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EVERY GIFT HELPS SUSTAIN OUR

Cathedral

St Peter’s Cathedral is more than a building. It is a place of worship, prayer, music, welcome, community, and public life.

Your giving supports both the everyday ministry of the Cathedral and the longer-term work required to preserve and strengthen this significant place for future generations.

GENERAL GIVING

Support the everyday life and ministry of St Peter’s Cathedral

As a not-for-profit organisation, St Peter’s Cathedral relies on the generosity of its community and supporters.

Regular and one-off gifts help sustain the day-to-day life of the Cathedral and make possible the worship, ministry, and welcome that shape this place.

Your giving helps support:

  • worship and liturgy

  • music and choirs

  • pastoral care

  • ministry and mission

  • administration and operations

  • hospitality and outreach

  • the ongoing care of the Cathedral

WAYS YOU CAN

Support

Giving is one of the practical ways we support the life of the church and invest in the future of our Cathedral community.

When you give to St Peter’s, you are helping ensure that this place remains active, prayerful, welcoming, and equipped to serve both its congregation and the wider community.

IN PERSON

You can donate in person at any of our services.

ONLINE

Donations/regular giving to support this work can be made via the bank account:

THE CATHEDRAL CHURCH OF ST PETER -
PARISH ACCOUNT 02-0316-0268898-000

Please contact admin@stpeter.org.nz for a tax receipt.

VOLUNTEERING

Whilst financial gifts given to the Cathedral are used to fund the ministry and mission of the Church locally, nationally and internationally, that work can only be carried out when people volunteer their time.

SAVING WAIKATO CATHEDRAL

Securing the future for generations

St Peter’s Cathedral is a place of worship, heritage, memory, music, and community significance.

Like many historic buildings, the Waikato Cathedral has received an official earthquake strengthening notice, which states that without structural attention, over the next two decades, it may close.

This project is about more than preserving a building. It is about securing the future of a sacred, historic, and civic place for generations to come.