Blog

  • 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


     

  • St. Anselm’s WhatsApp Group

    Our doors are now wide open, so step inside where a warm welcome is offered to all. Keep in touch with St. Anselm’s Church on your smart phone and iPad.

    Fr. Matthew has created the St. Anselm’s WhatsApp Group. This is open to anybody to join and belong to our ever increasing congregation.

    To join the group simply sign-up to receive updates from St. Anselm on our new sign-up page and you’ll receive an invitation to join the WhatsApp Group within 24 hours.

    We look forward to your joining, input and being part of us.