Find a church

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

St Idloes

Llanidloes, Powys | SY18 6AN

The only church dedicated to St Idloes, a 7th century saint about whom very little is known

St Margaret of Antioch

Reydon, Suffolk | IP18 6PB

A beautiful medieval church with an inclusive commitment to serving the whole parish and beyond.

Rye Lane Baptist Chapel

Peckham, Greater London | SE15 5EX

We warmly welcome visitors at Rye Lane Baptist Chapel; it is a Grade II listed building which boasts historical features in a fine Victorian nonconformist building.

We have supported this church

St Michael

Battersea, Greater London | SW11 6SP

We have supported this church

Trinity Church

Llanidloes, Powys | SY18 6AD

Built in 1878, to the design of architect John Humphries of Morriston, and described as the ‘Cathedral of Welsh Non-Conformity’.

St Cuthbert

Kentmere, Cumbria | LA8 9JL

In the heart of a beautiful Lakeland Valley, St Cuthbert’s church stands as a sentinel which dominates the landscape as a refuge, as a place of pilgrimage.

We have supported this church

Christ Church

Lowestoft, Suffolk | NR32 1XE

We have supported this church

Christ Church

East Greenwich, Greater London | SE10 9EQ

Christ Church was built in 1849 as the daughter church of St Alfege in West Greenwich.

St Clydog

Clodock, Herefordshire | HR2 0PD

This is a quintessential Borders church, built of red sandstone with a sturdy, castle like tower, and in a very rural setting. Its nave is Norman, the chancel a little later, and the tower later still.

Seion Chapel

Llanrwst, Clwyd | LL26 0ER

Seion Methodist Chapel was built in 1895 by architects Booth, Chadwick and Porter of Colwyn Bay, in the vernacular style.

St Mary

Shaw cum Donnigton, Berkshire | RG14 2DR

A beautiful Victorian church with a stunning chancel designed by the renowned architect William Butterfield (who designed Keble College, Oxford) under the initiative of the rector John Horatio Nelson, nephew of Admiral Nelson.

St Alfege

Greenwich, Greater London | SE10 9BJ

There has been a church here for over a thousand years, dedicated to the memory of Alfege, the Archbishop of Canterbury who was martyred on this site in 1012.