St. Andrews Church | |
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सेंट अँड्र्यू चर्च | |
19°3′18″N 72°49′28″E / 19.05500°N 72.82444°ECoordinates: 19°3′18″N 72°49′28″E / 19.05500°N 72.82444°E | |
Location | 115, Hill Road, Bandra West, Mumbai 400050. |
Country | IND |
Denomination | Roman Catholic |
Website | http://standrewchurch.in/ |
History | |
Founded | 1575 |
Founder(s) | Society of Jesus |
Dedicated | 1616 |
Architecture | |
Status | Roman Catholic Church |
Functional status | Active |
Heritage designation | Urban Heritage Award |
Designated | 2002 |
Architect(s) | Rev.F.Manuel Gomes |
Architectural type | Portuguese-style façade |
Construction cost | ₹45,354 |
Administration | |
Deanery | Bandra Deanery |
Diocese | Archdiocese of Bombay |
Clergy | |
Archbishop | H.E.Oswald Cardinal Gracias |
Priest(s) | Fr.Caesar D'Mello. (Parish Priest) Fr.Magi Murzello Fr.Allwyn Nazareth (SDB) Fr.German Lemos Msgr.Hilary Rodrigues Fr.Anthony Alphonso Fr.John Rumao |
St. Andrew's Church is one of the oldest churches in Mumbai, built by the Portuguese Jesuits in 1575. It stands on the sea-shore of the Bandra suburb of Mumbai, and was the only church there till the first quarter of the 17th century.
In 1534, the island of Salsette, containing Bandra came under Portuguese rule. In 1568, Bandra was assigned to the Portuguese Jesuits. At first, the Jesuits made hardly any progress in their evangelical mission, until Brother Manoel Gomes, the Apostle of Salcette, arrived. With his knowledge of local language and customs, by 1580, two thousand persons were baptized and this number multiplied from year to year till in 1603, practically the whole of Bandra was Catholic.
In 1575, a church, described as the "biggest and best of all those in the island of Salcette", was being built through the generosity of "a wealthy lady of good social standing". There is evidence gathered from the indulgence granted to the faithful by Pope Clement VIII that the Hermitage of St. Andrew existed in 1601. In the 400 (and counting) years, the Church withstood natural disasters and political turmoil. In 1618, a cyclone blew off the entire roof. It was closed just once between 1740 and 1749 during the Maratha invasion. Thereafter, the secular clergy took charge and the Church has continued to evolve to the present day.After the engineered blow-up by the British, to save Bandra’s first church, the Church of Santa Anna from the Maratha invasion, in 1739, the Church of St. Andrew was the only church left to administer to the spiritual needs of the Catholics of Bandra. This was a vast area extending in the north as far as Juhu and included Santa Cruz and Khar, till about 1853. After this date, Bandra acquired the rest of the churches in the Bandra Deanery.
While St Andrew Church was being built in Bombay, there was much back and forth over the steeple. The Bishop of Calcutta and the government of Bombay objected to its installation because that would give it the "character of an established church". However, the church session, argued against this "slight" pointing out that "Muslims, Hindus and Pagans of every caste and colour may raise temples and minarets and spires, that lift themselves to the clouds, without asking the consent of the Government."