The stone built
Anglican church of St Paul stands at the top of a hill, north of the village. It is a
Commissioners' Church built in 1826 to accommodate 1,590 worshippers, at a cost of , (based on increases in average earnings, this would be approximately £6,352,000 in 2016). The graveyard on the south, north and west sides of the church is specifically for church burials; there was a Local Authority graveyard to the south. There was a
Methodist chapel in the centre of the village, but the building is now used for business purposes. A
Presbyterian congregation met in a disused
malt kiln in Flanshaw Lane from 1672, but moved to a new chapel in 1697 which combined the Flanshaw and Wakefield congregations, this later becoming the
Westgate Unitarian Chapel. A Presbyterian burial ground with over a hundred graves remained in the village until the tombstones were removed around 1905 and the ground was used for
market gardening.