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Wednesday, March 26, 2025

Church of England marks five years of national online services

FIVE years ago, on Mothering Sunday, the primary national online service was broadcast on the Church of England’s media channels in response to lockdowns mandated by the Government to slow the spread of the coronavirus.

Marking the anniversary in Sunday’s broadcast, the Archbishop of York expressed his gratitude to this online worshipping community, and “to those that have made it occur”. Last 12 months, 59 weekly services were produced which accrued 21 million views. An average of 4000 people every week watch the service from start to complete.

“These services have connected us together as a Christian community, as a web-based community, and my prayer now’s that, in our worship this morning, we shall be more deeply connected to Jesus,” Archbishop Cottrell said.

This week’s broadcast, for the third Sunday of Lent, featured highlights from previous services, including the Revd Richard Allen leading the confession from a lifeboat within the Trelawny Benefice, in Cornwall, and hymns from St Martin’s Voices, on locations in Holy Island and in a stable, where Clover the donkey interrupted filming along with her own chorus of braying.

Church of England/YouTubeClover the donkey hears a rendition of the hymn “My song is love unknown”, by St Martin’s Voices

The sermon, first broadcast in March 2022, was given by Fr Angus Ritchie, by which he speaks of what it means to imagine, to talk of believing, and to act on beliefs.

The service also featured a mirrored image from Canon Gill Behenna, the National Deaf Ministry Adviser and considered one of the regular BSL interpreters, by which she discusses the importance of deaf people accessing the Bible of their language.

Carol Holdsworth, a licensed lay minister and regular viewer, describes how the net service has allowed her to remain connected when ill-health prevented her from attending in-person worship — “a joy” but additionally a “bittersweet” reminder of what she is unable to have interaction with in person.

Church House reports that, in 2023, 31 per cent of the C of E’s 16,000 churches were offering some type of online worship, down from 71 per cent throughout the peak of the pandemic. This percentage has stabilised: about 30 per cent of churches proceed to supply an everyday online service. More than 33,000 online services have been added to the church-finding website AChurchNearYou.com.

The services are broadcast weekly on YouTube and Facebook.

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