that we can ensure that all who come and go from here find that amazing, vulnerable, strong and vibrant love that God has made known to us the word made flesh.”

Refreshments and speeches followed the service.

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