Week beginning Sunday 15th September 2024

Fear not, rejoice and be glad! Joel 2:21

Services this Sunday 15th September

St Mary’s10.00Sung Holy Communion
All Saints 10.30 Harvest Holy Communion with band followed by bring and share lunch Donations of tinned and packet food welcome. Donations to Christian Aid by envelope,  or  virtual envelope

Greetings from Rev Diane

I confess I remember hymns more than sermons from my childhood and I loved decorating the church for Harvest Festival, savouring all the colours and shapes of flowers, fruits and vegetables. I remember sitting next to the sheaf of oats attached to the end of my pew and enjoyed investigating and eating the flour inside the grains. Oats grow well in the Irish climate. My dad, a city boy from Belfast’s Shankill Road, ended up as a Church of Ireland rector among farmers in South Armagh and Tyrone in the 60s and 70s. He was a good singer and a favourite harvest hymn of his was ‘God whose farm is all creation’ – partly because it was written by beloved cricket commentator of the day John Arlott.  In church we thanked God for the sights, sounds, scents and tastes of harvest – a welcome respite from the sectarian violence of the Troubles. Today we continue to live in a world of both bounty and scarcity, peace and war, reassurance and uncertainty.  And yet as Arlott’s hymn says, God takes our ‘hopes and fears of sun and rain’, all our ‘thinking, planning, waiting’,  and still He ripens the fruits and grains. God is good. All the time.

Harvest reminds us to give something back out of what we have generously received from God. Our thoughts turn to people who lack food and financial resources both locally and across the world. 
So we are offering two ways to give to others this harvest.

1) by donating tinned and packaged long life foods for local foodbanks 

2) make a donation to Christian Aid – by virtual envelope or envelope in church.

Christian Aid works with communities to help mitigate the effects of climate change by using alternative crops and farming methods. The charity supports the relief effort in Gaza and places on the brink of famine and advocates for climate justice worldwide

In the  Week Ahead

DateTimePlace Event
Tues 17th10.30St Mary’sMusic for Toddlers
Wed 18th09.00All SaintsCeltic Prayers
Thurs 19th10.00St Mary’sHoly Communion
Sat 21st12.00-14.00St Mary’sSaturday Lunch. All Welcome
Sun 22nd08.00All SaintsHoly Communion
Sun 22nd10.00St Mary’sHoly Communion with St Mary’s Guides
Sun 22nd10.30All SaintsCafe Church:  King David’s legacy

Thank you for sending rain and sunshine

Thank you for giving harvest growth

Thank you that we can share our food
With those who need it most!  

Week beginning Sunday 8th September 2024

The season of September is in full swing as schools return and the summer holidays fade from view. Autumn holds for us a feast of seasonal worship, with Patronal festivals and Harvest celebrations on the horizon. This weekend St Mary’s continues its patronal festival and will celebrate together the Song of Mary, as she visits her cousin Elizabeth. What an incredible story we have as part of our shared Christian heritage, this remarkable encounter, between these two strong women of the bible. I wonder often about the strong women in my own life, who have made such an impact on my faith, those ponderings often lead me to a place of thanksgiving and prayer. 

All Saints will make a mini pilgrimage to the river in their Muddy Church worship, as we look with awe and wonder at the different way God’s creation is put together. It might be wet, it may be muddy, but together we will have the chance of those remarkable conversations with others that are often life changing and faith giving. 

May we all be blessed this weekend be it at All Saints or St Mary’s with the presence of God and each other in worship and praise and thanksgiving.

Our services for the weekend – Sunday 8th September

8am – Holy Communion – All Saints

10am – Sung Patronal Festival Eucharist – St Mary’s

10.30am – Muddy Messy Church – All Saints

7.15pm – Generations –  11+  – All Saints

Please find attached the weekly sheets and readings. Harvest will be celebrated at the churches over the following weekends – 15th at All Saints and the 22nd at St Mary’s – Please bring any gifts of food donations you have to either church for these celebratory festivals. And a reminder to come and join the Beatles Benefit Gig on Sat 14th September!

Lizzie

Week beginning Sunday 1st September 2024

This Sunday’s readings have a common theme: What we do matters, but why we do it matters more. 

The first reading is from Moses final great speech to the people before they cross the Jordan and enter the Promised land. In Deuteronomy 4.1–2,6–9, Moses exhorts the people to obey all the laws that God has given them. However, this passage follows on from Moses reminding the people of all that God had done for them, bringing them out of slavery in Egypt and to the borders of the land he had promised to Abraham. Knowing their history, should help them trust in God. Out of that trust should come an understanding of what God wants and obedience to his laws.

The New Testament reading, James 1.17–end, contains James’ call to be doers of the word. However, this does not mean that we need not be hearers as well. In fact, James tells his readers not to be merely hearers, but doers as well. Hearing and doing should go hand in hand. One complements the other. Each is incomplete by itself. Again, it is knowing God and his will for us that leads towards the generosity and meekness that James commends.

The gospel reading, Mark 7:1-8,14-15,21-23, takes up a similar theme. The Pharisees and scribes challenge Jesus because his disciples were eating without washing their hands. Although washing your hands before eating is sensible for hygiene reasons, even today it is not always possible. Rigid adherence to such rules discriminated against the poor, who might need to eat on the job or out in the fields. Jesus criticises the scribes and Pharisees, because they are not interested in the wellbeing of the people. Instead, they are more focussed on their own importance. Jesus reminds his audience that they need to think about what their lives show about their hearts more than what is going into their stomachs. The things people do are a sign of what is going on inside.

We will have another chance to reflect on this during our 10:30 am Holy Communion service at All Saints on Sunday. At St Mary’s there is Creative church at 10.00 am. Choral Evensong at 6:30 pm will start our celebrations of the patronal festival of the Blessed Virgin Mary. (Note that different readings will be used at Evensong.) This gives the following services for Sunday 1st September:

10:00 amSt Mary’sCreative Church
10:30 amAll SaintsHoly Communion with Junior Church
6:30 pmSt Mary’sChoral Evensong for the Blessed Virgin Mary

We have our usual midweek services this week with Celtic Morning Prayer at All Saints on Wednesday at 9:00 am and Holy Communion at St Mary’s on Thursday at 10:00 am. In addition, there is a memorial service for Joe Sevens on Thursday at 2:30 pm at St Mary’s. Next Sunday, we have our usual second Sunday pattern with said Holy Communion at All Saints at 8:00 am, Holy Communion at St Mary’s at 10:00 am and Messy/Muddy Church at All Saints at 10:30. This gives the following services for the coming week:

Wednesday 4th September9:00 amAll SaintsCeltic Morning Prayer
Thursday 5th September10:00 amSt Mary’sHoly Communion
 2:30 pmSt Mary’sMemorial for Joe Sevens
Sunday 8th September8:00 amAll SaintsHoly Communion (said)
 10:00 amSt Mary’sHoly Communion
 10:30 amAll SaintsMessy/Muddy Church

Reflecting on Jesus’ message that it is what comes from our hearts that can defile or sanctify, let us pray for pure hearts and steadfast wills in the words of the collect for this Sunday:

Almighty God,
whose only Son has opened for us
a new and living way into your presence:
give us pure hearts and steadfast wills
to worship you in spirit and in truth.
through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord,
Amen

Yours in Christ

Mark Simms

Week beginning Sunday 25th August 2024

Finish Lines!

The month of August has been a bible extravaganza as people in churches across the globe have listen to the whole of Chapter 6 of St John’s gospel and the conversations and reflections that are inspired by the miracle of the feeding of the 5’000. It has also been a month when the Letter that St Paul wrote to the very early, young and emerging church in Ephesus has been read. Both this letter and gospel chapter come to a finale this Bank Holiday Sunday. We are asked to think on the disciple St Peter and his acclamation of Jesus ” You have the words of eternal life, we have come to believe and know that you are the Holy One of God“. St Paul speaks uses metaphors of putting on the armour of a Christian life that seeks justice, peace and truth. 

And so Christians are asked again through these words what is it that we believe and know about Jesus? And what difference does that make to our lives and those around us? How do we protect and discern truth, peace and justice. May we be blessed with the company of each other and Christ this weekend in worship and fellowship whether that is in the breaking of bread or through shared food, reflection and discussion at cafe church.

SUNDAY 25th AUGUST

8:00am – Said Holy Communion – All Saints

10:00am – Sung Holy Communion – St Marys

10.30am – Cafe Church – All Saints

THE WEEK AHEAD

Wednesday 28th Aug

9:00am – Celtic Morning Prayer – All Saints 

Thursday 29th Aug

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

Saturday 31st  Aug 

9:00am – 11.30am – Autumn Clean  – St Marys 

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

Sunday 1st Sept

10:00am – Creative Church – St Marys 

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

6:30pm – Patronal Choral Evensong – St. Mary’s 

Blessings

Revd Lizzie

Week beginning Sunday 18th August 2024

This week’s gospel reading draws us even further into the conversation that Jesus has with his followers over the last few weeks about Bread. Bread is a very ordinary food, a staple of many diets, a few ingredients that when put together can feed lots of people. Yet it is this simple food that Jesus chooses as a way of life for his disciples – of how we are to be together, how we are to share together, how we are to come to know Jesus fully. And in sharing in Jesus together, we heal wounds, build unity and find the strength to lift our hearts and voices to sing a song of hope and peace for God’s world. Bread not only becomes a food source, but a community foundation, a common ground. Jesus says “I am the living bread”, one that feeds not just our stomachs, but also our heart, mind and souls. I am excited for us all as we are invited to come together this week and eat bread. 

Our services this Sunday 18th August

10am – Sung Holy Communion – St Marys

10.30am – Holy Communion with Hymns – All Saints

The Week Ahead

Wednesday 21st

9:00am – Celtic Morning Prayer – All Saints 

Thursday 22nd

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

Saturday 24th

12 – 2pm – Saturday Lunches  – St Mary’s  

Sunday 25th

8.00am – Holy Communion – All Saints 

10:00am Sung Holy Communion – St Marys 

10.30am Cafe Church – All Saints

"Lord, each day as we wait on You,
You strengthen our hearts.
So now, as we eat the food set before us, strengthen our bodies, and as we share our lives around this table, strengthen the bond between us"

(Prayer at Communion – Celtic Daily Prayer)

Blessings

Revd Lizzie

Week beginning Sunday 11th August 2024

This has certainly been a week of contrasts. We’ve experienced the horror of the protests that caused so much violence and distress, but these were countered by an outpouring of calm protest that defused them and countered their message of hate. Alongside this has been the Olympics, which has been so much more than a glossy catalogue of sport. We’ve seen the joy and real humanity of athletes such as Simone Biles, and the mascot of the whole thing ending up being Snoop Dogg.

Against this backdrop of humanity in all its glory and its failings, our Gospel text this week uses the basic physical need of food and links it with the basic human need for spiritual food. For the whole person, sustenance on all levels is needed. Jesus links himself to a basic, unglamorous foodstuff, and he becomes that basic food for the spiritual life of each person who accepts him.  To be the whole person we cannot starve either the physical or the spiritual that make us who we are.

Services this Sunday

11th August (11th Sunday after Trinity)

8:00am – Holy Communion – All Saints

10:00am – Holy Communion – St. Mary’s

10:30am – Messy Muddy Church – All Saints

The Week Ahead

Weds 14th Aug

9:00am – Celtic Morning Prayer – All Saints

Thursday 15th Aug

10:00am – Holy Communion – St. Mary’s

Friday 16th Aug

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

Saturday 17th Aug

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

Next Sunday – 18th August

10:00am – Sung Service of the Word – St. Mary’s

10:30am – Holy Communion – All Saints

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 4th August 2024

Welcome to the month of August. The Paris Olympics are well underway, accompanied by tears and smiles, cheers and commiserations. I sometimes wonder how our nations and Team GB&NI would cope without Clare Balding and team to console the disappointed and celebrate with the triumphant. (OK, so maybe not all of the commentary hits the mark in tone and content, but let’s give them a break – it’s a tricky job).

One interview that stood out for me was when Sharron Davies interviewed Adam Peaty after winning silver in the 100m breaststroke – missing out on gold by just two hundredths of a second. Concerned that people would misunderstand his tears, Peaty reassured Sharron and the viewers saying, ’These are happy tears! I gave my absolute all there. In my heart I’ve already won.’ Peaty has been open about his Christian faith.

 Services this Sunday 4th August

10.00 am St Mary’sCreative Church: Stained Glass Windows
10.30 am All Saints  Holy Communion with Hymns
6.30 pmSt.Mary’sEvensong

At this week’s Creative Church (10.00 at St.Mary’s) we are celebrating not the Olympic Hall of Fame but rather the Cloud of Witnesses – the Biblical equivalent. The Cloud of Witnesses begins with the patriarchs, continues with the prophets (have a look at the ones depicted in the windows of St.Mary’s apse) and cascades down to the 12 disciples and beyond them to ‘saints’ in the widest sense –  followers of Jesus from all avenues of life.

In the East Window at All Saints we see an array of folks gathered around Jesus – young and old, rich and poor, employed or begging, sick and well. How lovely that, taken together, our benefice East Windows present an all-encompassing Cloud of Witnesses – each with Christ at the centre.

At this Sunday’s Holy Communion at 10:30 at All Saints we welcome back Rev Susan Allman to preside, and Mark Simms to reflect on the second in a series of readings from the sixth chapter of the gospel according to John. In this week’s section Jesus contrasts those seeking purely physical food and those looking for more spiritual nourishment. Jesus declares: ‘I am the Bread of Life’.

Services in the coming week and next Sunday 11th August

Wednesday 7th August9.00 amAll SaintsCeltic Morning Prayer 
Thursday 8th August10.00 amSt Mary’sHoly Communion
Sunday 11th  August8.00 amAll SaintsHoly Commuion
10.00 amSt.Mary’sHoly Communion 
 10.30 amAll SaintsMessy Muddy Church

The writer to the Hebrews encourages us all, regardless of age, nationality or background, to ‘Run with perseverance the race that is set before us, looking unto Jesus, the pioneer and perfecter of our faith’(Hebrews 12:1-3). For swimmer Adam Peaty, with Jesus in his heart, the struggles and challenges of his life – physical and mental, emotional and spiritual – can these days be met with joy and perseverance and peace. Because Christ is the once and for all Victor, he can cut himself some slack. What an amazing testimony! It makes me want to break out in singing this verse from a well-known 17th century hymn by Richard Baxter:, ‘Ye holy angels bright…’

Ye saints, who toil below,
adore your heavenly King
,
and onward as ye go
some joyful anthem sing;
take what he gives
and praise him still
through good or ill,
who ever lives!

Yours in Christ,

Diane

Week beginning Sunday 28th July 2024

This Sunday we take a break from the gospel according to Mark. We start a series of readings from the sixth chapter of the gospel according to John that will take us through the summer. (We will be getting back to Mark at the beginning of September). This Sunday we have two of Jesus’ most spectacular miracles: the feeding of the five thousand and walking on the water. Next Sunday, Jesus contrasts those seeking purely physical food and those looking for more spiritual nourishment. The following weeks we reach the high point, with Jesus’ declaration that he is the bread of life (John 6.35) and the living bread (John 6.51). This then culminates at the end of August with many disciples finding Jesus’ teaching difficult and turning away from him.

Many of those who turned away from Jesus must have known about Jesus’ miracles. It is likely that some of them were among the five thousand that Jesus had fed. Others would have seen Jesus healing the sick. They seem to have forgotten all that Jesus had done to show to them who he was and that he could be trusted. We can easily fall into the same trap. Despite knowing all that God has done for us, we can forget that he is with us and try to succeed in our own strength. It is all too easy to do what those around us want rather than thinking about what God wants. We will be starting this journey on Sunday at our 8.00 am Holy Communion service at All Saints and our 10.00 am Holy Communion service at St Mary’s.

Our 10.30 am service at All Saints continues our series of discussions bases around the characters in the books of 1 and 2 Samuel. This week we come to the character of Bathsheba and King David’s biggest mistake. We will reflect on the use and abuse of power and how we respond to those who point out our failings.  

This gives the current services for the coming Sunday.

8.00 amAll SaintsHoly Communion (said)
10.00 amSt Mary’sHoly Communion
10.30 amAll SaintsCafe Church

With Holiday Bible Club over, our midweek services return to normal, with Celtic Morning Prayer on Wednesday and Holy Communion on Thursday. Next week we have our usual pattern for the first Sunday of the month. There is Creative Church at St Mary’s at 10.00 am and Holy Communion at All Saints at 10.30 am, with Evensong at St Mary’s at 6.30 pm. This gives the following services for the coming week:

Wednesday 31st August9.00 amAll SaintsCeltic Morning Prayer
Thursday 1st August10.00 amSt Mary’sHoly Communion
Sunday 4th August10.00 amSt Mary’sCreative Church
 10.30 amAll SaintsHoly Communion
6.30 pmSt Mary’sEvensong

As we celebrate the end of another Holiday Bible Club, let us give thanks for this amazing opportunity to share God’s love with children from our community. May God bless all who were involved and strengthen them to walk in his ways.

Yours in Christ

Mark

Week beginning Sunday 21st July 2024

In Him the whole structure is held together“.

The words that we have from the passage in Ephesians this week speaks of Christ who binds people and brings them together. I have a strong image in my head of an adult holding the hands of two others, one either side. They are walking away from the viewer, so that only their backs can be seen as they set off into the distance. It could be the same image on a beach, or in a wood or down a busy high street. The adult in the centre holds the two together. They form the bridge. Through them the whole structure is held together. 

Similarly in the early church, the letters of the apostles speak plenteously about bringing together the Jews and the Gentiles. Accepting that the world has changed in the life of Jesus, that means that division of families, tribes and nations is now secondary to the way in which all people are called to God and asked to live. So that we are no longer aliens – but citizens with the saints. 

At St Marys we will have the honour of welcoming Maximus to the family of the church through his baptism. At All Saints there will be a celebration of Holy Communion. Both services help to remind us of ways in which we are united together. Held together. I look forward to being with you in worship.

This Weekend’s Services – Sunday 21st July

10 am St Marys Church – Baptism with Hymns

10.30 am All Saints – Holy Communion with Hymns

The Week Ahead

Weds 24th

9:00 am – Holiday Bible Club Begins – All Saints 

2:00 pm – Funeral of Mary Biddlecombe – St Mary’s

Thursday 25th

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

Saturday 27th

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

Sunday 28th

8:00 am – Holy Communion – All Saints 

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

10:30 am Cafe Church – All Saints

Please pray for us all this coming week as we begin Holiday Bible Club 2024. It has been a year of work and planning and we are so looking forward to the children being with us and learning together about Gideon, Esther and Timothy.

Gracious God

May we know the love that you extend to the world, may our footsteps be in rhythm with yours, may you guide us into your ways and may we humbly be your servants to all whom we meet. 

Amen

Revd Lizzie

Week beginning Sunday 14th July 2024

Dear Sisters and Brothers in Christ,

It certainly feels like we are in times of great change and uncertainty. The use and abuse of power is forefront in the world around us. Politically , there is an ongoing process of change, with new governments in the UK and France, and the seemingly endless lead up to the American elections. Power is being abused in aggressive and militaristic ways. The ongoing conflicts across the globe are testaments to how humanity is so often its worst enemy.

The account of the fate of John the Baptist that we will explore on Sunday is a chance to  reconsider the nature of power and how it is enacted-the contrast between transitory earthly power and eternal divine power.

John the Baptist and Jesus have considerable parallels. John is the one who  steps aside, but he is essential, the last Old Testament prophet proclaiming the one who will transform everything.  Did  these cousins knew each other well? Did Jesus come to be baptised by John as a result of that ongoing relationship? At this moment of divine meeting when John baptises Jesus, the parallels start to diverge. Jesus is now the centre of attention. 

What of John? We do not hear directly from him again, but we hear of him. He has upset those in power and been imprisoned because of it. We hear of the power of his words, but not the words themselves. In the ultimate fulfilment of those parallel lives, John will be executed by someone in power in a way set to humiliate and devalue on the pretext of vows and demands of others, ultimately killed seemingly as the result of a drunken vow made at a party. The story of John’s execution is either too bizarre and dramatic to give credence to or is utterly plausible because it is so peculiar. Certainly, any vow made by those with power would have to be honoured as this was an essential part of the structure of society at the time. Today to us it feels ludicrous, but we have to be wary of making these judgements via the lenses of modern thought. 

Could it be the kernel of truth-i.e. the imprisonment  and death of John has been embroidered with this narrative to serve later purposes? It certainly could be. What is telling is that both in this story and that of Jesus, the narrative seeks to draw responsibility for the actions away from the manin power an onto others-the crowd with Jesus, Herodias and her daughter with John. It’s like the critique of power is there but is being defused by keeping the actual men in power blameless.

Whatever the dynamics, the actual power and the perceived power are significant contrasts, and John’s story is a foreshadowing of Jesus’.

Meditating on these reassures us when the actuality of the world around us becomes overwhelming. The real power and authority in this world is one of love and grace that is alongside those who seem to be powerless. God has turned the perceived order of the world on its head.

Services and Notices for week beginning 14th July 2024

7th Sunday after Trinity

8:00 – Holy Communion – All Saints

10:00 – Holy Communion – St. Mary’s

10:30 – Muddy Church and JC Celebration – All Saints

18.30 – Generations Summer Party – The Vicarage

THE WEEK AHEAD

Tuesday 16th July

10:30am – M4T – St Mary’s

Wednesday 17th July

9:00am -Celtic Morning Prayer – All Saints

Thursday 18th July

10:00am – Holy Communion – St. Mary’s

Friday 19th July

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

Saturday 20th July

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

Sunday 21st July

10:00am – Sung Service of the Word – St. Mary’s

10:30am – Holy Communion – All Saints

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