Sung Eucharist Service

Occurring
Every Sunday at for 1 hour
Venue
St Mary Magdalene
Address
Windmill Hill Enfield, EN2 7AJ, United Kingdom

We are open every Sunday for a Sung Eucharist Service 10am - 11am.

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Morning Prayer

Occurring
Every Tuesday at for 30 mins
Venue
St Mary Magdalene
Address
Windmill Hill Enfield, EN2 7AJ, United Kingdom

A Morning Prayer Service taken from the Book of Common Prayer

Holy Communion

Occurring
Every Thursday at for 30 mins
Venue
St Mary Magdalene
Address
Windmill Hill Enfield, EN2 7AJ, United Kingdom

A weekly Holy Communion Service taken from the Book of Common Prayer

Palm Sunday

Occurring
Sunday 02 April 2023 at for 1 hour, 15 mins
Venue
St Mary Magdalene
Address
Windmill Hill Enfield, EN2 7AJ, United Kingdom

Palm Sunday Eucharist
Palm Sunday is a Christian moveable feast that falls on the Sunday before Easter. The feast commemorates Jesus’ triumphal entry into Jerusalem, an event mentioned in each of the four canonical Gospels. Palm Sunday marks the first day of Holy Week. For adherents of Nicene Christianity, it is the last week of the Christian solemn season of Lent that precedes the arrival of Eastertide.

In most liturgical churches, Palm Sunday is celebrated by the blessing and distribution of palm branches (or the branches of other native trees), representing the palm branches which the crowd scattered in front of Christ as he rode into Jerusalem. The difficulty of procuring palms in unfavorable climates led to their substitution with branches of native trees, including box, olive, willow, and yew. The Sunday was often named after these substitute trees, as in Yew Sunday, or by the general term Branch Sunday. In Syriac Christianity it is often called as Oshana Sunday or Hosanna Sunday based on the biblical words uttered by the crowd while Jesus entered Jerusalem.

Many churches of mainstream Christian denominations, including the Orthodox, Catholic, Lutheran, Methodist, Anglican, Moravian and Reformed traditions, distribute palm branches to their congregations during their Palm Sunday liturgies. Christians take these palms, which are often blessed by clergy, to their homes where they hang them alongside Christian art (especially crosses and crucifixes) or keep them in their Bibles or devotionals. In the period preceding the next year’s Lent, known as Shrovetide, churches often place a basket in their narthex to collect these palms, which are then ritually burned on Shrove Tuesday to make the ashes to be used on the following day, Ash Wednesday, which is the first day of Lent.