New church for Romanian community in Ireland officially opened

Church for 1,000 formally opens in Dublin 15 after four year community funding and building effort

Betania Church, located on Powerstown Road, Tyrrelstown, Dublin 15. The church was funded and largely built by those within the Romanian community.
Betania Church, located on Powerstown Road, Tyrrelstown, Dublin 15. The church was funded and largely built by those within the Romanian community.

A church that was funded and largely built from within the Romanian community to serve more than 1,200 worshippers at any one time was officially opened in Dublin on Sunday morning.

The Betania Church in Tyrellstown Dublin 15 which serves the Romanian Pentecostal community in Ireland, has bucked the trend of recent times that has seen places of worship significantly scaled back and it now stands as one of the largest in Ireland.

What makes it even more remarkable is that it was funded by the community to the tune of around €8 million and almost entirely built by the Romanian faithful, often at weekends and late evenings.

Construction took more than three years with frequent delays in 2020 as a result of the Covid pandemic.

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Betania Church, located on Powerstown Road, Tyrrelstown, Dublin 15
Betania Church, located on Powerstown Road, Tyrrelstown, Dublin 15

While it opened its doors several months ago, its official ribbon-cutting ceremony was held on Sunday with local TD and Tánaiste Leo Varadkar, the mayor of Fingal Howard Mahony, Romanian government officials and the Romanian ambassador in Ireland Laurenţiu-Mihai Ştefan in attendance.

“Our mission is to spread God’s love to all nations” said pastors Valerian Jurjea, Calin Onitiu and Avram Hadarau. “This was the motivating force behind the project.”

They said the church “brings unlimited benefits to the community” and highlighted the English services which recently started.

Conor Pope

Conor Pope

Conor Pope is Consumer Affairs Correspondent, Pricewatch Editor