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People Who Pray in Glass Churches… (10/29/25)

It has been quite the rainy Wednesday here, but with a feels-like temp in the high 40s F and little wind, it still made for an okay day for a walk. One of the sites in Jersey that they stop at on the bus tour that we hadn’t seen yet was the Glass Church. It is free to visit, so after a breakfast at the local pub (Wednesday is discount day, so we thought we’d treat ourselves.), we headed out to see the church.

I didn’t take many photos on the walk as one, it was raining, and two, we had done most of the same walk on the day that we went to the Artisan Market in St Brelade. But, a couple of things caught my eye. The first one was a park near a church that we had seen on our bus ride yesterday.

St Andrew’s Park with St Andrew’s Church on the back right
Just a flowering bush that caught my eye

Now for the Glass Church, which is not made of glass but does have a lot of glass features. It is St Matthew’s Church was built as a modest chapel in the 1840s at the foot of Mount Felard to keep parishioners from having to walk up the steep hill to the parish church. In 1934, Lady Trent (widow of Jesse Boot of the Boot Pharmacy chain) commissioned Rene Lalique to decorate the renovated church with glass features, including an illuminated cross, a glass font, and glass screens adorned with the Jersey lily motif. The Glass Church is the only surviving Lalique commission of its kind, making it a unique and globally significant work of art.

Rene Lalique (1860-1945) was a French jeweler, medalist, and glass designer known for his creations of glass art, perfume bottles (notably in collaboration with Francois Coty), vases, jewelry, chandeliers, clocks, and automobile hood ornaments.

St Matthew’s Church
A closer view of the entry
A framed lighted glass piece in the foyer
The glass font
A view of the sanctuary
The Lalique glass windows
“The Sword of the Spirit” by Louise Ramsay. It depicts the Sword of the Spirit being planted in the sea
between Jersey and Guernsey.
Lalique figures in the side sacristy at the front of the sanctuary
A Lalique screen
The illuminated cross and pillars at the front of the church
Looking towards the back of the sanctuary
“The Rock” by Louise Ramsay.
It depicts a worshipper standing on a rock
while a turbulent sea crashes around him.

Louise Ramsay was born and educated in England but now lives and works in Jersey.

Looking down on St Saviour Parish
before we descend a series of steps
after having come back up Mount Felard from St Lawrence Parish

We haven’t included photos of the cats recently. They are both sweet cats with perhaps the strongest interest in food of any cats we have cared for. Although you can see, they can also be sweet snugglers as well.

The very sweet Bella. She is either on your lap or a bit aloof unless she thinks you are going to feed her.
Lu is very active and playful,
but likes to get close if he’s slowing down for the day.

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