Welcome to St Clement's website

welcome

We are an Anglican Church, worshipping God for ourselves and others, seeking wholeness for all through Christ.

For details of our services and prayer times, please visit our Diary page.

If you would like to visit us in person, St Clement's church can be found at the corner of Edge Lane and St Clement's Road, Chorlton-cum-Hardy, Manchester.

Our mission church, St Barnabas, is in South Chorlton on the corner of Hardy Lane and Hurstville Road. Thank you for visiting us.

 

Forthcoming events

 

Back to Church Sunday

26th September 2010

An opportunity to invite friends and relatives back to Church. This year Canon Tony Hardy, the Canon Evangelist from Manchester Cathedral, will be our guest preacher.

 

Harvest Supper and Ceilidh

Saturday 2nd October 2010

An event organised by the social committee. Further details to follow.

 

Deanery Confirmation Service

Wednesday 20th October

This year St Clement's will be hosting the confirmation service for the Deanery. If you are interested in exploring what confirmation means please contact Ken Flood.

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Mission Statement

St Clement’s is an Anglican Church, worshipping God for ourselves and others, seeking wholeness for all through Christ.

Inclusivity Statement:

We affirm that the Church’s mission, in obedience to Holy Scripture, is to proclaim the Gospel of Jesus Christ in every generation. We acknowledge that this is Good News for people, regardless of their sex, race or sexual orientation.

Access For All Policy:

The Parochial Church Council of St Clement’s welcomes and supports the principles of ‘Access for All’, designed to enable people with disabilities and older people to worship God in fellowship with other members of their community.

We are committed to a programme of improvements to make St Clement’s activities and facilities more accessible to all people regardless of their disability or disabling condition. We will develop and monitor our wider church programme activities and endeavour to ensure that accessible venues are always available for meetings held outside our main worship area.

We will ensure that all necessary persons are given training on disability issues to enable them to be fully inclusive in their ministry.

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The History of St Clement's Church

While St Clement’s is a relatively new build ing, the history of a parish church in Chorlton goes back a long way.

Until 1512, the people of Chorlton had to travel to St Mary’s, the parish church of Man chester, for their baptisms, weddings, and funerals. The prominent Barlow family then established a chapel on what is now Chorlton Green, five minutes walk from the present church. The chapel remained a centre of worship in Chorlton for more than three hun dred years.

The original timber-framed chapel was in use until 1779, when a new building was constructed in brick. Although no records prove that it was built on the site of the original chapel, the fact that some 18th Century graves can be found in the graveyard, the oldest dated 1708, suggests this is likely.

In 1839, Chorlton Chapel was designated a parish church. However, by 1860, Chorlton had grown larger and more prosperous, and because the fabric of the brick building was in a poor state of repair, a new building was proposed. Lord Egerton provided land at the corner of what is now St Clement’s Road and Edge Lane for the new church building.

Moving the church to a new site, however, was not without opposition. Many in the parish resisted the plans. Among them was the banker William Cunliffe Brooks who had paid for the construction of the lych-gate to the old church. The gate still stands on Chorlton Green today.

After many delays, construction of the new church went ahead and the opening service was held in June 1866. The church was consecrated thirty years later.

The opposition to the new church continued and this meant that the church on Chorlton Green remained the parish church until its demolition in 1940 when the endowment was finally transferred to the new church of St clement.

In more recent times, St Clement’s has seen some major changes. Among the most radical date from 1976 when the church was ‘turned round’, with the congregation facing west instead of the traditional east, and allowing part of the nave to be converted into two large halls and other smaller meeting rooms.

Now, in the new millennium, it’s time for both consolidation and renewal. Some of the more doubtful innovations of the 1970s have been reversed to widespread approval. The church halls remain very much in active use, but once more the

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Latest News

01.08.10

Make a joyful noise! Saturday 16 October 2010, 9.15am-4.30pm at Manchester Cathedral and nearby ven... more

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