The monastic life is centred around Bible reading
Welcome to Worth Abbey
Worth Abbey is an English Benedictine monastery, a sanctuary where the Gospel of Christ is expressed through a community life of prayer and service.
At its heart is a community of Catholic monks who follow the life-giving guidance of the Rule of St. Benedict. The fusion of daily life with the wisdom of the Rule gives monasteries like Worth a powerful energy.
The monastic life is centred around Bible reading (“Lectio Divina”), Personal prayer, Sacred liturgy, Hospitality, Spirituality and Discipleship.
History
Worth Abbey is a daughter house of St Gregory’s Abbey, at Downside in Somerset.
In September 1933, Abbot John Chapman established a community of 17 monks as the dependent monastery, Worth Priory. The first prior of Worth, Dom Anselm Rutherford, chose Our Lady, Help of Christians, as the patron of the new monastery.
In 1957, under Abbot Christopher Butler of Downside, Worth Priory became an independent monastery. Dom Victor Farwell was appointed Prior and then elected the first Abbot in 1965, when the Priory was raised to the status of an Abbey. The community’s first concern was to build the Abbey Church, which has been the heart of Worth since it was consecrated in 1975.
Worth has been involved in a number of different pastoral endeavours. Worth School was opened shortly after the Abbey became independent of Downside.
In 1964, parish work began in the immediate locality of the Abbey.
In 1968 a long-term missionary connection with Peru began when monks from Worth built a farm and mission in the remote Apurimac valley, while in Lima they founded a monastery, a large parish and a health centre. Since 1990, this connection has been continued through the charity Outreach Peru.
In 1971, the Worth Abbey Lay Community launched the idea of lay participation in monastic life for young people, growing to become, by 2003, an independent lay movement as the Lay Community of St Benedict.
Between 1983 and 1990, St Peter’s, East Dulwich, became the home to an experimental urban monastic community jointly founded by Worth Abbey and the Anglican Diocese of Southwark. The work of formation in Christian faith and spirituality which began there is continued in The Open Cloister.
In 2019 Worth Abbey began an urban monastery in Brighton. The small community of ‘Monks in the City’ now lives and ministers at St John the Baptists Church, part of the East Brighton Catholic Parish.
The life and work of the Worth community has been guided by seven abbots:
-Abbot Victor Farwell (1965-88)
-Abbot Dominic Gaisford (1988-94)
-Abbot Stephen Ortiger (1994-2002)
-Abbot Christopher Jamison (2002-10)
-Abbot Kevin Taggart (2010-13)
-Abbot Luke Jolly (2013-21)
-Abbot Mark Barrett (elected 2021)
At Worth, the striking Abbey Church complements the surrounding natural beauty of the Sussex High Weald.
A bold design proclaims it to be the most significant building at Worth, indeed the heart of the Abbey complex. Its massive scale is offset inside by the openness of the plan and by the light that streams in from above during the day or from spotlights on the altar at night.
Monastic Churches are among the great marks that historic monasteries have left on our culture; in monastic thinking, beautiful buildings in beautiful surroundings encourage praise of God the Creator.
Worth Abbey Church was designed by the noted Catholic architect Francis Pollen (d. 1987). The foundation stone was laid in 1968 and the Church was consecrated in 1975, the exterior construction was completed in 2001.
Until 2005 the interior furnishing and decoration remained incomplete. In 2009 a design scheme by Heatherwick Studios was implemented: a modern version of traditional monastic furniture was installed, together with a new stone ambo and congregational seating. The result of all these works is a stunning interior which unites and enfolds all who use the Church in a spirit of prayer and peace.