March 6, 2011

SUNDAY SERVICES IN LONDON

Filed under: Church Services — tmooresr @ 6:53 pm

We all have our religious preferences at home, and when we are in London we enjoy mingling with the various religious families and congregations who view life as we all do.  In some ways, it is like home away from home.   I have my own Sunday routine which I rarely vary, but I must say I love to go to several services.  I try to arrive at Westminster Abbey at 9:45 am for Matins where I enjoy hearing the choir boys sing.  The organ begins to play, and I get a feeling in my heart that I wouldn’t want to miss each Sunday.  I believe that God is found in many places, even though we all have our special settings that we hold dear and special, but the musical and historical settings in the western civilization are common treasures to all of us.  When Matins have concluded at Westminster Abbey, I rush to my own services where I spend much of the morning until I again rush off to the Brompton Oratorio where the great music pounds in my ears.  Since it is the Sabbath today, I thought it would be appropriate to publish various church services in central London that might be what you are looking for to enrich your visit.  I hope so.

www.londonconnection.com

The LDS Church -the Mormons  64-68 Exhibition Road   Services at 9:00 and noon   Phone:  020 7584 7553

THE MAGNIFICENT BROMPTON ORATORIO

Thomas Moore   email:  TMooreSr@me.com    Telephone:  801.791.9918

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http://www.londonconnection.com

November 27, 2010

CHRISTMAS AT ST. MARTIN-IN-THE FIELDS – Schedule of performances

Filed under: Christmas,Church Services,Music — tmooresr @ 11:44 am

Mrs. Moore and I spent last December and January in London while our family members were all celebrating with their “other” grandparents–it was their year.  While we were in England, we spent many evenings attending the Christmas concerts at St. Martin’s.  We enjoyed these concerts more than the concerts at either St. Paul’s or Westminster Abbey.  Since January, I have received each month’s schedule and have posted them for my readers–month after month.  I just received the December 2010 schedule of performances and want to publish them immediately for those who will be in London for these fantastic concerts in this fabulous historic setting on Trafalgar Square.

See you there.

Thomas Moore   email:  TMooreSr@me.com    Telephone:  801.791.9918

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http://www.londonconnection.com

October 30, 2010

CHELSEA OLD CHURCH AND SIR THOMAS MORE

Filed under: Church Services,LONDON SITES,LONDON WALKS — tmooresr @ 8:33 pm

I am sure you have been wondering when we would be getting around to Sir Thomas More, knowing that is my name as well–slight different spelling.  OFTEN, I am asked if I am related.  I can confirm that I am not related, but my father used to think he liked the idea.  I have even thought about it once in awhile.  But really, no I am not related.  But believe me, I wish I were.  Every time I arrive at Heathrow Airport, my driver brings me down the Chelsea Embankment at my request, and I nod my head as I pass by the seated sculpture of Sir Thomas More.  I have read his biography two or three times, and I studied the UTOPIA in my college years.  I have a very large copy of Holbein’s portrait of Sir Thomas More which is in the Frick in New York hanging on one of my office walls.  My son, another Thomas Moore, even went by Charles Moore instead of his real name Thomas because he was living in Britain and was asked if he was a descendant–he wanted to say YES, but he was taught not to lie or there would be consequences.  So, let’s talk a bit about CHELSEA OLD CHURCH on the Cheyne Embankment.

Chelsea Old Church dates back to  1157 when the small chapels were all private.  The church today is the only church in London to have chained books.  It has the largest number of church memorials/monuments next only to Westminster Abbey.  Sir Thomas More lived nearby, and Henry VIII and James I were known to worship here.  In fact, Henry VIII married his third wife here after the beheading of Anne Boleyn in 1536.

The Chelsea Old Church has its FAMOUS ANIMAL SERVICE where all the fairly-well-behaved animals and insects are welcome.  Believe me, our house of three boxers and a King Charles Cavalier Spaniel would not qualify or suit.  And amazing, there is an dog lavatory opposite the Church. :)

The sculpture of Sir Thomas More sits on the side of the church facing the Thomas.  It was created by the sculptor Leslie Cubitt Bevis.  The More family lived in a very prestigious house very near to the church with its own boat dock and gardens.  It is very fitting to honor this great man here.  Great man!  Great man, indeed!  Principles and integrity–we need him these days!

While you are wandering through the winding old streets of Chelsea, come round to this area, visit CHELSEA OLD CHURCH, nod to Sir Thomas Moore, and walk back up Cheyne Embankment to the Chelsea Bridge and back up to Sloane Square.  It is a very, very beautiful walk along the river and the wonderful red brick houses.  Ignore the street traffic–they were once carriages!  Absolutely beautiful.

Nice.

Thomas Moore   email:  TMooreSr@me.com    Telephone:  801.791.9918

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http://www.londonconnection.com

September 19, 2010

THE QUEEN INVITES THE POPE TO BRITAIN — An Amazing Event

Filed under: BRITISH POLITICS,Church Services — tmooresr @ 7:05 am

Once again, the Queen’s DIPLOMACY sends a strong message to her people throughout Britain and the Commonwealth.  On many occasions, the Queen has expressed both privately and publicly her concern about the rising secularism in British society.  Her invitation to the Pope sends a strong message to the Archbishop of Canterbury that his lack of spiritual leadership concerns her as Sovereign and as the Supreme Head of the Church of England.

I am not Catholic, but I have a strong belief that people with “spiritual”  lives are happier and more productive.  I am not talking religion here, but I have long been very concerned about the lack of direction in the lives of our young people who have “thrown out the baby with the bath water.”  I spend a lot of time sitting on Trafalgar Square talking to young people from all over the world who have come to visit Britain to enjoy the incomparable treasures that draw us all to these island shores.  In all these years, NOT ONCE has the conversation turned to “spiritual” matters.  The theme has always been MONEY, FAME, MODERN MUSIC, FAMILY HATREDS, OUTDATED MONARCHY, FASHION, TATTOOS, CLUBS, SEX, AND “HOOKING UP.”  Every generation has had its need to reinvent itself ;  but our youth are playing with FIRE on a grand scale;  in so many cases THE BEHAVIOR AND EXPERIENCES are irreversible.  Their GODS have become the STARDOMS of our age.

I found the speeches given by the Pope in various locations  sound, necessary, and right on target. I have great faith in our young people and the world they are capable of creating;  but, I do not trust the powers that are swirling around them–shall we say THE KILLING TEMPTATIONS OF OUR TIMES?

I think the Pope has a point here!  Let’s read a few of the extracts from his speeches and enjoy a few images I have been able to find to share with my readers.

A lot to think about here.

Thomas Moore   email:  TMooreSr@me.com    Telephone:  801.791.9918

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http://www.londonconnection.com

August 5, 2010

OSTERLEY PARK – GREATER LONDON – ROBERT ADAM ARCHITECT

Filed under: Church Services,English Country Houses — tmooresr @ 9:22 am

OSTERLEY PARK is a mansion set in a large park of the same name in the London Borough of Hounslow, part of the western suburbs of London.  This house is one of a group of large houses close to London which served as country RETREATS for wealty families like SYON HOUSE and CHISWICK HOUSE.  OSTRLEY PARK is one of the largest open spaces in west London though it is marred by the presence of the M4 Motorway which cuts across the middle of the park.

When I am coming into central London from Heathrow Airport, I pass by the entrance to OSTERLEY PARK, and I am reminded that I must blog about this fabulous country seat.

The original building on this site was a anor house built for banker Sir Thomas Gresham in the 1570′s  It is known that Elizabeth I visited twice.  The stable block from this period remains at Osterley Park.  Two hundreds years later, the manor house was falling into disrepair wen it came into the ownership of Sir Francis Child, the head of Child’s Bank.  In 1761, he employed Robert Adam who was emerging as one of the most fashionable architects in England to remodel the house.  When Sir Francis died in 1763, the project was taken up by his brother and heir Robert Child for whom the interiors were created.

Adam’s neoclassical interiors are among his most notable sequences of rooms.  Horace Walpole sarcastically described the drawing room as WORTHY OF EVE BEFORE THE FALL.  The rooms are characterized by elaborate but restrained plasterwork, ric, highly varied color schemes, and a degree of coordination between decor and furnishings unusual in English neoclassical interiors.

Notable rooms include the entrance hall, which has large semi-circular alcoves at each end, and the Etruscan dressing room, which Adam said ws inspired by the Etruscan vases in Sir William Hamilton’s collection.  Adam also designed some of the furniture, including the opulent domed state bed, still in the house.

Osterley Park was used for Buckingham Palace scenes including Victoria’s sitting room and anteroom in the 2009 film THE YOUNG VICTORIA starring Emily Blunt and Rupert Friend.

OSTERLEY PARK WEBSITE:  www.nationaltrust.org.uk/main/w-vh/w-visits/w-findaplace/w-osterleypark.htm

ADDRESS:  OSTERLEY PARK, Jersey Road, Isleworth, London TW7

CHISWICK HOUSE, SYON HOUSE, AND OSTERLEY PARK are absolutely MUST SEE VISITS while you are in London.  Fabulous.  What a destination.

Thomas Moore   email:  TMooreSr@me.com    Telephone:  801.791.9918

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http://www.londonconnection.com

July 23, 2010

VISIT SOUTH LONDON – THE PRINCE OF WALES TO THE RESCUE

Filed under: BRITISH HISTORY,Church Services,Markets,Music,Sunday Services — tmooresr @ 8:07 am

800px-All_Saints_PeckhamI have written several posts about the new vitality in South London.  The art galleries, restaurants, and clubs are thriving.  Well, so is the church ALL SAINTS CHURCH, PECKHAM.  The church started in 1867 when Peckham was a village on the edge of Camberwell and was a haven outside the intense bustle of Victorian London.  Within a few years the church had grown from about 20 people to over 600 adults in the congregation, and there was even a children’s service for 800 children each Sunday afternoon.

The church grew rapidly in the early 20th century, but like many inner-city church, declined after World War II.  By the mid-1990′s the church congregation had fallen in number to a small handful of members. The church was no longer viable and plans were made to sell off the land for housing.

By 1996 a last ditch effort was made to sae the church.  A new reverand was appointed with the attitude that GOD HAD A PLAN THAT ALL SAINTS COULD BE FULL AGAIN ON SUNDAYS.  Since 2003, the church reports that people attending the church have continued to show strong growth.

Picture 1ALL SAINTS HAS TWO SERVICES each Sunday, a morning service at 10:30 am and an evening service at 7pm.  There is also a midweek service on Tuesdays at 11:00am.  The services reflect the New Wine/SoulSurvivor style of worship.  In 2005 the church released its first live worship CD YOUR FAVOR.

The Prince of Wales has taken a great interest in South London.  He has moved the offices for his charities to Camberwell and has been involved in projects to save the historic fabric of the area.  He and the Duchess of Cornwall spent a day recently visiting ALL SAINTS PECKHAM CHURCH and the BRIXTON MARKET.

I am going to attend church at ALL SAINTS in August.  I want to hear the spirited and spiritual music from the congregation and to visit another old church saved from demolition.

Picture 2I realize that many of my readers stay on the north side of the Thames–probably because limited time allows visits only to the more famous church buildings like Westminster Abbey, Brompton Oratorio,  and St. Paul’s.  But for those who have a bit more time, start exploring South London.  Great things are happening there.  I have written about BOROUGH MARKET and the GLOBE, etc., but I think ALL SAINTS PECKHAM would be a wonderful experience.  You would mingle with local Londoners and would be hearing accents which are so charming.

Visiting a charming service at ALL SAINTS in Peckham with local supports–wow!  What a wonderful plan.  I expect that the vitality of the South Bank which attracts the Prince of Wales will rub off on us.  What a great thing to watch an area come back to life.  Consider it for your visits.Picture 5

Thomas Moore   email:  TMooreSr@me.com    Telephone:  801.791.9918

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http://www.londonconnection.com

July 8, 2010

THE GUARDS CHAPEL ON SUNDAY — Perfect London Morning ACTIVITY

Filed under: Church Services,Sunday Services — tmooresr @ 10:24 am

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THE GUARDS CHAPEL is opposite the GUARDS MUSEUM  and is well worth a visit.  It’s free to go inside and have a look around but the best way to see it would be to att4n the Sunday Service at 11:00 am when there is a full GUARDS band and a professional choir.

You could start your day with breakfast at INN THE PARK in St. James’s Park , attend the church service, and then visit the GUARDS MUSEUM.

Sounds like a great morning activity to me.

Picture 4Picture 6Fun

Tom

http://www.londonconnection.com

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