Find a church

Search for a fascinating place to visit, or see the variety of churches, chapels and meeting houses we have supported.

St Michael & All Angels

Appleby Magna, Leicestershire | DE12 7BB

With its stone tower and spire, and windows of the Decorated period, from the outside Appleby Magna looks every inch a medieval church, which is what it is, and an excellent example of its kind.

St Peter

Arnesby, Leicestershire | LE8 5WJ

We have supported this church

St John the Evangelist

Stratford, Greater London | E15 1NG

St John's is an east London landmark, standing at the centre of Stratford, one of the world's most multi cultural places.

We have supported this church

St Celynin

Llangelynnin, Gwynedd | LL37 2QL

A fascinating church in a glorious setting.

St Illogan

Illogan, Cornwall | TR16 4RX

We have supported this church

Our Lady of Grace

Charlton, Greater London | SE7 7EZ

The parish began in a Regency house, once home to Baron Sir William Congreve, the father of modern rocket technology.

Christ Church

Bedford, Bedfordshire | MK40 3TJ

Modern and welcoming city church.

St Bartholomew

Maresfield, Sussex | TN22 3DP

St Bartholomew's dates back more than a 1,000 years and is in the centre of the historic village of Maresfield in East Sussex.

We have supported this church

All Saints

West Ham, Greater London | E15 3HU

The parish church of West Ham was established in 1135 and rebuilt in Early English Style in the reign of Henry II (1154-89).

St Edward the Confessor

Mottingham, Greater London | SE9 4AQ

A welcoming, modern Gothic church, with high ceilings and windows that create a light, spacious feeling.

We have supported this church

St Peter & St Paul

Wem, Shropshire | SY4 5DP

Used daily for prayer and worship. Sited in the heart of this Shropshire market town adjacent to a medieval motte castle mound, there has been a church on this site since Saxon times.

Blackheath & Charlton Baptist Church

Blackheath, Greater London | SE7 7DF

The church traces its origins back to 1863 when eight residents of Blackheath asked Charles Haddon Spurgeon of the Metropolitan Tebernacle for permission to start a separate fellowship in this area.