Find a church

Search for a fascinating place to visit, or see the variety of churches, chapels and meeting houses we have supported.

St Mary the Virgin

Holy Island, Northumberland | TD15 2RZ

Holy Island, or Lindisfarne, is the site of a monastery founded by St Aidan in 635 AD. It marks the establishment of Christianity in the northeast and is still a centre of pilgrimage today.

St John

Dunoon, Strathclyde | PA23 7RL

St John's boasts magnificent Gothic revival architecture, with its impressive tower and spire, and replaced the previous church on the site.

Cardross Parish Church

Cardross, Strathclyde | G82 5NL

A church was founded in 1225 on the west bank of the River Leven and rebuilt in the village in 1640.

We have supported this church

Kildrum Parish Church

Cumbernauld, Strathclyde | G67 2JQ

Regarded as being amongst the most notable post war churches in the UK.

Torphichen Kirk & Preceptory

Torphichen, Lothian | EH48 4NB

The history of this unusual site with its two buildings begins in the 12th century when the order of St John of Jerusalem was given charge to build a preceptory.

Colinton Parish Church

Edinburgh, City of Edinburgh | EH13 0JR

A church has stood here for around 1,000 years although what is seen today is largely the result of an outstanding rebuild in 1907-08 by architect Sydney Mitchell.

Campsie High Kirk

Lennoxtown, City of Glasgow | G66 7HA

Campsie High Kirk, the architecture of David Hamilton’s graceful hand, crowns the gentle hill of a tranquil cemetery, where stone and spirit rest beneath the watchful beauty of the Campsie Fells.

St Patrick

Kilsyth, Strathclyde | G65 0PF

This is one of only four churches by architects Gillespie, Kidd & Coia and is in their trademark red brick inside and out.

Greenbank Church

Edinburgh, City of Edinburgh | EH10 6ES

Opened in 1927, the current church is a plain cross.

Reid Memorial Church

Edinburgh, City of Edinburgh | EH9 3HY

The church was built by Willian Crambe Reid to fulfil his father's dying wish and was designed in 1928 by the architect Leslie Grahame Thomson.