Above the table is a Cross, the pre - eminent symbol of the Christian faith, suspended in front of the deep blue curtain, or reredos. The Cross is of strip bronze with filigree ornamentation within the outer framework. Similar work adorns the rail separating the chancel from the nave.
Around the Communion Table are stalls for the elders of the church to sit during Holy Communion. On one side are the choir stalls and lectern, and on the other the baptismal font, the Rodgers 940 organ and the pulpit, from which sermons are preached. The pulpit is round, emphasizing the earliest symbols of God, and the circle is ornamented with carved wooden roses. The rose theme is continued on the lectern, the baptismal font and around the top of the chancel woodwork. The Biblical rose is a white flower which blooms only in the winter of Israel.
Three large stained - glass windows spill multicoloured light into the church on sunny days. In the north gallery wall is the Memorial Window dedicated to the memory of the 44 soldiers from First Church who died in the First World War. This pictorial window is in three sections, or lights as they are called. The central light depicts Jesus on the cross, the ultimate sacrifice. At his feet are Mary, his earthly mother and John the beloved disciple. In the left light is Peter, a knight of the Middle Ages, and a soldier.