Author: Fr. Matthew

  • News for 3rd July

    Sent out, but never alone.

    Our Gospel this Sunday tells us of Jesus sending out the 72 disciples ahead of him.

    One of the most striking things about the passage is that he sent them out in pairs. 

    We often talk about being sent out into the world to proclaim the Gospel – it’s what I tell you to do at the end of mass each day ‘Go and proclaim the Gospel of Our Lord’. 

    What we don’t often consider is that we are never sent alone. We are sent in pairs just as Jesus sent out the disciples. 

    The question is who are we sent with? Who is the person who walks alongside us as we head into the harvest?

    I’ve often reflected that we all need a ‘holy friend’. Someone who we are able to have good conversations with about our faith and about how Jesus is working in our lives.

    In those conversations it becomes easier to talk about Jesus and in that ease between two friends we grow in confidence to share our love of Jesus with others outside our immediate group of friends or those who don’t come to church. 

    I’m very fortunate in that I have a friend in Fr. Sam Cross who I can call up, or message and ask honest questions about my faith, about scripture, about my place and calling from God.

    But who is your friend? Who can you turn to and ask these questions of? 

    Have a look around you at church this week and if you can’t immediately answer that question then think about who it could be and go and speak to them over coffee. Ask them if they’d be your ‘holy friend’. Build one another up in the Love of God.

    Fr. Matthew

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    Items needed for Food Bank & Church Larder: Tins of meat & fish, baked beans, soup, cereal, coffee, sugar, deodorants (especially mens), sanitary pads, incontinence pads, nappies (esp newborn to size 2). (THESE ARE QUITE URGENTLY NEEDED NOW PLEASE DO DIG DEEP!)

    After mass on the 3rd July Fr. Matthew will be driving to the Polish / Ukraine border to take a car-load of needed items to a refugee camp. He will be returning with two refugees who will be living at the vicarage with his family. Thank you to everyone for your support of cash for fuel and also for donations of flip-flops. We need more candy and fruit juice! Please bring them on Sunday.

    No mid-week services as Fr. Matthew will be driving to the Poland / Ukraine border. Please do join in with St. Mary’s, Hayes or St. Edmund’s.

  • News for 26th June

    Mass this Sunday (26th) is at St. Mary’s in Hayes with Bishop Jonathan who will be Confirming our own Isabelle Cummings. Please do make every effort to attend and support her on this important step in her journey with God. Mass is at 10am, there is lots of parking and an easy bus route. There will be some nibbles afterwards.  There is no mass at St. Anselm this Sunday.

    Confirmation,  the next step in our own journey with God.

    This Sunday we will gather not in St. Anselm, but with our dear brothers and sisters in Christ at St. Mary’s in Hayes (on Church Road).

    Fr. Nicholas is an old friend of the parish and in times past our confirmations have often happened at St. Mary’s. 

    We are two parishes who have a shared theology and a shared understanding of what it means to live out a life in Christ in Hayes and so it makes so much sense for us to do more things together in this way. 

    Next year we’ll have a procession from St. Mary’s to St. Anselm (with Bishop Jonathan) for Corpus Christi; before then there will more events that we come together for. 

    These shared moments are a decision we make deliberately to be together to celebrate our lives and journey in Christ with our nearest brothers and sisters. 

    It is joyful therefore that our first joint event is a confirmation. 

    A decision to step forward in a life as a Christian made by a young person in their own right and in their own strength. 

    A moment where they stand and say to everyone, ‘I am a Christian!’

    Please do make a special effort to come to St. Mary’s this Sunday and to share in that joyous moment and to be part of our wider family in Hayes.

    Fr. Matthew 

    (P.S. do bring some treats for afterwards!)

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    Mass this Sunday (26th) is at St. Mary’s in Hayes with Bishop Jonathan who will be Confirming our own Isabelle Cummings. Please do make every effort to attend and support her on this important step in her journey with God. Mass is at 10am, there is lots of parking and an easy bus route. There will be some nibbles afterwards.  There is no mass at St. Anselm this Sunday.

    After mass on the 3rd July Fr. Matthew will be driving to northern Poland to take a car-load of needed items to a refugee camp. He will be returning with two refugees who will be living at the vicarage with his family. If you would be able to support the petrol / ferry costs for this trip that would be an enormous help. The total cost will be in excess of £600. Please email/phone Fr. Matthew with any offers.

    Items needed for Food Bank & Church Larder: Tins of meat & fish, baked beans, soup, cereal, coffee, sugar, deodorants (especially mens), sanitary pads, incontinence pads, nappies (esp newborn to size 2).

  • News for 19th June

    A father’s love  comes from his Father in heaven.

    As we progressed through the lectionary over Easter and into Pentecost is was clear that the central theme of scripture was the love that exists between the Father and the Son, the Son and His disciples, the the love that should therefore exits between each of us as Christians. 

    The model of a Father’s love for his children comes up several times in scripture – but it is the love that God the Father has for His Son that is the shining example of what that relationship – father & child – should be.

    We are often very dismissive of talking about the relationship between father and child. We claim that it is difficult and that many people have had bad experiences of that relationship. 

    We snark that it is a ‘made up holiday’, that only exists to make card companies money. 

    The reality is that mothers day is exactly the same – yet – we don’t snark at that holiday or shy from celebrating mothers – so why do we do so on Father’s day. 

    There are no flowers for the fathers, no small gifts from the congregation to say thank you.

    There is no celebration of all that is wonderful in being a father to our children – in fact to be a father is to be constantly criticised, judged and ostracised for not being exactly what society claims you to be – and even if you are – you are still treated with suspicion and fear. 

    This needs to stop. We need to celebrate our fathers and to recognise in them the love of God the Father for His son.

    Fr. Matthew

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    Items needed for Food Bank & Church Larder: Tins of meat & fish, baked beans, soup, cereal, coffee, sugar, deodorants (especially mens), sanitary pads, incontinence pads, nappies (esp newborn to size 2).

    22nd – 26th August, 10am-4pm. We are lucky enough that five people have volunteered to be leaders for our summer holiday club. We’re now looking for people who can commit to a few hours to help with things like making tea & coffee, tidying up at the end of each day and other assisting tasks. Please speak to Fr. Matthew or Julie Estep (Sunday School Leader) or sign up on the sheet in church. 

    12th July, 10:30am-6pm. I’m still looking for volunteers for the 12th July to meet with  Priests applying for our new Mission Priest job (interviews with +Jonathan on the 13th July). If you’d like to meet the applicants or help with showing them around the parish please be in touch. 

  • News for 12th June

    The father, son & Holy Spirit.

    Just a week after we celebrate the decent of the Holy Spirit into the room filled with Jesus disciples we take a moment to praise and pray for a deeper understanding of the Holy Trinity.

    The Trinity pervades every aspect of our faith – it is one of the central planks of our faith – everything we do, everything we are sent out to do is done in the power of the Father, Son & Holy Spirit.

    It is possible, I think, to overthink this. 

    To try to figure out HOW this trinity of God works. We are human and modern humans attempt to understand the world through the lens of science and ‘reason’.

    The issue of course is that creation is rather more complex and difficult than we can understand.

    We are not God and we are reaching and trying as hard as we can to understand things that He created and put into place.

    It’s just not possible. 

    This is not to say that we shouldn’t try – that we shouldn’t engage in trying to understand the the universe through science and ‘reason’; but rather to accept that there are things that we can not neatly fit into categories of science that are central to how we exist in the universe. 

    We are not God. 

    Sometimes we need to accept that it is wiser to exist and simply appreciate and give thanks for what God has made – and our part in it.

    Fr. Matthew

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    22nd – 26th August, 10am-4pm. We are lucky enough that five people have volunteered to be leaders for our summer holiday club. We’re now looking for people who can commit to a few hours to help with things like making tea & coffee, tidying up at the end of each day and other assisting tasks. Please speak to Fr. Matthew or Julie Estep (Sunday School Leader) or sign up on the sheet in church. 

    12th July, 10:30am-6pm. I’m still looking for volunteers for the 12th July to meet with  Priests applying for our new Mission Priest job (interviews with +Jonathan on the 13th July). If you’d like to meet the applicants or help with showing them around the parish please be in touch. 

  • News for Pentecost 2022

    Tongues of fire, filled with the Holy Spirit.

    It is hard not to read the description of Pentecost Sunday in Acts and not be moved. The language is emotive and powerful.

    …when suddenly they heard what sounded like a powerful wind from heaven, the noise of which filled the entire house in which they were sitting; and something appeared to them that seemed like tongues of fire; these separated and came to rest on the head of each of them. They were all filled with the Holy Spirit, and began to speak foreign languages as the Spirit gave them the gift of speech.

    Acts 2:2-4

    We have been watching and waiting for the coming of the Holy Spirit for the last two weeks – knowing that the Helper was on his way – but how many of the disciples expected him to arrive with such power, such authority and such gifts!

    The wind roared – reaching back to the sound of the Holy Spirit roaring over the waves in creation.

    The fire descended and rested on each one of them… giving them the gift of tongues.

    Importantly this gift is the ability to speak foreign languages  – a gift that enables them to go out into the world and proclaim the Gospel of Jesus Christ. 

    That is what we celebrate today – the powerful gifts that the Holy Spirit gives each one of us to proclaim the Gospel. It’s different for each one of us – but it is our duty as Christians to identify it  and to deploy it to bring new people to the feet of Jesus. 

    Fr. Matthew

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    Bring and share lunch! Don’t forget that after mass this week there will be a bring and share lunch and party for Pentecost immediately after mass – wear something red!

    Thank you very much to Fr. Leslie for covering for me last Sunday, what a beautiful service. Also a huge thank you to Susan, Cynthia, Louise, Frank, Shirley, Trevor and the rest of the Foodbank team for keeping the most in need in food. 

    22nd – 26th August, 10am-4pm. We are lucky enough that five people have volunteered to be leaders for our summer holiday club. We’re now looking for people who can commit to a few hours to help with things like making tea & coffee, tidying up at the end of each day and other assisting tasks. Please speak to Fr. Matthew or Julie Estep (Sunday School Leader) or sign up on the sheet in church. 

    12th July, 10:30am-6pm. I’m still looking for volunteers for the 12th July to meet with  Priests applying for our new Mission Priest job (interviews with +Jonathan on the 13th July). If you’d like to meet the applicants or help with showing them around the parish please be in touch. 

  • News for May 29th

    The Helper,  the Paraclete.

    Next Sunday we will celebrate Pentecost – the coming of the Holy Spirit. On Thursday we said goodbye to the earthly presence of Jesus as He ascended to His Father.

    Jesus told us that He is sending us a helper – The Helper, called The Paraclete in some translations. 

    The Paraclete in the ancient Rome tradition was someone who was sent into a difficult situation to help. Sometimes they’re described in much the same way as a lawyer – but the reality was rather more complex and interesting. 

    When a soldier was accused of doing something wrong or was in any sort of trouble or strife the Paraclete was sent in to help.

    Sometimes that would mean advocating on behalf of the soldier, or it may mean giving advice, or perhaps pointing them in the right direction when they may not be able to see the path in front of them.

    That’s one of my favourite ways to think about the Holy Spirit – that when I’m in trouble (and perhaps I don’t even know I’m in trouble) the Holy Spirit will speak to me, advocate for me, give me advice and point me in the right direction. 

    Now, I may not like that advice, but the important thing is that I listen to it. Because when we’re in trouble, when we’re walking the wrong path or we’re in a spot of bother The Paraclete is there to give us some clarity and only has our best interests at heart. 

    We would be foolish not to listen to the advice of The Holy Spirit. 

    So spend this week listening and being open to what the Holy Spirit is saying to you in this moment.

    Fr. Matthew

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    Thank you very much for Fr. Leslie who is covering Parish Mass for us whilst Fr. Matthew is away with his family on half term break. Please do pray for Fr. Leslie and give him the usual St. Anselm welcome!

    There will be a bring and share lunch after the Pentecost service next Sunday – come to mass wearing red and be prepared for a great party afterwards. 

    We are lucky enough that five people have volunteered to be leaders for our summer holiday club. We’re now looking for people who can commit to a few hours to help with things like making tea & coffee, tidying up at the end of each day and other assisting tasks. Please speak to Fr. Matthew or Julie Estep (Sunday School Leader). 

    I’m still looking for volunteers for the 12th July to meet with  Priests applying for our new Mission Priest job (interviews with +Jonathan on the 13th July). If you’d like to meet the applicants or help with showing them around the parish please be in touch. 

  • News for 22nd May

    Evangelising  England.

    On Tuesdays we pray for the evangelisation of England. We pray that everyone in this country will come to know the deep love of Jesus Christ and come to faith in His Father.

    We’re not the first to make that prayer. 

    In the early part of the sixth century the wife of King Æthelberht (St. Bertha) prayed that her then pagan husband would become Christian (as she was). 

    She wrote to the Pope and asked him to send a mission to England and in 595 that’s exactly what he did. 

    He asked Augustine (then a prior of a monastery in Rome) to lead this mission and in 597 he arrived in England, landing in Thanet. 

    (I’ve visited the church in Rome from which St. Gregory sent St. Augustine to England and even sat in his papal throne!)

    After he landed, Augustine made his way to Canterbury and converted the King to Christianity and from there the English church as we now know it was born. 

    Over the coming years St. Augustine converted thousands of pagans to Christianity. At one famous mass on Christmas Day 597 several thousand people converted and were baptised at the same time. 

    At St. Anselm’s (named after a successor of St. Augustine) we share in the gift of the mission to convert England. To bring people to Jesus. 

    I’m not sure we’ll convert thousands at one mass – but let’s do our very best! 

    Fr. Matthew

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    Our APCM will be on Sunday 22nd May immediately after Mass. If you would like to stand for the PCC please speak to Fr. Matthew or one of the Church Wardens. 

    We are lucky enough that five people have volunteered to be leaders for our summer holiday club. We’re now looking for people who can commit to a few hours to help with things like making tea & coffee, tidying up at the end of each day and other assisting tasks. Please speak to Fr. Matthew or Julie Estep (Sunday School Leader). 

    I’m still looking for volunteers for the 12th July to meet with  Priests applying for our new Mission Priest job (interviews with +Jonathan on the 13th July). If you’d like to meet the applicants or help with showing them around the parish please be in touch. 

  • News for 15th May

    St. Dunstan

    What could have been.

    St. Dunstan was a renowned and well loved Archbishop of Canterbury (which is why we remember his feast day here at St. Anselm). 

    He was so loved that for the better part of two centuries he was easily England’s favourite Saint. It was a close run thing between him and St. Edmund as to who would be the patron saint of England.

    In the end of course, England chose St. George, which makes St. David the only native of the country for which he is the Patron Saint in the British Isles. Patrick was Welsh, Andrew was from Judea  and George was Greek/Palestinian.

    Dunstan was a monk (in Glastonbury), a writer and artist (he was particularly known for this), he was behind major reforms at Glastonbury and is often credited with the restoration of monastic life towards the end of the 10th Century when it had started to wane. 

    From Glastonbury he went on to be Bishop of Worcester and then London before being made Archbishop of Canterbury in 960AD.

    As we prepare to celebrate the Platinum Jubilee it’s worth remembering that it was the coronation service that he wrote for King Edgar in 973 that formed the basis of the coronation of Her Majesty in 1953. 

    He was also known for his amazing generosity. At one point on a journey to Rome his generosity was so great that nothing was left for him or his followers and retainers. There were many complaints among his retinue! 

    He has many examples for us to follow. Patience, love, a dedication to learning and to sharing that knowledge – but perhaps most importantly his excessive generosity. 

    St. Dunstan pray for us…

    Fr. Matthew 

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    Our APCM will be on Sunday 22nd May immediately after Mass. If you would like to stand for the PCC please speak to Fr. Matthew or one of the Church Wardens. 

    We are lucky enough that five people have volunteered to be leaders for our summer holiday club. We’re now looking for people who can commit to a few hours to help with things like making tea & coffee, tidying up at the end of each day and other assisting tasks. Please speak to Fr. Matthew or Julie Estep (Sunday School Leader). 

    Quite a lot of changes to the weekly schedule coming up. As meetings return to in-person there is an inevitable degree of catch-up and I find myself in London everyday next week. There’s a mass everyday except Thursday. 

    I’m still looking for volunteers for the 12th July to meet with  Priests applying for our new Mission Priest job (interviews with +Jonathan on the 13th July). If you’d like to meet the applicants or help with showing them around the parish please be in touch. 

  • News for 8th May

    How to recruit a Mission Priest.

    Saint Matthias is not mentioned in the synoptic gospels in the list of the Apostles. 

    He does appear in Acts however and it’s clear that he was with Jesus from the time of his baptism.

    In the days following the Ascension Peter suggested that one of the 120 followers of Jesus nominate two men to replace Judas amongst the group of Apostles. 

    How they went about choosing these men is really interesting – they started immediately by praying.

    And they prayed and said, “You, Lord, who know the hearts of all, show which one of these two you have chosen to take the place in this ministry and apostleship from which Judas turned aside to go to his own place. 

    Acts 1:24-25

    Given we’ve just launched our own campaign to appoint a new Priest (in addition to me) to St. Anselm I see the work of the Holy Spirit in the timing of the feast. 

    Next Saturday (the Feast of St. Matthias) the advert will have been out in the world for about a week. 

    Many people will have seen it and many people will have thought about it – but I want us to pray about it. 

    Just as the followers of Jesus did all that time ago, I want us to pray ‘You lord, who know the hearts of all, show which one of these you have chosen to come to St. Anselm’

    Please make next Saturday a special day of prayer that we find the right person to come and serve as Mission Priest in Hayes.

    Fr. Matthew

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    Thank you to Susan and Julie for the flowers this week – I think they’re looking absolutely great!

    A thank you also to the anonymous donor who has also given £250 to the foodbank – this is not the first time – so a huge thank you for the generosity. 

    We’re looking to run a summer club for children (10am-4pm) for a week in the Summer Holidays. We have two great volunteers already, but we’ll need more – even if you can only offer a few hours. Please speak to Fr. Matthew. 

    There will be a parish open day on the 12th July for Priests applying for our new Mission Priest job (interviews with +Jonathan on the 13th July). If you’d like to meet the applicants or help with showing them around the parish please be in touch. 

    Our APCM will be on Sunday 22nd May immediately after Mass. If you would like to stand for the PCC please speak to Fr. Matthew or one of the Church Wardens. 

    There will be safeguarding training at 10:30am on Friday 13th May – both C0 and C1. Please contact Fr. Matthew if you’d like to receive this valuable training. All are welcome. 

  • Mission Priest for Hayes

    Applications for this post are now closed, thank you for your interest. Please do pray for us as we discern the right candidate and interview in July.

    The parish has passed a Resolution under the House of Bishops Declaration.

    Hayes is growing at an enormous rate – and so are the opportunities to engage with people who have never known Jesus. This exciting new role will be at the heart of our ambitious vision to be the beating heart and lived out love of Christ in Hayes.

    Main Responsibilities

    • Lead and develop a team of lay leaders on the estates of Hayes who will be comfortable and able to lead others to Christ.
    • Chair the Mission committee at St. Anselm.
    • Be a key part of delivering the St. Anselm Five Year Vision.
    • Be responsible for growing communities in personal and communal spaces (homes, offices and coffee shops etc).
    • Be a visible presence on the estates, especially the area known as the Red Brick Estate.
    • Develop new relationships with non-church of England primary schools and secondary schools that serve Hayes.
    • Offer pastoral care to the parish, including visiting, home communions etc.
    • Use modern communication tools to engage with new communities

    The Ideal Candidate

    • Passionate about re-engaging with those who have lost their faith.
    • Enthusiastic about mission to the unchurched.
    • Someone who wants to spend as much time out of the church as they do inside it.
    • Comfortable in the roughest of pubs and the nicest of restaurants.
    • Comfortable meeting in people’s homes and businesses.
    • Willing to roll up their sleeves and get stuck into anything that is thrown at them.
    • Open to the inspiration and leading of the Holy Spirit at work in Hayes.

    About us

    St. Anselm was opened in 1929 at the heart of what was then a village rapidly turning into an industrial town. The rapid growth in the latter part of the 19th century prompted the Diocese of London to plant a new church (initially in a hut before the current church was built) in the midst of Hayes Town – centred on the canal and railway into London.

    There was an explosion of house building and many people saw Hayes as a new suburb of London. Hayes though retained its own character and identity as the railway served industry rather than passengers into Paddington. The housing was bought by people working at EMI, Nestlé and other large industrial companies supplying vital materials for the inter-war expansion of London and its suburbs.

    Hayes is once again at the centre of an exciting period of change, with factories being replaced by high density housing for people moving to the area, attracted by the new Crossrail station, this time ferrying passengers rather than cargo. This huge increase in housing marks a new phase of opportunity for St. Anselm, and almost a 100 years after it was opened it finds itself once again at the heart of mission in the Diocese of London

    For further details and an application form please contact the Bishop of Fulham’s office
    fulham.chaplain@london.anglican.org
    020 7932 1130

    For informal conversations please contact Fr. Matthew Cashmore
    father@parpri1.dreamhosters.com  
    020 3882 0553

    Closing date for applications: 17th June 2022

    Interviews: 13th July 2022
    Parish tours: 12th July 2022

    Enhanced DBS disclosure required