London/UK- A Service of Thanksgiving for The Queen’s reign will be held at St Paul’s Cathedral. Great Paul, the largest church bell in the country, will be rung for the Service. It was made in 1882 but fell silent in the 1970s due to a broken mechanism. It was restored in 2021 and has been rung on eight occasions since, but this is the 1st royal occasion it will be rung.
The Queen will not attend Friday’s Jubilee service at St Paul’s Cathedral after experiencing discomfort while watching Thursday’s parade at Buckingham Palace.
The palace said that the decision was made with “great reluctance” after considering the “journey and activity required”.
However, she did take part in a beacon lighting ceremony on Thursday evening.
Four days of celebrations marking the Queen’s 70-year reign began earlier.
The 96-year-old monarch appeared twice on Buckingham Palace balcony, flanked by other senior royals, as they watched a military parade and waved at thousands of well-wishers gathered on The Mall.
Hours after the ceremony, the palace confirmed she would not attend Friday’s thanksgiving Service but said she “would like to thank all those who made today such a memorable occasion”.
The next Jubilee event the Queen is due to attend is the derby at Epsom racecourse on Saturday, although it is yet not known whether she will still appear at the horse race.
The Service at St Paul’s in central London will thank the Queen’s seven decades as monarch.
Senior royals, including the Prince of Wales, Duchess of Cornwall and the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, will all attend, with Prince Charles officially representing the Queen.
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex will also join the thanksgiving. Who has flown over from California. Since leaving the UK two years ago, it will be Prince Harry and Meghan’s first royal event together.
However, Prince Andrew will be absent after testing positive for Covid.
The royals will be joined by more than 400 honours recipients, including NHS and critical workers, public servants and representatives from charities and the Armed Forces.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson will give a reading from the New Testament. In contrast, the sermon will be delivered by the Archbishop of York, Stephen Cottrell, after Archbishop of CanterburyJustin Welby tested positive for Covid-19.
The largest church bell in the UK, the 16-tonne Great Paul, will ring continuously for four hours after the Service. The event begins at 11:30 BST on Friday, with coverage starting on BBC One from 09:15.
Other political attendees will include Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer, cabinet members, former prime ministers and the leaders of the devolved administrations in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
Young people representing countries where the Queen is head of state will lead an ‘Act of Commitment’ to celebrate her life and reign.
Thursday evening’s beacon lighting event saw the Queen symbolically touch a globe to begin the ceremony at Windsor Castle.
The head of state illuminated the globe, symbolically sending a chain of lights from her Windsor Castle home to Buckingham Palace, where Prince William watched as a sculpture, the Tree of Trees, was bathed in light.
Thousands of beacons were also lit across the UK and the Commonwealth to mark the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee.
Beacons were visible around Scotland to mark the occasion, with tributes lit at landmarks from Edinburgh Castle to Ben Nevis – Britain’s highest mountain.
One of the main flames to be lit in Wales was outside the Pierhead building in Cardiff Bay, where the evening’s celebrations were capped with a firework display over the water.
In Northern Ireland, 13 beacons were lit at Enniskillen Castle, while the building was illuminated purple, and two beams of light were projected into the night sky.
The Service is not the first engagement the Queen has had to miss in recent months because of health problems.
In May, she missed the State Opening of Parliament because of “episodic mobility problems”, and in February, she caught Covid, which she said left her feeling “very tired and exhausted”.
The Queen will have pulled out of the thanksgiving service only with great regret.
She has a deep religious faith, and the Service at St Paul’s Cathedral would have been one of her highest priorities for the weekend.
She was more committed to attending the church service than many of the weekend’s events.
But Thursday’s exertions have left her suffering from discomfort, with a recurrence of the mobility problems that have caused her to cancel events before.
Now it seems the journey to St Paul’s, a procession and the length of the church service, has become too complicated.
It’s at short notice, with the programme for the church service already printed. So it will leave a real sense of loss to have the Queen, the focal point of the Service, no longer attending.