Central Church
Torquay Devon

TQ2 5RF

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Who we are

We are a welcoming Church and hope you will be able to visit us in person if you live locally, are on holiday here or on business in this region.

OUR MISSION IS:

​To proclaim the Good News of the Kingdom ​To nurture all believers, whether new or longstanding To respond to human need by loving service To seek to transform unjust structures of society ​To sustain and renew the life of the earth

We do this in four different ways:

Worship Outreach Service ​Learning and nurture

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Church Website


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Leadership

Leader Name:
Revd Jerry Cook   Edit
Leader Position:
Minister   Edit
Phone:
Leader Email:
Click here to contact Revd Jerry Cook   Edit


Administration

Admin Name:
Mrs Margaret Newman   Edit
Admin Position:
Church Life Co-ordinator   Edit
Phone:
Admin Email:
Click here to contact Mrs Margaret Newman   Edit

Driving Directions to Central Church

A From:
B To:
48 Tor Hill Road, Torquay, Devon
Mode of Travel:




Travel/Direction Tips

We are located up the hill from ​Castle Circus in Torquay   Edit



Central Church Service Times

WE ARE NOW OPEN FOR

10.30 am Morning Worship

This is all age worship and incorporates traditional hymns with modern songs and visuals.

Suitable for all ages and people at all stages of their Christian journey.

The following services are not currently taking place due to Covid restrictions but it is hoped they can return later in 2021:

9 am Rise and Shine Family Worship ​(2nd and 4th Sundays of the month)

This is our informal and contemporary half hour worship, suitable for all ages and stages of the Christian journey.

6.30 pm Evening Worship

A smaller worship setting

It's been more than 2 years since the last service times update. Please make sure to contact the church to confirm service times.

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Sunday School / Children and Youth Activities

Other activities & ministries

Central Tots
Choir
Contact Centre
Guild
Healing Ministry
Home Groups
Messy Church
Sunday Club
Women's Fellowship   Edit

Other information





Central Church History

AN INTRODUCTION TO CENTRAL CHURCH TORQUAY

The striking high tower of Central Church, crowned with three crosses to signify the union of three churches, dominates the Torquay skyline and can be seen over a wide area. Built in 1976 it is a joint Methodist and United Reformed Church. With its multi-functional accommodation, it has become a busy centre for services, gatherings of all types, concerts and recitals. The congregation is cosmopolitan, coming as many do from other denominations, and all feel comfortable within its walls.

There is a broad base of worship – Sunday mornings start at 9.15am with our Rise and Shine Family Worship, a contemporary half hour service for All ages. Our 10.30am service is more traditional with our gowned choir in attendance every week. The third Sunday evening service each month is a Cafe Church, and there are midweek services/communion and prayers for healing. There are also House Groups. We actively support local community groups, such as food banks. In addition, regular meetings of a variety of organisations, Guild, Beavers & Cubs, Guides & Brownies, a Flexercise group, a Badminton Club, Belleplates and a lively social life complete the picture.

THE HISTORY OF CENTRAL CHURCH

It was in 1971 that the leaders of the three churches began seriously to discuss the possibility of uniting. It was proposed to sell the two Methodist churches and demolish Belgrave and erect a new building on this valuable site, suitable for present day needs. Draft proposals and constitution were brought to the church members and agreed in their own churches first and then a united meeting was held and the final decision almost unanimously passed. During the winter of 1973 united evening services were held to enable the congregations to become better acquainted with each other's form of worship. Edward Narracott, Tanner and André were appointed architects in December 1971 and when their plans had been accepted by all concerned the sale of Union Street Church could proceed. The auction took place in January 1973 and the building was sold to "Mothercare". Tenders were invited for the construction of the new building. That of Currall, Lewis and Martin Ltd. of Birmingham was accepted. Money for furnishings is being provided by church organisations and individuals in a variety of ways. The ecumenical spirit was further strengthened when Tor Parochial Church Council offered the use of St. Saviour's Church until the new premises were ready, an offer which was gratefully accepted, and the friendship was deepened further when the Bishop of Exeter laid the foundation stone in June 1975.

THE BUILDING

The Church is designed on an elongated octagonal plan and will seat 350 with a sliding partition connecting to the Hall which seats a further 350. This section is surrounded by all other rooms to obviate traffic noise. These rooms consist of vestry, treasury, choir room and four meeting rooms, with a youth centre with disco at basement level. A three-bedroomed caretaker's flat forms the roof of the covered car park. The Hall is high enough to be used for championship badminton. Each section is independent so any one part can be closed off to allow different activities to carry on without inconvenience to each other.

External walls rise off a podium of limestone recovered from the walls of Belgrave; all external facings are in white precast fluted stone. A special feature is the "screen to the clouds", consisting of white tracery surrounding multi-coloured glass for interior lighting and above the building itself open tracery rising to thirty metres and terminating in twin crosses surmounted by a single cross to symbolise the uniting of the two churches in Christ. The lancet-shaped windows in bronzed aluminium frames are directed away from high noise levels. All external maintenance is cut to an absolute minimum.

ORIGINAL FURNISHINGS AND FITMENTS

The Church and Hall are decorated to conform so they can be seen as a whole when used together; the walls are dove grey, ceilings cherry red in white surrounds, that of the church has additional beech ribs. The floor is deep brown wood block; the dais of the church is carpeted in olive green. The stage is surrounded by oatmeal curtaining. All fittings throughout have been designed by the architects using mostly mahogany and stainless steel.

SPECIAL FEATURES

The glazing of the Church is in thick multi-coloured glass depicting the Seven Ages of Man, and designed by Peter Tysoe.

In the entrance hall are three lancet stained glass windows from Belgrave set in a frame made of oak from Union Street.

The seating consists of linked chairs upholstered in blue coloured fabric and designed by Robin Day.

The organ is a four manual electrostatic with movable console built by Compton-Makin.

The choir is robed in red purple gowns made by The House of Van Heems Ltd., London.

The Cross above the Communion Table is the gift of the architect.

Outside, the surrounds to the building are laid out with specimen trees in grassed areas with small beds for annual flowers and certain low roofs at the rear are planted with shrubs in natural soil.

THE CHAPEL OF UNITY

A unique feature of the building is the inclusion of the small Prayer Chapel at the right-hand side of the vestibule. It is the sign to all who enter, for any purpose, that this is first and foremost a house of prayer.

The Chapel will be available for private and communal prayer at all times by those who desire to deepen their own spiritual life and that of the whole fellowship of this congregation. But, above all, it is a Chapel of Unity, dedicated to the bringing together of the whole people of God; and all Christian communions are invited to use it as the common ground where they can meet together before God. To this end other Churches have been invited to include gifts for the Chapel which express some aspect of their tradition, and to place in it a book of prayer used among their own people.

These gifts are:

Cross Churches of the Torquay and Paignton Methodist Circuit. Chalice and Paten Mrs. B. Maillard, on behalf of the Central Parish. Communion Cloth Community of West Ogwell. Kneeler Roman Catholic Church of the Assumption of Our Lady. Bibles Upton Vale Baptist Church. St. Mary Magdalene Anglican Church. Screen Central Church. Methodist and United Reformed.

The coloured glass screen and other furnishings have been donated anonymously by those who wished to commemorate the set-vice given to the Church by family members for more than a century. We offer this Chapel with the prayer that our Lord will grant to His Church on earth "that peace and unity which were in his mind and purpose when, on the eve of his passion, he prayed that all might be one". Brief history of how three churches came together to build a new Church

Central The following tells, quite briefly, the story of four Churches. Three of them, with a tradition in each case extending back for over a century, have been demolished, and the Methodist and United Reformed Congregations have joined to build the new Church ... Central. In this way they have sought to express gratitude for the past by seeking to put the future in debt to themselves.

During the demolition of one of the Churches a bottle was found under the front wall of the building which had survived a disastrous fire in 1926. Amongst other contents was found a poem composed for the stonelaying in November 1877. What it expresses would also seem to be the aim for our new Church a century later.

"These Foundation Stones to God's glory we lay, And trust that this Building for ages shall stay; May the Truth there be preached, and sinners be blest, When we who now near it are gone to our rest."

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The power of Christian prayer Abide in my heart
Come, Lord Jesus, and abide in my heart. How grateful I am to realize that the answer to my prayer does not depend on me at all. As I quietly abide in You and let Your life flow into me, what freedom it is to know that the Father does not see my threadbare patience or insufficient trust, rather only Your patience, Lord, and Your confidence that the Father has everything in hand. In Your faith I thank You right now for a more glorious answer to my prayer than I can imagine. Amen.
Central Church listing was last updated on the 19th of November, 2021
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