Week beginning Sunday 10th November 2024

Photo by Fraizer Dunleavy on Unsplash

When a young boy, my family subscribed to a weekly comic which routinely told ‘war stories’.  These were daring tales of soldiers and sailors who overcame mountainous odds, defeated enemies, and often won medals.  This stirred the hearts of young lads.  As the years rolled by, I noticed that the stories became more varied.  We heard about spies, or radio operators, or scientists – all of whom eventually contributed to victory in the Second World War.

And, more years further on, we now hear tales of the Women’s Land Army, or the Lumberjills (as the Women’s Timber Corps were affectionately known).  There were plenty of others who contributed their part to the war effort, many of whom stayed at home and undertook mundane ordinary tasks which were vital to keep the country alive and flourishing.  In this week of Remembrance Sunday,  all these people deserve to be remembered.  Of course, we must recall those who made the final sacrifice.  Yet they were not alone.  Many made a “living sacrifice” as Paul names it in Romans 12: “present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable service.”

In addition, it is right that we remember those who have opposed injustice through their peaceful objection.  Think of Rosa Parks who in 1950s Alabama courageously stood firm (or should it be “sat firm”?!), against racial prejudice.  And here in the 1960s, there was the determined brave efforts of those involved in the Bristol Bus Boycott.  There are many forms of evil in this world, each of which demands a different type of resistance.  We may not personally be able to address each one of this world’s troubles; but we can choose what our particular contribution can be, to advance God’s kingdom.  When we remember, we honour those who made for us the possibility of a better today.  We honour the past partly by choosing well today.  As the Kohima Epitaph says:

When you go home
Tell them of us and say:
For your tomorrow
We gave our today

Sunday 10th November – Remembrance Sunday

08.00am – Holy Communion, All Saints

10:00am – Remembrance Sunday Holy Communion followed by civic act of remembrance in Fishponds Park, St Mary’s

10:45am – All Age Remembrance Service with Scouting Groups – All Saints

7.15pm – Generations Youth Group, All Saints

The Week Ahead

Tues 12th Nov

10:30am – Music for Toddlers, St Mary’s Parish Room

Weds 13th Nov

09:00am – Celtic Morning Prayer, All Saints

Thursday 14th Nov

10:00am  Holy Communion, St. Mary’s

Friday 15th Nov

11:00am – Living after Loss – Bereavement Group

Saturday 16th Nov

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

Sunday 17th Nov

10:00am  Sung Holy Communion with Baptism, St Mary’s

10:30am  Holy Communion with Hymns, All Saints

Best wishes

Bob

Week beginning Sunday 3rd November 2024

Dear Friends in Christ,

After a summer which has seemed very short of summeriness, we are in the time of year where there is a real change of mood. We transition to Autumn, with its golds and reds, but also the clock changes making the nights longer. The change from October to November takes into the season of remembrance, and then the gradually intensifying journey to Christmas.

I was in Page Park with a friend and as we walked around it I was struck by the beauty of the trees, but also the mix of people and their pets simply enjoying being in this space. Being there felt so special and harmonious, creation in all its forms co-existing. 

Sadly, our readings remind us that the world isn’t like this. We’re admonished and commanded to welcome the stranger, something that should be second nature,  but sadly isn’t the real experience of so many.

The Beatitudes, the wonderful sermon where Jesus turns round the accepted social order in a series of timeless statements, recognises and values the poor, the grieving, the downtrodden, the people shoved down into the lowest parts of society. But they are not just identified, they are assured blessings. They are seen and loved by God, who sees so differently to how we see. The norms of the world that value success, fame and power will be utterly reversed, God’s order circumvents ours, valuing those we devalue, seeing those we are blind to, promises of hope and joy.

Our services and activities for the week ahead:

This Sunday: All Saints Day

10:00am Creative Church: St Marys

10.30am All Saints Patronal Festival: Holy Communion with Baptism: All Saints

6.30pm Choral Evensong: St Marys

THE WEEK AHEAD

Tues 5th  Nov 10:30am Music for Toddlers: St Mary’s

Weds 6th  Nov 9:00am: Celtic Morning Prayer: All Saints

Thursday 7th Nov 10:00am: Holy Communion: St. Mary’s

Saturday 9th Nov 10:00am: Coffee Morning, Book Sale & Bristol Repair Café: All Saints

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

Next Sunday: 10th November

08.00: Holy Communion: All Saints

10:00: Remembrance Sunday Holy Communion followed by civic act of  remembrance in Fishponds Park: St Marys

10:45: All Age Remembrance Service with Scouting Groups: All Saints

7.15pm: Generations Youth Group

 

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 27th October 2024

Photo by Kelly Sikkema on Unsplash

To all God’s beloved in Fishponds, who are called to be saints: Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ

Since we are on the cusp of Bible Sunday I couldn’t resist opening my message with this beautiful greeting by the apostle Paul. He uses it to begin his letter to the Romans. This Sunday marks the launch of our new Cafe Church year studying Romans, animated by Bible Society’s dynamic presenter, Andrew Ollerton.

The Last Sunday after Trinity is commonly celebrated as Bible Sunday and the Collect gives thanks for the Holy Scriptures and asks that God would help us ‘hear, read, mark, learn and inwardly digest them’  So how where do we start so our Bible studies don’t give us indigestion?

Over the years, I have valued tools for Bible Study e.g. consulting commentaries, using a Lectio Divina method of hearing the Bible as if God is engaging in a conversation with me through a phrase or passage. I find the so-called ’Swedish Method’ particularly helps me engage with any passage by using a range of questions (one version of the Swedish Bible Study Method is available here). Four key questions are:

What stands out to me in this passage? What don’t I understand? Does the passage remind me of something going on in my life, or the world at the moment? What will I do as a result of reading this passage?

If I apply these questions to this week’s Gospel reading about the healing of Blind Bartimaeus in Mark 10:46-51 this is the sort of thing that emerges for me… For you, it may look different.

What stands out to me in this passage?

  • The care of the people around Bartimaeus: ’Take heart, he (Jesus) is calling you!”
  • The courteous way Jesus addresses the blind man without making assumptions: ‘What do you want me to do for you?’
  • Bartimaeus chose the better, more life-transforming thing- not more money (he was begging), but the recovery of his sight. 
  • Bart’s faith made all the difference. He trusted Jesus and Jesus healed him.

What don’t I understand?

  • I wonder why Bartimaeus addressed Jesus as ’Son of David’? I will need to consult a commentary to find this out, or a local Bible expert 

Does the passage remind me of anything?

  • My thoughts turn to those who sit and beg around Fishponds and God’s greatest desire for their flourishing and how that might happen for them and how God might use our churches to be a part of that

What will I do as a result of reading this passage?

  • I will ponder the question of Jesus (What do you want me to do for you?) and, like Bartimaeus, try to identify and then dare to ask for something I would really like God to do in my life


Services on Sunday 27th October 2024

8.00am        Holy Communion – All Saints

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

10.30am       Cafe Church –Book of Romans (Episode 1)- All  Saints

Events in the week ahead

Monday 28th October

No meeting for Tiny Tots, Beavers, Cubs or Scouts – Half Term

Wednesday 30th October

Celtic Morning Prayer – 9.00am at All Saints Church

Thursday 31st October

Holy Communion – 10.00am in St. Mary’s Parish Room (enter via back door)

Friday 1st November

Living after Loss – 11.00am in St. Mary;s Parish Room

Saturday 2nd November

Coffee Morning – 10am to 12noon at All Saints Church.

 Plus Bristol Repair Team

Services on Sunday 3rd November 2024

10:00am – Creative Church – St Mary’s

10:30am – All Saints Patronal Festival: Holy Communion with Baptism and Junior Church and Band  – All Saints

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

 As you can see, there are three services to choose from to come and worship God together in Fishponds this Sunday. We look forward to seeing new and old faces. And you even get a lie-in, as the clocks go back one hour! 

I wonder what points your preacher will draw out and what you will hear this Sunday? While we can read the Bible alone, it is even better when we explore the Bible in community.  We can learn from a preacher who has studied the Gospel text and consulted commentaries and read what contemporary theologians are drawing out for today’s world. Or we can meet around a table and hear how a passage is resonating with members of the church family (e.g. at Cafe Church). Hearing from each other helps us care for one another better as we come to know what others are going through.

Additional Collect for Last Sunday after Trinity

Merciful God, teach us to be faithful in change and uncertainty,
that trusting in your word and obeying your will
we may enter the unfailing joy of Jesus Christ our Lord.

May God bless you with a healing message from the Scriptures this Sunday,

Revd Diane (curate)

Week beginning Sunday 20th October 2024

The reading from the gospel of Mark that occurs this week in the lectionary is a one that was hard to grasp for the first followers of Jesus and is still a challenge today. Jesus tells his motley crew, after they fight among themselves (again!) that the call to greatness, is one that is first and foremost a call to service. James and John the “Sons of Thunder” had asked that they might have a place at the “top” table, ahead of others. That’s what caused the angry scuffle. Jesus uses it as a teaching opportunity for all those that gathered around. It is still today a “teachable moment”.

Jesus is often guiding people to the greater kingdom vision of a place of service over and above that of hierarchical power and privilege.  Jesus’ choses to spend his last evening with his friends showing them, in the washing of feet. The master is the one who kneels and washes feet, rather than hold court at table. The idea that the true power of God, that the kingdom is first and foremost carried out in the service, practical and prayerful, of those around us. How do we serve others? 

Whilst away this week on conference, one of our speakers – Elizabeth Oldfield, spoke passionately about something that resonated with me. Her core message was one about building relationships, and how this is at the centre of how we relate to people, build people up and understand our differences more keenly. A phrase that stood out for me was “Connect before you Correct!”. Her focus on deep listening to others, to listening to ourselves and our preferences, whilst simultaneously curiously seeking out to discover why other people might view the world differently was refreshing and full of wisdom. Jesus’ call to servant ministry, turning the topsy turvy world of power and privilege on its head requires us to connect with others by accepting a servant centred service. 

Who might we reach out too and listen too today? Who might we cross the road or church aisle to listen too. Who might we not know? Who do we see? Who might we not see? It was a teachable moment for me. As is still the words of Jesus today 

but whoever wishes to become great among you must be your servant”

Worship Services this Sunday 20th October

10am – Baptism  with Communion at St Marys

10.30am – Holy Communion with Hymns – All Saints

The Week Ahead

Monday 21st        

10.30am – Tiny Tots – All Saints

Tuesday 22nd

10:30am – M4T  – St Marys

Wednesday 23rd

9:00am – Celtic Morning Prayer – All Saints 

Thursday 24th

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

Saturday 26th

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

7pm – All Saints Quiz – £6 a ticket. 

Sunday 27th

8.00am – Holy Communion – All Saints 

10:00am Sung Holy Communion – St Marys 

10.30am Cafe Church – All Saints 

God of Glory, the end of our searching, help us to lay aside all that prevents us from seeking your kingdom, and to give all that we have, to gain the pearl beyond price, through our Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen

Revd Lizzie

Week beginning Sunday 13th October 2024

Money, money, money
Must be funny
In the rich man’s world
Money, money, money
Always sunny
In the rich man’s world

All the things I could do
If I had a little money
It’s a rich man’s world’ 

Money, Money, Money-ABBA

Dear Friends in Christ,

I was reading an article about how much money the Democrats and Republicans have raised for their election costs, and it was staggering. The power of the ‘tech bros’ like Elon Musk through their staggeringly huge fortunes is increasingly alarming. Money-the presence or absence of it-seems to be increasingly the goal of life in the modern world. 

Yet so many others have so little. We see that in Fishponds-the homeless, those struggling with paying for heating and food. The gaps in society seem to grow ever bigger.

This Sundays Gospel reading  has the challenge to the rich young man. Can he give up his wealth to serve Jesus? It seems to be his stumbling block. Yet we need to also remember that it’s not having money in itself that’s evil but the love of it. History charts the wealthy who have shared that wealth. Its placing money above anything else that is the issue-especially when it replaces God in our hearts, and it can be anything that we put in the place of God that can become our stumbling block, not just money. I hope that the rich young man was able to see this and came to follow Jesus.

Sunday 13th October.  Twentieth Sunday after Trinity

8.00am – Holy Communion – All Saints

10.00am – Holy Communion – St. Marys

10.30am – Messy Muddy Church – All Saints

7.15pm – Generations – All Saints

The Week Ahead

Monday 14th October

10.30am – Tiny Tots – All Saints Community Hall

6.15pm – Beavers – All Saints Community Hall

Wednesday 16th October

9.00am – Celtic Morning Prayer –  All Saints Church

2-3.30pm – Benefice Bible Book Club – St. Mary’s Church

Thursday 17th October

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

6.30pm – 13th Bristol Cubs – All Saints Community Hall

8.00pm – 13th Bristol Scouts – All Saints Community Hall

Friday 18th October

11am – 12pm – Living after Loss –  St. Mary’s Church

Saturday 19th October

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

Next Sunday 20th October. Twenty First Sunday after Trinity

10.00am – Baptism & Holy Communion – St.Mary’s Church

10.30am – Holy Communion – All Saints Church

Looking ahead

Thursday 24th October – Fr Roger’s funeral – 2.15pm – St John the Baptist Church, Ruardean. All Welcome.

Saturday 26th October – Quiz Night – 7pm start.  All Saints Community Hall – Price £6 per person includes jacket potato with filling of choice

This academic year we welcome Charlie Blackett, who will be with both parishes on a long term placement as she trains to be a vicar. Charlie is at St Mary’s next week, please chat to her at coffee and ask any questions

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 6th October 2024

He is the reflection of God’s glory and the exact imprint of God’s very being, and he sustains all things by his powerful word. 

Hebrews 1:3 NRSV

This Sunday, we start a series of readings that will take us through the Letter to the Hebrews in the next seven weeks. This great exposition of the centrality and uniqueness of Jesus, feels more like a sermon than a letter. It exhorts its hearers to be faithful to Christ, despite difficulties and persecution, because Christ is so much more than any of the leaders or heroes of the past. Christ became like us, ‘a little lower than the angels’, so that we might become like him, his brothers and sisters, children of the same Father. Jesus is the pioneer of our faith, the one who has gone before us and the one whom we follow.

This Sunday, we have three services, at which we can concentrate our focus on Jesus and strengthen our commitment to walk in his way. There is Creative Church at St Mary’s at 10.00 am and Holy Communion at All Saints at 10.30 am. At 6.30 pm at St Mary’s we have Choral Evensong, at which we will be celebrating the Dedication Festival. This gives the following services for this Sunday:

10.00 am – St Mary’s  – Creative Church

10.30 am  – All Saints  – Holy Communion

6.30 pm  – St Mary’s Choral  Evensong

We have our usual midweek services, with Celtic Morning Prayer on Wednesday at 9.00 am at All Saints and Holy Communion on Thursday at 10.00 am at St Mary’s. Next Sunday follows our usual second Sunday pattern, with said Holy Communion at 8.00 am at All Saints, Holy Communion at 10.00 at St Mary’s and Messy/Muddy Church at 10.30 am at All Saints. This gives the following services for the week ahead:

Wednesday 9th 

9.00 am – All Saints  – Celtic morning prayer

Thursday 10th 

10.00 am – St Mary’s – Holy Communion

Sunday 13th 

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 start on this journey through the Letter to the Hebrews, let us pray for the grace to trust Christ and turn to him afresh each day, in the words of the collect for this Sunday:

Faithful Lord,
whose steadfast love never ceases
and whose mercies never come to an end:
grant us the grace to trust you
and to receive the gifts of your love,
new every morning,
in Jesus Christ our Lord.
Amen

Yours in Christ

Mark

Week beginning Sunday 29th September 2024

I have always had a soft spot for the Feast of St Michael and All Angels. I have found the ministry of angels, be them earthly or heavenly, to be a source of protection, wisdom and blessing in my own Christian faith. I would agree with Archbishop Desmund Tutu who once said “Angels speak in many layers of meaning and mystery, trying to express the inexpressible. If we ignore them, our lives are the poorer.” 

So, it is a huge delight when this festival combines with our joining together as a Benefice for our worship on this coming Sunday at St Marys. We also have the privilege of being able to combine this feast by welcoming  the charity “Through the Roof”,  https://throughtheroof.org/, who are one of the nominated charities we are supporting at St Mary’s in 2024. “Through the roof” seek to transform the lives of disabled people in different parts of the world. Katie, who works for the charity will be joining us to reflect, challenge and bless us with her own experience and wisdom. 

This week’s worship:

SUNDAY 29th SEPTEMBER 

8am – BCP Holy Communion – All Saints

10am – Sung Holy Communion – St Mary’s

THE WEEK AHEAD

Monday 30th Sept

10.30am – Tiny Tots – All Saints 

Tuesday 1st Oct

10:30am – M4T  – St Mary’s

Weds 2nd Oct

9:00am – Celtic Morning Prayer – All Saints 

Thursday 3rd Oct

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

Friday 4th Oct

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

Saturday 5th Oct

10:00am – Coffee Morning and Book Sale with Bristol Repair Café – All Saints 

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

Sunday 6th Oct

10:00am – Creative Church – St Mary’s

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

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

The collect prayer for Michaelmas – may we know the defence of your love and be defenders of your people.

Everlasting God, you have ordained and constituted the ministries of angels and mortals in a wonderful order: 

grant that as your holy angels always serve you in heaven, 

so, at your command, they may help and defend us on earth; 

Revd Lizzie

Week beginning Sunday 22nd September 2024

Dear Friends in Christ,

Reflecting on a British summer that seems to have consisted of more rain than sunshine, it’s easy to grumble about the ‘soft refreshing rain’ as the hymn puts it.

Yet without it we wouldn’t have the richness of the creation we experience in this country. We can take for granted the variety and wonder of nature, the profound and beautiful scope of creation. Even more so, it’s so easy to forget that whilst we can buy all manner of things from the local shops, many today cannot do so. We naturally (and rightly) think of those in countries where crops fail and extreme weather decimate harvests, there are other ways that people are denied the food that they need. Those places where there is violence and war destroy the wonders of creation and restrict access to food. Even in this country, many live on budgets that are stretched to the max, with the use of Food Banks proliferating.

But the text from Joel reminds us that God is with us, that even in the hardest times he does not desert us. He supplies us with all that is most necessary for our lives. Creation itself is a testament to God’s glory- a visual, sensual outpouring of his love, and a love that sustains us spiritually and physically.

This Sunday – 17th after Trinity

8.00    Holy Communion: All Saints

10.00  Harvest Holy Communion with Guides: St Marys

10.30  Cafe Church: All Saints

The Week Ahead

Tuesday 24th Sept    

9:00 – Celtic Morning Prayer: All Saints

Thursday 26th Sept

10:00– Holy Communion: St. Mary’s

Saturday 28th Sept 

10:00 – Coffee Morning, Book Sale & Bristol Repair Café:  All Saints

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

Sunday 29th Sept    

8.00 BCP Communion: All Saints

10.00 Joint Benefice Sung Holy Communion:  St. Marys with this year’s charity  “Through the Roof”.


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 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