The Parish Church of St. Luke, Lightbowne

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Only 19 days to go until The Pilgrim Plodders 👣 set off on their sponsored prayer walk in support of the Manchester Grou...
14/06/2026

Only 19 days to go until The Pilgrim Plodders 👣 set off on their sponsored prayer walk in support of the Manchester Group's journey to this year’s Walsingham Youth Pilgrimage!

As the countdown continues, we’re asking for your support. Every donation, no matter the size, helps make this special pilgrimage possible for the young people in our group and is greatly appreciated.

If you’re unable to donate, please keep us in your prayers 🙏.

Your prayers and encouragement mean so much as we prepare for the walk and the pilgrimage.

📍Donation link in the comments.

Eleventh Sunday in Ordinary Time Parish Mass 10.15am
14/06/2026

Eleventh Sunday in Ordinary Time
Parish Mass 10.15am

Feria Mass 11am
10/06/2026

Feria
Mass 11am

The Solemnity of The Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ10.15am Parish Mass & Benediction
07/06/2026

The Solemnity of The Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ
10.15am Parish Mass & Benediction

St Charles Lwanga & Companions Mass 11amMwanga. Some of them were servants in the king’s palace or even his personal att...
03/06/2026

St Charles Lwanga & Companions
Mass 11am
Mwanga. Some of them were servants in the king’s palace or even his personal attendants. Charles Lwanga and his twenty-one companions (the youngest, Kizito, was only 13) were executed for being Christians, for rebuking the king for his debauchery and his murder of an Anglican missionary, for “praying from a book,” and for refusing to allow themselves to be ritually abused by the king. They died between 1885 and 1887. Most of them were burned alive in a group after being tortured.
Within a year of their deaths, the number of catechumens in the country quadrupled. St Charles Lwanga is the patron of Catholic Action and of black African youth, and the Ugandan martyrs’ feast day is a public holiday in Uganda.

Solemnity of the Most Holy TrinityParish Mass 10.15am
31/05/2026

Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity
Parish Mass 10.15am

St Augustine of Canterbury Mass 11amChristianity in Britain started early, but was largely submerged by the pagan Anglo-...
27/05/2026

St Augustine of Canterbury
Mass 11am
Christianity in Britain started early, but was largely submerged by the pagan Anglo-Saxon invasions of the fifth and sixth centuries. It remained alive only in the far west, which remained British because it was too remote and inaccessible for the invaders to attack.
It is said that Pope Gregory the Great saw some fair-haired Anglo-Saxon slaves exposed for sale in a market in Rome. He asked where they were from, and when he was told, replied non Angli, sed angeli – “not Angles, but angels,” and determined to secure their evangelization.
Whatever the truth of that story, it is certain that Gregory did organise a party of thirty monks to travel to south-eastern England and spread the Gospel there, and chose as their leader Augustine, prior of the monastery of St Andrew in Rome. They landed in 597, and were welcomed by the king of Kent, Ethelbert, who became a Christian along with many of his subjects. A second wave of missionaries arrived in 601. Augustine went to Arles, in France, where he was consecrated archbishop of the English, and then returned to Canterbury to set up his see. The mission prospered, and he founded two more sees, at London and at Rochester in Kent.
The evangelization of the country was planned in close agreement with Pope Gregory, and took care to respect existing traditions. Pagan temples and holy places were not to be destroyed, but to be converted to Christian use; and pagan feasts were to be superseded by Christian ones. This is consistent with the pattern of evangelization throughout the first millennium, which saw Christianity as a fulfilment of what went before, rather than a contradiction of it. Even in Rome itself, temples of Juno had a tendency to become churches dedicated to Our Lady. (It is only with the Spanish colonial evangelizations of the mid-second millennium that the policy of making a clean break with the past began: a policy that works faster but whose effects are not always permanent).
In the far west of Britain, where British bishops had survived the pagan invasions – or where they had fled to escape them – Augustine was less successful in establishing his authority. The traditions of the Celtic church were different from the Roman ones, and bishops who had guided their people for generations were not about to submit to a jumped-up missionary from overseas. It took several generations for the whole of Great Britain to become Christian and for the English and British liturgical traditions to be reconciled.
Augustine died at Canterbury on 26 May 604 or 605.

Fr Paul and Fr Ben arrived yesterday in England’s Nazareth to take part in the National Walsingham Pilgrimage. Upon arri...
25/05/2026

Fr Paul and Fr Ben arrived yesterday in England’s Nazareth to take part in the National Walsingham Pilgrimage. Upon arrival, they prayed for our parishes and lit a 7-day candle for all our intentions.

May Our Lady of Walsingham continue to pray for us all!

The Solemnity of Pentecost Parish Mass 10.15am
23/05/2026

The Solemnity of Pentecost
Parish Mass 10.15am

Easter WeekdayMass 11am
20/05/2026

Easter Weekday
Mass 11am

Address

Manchester
M405HS

Opening Hours

Wednesday 11am - 12pm
Sunday 10:15am - 11:15am

Telephone

+447572075990

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