Occurring
Every Thursday at for 1 hour, 30 mins
Venue Address
Cappell Lane Stanstead Abbots, SG12 8BU
Our Lent Groups replace the usual Life Groups, but are open to everyone. Join us every Thursday (at a slightly later time that usual) as we use this time for study and quiet reflection, followed by a soup and bread lunch.

The Church of England’s theme for this Lent is to ‘Watch & Pray’, which invites us to seek God in both familiar and unfamiliar places this Lent: in darkness and in quiet; in movement and migration; in the healing and transforming work of the Spirit; in the weeping of Holy Week and in the joy of Easter morning. The reflections follow the same themes as the Archbishop of Canterbury’s Lent Book for this year, Tarry Awhile by Selina Stone, which we will be reading over Lent and discussing together in these Lent Groups.

St Andrew's Church

Welcome to St Andrew, Stanstead Abbots' Parish Church.

St Andrew's Church is part of the Great Amwell with St Margarets and Stanstead Abbots Benefice. Our 3 Churches Benefice covers three villages with four churches, so we are blessed to be able to provide a variety of services. St Andrew’s has evangelical roots and with long-standing links with All Nations Christian College and its missions overseas.

For more information about our Benefice, including our full Safeguarding Policy, please visit our website www.3churches.net

Get in touch

Revd Dr Sarah Forrest

The Vicarage
25 Hoddesdon Road
Stanstead St Margarets
Herts

SG12 8EG
Priest-in-Charge
07488 914972
Benefice Administrator
01920 870115

Our website

What's on

Lent Group at The Wilshere Hall

Occurring
Every Thursday at for 1 hour, 30 mins
Venue
The Wilshere Hall, St Andrew's Church
Address
Cappell Lane Stanstead Abbots, SG12 8BU

Our Lent Groups replace the usual Life Groups, but are open to everyone. Join us every Thursday (at a slightly later time that usual) as we use this time for study and quiet reflection, followed by a soup and bread lunch.

The Church of England’s theme for this Lent is to ‘Watch & Pray’, which invites us to seek God in both familiar and unfamiliar places this Lent: in darkness and in quiet; in movement and migration; in the healing and transforming work of the Spirit; in the weeping of Holy Week and in the joy of Easter morning. The reflections follow the same themes as the Archbishop of Canterbury’s Lent Book for this year, Tarry Awhile by Selina Stone, which we will be reading over Lent and discussing together in these Lent Groups.