High Street,
Dedham,
Colchester,
Essex CO7 6DE
Tel: 01206 322136
Email:
The present
Parish Church of St Mary
the Virgin, Dedham has
stood as a witness to the
centuries since 1492. Work
started in the year that
Columbus discovered America.
It was completed before
King Henry VIII became
Defender of the Faith and
before he made himself
head of the Church in England.
Clergy have served
here in an almost unbroken
line stretching back
to 1322 when they held
services in a smaller
one-aisled church on
the site of our present
Lady Chapel.
It was in
this building that the
celebrated Puritan Divine
Matthew Newcomen, who preached
several times before the
House of Commons at Westminster,
expounded the Word of God
with such ability. From
the turret adjoining the
porch roof, 'Roaring' John
Rogers thundered the Gospel
of Salvation to twelve
hundred eager and expectant
people gathered in the
churchyard, and it was
from this building that
they carried the well-loved
and scholarly Lecturer
William Burkitt after he
had collapsed at a Sunday
Service, a few days before
his death.
As you read the memorial
plaques, appreciate
the skill of those
who raised the graceful
arches, and think of
those who carved their
initials in the stonework
of the columns, remember
that this is more than
an historic building.
It is a place of prayer
and a meeting-house
where members of the
Body of Christ still
gather to worship the
Living Lord.
The appearance of the building around
you has changed many times through
the years. Benches round the walls
in early days gave way to box pews,
then pine and now oak. The screen
dividing the east end of the church
from the main body has vanished.
Balconies have been removed and the
Holy Communion Table has, according
to legal requirements, been turned
from sideways to lengthwise and back
again, carried into the body of the
church and returned to the east end.
Fashions and actions which reflect
the thoughts of worshippers, monarchs
or reformers have taken place here
in plenty. In 1538, by Order of the
King, every parish church in England
was instructed to have 'one book
of the whole Bible in English in
the largest volume'. We no longer
have a copy of 'The Great Bible'
chained to our lectern, but if you
look around you will see that you
are never far from an edition of
God's Word in this building. The
translation may be modern, but the
message is the same. You are most
welcome in this place.
We hope
that you will enjoy your
visit and appreciate our
lovely old building which
has become familiar to
many who have never visited
it through the work of
the great English landscape
artist John Constable,
in many of whose paintings
the tower of Dedham Church
may be clearly seen. Sadly,
our bells cannot be pealed
because the structure is
not safe for that purpose,
but they are chimed. Five
of them were cast before
1552, one in 1675, another
before the close of the
seventeenth century, and
the tenor in 1717.
At the heart of Dedham stands the
Church. At the heart of the Church
are its members, and they are those
who carry out the Apostle's instruction
to 'have reverence for Christ in
your hearts, and honour Him as Lord'.
1 Peter 3: 20 (Good News Bible).
May God Bless Your Visit






