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BANNER Prayer 960 x 320Prayer Ministry 

‘Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God.’ Philippians 4 6-7
 

What is Prayer Ministry?      

Prayer ministry isn’t counselling or giving advice. It’s an opportunity to pray with another person about any concerns we have, for wholeness and fullness of life and/or to give thanks for answers to prayer.
 

Where and when?

This takes place in the Chapel during the Sunday 10.30am Communion and/or after the service. When weather permits, a member of the team may be sitting on the bench by the St Andrew's Centre behind the church.
 

What happens?

Please make your way to one of the above areas and approach a member of the prayer ministry team who will be waiting there. If someone is already receiving prayer, find a place to wait at a discreet distance. You will be invited to take a seat, and in confidence to share what’s on your mind if you’re comfortable doing so. You might need to simply sit in silence, and that’s okay. The member of the team will listen and then pray with you. If you’d also like to pray, please do. They might ask you if it’s okay to place their hand on your shoulder.
 

Here's an extract from Alan's sermon Healing Light:

It’s important to say that Prayer Ministry isn’t advice giving or counselling. It’s simply about holding someone in loving attention and healing light. LovingHealing light attention is about listening without prejudice, allowing someone to speak their truth; allowing someone to hear themselves. To be listened to, to be heard, is one of life’s greatest gifts. And sometimes that’s enough. All of this is completely confidential except, of course, when there’s a safeguarding situation.

And it might be that we don’t have the words or we’re not ready to speak something, so it’s totally OK to just sit in silence with someone who cares, someone who wants the very best for you. That person can be praying silently, picturing you held in the healing light of Christ.

We can come for ourselves or for someone else, or for both. And hear this - it is never a selfish, self-indulgent thing to ask for prayer for yourself. We all need and deserve prayer. And if you’re thinking, “I’m too shy, too private, too self-sufficient, too skeptical, too scared, too whatever to try this”… Think again. It’s never too late to surprise yourself.

In prayer, we bring our concerns, our burdens, and we lay them down with the Christ who longs to carry what we carry. We come asking for healing, wholeness, fullness of life. And sometimes we come simply to say thank you for prayers answered, for the grace and blessing that surrounds our every breath.

Read the full sermon (from 3 September 2023) here: Healing Light
 

What you say will be treated with complete confidence, but please be aware that we are required to share with our Safeguarding Lead any disclosure of abuse (physical, sexual, or emotional), or the knowledge of a third-party experiencing abuse.
 

If you would like to pray more with others

You might like to consider…

  • Talking with one of our priests (contact us).
     
  • Laying on of hands - a Healing Litany is included in the Wednesday 10.30am Communion (first Wednesday of the month). There is an open invitation to receive the laying on of hands at the altar rail.
     
  • Trying a home group.
 

Find out more about Prayer

Glenys
Hello and welcome to St Andrew's. If you are new, we have a page for you to get to know us and learn more about planning a visit.
Click here to see more.

Planning your Visit

Banner group 1140x320A Warm Hello 

No one belongs here more than you.

We look forward to meeting you! Here's some information so that if you're planning a visit you know beforehand what to expect on a Sunday morning.  We have other pages telling you more About Us, our approach to Faith and our Online services.

Where and When

We meet at the Church Building (details below) for our main Sunday Service starting at 10.30am. For your first visit, we recommend arriving 10-15 minutes early to ensure you find a parking space and can settle in before the service begins. When you arrive, you should be greeted by someone on our Welcome Team.

Plan your journey:
While, unfortunately, St Andrew's does not have its own carpark, there is a council-run pay and display carpark a short distance along St Andrew Street, to the east of the church; there is a £1.50 flat-rate charge for parking in this carpark on Sundays (though half an hour or less is free).

This is a useful East Herts Council website page for full details of parking in Hertford.

There are single yellow lines outside the church with parking restrictions, but some 30-minute parking bays are situated on the opposite side of the road for short stays (longer on Sundays).

Open Google Maps

Accessibility: There is wheelchair access, and a sound loop for anyone who needs it. Please let one of the Welcome Team know on your arrival and they will help you to get set up. There is a disabled toilet towards the back of the church, behind the kitchen.

Our Service

The service will usually begin promptly at 10.30am and will last between 60 and 75 minutes. We enjoy the presence of an excellent choir who help us sing hymns (modern and traditional) as well as provide anthems and special songs through the period of communion. We have a traditional organ but also benefit from music played on the piano and by our band (eg on the Second Sunday of each month when we have an All-Age Service in which our children and young people are fully involved).

Each 10.30am service includes a sermon, prayers and eucharist.

After the service, everyone is invited for coffee and conversation - some like to stay for a quick chat while others remain in the church for a longer time.

Communion

Children and Young People

Children are never too young to come to church. You and your children are very welcome at St Andrew’s. 

We really value worshipping God together as a family, so children stay with their parent or grown-up at the start of the service before being invited to leave for the young people's activities after the first hymn. Junior Church meets in the St Andrew's Centre (our adjoining hall), accessed through the church on Sunday mornings. You will need to go with your children to their groups and register them as part of our child safety policy.

The children and young people then return to the main service in time to join the eucharist and, if confirmed, take Holy Communion or, if not, receive a blessing. We offer a little box of raisins to children being blessed at the altar.

There is a Children's Corner in church where you can go at any time. You will find books, toys and drawing materials there.

Toilet and baby-change facilities are located at the back of church, behind the kitchen.

There's more information here: Children and Young People at St Andrew's

Junior Church celebration

Getting Connected


Home Groups

While Sundays are a great way to meet new people, it is often in smaller gatherings that you can really get to know someone. Being part of one of our small groups allows you to make new friends, share together and support each other. We have a variety of groups that meet throughout the week. Check out Home Groups on our website and see if there’s one that you could join. Alternatively, speak to a member of the Welcome Team who will give you the information that you need.

Serving and Volunteering

If you want to get involved in the life of the church and help us make Sundays run smoothly, you can sign up to serve on a team. Please contact Phil in the Church Office.

Get in touch with us
If you have any questions, please do get in touch. You'll find our contact details here.

We hope that you will feel at home at our church.

Group photo at the top of the page taken by Tim Pike