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Welcome to our website! The Marble Church, Bodelwyddan is one of most visited churches in North Wales. It is known for its elaborate and spectacular architecture. St. Mary's, Rhuddlan is one of the oldest churches in our diocese. Both our Churches are in the in the Deanery of St. Asaph, which is an area grouping of parishes within the Diocese of St. Asaph, and together they constitute the Grouped Benefice of Rhuddlan & Bodelwyddan. The diocese is one of the six dioceses of the Church in Wales. The Church in Wales is a member church of the world wide Anglican Communion .

The Marble Church, which is located just off the A55 North Wales Expressway (Junction 25), is open daily for private prayer and meditation and visitors are most welcome. Guided tours of both St. Margaret's and St. Mary's may be arranged with the Vicar or the Wardens. We warmly welcome you to come and visit both our churches -- St. Margaret's spectacular example of Victorian architecture at its finest and best, and St. Mary's with its rich history spanning some 700 hundred years. The benefactress of St. Margaret's, Lady Margaret Willoughby de Broke had this church built, at a cost of sixty thousand pounds, in memory of her husband, Henry Lord Willoughby de Broke. She laid the foundation stone on the 24th July 1856; and the new church was consecrated by the Bishop of St. Asaph on the 23rd August 1860. A short distance away from the Marble Church is Bodelwyddan Castle --Lady Margaret Willoughby de Broke was a daughter of the castle. Hotels adjacent to both churches are the Faenol Fawr Hotel and the Warner Bodelwyddan Castle Hotel. Full details of St. Margaret's Church may be read by clicking here oron the tab at the left side of this page.

St Mary's Church, Rhuddlan is an ancient church that sits high and dry on the steep bank of the River Clwyd just a few hundred yards from Rhuddlan Castle. The first church in the Norman Borough of Rhuddlan was built about 1080. The church celebrated it's 700th. Anniversary in 2001. The building was substantially restored in 1812 and by George Gilbert Scott in 1870. It has the appearance of a typical 'Clwydian' or double-naved church of the late 15th Century. Full details of St. Mary's Church can be read by clicking here, or on the tab on the left side of this page.


We have many inquiries about getting married in both St. Margaret's and St. Mary's. All marriages must comply with the Marriage (Wales) Act 2010. The following documents have been produced for your assistance: Residency Conditions -- Bodelwyddan. You may read this document by clicking here. Residency Conditions -- Rhuddlan. You may read this document by clicking here. You may read read full details of the Marriage (Wales) Act by clicking here. The Church in Wales document: "Getting Married in the Church in Wales" may be read by clicking here .
Sunday February 04, 2012 Fifth Sunday after Epiphany The Third Sunday before Lent

From the studio of Robbia, Luca della, 1484-1519
"with righteousness he shall judge the poor, and decide with equity for the meek of the earth" [ Isaiah 11:4] - "may he defend the cause of the poor of the people, give deliverance to the needy, and crush the oppressor." [Psalm 72:4] This terracotta rondel, covered with waterproof glaze, became a popular medium in Florence, Italy, for architectural decoration during the Renaissance. The glaze provided reflection of light and the ability to retain color over a long period. Copyright Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luca_della_Robbia -- photographed by Jastrow Copyright Permission: This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial ShareAlike 3.0 License. In short: you are free to use and to share the file for non-commercial purposes under the conditions that you appropriately attribute it, and that you distribute it only under a license compatible with this one. For uses other than the above, contact the Divinity Library at divref@vanderbilt.edu. Attribution: Christ comforting a poor man, from Art in the Christian Tradition, a project of the Vanderbilt Divinity Library, Nashville, TN. http://diglib.library.vanderbilt.edu/act-imagelink.pl?RC=53086 [retrieved February 4, 2012].

Readings for this Sunday may be read by clicking here.

Lent Book: LOVE UNKNOWN -Ruth Burrows OCD The Archbishop of Canterbury's Lent Book 2012 ISBN: PB: 978-1-4411-0372-7 Ruth Burrows is the author of a number of best-selling books, most recently Essence of Prayer. This new book is the result of a commission to write the Archbishop of Canterbury's Lent Book for 2012. In it she distils the wisdom and experience gained from her 70 years of living as a Carmelite nun into a vigorous and compelling presentation of what it means to be a Christian. Burrows believes that many people, even regular churchgoers, miss the true meaning and joy of Christianity. God longs for us to know him as our Saviour, so that he can bring us to share in his own Trinitarian life and love. In successive chapters Burrows traces how God reveals himself to us through our personal lives, particularly our experiences of weakness and failure; through history and the natural world; through the scriptures; and above all, through his beloved Son Jesus. Encountering the living and true God revealed in Jesus Christ challenges us to face our own truth, and so sets us free to receive the boundless love, the joy, fulfilment, and holiness, for which we were made. Then we shall 'sing a song we have never sung before.' Ruth Burrows is a Carmelite Nun from Quidenham in Norfolk, UK. She is the author of a number of best-selling books including Guidelines for Mystical Prayer and Essence of Prayer. (CONTINUUM PRESS)



St. Mary's Church, Rhuddlan
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