Week beginning Sunday 19th May 2024

This Sunday is the great Feast of Pentecost, and I can’t help but hum and sing to myself the hymn “Come Holy Ghost our Souls inspire”. I find the ancient lilting tune of the 16th Century to be both haunting and comforting. It is perhaps also poignant as it is the hymn that is sung at the Ordinations of Deacons and Priests, normally the first verse and line being a solo by the Bishop, It has always felt like a moment of complete trust and fragility. Not many people enjoy singing solo lines in front of hundreds of people, and yet on our knees in prayer as the body of Christ, we ask for the Holy Spirit in that place to “inspire our souls”. 

The Holy Spirit is the inspiration in our lives. Often described in multiple ways, breath, fire, wind, power –  to try and explain that life force that is in each person we encounter. The drive and force and breath of our lives. This week in worship join us as we pray, sing and reflect on this part of the Christian faith.

THIS SUNDAY 19th MAY – PENTECOST

10am – Sung Holy Communion- St Marys

10.30am – Holy Communion with Hymns – All Saints

THE WEEK AHEAD

Monday 20th May

10.30am  – Tiny Tots – All Saints 

Tuesday 21st May       

10:30am – M4T – St Mary’s

Weds 22nd May          

9:00am – Celtic Morning Prayer – All Saints

Thursday 23rd  May     

10:00am – Holy Communion  – St. Mary’s

Saturday 25th May     

12.00 – 2:00pm – Saturday Lunches  – St Mary’s       

Sunday 26th May          

8.00am – Holy Communion – All Saints

10:00am Sung Holy Communion, Trinity – St Marys

10.30am Cafe Church – All Saints

May God’s peace and protection and blessing rest on each and everyone of us, may we encounter the power of the Holy Spirit in our lives and may we in turn be inspired to bring light and goodness in  God’s name to other people in the week. Amen

Revd Lizzie

Week beginning Sunday 12th May 2024

Thy Kingdom Come

“Thy Kingdom Come” are some of the most powerful words of the prayer that Jesus taught his disciples and teaches us today. They invite, welcome, anticipate and encourage into our lives, what God desires for the world. Not the little kingdoms that we build around ourselves, but the bigger, bolder vision of a world created, at rest, in love, and at peace. Sometimes we feel a fair distance from that, and yet – each week – we sincerely pray it.

 “Thy Kingdom Come” is the strapline for this time of prayer between the feasts of Ascension and Pentecost. A time when the church prays for the coming of God’s kingdom, in that we accept the task that Jesus gives us and wait and pray for the Holy Spirit to help us in that task. For us in the parishes it is also a time of APCMs and the importance of reflecting together whilst looking back on what we have noticed and been part of, and looking forwards towards where we might be taken by the Holy Spirit in the coming year. 

This is also the week that Christian Aid Week occurs, a time when we can be part of and are invited into being part of seeing God’s kingdom come through the work of this Worldwide Church. Envelopes are available in both churches as we worship together this week.

Our services this week include

8:00am – Holy Communion – All Saints

10:00am – Sung Holy Communion (followed by the APCM) – St Marys

10.30am – Muddy/Messy Church – All Saints

7.15pm – Generations – All Saints

THE WEEK AHEAD 

Tuesday 14th May

10:30am – M4T – St Mary’s

Weds 15th May

9:00am – Celtic Morning Prayer – All Saints 

Thursday 16th May

10:00am – Holy Communion  – St. Mary’s 

Friday 17th May

11:00am – Living After Loss – St. Mary’s  

Saturday 18th May

10:00 – 11:30 – Christian Aid Coffee Morning – St. Mary’s 

12:00 – 15:00 – Spring Fayre (with Dog Show) – All Saints 

12.00 – 2:00pm – Saturday Lunches  – St Mary’s  

Sunday 19th May

10:00am – Sung Holy Communion– St. Mary’s 

10:30am – Holy Communion – All Saints 

12.00  – All Saints APCM 

I love the month of May – especially when we see the sun a little more. I found a 7 fold piece of poetry about creation that I wanted to share with you, as we are invited into the rest that God desires for his Kingdom.

Blessing and rest, delight in everything, 

Sustained by your strong love and richly blest, 

This is the gift you give, the day you bring

Blessing and rest.

This is the ‘gladness of the best’, From the lines in the east where linnets sing, 

To where the last light lingers in the west.

You lift the cares to which I used to cling, 

As you yourself descend to be my guest 

And show me how to find in everything 

Blessing and rest.

Malcolm Guite  – Parable and Paradox

May you all know the blessing and rest that God desires for the Kingdom.

Blessings

Revd Lizzie

Week beginning Sunday 5th May 2024

Fruit that will last 

 

 

Hello there!

This week I enjoyed my first taste of Cheddar strawberries. The luscious red fruits gleamed at me temptingly from their prominent podium on the greengrocer’s stall on Henleaze High Street, shouting ‘Buy me!’ I was smitten. In this Sunday’s Gospel reading from John Jesus is giving a pep talk to his disciples. He is sending them out as God’s beloved into the world to go and bear fruit, fruit that will last’.  We also want our strawberries to last beyond summer, don’t we? That’s why we bottle them and make jam. But jam isn’t just admired in a jar, it gets eaten pretty quickly. But what kind of fruit could Jesus be talking about –that has a lasting quality and enduring impact, I wonder?

Love in action

Jesus sees how his disciples have stuck with him through thick and thin. So at this moment, before he goes to the cross, he confirms his love for them and his trust in them by calling them no longer servants but friends. Friends of Jesus love God, love one another, and love people beyond their inner circle – and commit to one another in love. Where might this happen through All Saints and St.Mary’s, as we become better informed and more aware of the experiences of young people and their gifts and needs?

Loving our communities

It all comes down to love. Yet love is not passive. Love is active and committed to everyone’s wellbeing and flourishing. I witnessed that kind of love in effortful action at the first ever Citizens UK Youth Assembly in Bristol held last Monday at City Academy. In the words of Senior Community Organiser, Fiona Meldrum, the event was  ‘an exciting opportunity to reimagine what Politics could look like at across Somerset and Avon when we are able to bring communities and decision makers together for the common good. There is no doubt that we are all concerned about the recent rise in violence in our communities. Sometimes fear can lead us to retreat. But through community organising, we are building the power to offer hope that things can be different and we can find solutions to tackle this issue.’

Primary and secondary students from Taunton to Bristol had spent months with teachers and trainers from Citizens UK –and with support from faith communities and other local support networks– calling for changes in their local communities, culminating in addressing the Police and Crime Commissioner candidates in person. The story continues below the weekly information. You can find out more about Citizens UK here

Services this Sunday 5th May

Readings: Acts 10:44-48; 1 John 5:1-6; John 15.9-17

10.00 – St.Mary’s – Creative Church

10.30 – All Saints – Holy Communion

6.30pm – St.Mary’s – Evensong

Services and events in the week ahead

Monday 6th – Tiny Tots not meeting due to Bank Holiday

Tuesday 7th – 10.30 – 11.30 – St Mary’s Parish Room – Music for Toddlers

Wednesday 8th – 09.00-9.30 – All Saints Church – Celtic Prayers

Thursday 9th – 10.00-11.00 – St Mary’s Church – Ascension Day Holy Communion

Saturday 11th – 12.00-1.30 – St Mary’s Church – Saturday Lunches – all welcome

Sunday 12th

08.00 – All Saints Church – Said Holy Communion

10.00 – St.Mary’s Church – Sung Holy Communion

10.30 – All Saints Church – Messy Muddy Church

At the Citizens Youth Assembly young people movingly shared their stories about situations and events that had made them feel unsafe, angry or fearful. We heard about actions they’d already taken to change and improve matters. The young people finally presented a list of formal ‘asks’. They called on the PCCs to work towards further specific goals to enable young people to feel safer and flourish. The PCCs agreed (budgets permitting) to do so. Here is one of their asks. ‘Will you acknowledge the importance of diversionary activities (such as boxing) in preventing youth violence and crime and will you ring-fence money to fund it for the next four-year term?’

Reflective prayer was included in the evening. A row of students held lit candles in the darkened school hall to remember victims of knife crime while we listened to Stormzy’s words: Lord I’ve been broken, although I’m not worthy, you fixed me, now I’m blinded by your grace, you came and saved me.

The Youth Assembly was the most inspirational and thought-provoking event I have attended in a long time.

Let us pray and commit to finding ways to engage with young people and work with them on local issues of common concern, and may this week’s prayer spur us on to do so. 

Risen Christ, your wounds declare your love for the world and the wonder of your risen life: give us compassion and courage to risk ourselves for those we serve, to the glory of God the Father.

 

 

Revd Diane, curate

Week beginning Sunday 28th April 2024

As we continue in the seasonal joy of Easter we are invited to reflect on one of the “I AM” sayings of Jesus in John’s gospel. There are 7 different ways in which Jesus describes himself by using the words “I AM”.  The last one of these is “I AM the vine” as Jesus speaks with his friends about what his life is about and will be about for them and others. It is a powerful image of connection. The fruit that we see on vines, be them beautiful to look at or good to eat are dependant on being attached to the vine. Jesus asks us to consider how we each flourish, and what it is that connects us and nourishes our lives. 

A way of connecting, is our worship when we come together to give thanks for God and the life and love that we can know through God, Jesus and the Holy Spirit. Cafe Church is back this weekend at All Saints at 10.30am, with a chance to have some more informal time together, studying and discussing the biblical themes in the Book of Samuel. If you haven’t been to Cafe Church before then it is a great way to get to know people better, to learn together and from each other as well as to have what my kids call “Second Breakfast!”.

All Saints also have a quiet and short communion at 8am and St Marys has a sung Communion at 10am.

 

This Sunday 28th April 2024

 

8am – Said Communion – All Saints

 

10am – Sung Communion – St Marys

 

10.30am – Cafe Church – All Saints

 

The Week Ahead

Tuesday 30th April 10:30am – M4T

Weds 1st May 9:00am – Celtic Morning Prayer – All Saints

Thursday 2nd May 10:00am – Holy Communion – St. Mary’s

Friday 3rd May 10:00am – ‘Living After Loss’ Group – St. Mary’s

Saturday 4th May 10:00am – Coffee Morning Repair Café – All Saints

12.00 – 2:00pm – Saturday Lunches – St Marys

Sunday 5th May 

10:00am – Creative Church – St Marys

10:30am – Holy Communion and Junior Church – All Saints

 6:30pm – Evensong – St. Mary’s

Malcolm Guite’s poems bring me a huge amount of joy and Christian spiritual nourishment, so I commend the following to you all. Looking forward to worshipping with you this weekend.

 

I AM the Vine

How might it feel to be part of the vine?

Not just to see the vineyard from afar

Or even to pluck the clusters, press the wine,

but to be grafted in, to feel the stir

Of inward sap that rises from our root,

Himself deep planted in the ground of ove,

To feel a leaf unfold a tender shoot,

As tendrils curled unfurl, as branches give

A little to the swelling of the grape,

In gradual perfection, round and full,

To bear within oneself the joy and hope

Of God’s good vintage, till its ripe and whole.

What might it mean to bide and to abide

In such rich love as makes the poor heart glad?

 

Blessings

Revd Lizzie

Week beginning Sunday 21st April

The apostle John is depicted in Eastern Christian art as an old man. His words radiate the wisdom of years. He himself witnessed to Jesus’ love in action at first hand He has seen, heard and touched the Word of life (1 John 1.1). John wrote the words we find at 1 John 3:18 as a wise and gentle pastor to his flock, the early church. He cares for them just like his friend and teacher Jesus would. Calling them “Little children” is not meant to belittle, but to underscore his role as their mentor. He hopes his message will give them the courage they need to put love into action and to speak and follow the truth.

Words and speeches are in abundance in the run up to our elections for local councillors and an Avon and Somerset Police and Crime Commissioner. There have been flyers through doors and conversations with candidates on our doorsteps. In order to vote wisely, it is good to find out as much as we can. The colour of the rosette they wear is not as important as the experience and commitment they offer. Is this person the most likely to make the wards of Eastville and Fromevale safer, happier, more pleasant and friendly neighbourhoods to live in? What do their actions tell you about their commitment to the wellbeing of residents?  Do they make a point of listening to young, middle-aged and older people? Do they know and value faith communities? As Christians we need to discern which of their proposals we consider the most Jesus-shaped. Because with them we will be playing our part in making Fishponds a place where people love their neighbours in truth and action more and more. 

The apostle John is not naïve about the cost of being a good neighbour. ‘Laying down our lives’ each day, means taking the time to learn about people’s struggles, letting go of some of what we want, in order that others can receive what they desperately need. Members and volunteers of our churches are at the very heart of this courageous work across all ages.

The great news is that the love of Jesus is open to all. May God help us at St.Mary’s and All Saints to offer open doors and open hearts in welcome.  May we use our time and buildings wisely to serve people lovingly, and to worship in the name of Jesus Christ, our living Lord,

Services this Sunday

 

St Mary’s  – 10.00  – Sung Eucharist

All Saints – 10.30  – Holy Communion with Hymns

 

Events in the week ahead

Monday 22nd – 10.30 – All Saints – Tiny Tots

Tuesday 23rd – 10.30 – St.Mary’s – Music for Toddlers

Wednesday 24th – 9.00 – All Saints – Celtic Prayers

Thursday 25th – 10.00 – St.Mary’s – Holy Communion

Saturday 27th – 12.00 – St.Mary’s – Saturday Lunches

Services next Sunday 28th April

08.00 – All Saints – Holy Communion

10.00 – St.Mary’s – Sung Eucharist

10.30 – All Saints – Café Church

 

COLLECT for the Fourth Sunday of Easter

 

Risen Christ,

faithful shepherd of your Father’s sheep:

teach us to hear your voice

and to follow your command,

that all your people may be gathered into one flock,

to the glory of God the Father.

 

 

May our heavenly Father hold us secure in his love,

Jesus our Good Shepherd lead us into new pastures

and the Holy Spirit help us hear God’s voice above the clamour. Amen

 

In election season and always. 

 

Revd Diane, assistant curate, St Mary and All Saints Fishponds.

Week beginning 14th April 2024

Jesus Christ is risen!

He is risen indeed!! Alleluia! Alleluia!

The earliness of Easter this year has tied in with the joy of the stirrings of Spring. The themes of new life and rebirth are perfectly illustrated by what we can see around us as nature seems to wake up and we can feel the vibrancy of spring in the air. 

This very action surrounds us with beautiful transformation. The longer days, feeling of warmth and the sight of blossom give us real joy after the darkness and cold of winter. It is the very essence of new life, rebirth, creation and recreation,  a tangible signpost to the greater transformation and resurrection of Jesus. 

Nature has not vanished, but has subdued itself, become hidden. Now it is re-emerging. The working out of nature directs us to God and this rebirth of Jesus, helping us to process it and recognise it, placing it within the natural world but at the same time  emphasising that it is beyond the natural world-like Jesus himself there is the natural and the divine.

In Sunday’s Gospel reading from Luke we encounter a very present, very physical Jesus. He encourages the disciples to touch him to verify his physicality. This is the Jesus of creation, physical like the physical world around us. Yet his body is  changed. To underline his physicality he eats with them. This is our embodied Jesus, human and divine, and his divinity shines forth when he teaches the disciples about the meaning of his Messiahship and all that they have experienced.

Our services this Sunday, the 3rd Sunday of Easter:

8.00  – Holy Communion at All Saints

10.00 – Holy Communion at St. Marys

10.30 – Messy Muddy Church at All Saints

19.15 – Generations Youth Group at All Saints

The Week Ahead

Monday 15th April.

10.30  Tiny Tots All Saints

Wednesday 17th April 

9.00 Celtic Morning Prayer All Saints

Thursday 18th April

10.00 Holy Communion St. Marys

Friday 19th April

11.00. Living after Loss. St. Marys 

Saturday 20th April

12.00 Saturday Lunches  St. Marys 

May the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with us all evermore. Amen

Blessings

Revd Kester de Oliveira

Week beginning Sunday 7th April 2024

 

This Sunday’s reading from the Acts of the Apostles (Acts 4.32–35) paints a beautiful picture of the early church. All the believers worked together for the common good and supported the apostles in their preaching of the gospel. This was not an easy time for the church. In the passage before this one, Peter and John had been arrested for teaching about Jesus. Yet the apostles refused to be silenced. They remembered the words of Psalm 2, where God defended his anointed against the rulers of the earth. This encouraged the early church to continue to live as a loving and supportive community and to tell everyone about Jesus.

 

Although we know that it was not long before disagreements spoilt the harmony in the church, this picture of a community remains one that we can aspire to. Being grounded in scripture, caring for and supporting one another and telling those we meet about Jesus are at the heart of what it means to be the Church. As church communities, we need to look for ways we can get closer to this pattern, which Luke presents in Acts.

 

This Sunday, we have our usual services for the first Sunday of the month. There is creative church in the morning at St Mary’s and Holy Communion at All Saints. There is also Evensong in the evening at St Mary’s.

10.00 am – St Mary’s – Creative Church

10.30 am – All Saints – Holy Communion with Junior Church

6.30 pm – St Mary’s – Evensong

We have our usual weekday services with Celtic Morning Prayer on Wednesday at All Saints and Holy Communion on Thursday at St Mary’s. Next Sunday follows our usual pattern for the second Sunday of the month. There is Holy Communion at 8.00 am at All Saints and 10.00 am at St Mary’s. The 10.30 am service at All Saints will be Messy/Muddy Church.

 

Wednesday 10th – 9.00 am – All Saints – Celtic Morning Prayer

Thursday 11th – 10.00 am – St Mary’s – Holy Communion

Sunday 14th

8.00 am – All Saints – Holy Communion (said)

10.00 am – St Mary’s – Holy Communion

10.30 am – All Saints – Messy/Muddy Church

 

As we continue to celebrate the resurrection over the weeks of the Easter season, let us pray for Christ to open our hearts to follow him using the words of the collect for Sunday.

 

Risen Christ,

for whom no door is locked, no entrance barred:

open the doors of our hearts,

that we may seek the good of others

and walk the joyful road of sacrifice and peace,

to the praise of God the Father.

Yours in Christ

 

Mark

Easter Sunday 2024

This Holy Week we have walked, prayed, sung and reenacted together the journey of Jesus from Palm Sunday to Good Friday. This weekend we celebrate the Risen Jesus in our Easter Celebrations. It is through our Easter Faith, that we come to know the love of God and the hope for the world. It is in the Easter faith that our sorrows are turned to joy. It is in the Easter Faith that we believe God conquered death and brought us all to resurrection life. It is a promise outpoured for the world, and a truth on which we come to depend and understand our lives. The empty tomb declares that “He is Risen”. Mary meeting Jesus in the garden reminds us that we are all known by name. As we celebrate this weekend together, may we be reassured, strengthened and brought hope so that we might also live that new life in Christ.

Join us at All Saints and St Marys for our services this weekend to celebrate.

Easter Saturday 

7.30pm – Easter Vigil and First Holy Communion and Celebrations – St Marys

Easter Sunday

8.00am – BCP Easter Holy Communion – All Saints

10.00am – All Age Easter Holy Communion – St Marys

10.30am – All Age Easter Holy Communion – All Saints

6.30pm – Easter Choral Evensong – St Marys

This Week

Wednesday 3rd April 9.00am – Celtic Morning Prayer  – All Saints  

Thursday 4th April          10am Holy Communion – St Marys  

Saturday 6th April 10.00 – 12.00 – Coffee Morning & Repair Cafe – All Saints

                    12.00 – 2pm –Saturday Lunches  – St Marys  

Sunday 7th April      10am Creative Church – St Marys 

10.30am Holy Communion with Band – All Saints 

18.30 Evensong  – St Marys


 

Christ Yesterday and today, the beginning and the end, Alpha and Omega, all time belongs to him, and all ages”


 

HAPPY EASTER 🙂


 

Revd Lizzie

Holy Week 2024

It hardly seems possible that the reflective time of Lent has reached its climactic destination in the drama of Holy Week. The early occurrence of Lent this year has created a rapidity that has felt like a rush from Christmas and its culmination in Epiphany to the start of Lent. The contrast is pronounced, yet the periods of Advent and Lent are both times of reflection, prayer, study. But the contrast in nature is profound.

Advent is an oasis  of calm within the whirlwind of the lead up to Christmas. It is  a counter to the pressures that the world exerts at the time. Lent, however, defines the approach to Easter. It’s  a time of sombreness as opposed to the energised anticipation of Advent. Its shadow is present in the world with the practices of giving things up for Lent, but the approach to Easter in the world  is only marked by the appearance of Easter eggs and hot cross buns on the supermarket shelves.

But for us that Lenten process has prepared the way for the dramatic unfolding of Holy week, starting with Palm Sunday and its symbolic recreation of the palm procession welcoming Jesus into Jerusalem. We stand outside our churches and walk  in procession with songs, remembering that joyful event that was loaded with such meaning and hope. But as we do so we are also mindful of the swift transformation of this, the euphoria that will be replaced with the events that lead up to the crucifixion, the dark time of pain, rejection, misery, and a seemingly crushing defeat. 

But this is far from being the whole story. Whilst this needs to be marked, reflected upon, and experienced in the depth of the pain and suffering that Jesus underwent, it is utterly changed by the events of Easter  Day, the ecstatic joy of the resurrection and the fulfilment beyond all expectations of the salvific mission of the love of God embodied through the life and person of Jesus.

I encourage you to experience the richness of Holy week. There are a variety of services and opportunities to come together as a worshipping community that offer times to worship, reflect and rejoice.

The services for this Sunday and the week ahead.

Sunday 24 March (Palm Sunday)

08.00 Said Holy Communion (All Saints)

10.00 Palm Sunday & Holy Communion (St Marys)

10.30 Palm Procession & Passion Drama All Saints)

The Week Ahead

 

Monday 26th

10.30 Tiny Tots (All Saints)

19.30 Compline (All Saints)

Tuesday 27th

19.30 Compline (St. Mary’s)

Wednesday 27th

09.00 Celtic Morning Prayer (All Saints)

19.30 Compline (All Saints)

Thursday 28th – Maundy Thursday

18.30 Agape Meal & Eucharist (All Saints)

19.30 Holy Communion, washing of feet  & Vigil (St. Mary’s)       

Friday 29th  – Good Friday

10.00 All Saints Children’s Activities & Story

13.30 Good Friday Service (St. Mary’s)

 14.00 All Saints Last Hour

Saturday 30th March – Easter Eve

12.00-14.00 Saturday Lunches (St. Mary’s)

19.30 Holy Communion & Vigil with Celebrations (St. Mary’s)

Sunday 31st March – Easter Day

08.00 BCP Said Holy Communion (All Saints)

10.00 All Age Sung Easter Communion (St. Mary’s)

 10.30 All Age Easter Communion (All Saints)

 18.30 Easter Evensong (St. Mary’s)

May the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with us all evermore. Amen

 

Blessings

 

Revd Kester de Oliveira

Week beginning Sunday 17th March 2024

This Sunday, we turn away from the joyful thanksgiving of Mothering Sunday and towards the events of Holy Week. The season is often referred to as Passiontide, from the Latin passio, meaning suffering. It is a time to reflect on Jesus’ arrest, trial, crucifixion, and death. In the early church, many Christians struggled with the idea that an almighty and perfect God could suffer and die in the way that Jesus did. Yet through the debates and discussions that followed, the church fathers came to the realization that perfection is not about standing aloof from the sufferings of the world. Jesus was born into the world to be with humanity and to identify with us in our joy and our sorrow. It is when we remember Christ’s suffering, that we know we are not alone in anything that we go through. God can understand our fears and temptations, recognize our pains and our sufferings, because, in Christ, he has been there before us. He has led the way and can lead us through the worst that the world can throw at us.

This Sunday, we have several services, where we can reflect further on this. In the morning there are services of Holy Communion at both St Mary’s at 10.00 and All Saints at 10.30. In the evening, there is a service of readings and music for Passiontide at St Mary’s. This gives the following services for this Sunday:

10.00 amSt Mary’sHoly Communion
10.30 amAll SaintsHoly Communion
6.30 pmSt Mary’sMusic and readings for Passiontide

This week we have our normal weekday services with Celtic Morning Prayer at All Saints on Wednesday and Holy Communion at St Mary’s on Thursday.

Next Sunday, we start Holy Week with our Palm Sunday celebrations. There is Holy Communion at 8.00 am at All Saints and 10.00 am at St Mary’s. The 10.30 service at All Saints will be a Service of the Word with a procession round the local streets and a Palm Sunday drama.

This gives the following services for the coming week:

Wednesday 20th9.00 amAll SaintsCeltic morning prayer
Thursday 21st10.00 amSt Mary’sHoly Communion
Sunday 24th8.00 amAll SaintsHoly Communion
 10.00 amSt Mary’sHoly Communion
 10.30 amAll SaintsService of the Word with procession and drama

As we approach Holy Week led us pray that God will guide us in our reflections on Jesus’ road to Jerusalem and Calvary:

Gracious Father, you gave up your Son out of love for the world: lead us to ponder the mysteries of his passion, that we may know eternal peace through the shedding of our Saviour’s blood, Jesus Christ our Lord.

Yours in Christ

Mark