Author: Fr. Matthew

  • A letter from Fr. Desmond Banister

    Dear Parishioners of S Anselm’s in Hayes Town

    I am very grateful to Father Matthew for his kind invitation to write to you at this particular period of difficulty and uncertainty for all of us in this time of pandemic.

    Compared to Bishop Michael Colclough, whose connection with your parish goes back over forty years, I am, I appreciate, still a relative new boy in these parts!

    My first memories of S Anselm’s date back just over a decade. I arrived in North Hillingdon in September 2009 and had to learn my way around this part of West London. Eventually, I had to travel to Hayes to meet the son of a lady resident in this parish, who had recently died, and found myself locked into the Hayes Town one-way system(!!), which took me past what looked like a derelict church building on Station Road. I since learned that this was S Anselm’s. I learned too that the parish had had a difficult history and had no full-time priest.

    Our Hillingdon Deanery Clergy Chapter met at S Anselm’s on 3 February 2011, thanks to the good offices of Father Simon Evans, then Area Dean. Over the coffee-cups, I learned that a couple wanted to get married at S Anselm’s later that year, but that no priest had been found to conduct the wedding. So I volunteered – and the offer was taken up with considerable alacrity. The wedding took place at S Anselm’s on 14 May. It was the first that had happened there for many years and was, very properly, an occasion of great rejoicing!

    Since then, I have been very pleased to assist you in various ways, most recently in arranging suitable cover during the recent Interregnum, following Father Geoffrey’s departure for a parish in the Diocese of Derby at Eastertide in 2019. I have much enjoyed both my occasional Sunday visits to you for the Parish Mass and also the Low Masses I have been able to cover on a Thursday morning. It is really good that you specifically asked that these be kept going, even in the absence of a full-time priest!

    We are not yet quite sure when it will be possible for our churches to re-open for public worship, even though we look forward to that time with increasing impatience. You are most fortunate in having Father Matthew as your new Parish Priest and whether or not it will be possible for him to be licensed publicly on the Feast of S Mary Magdalene in July (which also happens to be an important birthday for Father Matthew, but don’t tell anyone!), I am sure that a way will be found for the legal necessities to be completed, so that he actually becomes your Parish Priest on that day and so begins with you a fresh chapter in the life of S Anselm’s. As Bishop Michael’s recent letter to you indicates, life at S Anselm’s has rarely been easy and I guess that the immediate future will present its own difficulties and problems for all of us. As a parish, S Anselm’s has shown a remarkable degree of resilience over the years and I wish you all both happiness and success as you look forward to sharing with Father Matthew in the life, mission and ministry of S Anselm’s in Hayes Town, both in the coming weeks and months, as we strive to move from the present ‘lock-down’ and into what some have described as the ‘new normal’ (whatever that may mean).

    Our Lady of Walsingham: Pray for us.
    S Anselm: Pray for us.

    With prayers and every good wish to you all.

    Father Desmond

  • News for Sunday 17th May

    Thank you for getting in touch and letting us know how you and yours are getting on. Your clergy are here for you to help in whatever way we can. Please don’t hesitate to be in touch if we can help. 

    We are thrilled to be able to broadcast from our parish Church once again. 



    The latest predictions are that nothing much will happen before July in terms of returning a congregation to Church in one way or another. 😰😰😰

    The daily mass, offices and other devotions are offered for you and with you. Numbers watching vary from 250 to 700 and we know that they span from Barbados to Lugano to York to Hayes to Kenton. 

    Being unable to receive the most Blessed Sacrament is the hardest thing for the devout soul. However The Good Shepherd will provide a pasture for his people. That moment of Spiritual Communion is an open and welcome heart saying YES to God, as Our Lady did, in a different way. 

    This Sunday will see our May Devotion at 4pm. Evening Prayer with devotions and a short  webcast homily from Fr Harri Williams the Vicar of Walsingham, who was due to preach for us before the lockdown. Let us honour our Patron in her month of May. 

    We then have Ascension Day  to celebrate. As a youngster it was always great to have time off from school to go to Mass on this great day. But more seriously, Ascension sees the culmination in the earthly ministry of Our Lord. ‘He who came down to earth from heaven’ now returns to the throne from whence he came. 
    But He promises not to leave the apostles desolate. They will NOT be left alone…

    This week we are grateful to receive the ACAT Monthly Newsletter which we attach below.

    We can only hope and pray that we will meet together soon. We miss you so much. However please remember St Augustine’s words  ‘ we are an Easter people and Alleluia is our song.’

    Please pray for each other and for us your unworthy servants. 

    Fr. Edward.

  • A letter from Bishop Jonathan

    Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ

    Alleluia! Christ is Risen

    This is an Easter season which none of us could have expected, and the like of which none of us has seen before. You are all so much in my prayers. I pray for health and wellbeing for you and your loved ones, and that you may find joy and hope in the resurrection of Our Lord Jesus Christ even in  this time of trial.

    The second reading at Mass last Sunday was taken from the First Letter of St Peter. St Peter is writing to young Christians, to those newly baptised, fresh in the faith but also it seems facing the threat of persecution and uncertainty. St Peter encourages these new-born disciples of Jesus Christ with these ringing and resonant words:

    But you are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a consecrated nation, a people set apart to sing the praises of God who called you out of the darkness into his wonderful light

    A chosen race, a royal priesthood, a consecrated nation – these are all words and phrases which were once applied to the people of Israel. But what was once true of God’s first people, the Jews, is now true of us, because we have been called into the fellowship and communion of Christ’s universal Church. We who were once (as St Peter continues) no people are now the people of God.

    What a cause for rejoicing! Even in times of trial – especially in times of trial – we know that we are God’s people and that Jesus Christ is our shepherd, teacher, Saviour, and friend. And what are God’s people to do? At all times, in every circumstance, we are to sing the praises of God. We are called to worship. In the well known phrase of St Augustine, we are an Easter people, and Alleluia is our song!

    As we travel through lockdown we look forward to the restoration of public worship in our churches, including of course at St Anselm’s. That is still some way off, though it may be that the church building may at least be open again for prayer after a few more weeks have passed. Meanwhile, I am grateful for all that you are doing to maintain a sense of being together as God’s people in Hayes Town. I am very grateful indeed that Fr Matthew Cashmore, your parish-priest designate, is now offering valuable help to you in doing just that. 

    On the 22nd July, Fr Matthew will be licensed as your new Priest-in-Charge. Whether that can happen in church we must wait and see. But whatever the circumstances of his licensing, the day will mark an exciting moment in the life and mission of the parish. I am convinced that God has great things in store for you, and that, through your witness, the power of the risen Christ will be made known to many.

    Brothers and sisters, I long to be able to celebrate the Mass with you and for you. Until that time, in these strange days, please keep singing the praises of God. Keep hopeful and keep faithful, and may the love of God warm your hearts and nourish your souls.

    May Our Blessed Lady, Our Lady of Walsingham, pray for you.

    May St Anselm and all the saints of God pray for you.

    May His holy angels watch over you and keep you safe.

    Thank you for your witness and your courage

    With every blessing

  • Giving during lockdown

    It was inevitable that at some point I would need to write to you about money. As you all know St. Anselm’s has very low monthly outgoings, especially whilst payment of the Parish Offer is suspended. At some point in the future we will need to revisit that – but for the moment our principle outgoings are utilities and insurance. This comes to about £600 a month at a very basic level.

    Whilst we’ve been away from the church building our income has dropped significantly – the primary method of giving remains the envelopes and cash on the collection plate. This is wonderful and the giving at St. Anselm’s is very generous. 

    I’m writing to you today to ask you to change the way you donate.

    Rather than use the envelopes or put cash in the plate – would you please take 10 minutes and set up a Direct Debit with the Parish Giving Scheme run by the Church of England? 

    This is hugely beneficial for us – and for you. Firstly, the scheme is backed, insured and run by the Church of England, meaning it’s 100% safe. The Direct Debit Guarantee means we can never take more than you’ve offered, and you can cancel it at any time with a quick phone call. St. Anselm’s can then automatically claim Gift Aid on your donation without having to fill out arduous forms and waiting a long time for the money to come in – we will get it every single month – meaning your donation instantly attracts 25p per £1 donated every single time – straight into our bank account. 

    Setting this up is ever so easy – in fact I’ve just done it and it took me 8 minutes on the phone! You’ll need the following information to hand.

    • Your own bank account number and sort code
    • The parish code, which is:  230 623 503

    …and that’s it! Just call 0333 002 1271 (local rate number) and set your donation up. From there on out the donation will come out of your account each month – automatically boosted with Gift Aid – and into our account. 

    This will make an enormous difference to St. Anslem’s and will put us on a firm footing before I join you properly in July. We’ll be able to pay our bills and open the church once again after this crisis. 

    With all my love, prayers & thanks,

    Fr. Matthew

  • News for Sunday 10th May

    Hope. 
     
    It’s a simple word. 
     
    Do not be afraid.
     
    It’s a simple sentence.
     
    We hear the word Hope and the sentence Do not be afraid so often at the moment. It’s part of the funeral liturgy and we talk of it when we encourage one another in our dark moments. But what do they really mean? When we say that we live in ‘sure and certain hope’ what does that really mean?
     
    It means that in the middle of all of this we are assured of our place with Jesus in the next life. When the hardship of this one is over, and we believe in Jesus Christ, we have a home to go to that he has prepared for us with his Father. It means that the troubles of this life are transitory and because of that the burdens that we carry in this life are of little importance. 
     
    When our hearts are heavy, when our burdens overwhelm us, we need to reach for this simple and powerful truth. 
     
    When we are tempted to snap, when we’re tempted to be grumpy, when we’re tempted to shout and scream and rail against everything and everybody… reach for this simple truth. You can do that in the words of the rosary, you can scream to our Mother for help. She will always come. 
     
    Be at peace. Hope in the Lord. Do not let your hearts be troubled.
     
    With all our love & prayers,

    Frs. Matthew, Edward, Mike & John

  • A letter from The Rev’d Richard Young

    Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ at St Anselm’s

    I am so delighted to be invited by Father Matthew to write to you as Area Dean of Hillingdon, to encourage you and to assure you of my prayers.

    I hope that you and your loved ones have been able to keep safe and well in your homes during the Coronavirus lockdown.  It’s a tough time, isn’t it, but I have been encouraged over the last few weeks by the words of Psalm 46 which speak so powerfully into the challenging times that we face:

    God is our refuge and strength,
    a very present help in trouble.
    Therefore we will not fear,
    though the earth should change,
    though the mountains shake in the heart of the sea;
    though its waters roar and foam,
    though the mountains tremble with its tumult.

    The Psalm concludes:

    Be still and know that I am God!
    I am exalted among the nations, I am exalted in the earth.

    Psalm 46 verse 10.

    I hope that, although you are sadly unable to meet together for Mass at the moment, you are still able to find your own space and time to be in God’s presence, for worship, prayer and reading the bible.  It is so often in the stillness that we discover for ourselves the psalm’s promises that God is indeed our refuge and strength.  I am therefore particularly grateful for the way that Father Matthew, and the rest of the team at St Mary’s Kenton, are supporting you pastorally, including providing you with access to their amazing online worship. 

    As Bishop Michael recognised in his recent letter to you, it is fair to say that life at St Anselm’s has been become rather fragile over recent years.  However, I really do think that there are grounds for great hope that you are about to enter a new season of renewal, growth and blessing.  First, you are about to receive a wonderful new priest in Father Matthew.  I know from having met him that he will come to you full of faith, passion and vision for the future of St Anselm’s.  Can I therefore encourage you to pray for Father Matthew and his family, to welcome them with open arms and then work collaboratively with him to discern God’s direction for St Anselm’s in the years ahead.  

    Secondly, Hillingdon Deanery is right behind you as you embark on this exciting journey.  It has been really striking over the last year that, although as a Deanery we face many challenges and demands on our resources, the Deanery clergy all agree that providing St Anselm’s with the resources you need to bring renewal to the life of the church is our number one priority. The first piece of the jigsaw was to appoint a new incumbent who is a missional and entrepreneurial Catholic – we believe we have achieved that in Father Matthew.  But we also feel that to give you a fighting chance of being properly equipped to serve your rapidly changing community, you need other resources too.  We are therefore hoping to be able to reallocate additional resources to St Anselm’s from elsewhere in the Deanery as they become available.  All being well, this may include a salary and housing for someone to work with Father Matthew to develop midweek community ministry based in St Anselm’s.  We also hope to be able to provide some capital funds to kickstart a project to renew your building so that it is capable of being used flexibly to host a whole range of church and community groups and activities.  The Southall group of churches are also available to help you to think about how you can connect with the incredibly diverse and vibrant community of which you are a part. 

    So, despite all the troubles of the present time, this is also a time to be hopeful and prayerful.   I think that we have cause to be really encouraged about what God has in store for St Anselm’s and for the people of Hayes Town in the years ahead.  In the coming weeks and months please do devote yourselves to prayer, as I and my colleagues in the Deanery pray for you.  As psalm 46 urges, take time to be still before God, and listen for what the Lord has to say to you about your part in God’s plan to new life to St Anselm’s.  You will discover that the Lord is indeed a refuge and strength but he is also the God of new life. 

    May God bless you and those you love.

    The Revd Richard Young
    Area Dean of Hillingdon 

  • News & Pew Sheet for Sunday May 3rd

    From Fr. Edward at St. Mary’s

    At last we were able to have the graveside funeral for beloved Trevor. Janet who is so full of faith wants to thank everyone for their cards, flowers, prayers and support during this time. We await Austin’s cremation and continue to keep, Ira, Janet and all who have lost loved ones in our prayers. 

    Sadly Fr Colin Tolworthy who often covered mass for us and loved coming to St Mary’s, died recently after a short illness. Jesu mercy Mary mother of priests pray. 

    Bishop Jonathan sends his love and prayers to all of you. He also thanks us for our perseverance with broadcasting from our homes. We want to be broadcasting from church as soon as we can,  so you can see our beautiful church and our spiritual home, once again. Please God we can all worship together sooner rather than later. 

    Keeping together is so important so do join the daily mass and other services as you can. Thank you for the kind comments you send in. Thanks to those who are contributing to the Sunday mass by reading. 

    Father John sends his love and prayers too. He is worshipping daily in his home and so we are very united in prayer and praise. 

    You will be delighted to know that we have at long last received the settlement from the nursery. The work to refurbish the hall and make it ready for the next nursery proceeds apace. I know that you will be delighted when you see it. Wojtek and his colleagues have done an amazing job and we must have a reopening party. I am very grateful to Fr Matthew for leading on the legal and contractor side. 

    The one certainty in the midst of so much uncertainty is Jesus Christ. He is with us and we go forward with our hand in His. We are here for you. If we can help you please don’t hesitate to ring or email Fr Matthew or Me. 

    You are in our prayers each and every day.

    May God richly bless you and as we enter her month of May let Our Lady’s prayers support and strengthen you. 

    With our love and prayers,

    Fr. Edward, Matthew, Mike & John

  • A letter from the Dean of Hereford Cathedral

    Message from The Very Reverend Michael Tavinor, 
    Dean of Hereford Cathedral to the people of St. Anselm’s, Hayes.

    I suppose my roots in St Anselm’s go back to its very beginnings.  I was taught piano in Hayes 1960-72 by a lady called Mrs Rixon – as Olive Bishop she was the first person to be married in the new St Anselm’s in 1929.  Not that long after, my parents were married there in May 1931 – you can see a picture of their wedding, outside the main door.  It hasn’t changed that much, although the style of dress of the guests is very different, isn’t it?!   The Hayes Gazette for May 1931 tells us that the officiant at the wedding was the Revd. E F Bailey, the first vicar of the parish.  At the wedding, the organ was played by my aunt Hilda and the reception was at the Hayes Restaurant, near the church but long since closed.   Later, in 1938, my aunt Doris was married at St Anselm’s, and on that occasion, my father was the organist. Again, Fr Bailey officiated. 

    I lived (until 1982, when I was ordained), in Stirling Road, just within St Anselm’s parish, on the estate off Coldharbour Lane.   I went to school, 1958-65 at Minet Infants/Junior – again, in the parish.   It is, of course, a Local Authority school, but the parish priest of St Anselm’s, Fr Albert Phyall, used to visit and took a group of us for a weekly class.   I visited the school a couple of years ago and spoke to the staff and pupils.  I was very impressed with the school today – lovely staff and pupils. Just one excerpt from my reminiscences of school life: 

    I recall the wedding day of Princess Margaret in 1960.  I would have been 6.  We enacted the ceremony taking place in Westminster Abbey – the prettiest girl in the class, was Princess Margaret; the boy best at sport was Anthony Armstrong Jones and guess who I was?  Yes – you got it – the Archbishop of Canterbury!  (my note – mercifully, the prophecy was never fulfilled….!)

    Hayes was a different place then – it had lots of independent shops. There were a lot of Co-op shops – drapers, undertaker, chemist, shoes, and whenever we went in there, I had to parrot out the Coop number – 945985.  Sainsbury’s was there too, just opposite St Anselm’s –  white marble counters, where one was always queuing – you queued for tea, and when you’d got that, and paid, you joined another queue for bacon, paid for that, then joined another queue for butter, and paid for that….  The butter was in huge blocks, and the ladies, wearing white turbans patted it about with things like ping-pong bats. When I recently visited Hayes, I counted just a handful of shops that were there when I was a boy – the banks, three opticians and Cain’s the undertakers!

    For my early years, I was ‘sent’ to Hayes Baptist Church, Coldharbour Lane but in the 1960s, my father became organist of Harlington Parish church and that was my main association until I went to university in 1972.    But, as the call to ordination became stronger, it was to St Anselm’s, that I felt increasingly drawn.  

    Yes, I remember Fr Phyall, who was parish priest 1944 – 75.  He was very much of the ‘old school’, and rumour had it that he even said Mass in Latin….!

    His successor, in about 1975, was Fr Anthony Burge and I became friendly with him and his wife, Caroline.  He was Australian and returned there in 1979 – he has since died.    I made my first confession to him, in the sentry box confessional, which I think is still in the church.    At that time I also used to play the organ, on occasions at St Anselm’s – the organist was Edna Davies and I still use the Delia Smith Cookery Course that Edna gave me when I went to theological College!  

    Fr Burge’s successor was Fr Michael Colclough.  I regularly attended daily mass, when back from Cuddesdon and there were often as many as 20 there.  In Fr Colclough’s time, the interior of the church was transformed. He used the designs of churchwarden, Terry Hamaton (who also designed, for me, the hangings of the life of St Thomas of Hereford in Hereford Cathedral)- and from this time came the statue of St Anselm (made by Anton Wagner, of Norfolk) and the new high altar arrangements.   

    In my deacon’s year, 1982, Fr Colclough celebrated his tenth anniversary of priesthood and I deaconed for him (see attachment 2).  When I was ordained, the parish gave me a silver pyx, which I still use regularly today, when taking the Sacrament to the sick.  On it is engraved, ‘To Michael Tavinor, Deacon, June 1982 from St Anselm’s Hayes’.   After my First Mass at Ealing, in 1983, I celebrated the traditional two further ‘first masses’ – a requiem at Harlington, where my parents are buried – and first mass of Our Lady at St Anselm’s. 

    I served 3 years as curate at St Peter, Ealing, then five and half years as Precentor at Ely Cathedral.  From 1990- 2002, I was Vicar of Tewkesbury Abbey in Gloucestershire and have been Dean of Hereford since 2002. 

    So, St Anselm’s is a long time ago, but I’ve never forgotten the influence that the church and parish had on me.  It taught me the central place of the daily Mass and, although we can’t gather for Mass, in the usual way now, when we do gather again, may the Mass have real priority in your life as a parish.  You have a wonderful church building and a rich tradition – I shall pray for you and for Fr Matthew, as you look towards the next chapter of your life in Christ together. 

    Michael Tavinor

    Dean of Hereford Cathedral

  • A letter from Bishop Michael Colclough

    Dear Friends in Christ,

    Yesterday we kept the Feast of St Anselm and, in that we are not able to get to church because of Coronavirus, I celebrated Mass here in our home along with my family: offering the Mass for all of you and for Father Matthew Cashmore as he prepares to become your next Parish Priest.  The Feast of St Anselm brings back lots of fond memories of my time as your Parish Priest.  I arrived in Hayes 41 years ago and, though grateful to be entrusted with such a beautiful church with a rich tradition of Anglo-Catholic worship, I was also apprehensive because the numbers attending church were so low.  The Bishop told me that if I did not make it a viable parish, then closure was in sight.  

    I have heard that life at St Anselm’s is again rather fragile but, from my own experience of God’s grace, guidance and blessings, I do encourage you to take heart as Father Matthew prepares to come among you.  Pray for him now and for yourselves as a community now: and once he arrives pray faithfully with him and be faithful in your presence at Mass – which must be the heart of all you seek to be and do as God’s people.  And God will be faithful: He will bless your lives and efforts given to Him.  Remember these words of Saint Teresa of Avilla: 

    Christ has no hands but your hands
    To do his work today.
    No other feet but your feet
    To guide folk on his way.
    No other lips but your lips
    To tell them why he died.
    No other love but you love
    To win them to his side.
    Yours in our Risen Lord,

  • News for Sunday 26th April

    This week it feels as if things should be returning to ‘normal’. Children are supposed to be going back to school, those early quick little holidays are over and after the stunning weather of the Easter weekend we should be going back to work, going back to school or slipping back into the everyday routine – whatever that was!
     
    Routine can sometimes feel very dull. The everyday slog that simply ensures that one thing happens after another. But sometimes, in that routine we can miss something absolutely vital. So perhaps, we can look at this unusual time, this break in the routine to try to notice the unusual and the vital. Perhaps, with a great deal of effort we can look on this time as an opportunity to see Jesus where we haven’t seen Him before. 
     
    This Sunday’s gospel is the story of the two disciples – who utterly broken and bereft – have fled Jerusalem after the death of Jesus. In their dejection and upset they are joined by a man on their journey who knows nothing of the huge events that have just happened. They tell him the shattering story of the past few days and invite him to stay. They don’t recognise Jesus because they are so caught up in their own grief and pain (and who can blame them) and it’s not until Jesus breaks bread with them that they see his true face. It is a powerful example of how in our darkest and longest nights if we turn to Jesus and open our hearts to Him, He will take us up and comfort us. 
     
    We continue in these unusual days to search for Jesus in the different routines that have developed. In the new ways of living and being that none of us invited into our lives, but with which – none the less – we now have to grapple.
     
    We don’t do this alone (just as the disciples on the road were never alone), we do it as a community of Christians – praying, loving and caring for one another in the only way we know how – the way Jesus taught, and continues to teach us. 
     
    We miss you all a great deal, we pray for the day we are physically re-united – but until that day know that we continue to pray for you and that we continue to break bread with Jesus every single day – in your name, and for your journeys. 

    With all my love,

    Fr. Matthew