WELCOME TO BELMONT ABBEY


It gives us great joy to welcome you to our website, as it would to our monastery.
We are a community of about 30 monks whose home is at Belmont, just outside Hereford  on the borders of England and Wales.
 Following the 6th century Rule of St Benedict, and under the guidance of the Abbot, we seek to live the ancient wisdom of the monastic life in a contemporary way so that as St Benedict says, "in all things, God may be glorified." The rhythm of each day is shaped  by the liturgy, our daily cycle of prayer and praise. Our work in the monastery includes the welcome of many guests and visitors, but our reach is much wider through our monks working in parishes and chaplaincies in Herefordshire and beyond, and as far away as Peru, our monastery at Lurin outside Lima. Through this website we hope to share with you something of the spirit of our monastic life and to remain in contact with our friends and supporters scattered throughout the world.

Sadly, Hedley Lodge, our guesthouse, is currently closed and will hopefully reopen after refurbishment in Summer 2024.

News & Events

News from Belmont Abbey


By Abbot Paul 29 May, 2024
I’m sitting in the Aegean lounge at Thessaloniki Airport waiting for the Lufthansa flight to Frankfurt, where l will connect with another flight to Birmingham. Although feeling relaxed and rested after my brief visit here, I’m nevertheless filled with trepidation at the thought of clearing my old rooms at Belmont, storing things there and beginning a new life taking care of myself at Leominster and Bromyard. It will be a rather busy weekend to set out on that venture what with First Holy Communions in both parishes, but a clear mind and help from on high as well as from fantastic parishioners and friends will see me through, no doubt. I ended my stay in Thessaloniki by cooking lunch for my friends. I’m looking forward to cooking in my new home. Perhaps I should start taking orders! Our Gospel reading today comes from Mark, (Mk 10: 46-52), the account of the healing of the blind beggar, Bartimaeus, who was sitting at the roadside on the way out of Jericho. When he hears that Jesus is passing by, he calls out for help. When scolded by people standing by, he shouts all the louder, “Son of David, have pity on me.” He is so excited when Jesus calls him that he jumps for joy and casts off his cloak. When asked by Jesus, “What can I do for you?” He simply replies, “Rabbuni, Master, let me see again.” He only asks for what he needs, nothing more, nothing less. What a model for prayer this is, and Jesus grants his request, saying, “Go, your faith has saved you.” But he doesn’t go, he remains and follows Jesus, becoming a disciple, another example for us to follow.
By Abbot Paul 28 May, 2024
Yesterday was my last whole day in Greece and most of it was spent talking with my friends, discussing care options for the future as both become frailer and in greater need of help. Fortunately they have two lovely carers who come in on alternate days to help them, but soon this may not be enough. I thank God that, for the time being, I am well enough and enthusiastic enough to contemplate a new ministry in the parishes of Bromyard and Leominster, obviously with the help of many lay volunteers among parishioners. As you know, May 31st will be my last day as Abbot of Belmont and over the weekend I will move to the parish house at Leominster. I also feel that this would be a good time to stop writing this daily message for the time being until I see how to consider something similar in the future. I began writing this daily message in March 2020 as a result of Covid and the first lockdown. With just one or two exceptions, I’ve written a message every day since then. I thank my readers for your encouragement and prayers and assure you of my prayers and remembrance in my daily Mass. This evening I will be travelling back to England via Frankfurt and look forward to being welcomed home by a dear friend at the airport. Today the Church remembers Pope St Paul VI, who died on the feast of the Transfiguration, 6th August 1978, at the age of 80. I remember that day so well, as Fr Dyfrig and I were on holiday in Italy and staying at the Abbey of St Paul outside the Walls. We were taking a stroll in the gardens after supper when the news came that this great pope had passed to his eternal reward. Today’s Gospel passage comes from Mark, (Mk 10: 32-45), in which Jesus gives his disciples a lesson on humility after they have been quarrelling amongst themselves as to who is the greatest among them. “Anyone who wants to become great among you must be your servant, and anyone who wants to become first among you must be slave to all. For the Son of Man himself did not come to be served but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many.” That is how we should all behave. We can find no better example than in Pope St Paul VI.
By Abbot Paul 27 May, 2024
Yesterday was a wonderful day in so many ways. It was a particularly happy day spent with my dear friends Sandra and Vasili. We have been close friends since our student days in Thessaloniki in the mid sixties. In the morning Vasili and I drove down into the city to visit the excavations of the Roman agora, a couple of Byzantine churches, of which Thessaloniki has many, and a number of Ottoman buildings being restored at present. There is just so much to see in this amazing city, greatly loved by St Paul and his companions. On our return, I celebrated Mass for Sandra, who is a Catholic, and her delightful Filipino carer, Cheryl. It was powerfully prayerful: we felt the touch of God as we walked with Jesus. And so the day continued in God’s presence in the most extraordinary way, sitting in the garden and reminiscing over old photographs. As always, I also chatted with my mother, who enjoyed speaking with Sandra and Vasili. My mother loves chatting with my friends: she seems to be energised by them. Our Gospel reading today comes from Mark, (Mk 10: 28-31), in which Peter questions Jesus on the reward he and his companions will receive for leaving everything that was dear to them in order to follow Jesus. He assures them that they will be repaid a hundred times over in this world, though not without persecutions, and, in the world to come, eternal life. Jesus caps this promise by saying, “Many who are first will be last, and the last first.” This is a warning we all need to heed, that we shouldn’t take things for granted, but truly dedicate our lives to the Lord.
By Abbot Paul 26 May, 2024
Today in England we keep the Solemnity of St Augustine of Canterbury, who was sent to England by Pope St Gregory the Great at the end of the Sixth Century to convert or reconvert the English people to the Christian faith. He was a monk who lived according to the Rule of St Benedict and arrived in Kent with forty companions not only to evangelise the English but also to bring monastic life following the Benedictine tradition. May he intercede for us today. Yesterday I was so busy that I didn’t get the opportunity to write a message for today. I do apologise. I share a few photographs of flowers taken during a ride in the countryside to the north of Salonica. Be assured of my prayers.
By Abbot Paul 25 May, 2024
Yesterday I went to the local Saturday market in Thermi, twenty minutes away from Panorama, where my friends live, with Vasili, who bought vast quantities of fruit, vegetables and meat. I’m not quite sure who’s going to eat it all, but we’ve certainly made a start. As everyone knows him, whatever he buys is taken immediately to his car. No need to lock cars in Greece! As he’d forgotten his stick, we walked hand in hand through the open air market, crossing roads without looking out for traffic. Everything stops for Vasili, even now that he’s retired, just as it did when he was Greece’s top urologist/oncologist. It was he and his team who saved my life fifteen years’ ago when I had major surgery for cancer in Thessaloniki. Today I can say that I’ve never felt better in my life and I owe that in great part to him. Today we keep the Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity, an unusual feast as it celebrates a theological truth rather than an event like Christmas, Epiphany, Easter or Pentecost. Our Gospel passage is taken from Matthew, (Mt 28: 16-20), where Jesus meets the Eleven in Galilee after his Resurrection. We see the uncertainty of the disciples, some clearly recognising him to be Jesus, their risen Lord and God, while others are unsure. He says to them, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Go, therefore, make disciples of all the nations; baptise them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teach them to observe all the commandments I gave you.” So they are to baptise and teach, not simply to baptise. It’s important to remember that catechesis and sacraments must go hand in hand. We cannot and should never have one without the other. Finally, he promises them, “Know that I am with you always, yes, to the end of time.”
By Abbot Paul 24 May, 2024
Dear friends, today we keep the feast of St Bede the Venerable, the great English saint, theologian, historian and Benedictine monk. He entered the monastery at Jarrow and Wearmouth at the age of seven and died on this day in the year 735. Although there are special readings selected for his feast, I will simply stick with the Gospel reading of the day. In the Orthodox Church his feast is kept on 27th May. As you know I’m in Greece at the moment visiting friends. Yesterday, with my friend Vasilis, we visited the old city of Thessaloniki and the old market, where we bought incense for our monks in Peru, olives and olive oil, baklava, Greek delight, fruit and cheese. We then had a lazy lunch, washed down with ample amounts of tsipourou, the Greek version of grappa or eau de vie. Our Gospel passage comes from Mark, (Mk 10: 13-16), and sees Jesus welcoming little children and insisting that his disciples do the same. They are to be cherished and treated with respect. In fact, he recommends that we all become as little children if we wish to enter the kingdom of heaven. “Anyone who does not enter the kingdom of God as a little child will never enter it.” These are powerful words and sum up the life of St Bede. May we follow his example.
By Abbot Paul 23 May, 2024
​Today we continue our reading of Mark, (Mk 10: 1-12), where we find our Lord in Judaea, surrounded by a large crowd and teaching them. At this time a group of Pharisees approach him and put a question to him, no doubt to test his credentials as a preacher who draws such large crowds to hear his teaching. “They asked, ‘Is it against the law for a man to divorce his wife?’ They were testing him. He answered them, ‘What did Moses command you?’ ‘Moses allowed us’ they said ‘to draw up a writ of dismissal and so to divorce.’ Then Jesus said to them, ‘It was because you were so unteachable that he wrote this commandment for you. But from the beginning of creation God made them male and female. This is why a man must leave father and mother, and the two become one body. They are no longer two, therefore, but one body. So then, what God has united, man must not divide.’ Back in the house the disciples questioned him again about this, and he said to them, ‘The man who divorces his wife and marries another is guilty of adultery against her. And if a woman divorces her husband and marries another she is guilty of adultery too.’” ​It’s quite obvious that Jesus is very learned in the Law, for the scribes and Pharisees never manage to catch him out or get the better of him. When they ask him about divorce, Jesus points to scripture and God’s original plan for marriage, that two become one body, one spirit in God’s love. United in God, no human being has the right to break that union. It was because they were unteachable that God allowed the writ of divorce. When the disciples question him, Jesus reiterates his dictum to the Pharisees and interestingly puts men and women on equal terms. If a man can divorce his wife on account of adultery, so can a woman divorce her husband, The words of Jesus prompt us to ask a question, perhaps. What, then, is annulment, the only process permitted and recognised by the Catholic Church? In a divorce, the contract or covenant between a couple is cut up and rejected, so that the marriage no longer exists. With an annulment, we set out to show and to prove that the marriage, in fact, never existed, that the couple were never married in the first place. For example, a marriage based on deception, a forced marriage, a marriage between a couple who were not free to marry, perhaps one of them was already married, and so on. Divorce and annulment are not the same! ​This Gospel passage encourages us to pray for all married couples and those planning to marry. We pray especially for those marriages encountering difficulties.
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Our community here at Belmont Abbey dedicate our lives to God through prayer and work. We receive various requests from those who have had a direct or indirect connection with the Abbey, but for whatever reasons are unable to visit.
We would be delighted to include your prayers within the community.
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