Welcome to Weobley & Staunton Joint Benefice
incorporating the Churches and Parishes of Weobley, Staunton On Wye, Norton Canon, Monnington, Sarnesfield, Byford and Letton in Herefordshire
Inclusive Church
As a Benefice, we believe in Inclusive Church β church which does not discriminate, on any level, on grounds of economic power, gender, mental health, physical ability, ethnicity, race, marital status or sexuality. We believe in Church which welcomes and serves all people in the name of Jesus Christ; which chooses to interpret scripture inclusively; which seeks to proclaim the Gospel afresh for each generation; and which, in the power of the Holy Spirit, allows all people to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Jesus Christ.

Sponsor an Angel
Throughout the Christmas period, bring light and love to the memory of a loved one or honour a special person by sponsoring an angel at St Nicholas, Norton Canon.
Join us in this beautiful tradition of remembrance and dedication and see the angels displayed in the church and have a moment or two for reflection.
Donations welcome to St Nicholas Church
St Nicholas Church, Norton Canon HR4 7BQ

Carol Services across our Joint Benefice
Join our Christmas celebration
Sunday 21st December 2025
10.30am - Letton, HR3 6DH
11.00am - Norton Canon, HR4 7BQ
3.30pm - Monnington-on-Wye, HR4 7NL

Christmas Eve Services
Wednesday 24th December 2025
Join us for one of our Christmas Eve Services across our joint benefice
2.30pm Staunton-on-Wye, HR4 7NE Christingle Family Service
5.00pm Weobley, HR4 8SD Family Crib Service
9.00pm Monnington-on-Wye, HR4 7NL Christmas Eve Communion
11.15pm Weobley, HR4 8SD Midnight Mass
Christmas Day Services
Thursday 25th December
Join us for one of our Family Communion Services across our joint benefice
9.00am Sarnesfield, HR4 8RE (joined by Norton Canon)
10.30am Byford, HR4 7LD
10.30am Weobley, HR4 8SD
WEOBLEY & STAUNTON JOINT BENEFICE
Sunday 4th January 2026
9.30am
Epiphany Service
Churches Together in Weobley
Join us as we gather together as one church to celebrate the visit of the Wisemen
Weobley Methodist Chapel, HR4 8SP

Coffee Morning
Tuesday 13th January 2026
10.30am - 12.00pm
Tea - Coffee - Cakes - Biscuits & Friendly Chat
Weobley Parish Church
2nd Tuesday of every month
Year of Engagement
Hereford Diocese has branded 2025 the ‘Year of Engagement'. With a strategy to build on three core behaviour values - to be prayerful, Christlike, and engaged. The events and activities this year will be based on the five marks of mission, summarised as Tell, Teach, Tend, Transform and Treasure, and led by our Mission Enabler for the Environment, Rev'd Stephen Hollinghurst. These values will help ensure that we proclaim Christ and grow as disciples in our faith. Being prayerful and confident in our Bible helps make us more outwardly looking and engaged Christians who live out our faith daily.
For Year of Engagement events please click on the button below.


Weekly Reflection
thoughts and reflections from the Rev'd Philip Harvey
21st, 28th December & 4th January 2026 Christ on the margins
Painted by the artist Andrew Gadd, Bus Stop Nativity (2008)* depicts the Holy Family huddled together at night in a bus shelter, trying to stay warm. Some passersby look on with curiosity and two even kneel on the snow; others go about their business with total indifference. The image is a reminder that - unlike the softly lit nativity scenes on Christmas cards with smiling shepherds and cute stable animals - the context of Jesus coming into the world was on the poor, unrespectable margins of society. He entered a harsh, unjust world which failed to care for the most vulnerable. Not much has changed today. This painting is being widely shared in view of the current populist campaign targeting immigrants and asylum seekers. Outside one church in Chicago, a prominent sign has been placed (in place of the usual nativity scene) which reads ‘Holy family removed by ICE’ (United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement).
When we, individually or collectively, fail to care for the most vulnerable in our midst, we also fail to recognise the reality of Christ’s presence in our midst. In the remarkable first chapter of John, the writer says βHe was in the world, and the world came into being through him; yet the world did not know him. He came to what was his own, and his own people did not accept him.β We do well to recall that Joseph and Mary were homeless for a time and sought refuge from political persecution. The infant Christ would have been killed by the government of the day (under the paranoid King Herod) had his parents not made the decision to flee their own land. It is my hope that our Christmastide prayers for the poor, homeless and vulnerable would result in a more compassionate approach in our world today.
Source: https://artandtheology.org/2022/12/18/advent-day-22-bus-stop-nativity/
30th Nov, 7th & 14th Dec How long O Lord, how long?
The season of Advent is traditionally a season of waiting and expectation. For small children, it seems like the waiting goes on forever, as excitement mounts toward Christmas. For the lonely and bereaved, the waiting is of a different kind; perhaps more a time to endure. The theme of waiting and anticipation appears in our Advent readings. Texts from the prophet Isaiah recall the waiting of the people of Israel, as they longed to return from exile in Babylon and looked for rescue. Isaiah also speaks of a future chosen one, a rescuer who would usher in a period of peace and prosperity and national renewal. But when would this be, and how long would the desolation of exile continue?
There are many in our world, daily dealing with the harsh realities of civil conflict or war or grinding poverty who continue to voice the question of the psalmist ‘How long, O Lord? Will you forget me forever?’ (Psalm 13). The waiting can seem interminable. It was like this also in the early church communities, who were a tiny minority under severe pressure and persecution. In one of his letters, the apostle Peter writes to the suffering churches of Asia Minor these words:
do not ignore this one fact, beloved, that with the Lord one day is like a thousand years, and a thousand years are like one day. The Lord is not slow about his promise, as some think of slowness, but is patient with you, not wanting any to perish, but all to come to repentance. But the day of the Lord will come like a thief, and then the heavens will pass away with a loud noise, and the elements will be dissolved with fire, and the earth and everything that is done on it will be disclosed. Since all these things are to be dissolved in this way, what sort of people ought you to be in leading lives of holiness and godliness, waiting for and hastening the coming of the day of God. (2 Peter chapter 3)
Peter’s words remind us that in Advent, as we wait to celebrate the first coming of Christ, so we simultaneously look forward to his second coming, when all things in heaven and earth will be made new. And that is very much worth waiting for.
Rev’d Philip






