Forest Hill Methodist Church
Forest Hill
London

SE23 2DS

Forest Hill Methodist Church, Forest Hill, London, United Kingdom
Stained Glass Window designed by Jeffery Matthews MBE
The sanctuary

Who we are

Welcome to Forest Hill Methodist Church

At our church you can join the Guides, Rangers, Rainbows, Brownies

A thriving parent, baby and toddler group meets at the church on Fridays 9.30-11.30 during term time. Lots of activities and a chance to meet other parents and make new friends. Entrance £1 includes refreshments.

Sunday services and Family services
Spiritual support; friendship
Church choir
Worship Group
Flower Group
Sunday School for children

Bible Study
Tuesday Fellowship
Church Office
Gardening
Music lessons, martial arts, dance, singing and many more activities take place on the premises. Call if you are interested.

Tennis courts, can also be used for 5-a-side football

Street Address

5 Normanton Street
Forest Hill, London SE23 2DS
United Kingdom
Phone: 020 8291 6996

Download Forest Hill Methodist Church vCard with Service Times


Church Pastor

Rev. Dee Yeadon
Minister
5 Normanton Street
Forest Hill, London SE23 2DS
United Kingdom
Phone: 020 8291 6996

Download Minister Rev. Dee Yeadon vCard


Quote of the Day

1 Timothy 2:5

For there is one God, and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus;

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Rev. Dee Yeadon
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Minister
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Forest Hill Methodist Church on the map




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Forest Hill Methodist Church - 5 Normanton Street, Forest Hill, London
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Travel/Directions Tips

Nearest bus routes:

To: Perry Vale: 75, 356
To: Stanstead Road: 122, 185
To: Forest Hill town centre: 122, 185, 197, 176

By rail to: Forest Hill Station

Walking: Additional route via footpath from Sunderland Road by Perrymount Primary School.


Parking



Forest Hill Methodist Church Forest Hill Service Times

Church Services each Sunday at 11am

All Age Worship and Communion Services at 11am. When Communion Services are held there is a Benevolent Fund collection during the final hymn.

Junior Church during the Service most Sundays except when All Age.

The Church is open on Wednesday mornings from 10am to 1pm for quiet reflection and prayer

Service Times last updated on the 29th of November, 2018


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Forest Hill Methodist Church Photo Gallery

Forest Hill Methodist Church, Forest Hill, London, United Kingdom
Stained Glass Window designed by Jeffery Matthews MBE
The sanctuary



Forest Hill Methodist Church History

A brief history of Methodism

Childhood home: Born into the large family of Samuel Wesley, Rector of Epworth in Lincolnshire, John [1703-1791] and Charles [1707-1788] owed a great deal to their remarkable mother Susanna, as well as to the Puritan background of both parents.

'Methodists' was originally a nickname applied to a revival movement in 18th century Britain, based within the Church of England and led by, among others, the brothers John and Charles Wesley.

Oxford and America: Both brothers studied at the University of Oxford (at Christ Church) and John went on to become a Fellow of Lincoln College, Oxford. In the early 1730­s, a small group of students met regularly for Bible study and prayer, received Communion frequently and undertook works of charity; such devout behaviour was unusual in those times and they were soon ridiculed. Among others in the 'Holy Club' (another nickname) was George Whitefield who would become the greatest preacher of the time. The Wesleys, Whitefield and other leaders were mostly ordained clergy of the Church of England. The 'Methodists' in Oxford were a short-lived group, but they set a pattern for the 'Evangelical Revival'.In 1735 the Wesleys responded to an invitation to serve as chaplains to American colonies; this was unsuccessful, and both had returned to Britain by 1738. Although neither returned to America, some 50 years later their followers (such as Francis Asbury and Thomas Coke) did, and so Methodism spread in the 'New World'.

Aldersgate: Influenced by the Moravians the Wesleys joined in a 'Religious Society' in London, and in May 1738 both underwent a profound spiritual experience. John famously described this in his Journal for 24 May 1738"In the evening I went unwillingly to a society in Aldersgate Street, where one was reading Luther and preface to the Epistle to the Romans. About a quarter to nine, while he was describing the change which God works in the heart through faith in Christ, I felt my heart strangely warmed. I felt I did trust in Christ, Christ alone for salvation, and an assurance was given me that Three days earlier, following his own 'conversion', Charles had written a hymn:Where shall my wondering soul begin
How shall I all to heaven aspire? For the following half-century such hymns flowed from Charles' pen (it is estimated he wrote over 6,000), while John was the organising genius who turned a spontaneous movement into structured body which became the origin of today's world-wide Methodist Church.

Preaching: In 1739 Whitefield invited John Wesley to preach to crowds of working classes in Bristol in the open air. Since such people were often excluded from the churches, 'field preaching' became a key feature of the Revival, and Wesley recorded addressing gatherings of many thousands. His published Sermons became and remain the doctrinal standard of the Methodist Church.

Societies and classes: Wesley formed converts into local societies, originally modelled upon the 'Religious Societies' and his Oxford group; they were also subdivided into 'classes' which met weekly. Every year, by horse or carriage, John Wesley travelled the country to visit, encourage and admonish the societies, as well as preaching. He insisted that Methodists regularly attend their local parish church as well as Methodist meetings.Through the societies, members supported one another spiritually and pastorally, and working people and women often found a status otherwise denied to them.'

Social righteousness: For the Wesleys, 'works' as well as faith were essential to the whole of Christian living, and caring for the poor, for prisoners, for widows and orphans mattered a great deal. Methodists were not only interested in welfare, they were concerned to remedy social injustice, and John Wesley's last known letter urged the abolition of 'that execrable villainy'; black slavery. The Wesleys were an influence in prison reform and, inspired by Susanna Wesley, they earned a reputation as pioneers in education. John Wesley wrote, edited or abridged some 400 publications.

Hymns: Among Charles' hymns, still sung today, are numbered some of the finest ever written; and through them the Methodists received and expressed their Christian experience and learned their beliefs. His poetic genius drew upon his classical and literary education and an awareness of popular culture, as well as his musical talents. After his marriage in 1749, Charles remained mostly in London and Bristol.

Doctrine: The assurance of the free grace of God was the experience of the early Methodists, which the Wesleys set in the Christian tradition of 'arminianism', emphasising within human freewill the need for holy living as an outcome of faith leading towards 'Christian perfection'. The Calvinists (such as Whitefield) by contrast stressed the absolute sovereignty of God and believed in predestination.

Separation: Although Wesley declared, "I live and die a member of the Church of England", the strength and impact of the movement, especially after John Wesley's clandestine ordinations in 1784, made a separate Methodist body virtually inevitable. In the 19th century Methodism in Britain flowed in several channels, including Primitive Methodism which began with 'camp meetings' in 1807 and was organised into a separate body in 1811. The Methodists grew to be a large, respectable and influential section of society; characterised by the 'nonconformist conscience' and also the 'temperance movement' and many members with poor origins became prosperous. The missionary movement also spread the Methodist message around the world. In 1932 the three main Methodist groups in Britain came together to form the present Methodist Church.


Forest Hill Methodist Church Historical Photos




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