Week beginning Sunday 20th April 2025

Happy Easter- when it comes!

For most of the last week, I have greeted people with a “Happy Easter” with the caveat….”when it comes”.  Not knowing if I will see that person again before the “Big Day” it seems the right greeting. And we are still in that paused moment, when Easter has not yet arrived, but it is very very near. 

Easter, when it comes, is the moment that Christians believe changed the world absolutely and forever. Having walked the road of Lent and Holy week, of foot washing, agape meals, silence and Good Friday we are now almost at that time. A time when around the world in all shapes and sizes people will gather and sing and say “Alleluia – Christ is Risen”. A statement of faith and truth for Christians. 

So may I also wish you a Happy Easter here, in the hope of seeing you and being with you to celebrate this over the coming weekend. 

EASTER SERVICES – 19th and 20th APRIL

7.30pm – SATURDAY NIGHT – 19th APRIL – Easter Vigil, Fire and First Holy Communion. – St Mary’s

10am – SUNDAY AM – 20th APRIL- All Age Holy Communion – St Mary’s

10.30 – SUNDAY AM – 20th APRIL- All Age Holy Communion – All Saints

6.30pm – SUNDAY EVE – 20th APRIL – Easter Choral Evensong – St Mary’s

Blessings and Happy Easter

Revd Lizzie. 

Week beginning Sunday 13th April 2025

Palms – Hands, Branches and Donkeys

Every story has a beginning, a middle and an end (or so some say). This week, Palm Sunday arguably marks all three. It is an ending of Lent. A beginning of Holy Week. And it marks an interjection in the midst between the two.  A day of remembering, retelling, taking part in the story of Jesus’ entry into Jerusalem. A day which marks the beginning but also draws us to the ending . A week which sees processions, fickle crowds, rowdy temples, unjust trials, eating, sleeping, praying, dying and rising. It is the story which for Christians holds profound truth about who God is and how God acts. May we all be invited into this Holiest of weeks together.

This Sunday our worship allows us to open the palms of our own hands to receive God with the palm branches as we re discover again this life giving story.

PALM SUNDAY – Sunday 13th April

8am – Holy Communion – All Saints

10am – Sung Palm Sunday Holy Communion Service- St Marys

10.30 – Palm Procession Service – All Saints

7.15 – Generations Youth Group – All Saints

The week ahead

Tuesday 15th

11am – Pat Jones Funeral – All Saints

6.30pm – Holy Communion – All Saints

Wednesday 16th

9am – Celtic Morning Prayer – All Saints

6.30pm – Taize – All Saints

Thursday 17th

10.30 – Chrism Mass – Bristol Cathedral

6.30pm – Agape – All Saints

7.30pm – Maundy Thursday Holy Communion – St Marys

Friday 18th

10.30 – Good Friday Children’s Activities – All Saints

1.30pm – Liturgy of Good Friday – St Marys

2pm – Last Hour – All Saints

Saturday 19th

12-1.30pm – Sat Lunches

 7.30pm – Easter Eve Holy Fire, Vigil and First Communion of Easter – St Marys

Sunday 20th

10am – Easter Sunday Holy Communion – St Marys

10.30am – Easter Sunday Holy Communion – All Saints

6.30pm – Easter Choral Evensong – St Marys.

Oh….and a interesting poem I discovered this week to ponder about a Donkey by GK Chesterton ( because…why not on Palm Sunday)

When fishes flew and forests walked
   And figs grew upon thorn,
Some moment when the moon was blood
   Then surely I was born.
With monstrous head and sickening cry
   And ears like errant wings,
The devil’s walking parody
   On all four-footed things.
The tattered outlaw of the earth,
   Of ancient crooked will;
Starve, scourge, deride me: I am dumb,
   I keep my secret still.
Fools! For I also had my hour;
   One far fierce hour and sweet:
There was a shout about my ears,
   And palms before my feet.

God Bless

Revd Lizzie

Week beginning Sunday 9th March 2025

Lent 1

As a young man, on two occasions I decided to give up alcohol for Lent. One year, I was successful, not drinking a drop until Easter Day. Yippee! I was so proud of that achievement – which, of course, defeats the whole object of a Lenten discipline. This is not meant to be about our moral strength or determination. Rather, Lent is a season to be more attentive to the presence of God, and our neediness. So, on the other occasion, I managed to avoid alcohol for 36 hours – but, by the Friday evening after Ash Wednesday, I gave up. I can remember sitting in the pub with my pint of beer, thinking “I’ve blown it. What a weakling!”. Until I remembered that wonderful story about two people who go into the Temple (Luke 18). The Pharisee is proud of his achievements; the other one – you or me – says “God, I’ve blown it again. Sorry. How can you help me be better next time? Thank you for not abandoning me”.

Services this weekend for the 9th March 2025

8:00am Holy Communion – All Saints 

10:00am Holy Communion – St. Mary’s

10:30am Muddy Church – All Saints

4:15pm Generations (Crazy Golf)

The Week Ahead

Mon 10th

10.30am – Tiny Tots – All Saints 

7.30pm – Lent Group 

Tues 11th

10:30am – Music for Toddlers 

Weds 12th

9:00am – Celtic Morning Prayer – All Saints 

1pm – Lent Group – St Marys 

Thursday 13th

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

Saturday 15th

9.30am Safeguarding Training – All Saints 

12–2:00pm – Saturday Lunches  – St. Mary’s 

Sunday 16th

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

10:30am – Holy Communion – All Saints 

Revd Bob.

Week beginning Sunday 16th February 2025

Waiting on the Waiting

The middle of February brings us into a betwixt and between time. The days are still cold, yet they are also noticeably longer and lighter. We are moving away from winter, but spring is not quite here. There are glimpses of what is to come, and yet it feels as if we are still in the thick of it.

Easter, the ever-moveable Calander feast comes as late as possible in 2025, and so that gives a rare opportunity of a three-week gap before Lent even begins. It feels a bit like the waiting room, before the waiting room. Or the departure area, that isn’t quite yet the actual departure area. What possible purpose could this extra waiting space bring? 

I want to rush through it…to not consider its importance or notice its possible usefulness. Yet, perhaps it is a time to slow the steps down and not race through the year wishing it away – getting to of 2025 and looking back saying “Where did the year go?”  These three weeks before Lent can be a blessing, a time of not requiring more from me than the attention to just the space it brings. So it is not a drag, or a bind to reach March – but the move from the speed of a sprint, into a steady jog, so that we can walk more easily into the year, and on the way hear more clearly God’s call on our lives. 

This Sunday 16th February

10am – Sung Holy Communion – St Mary’s

10.30 – Holy Communion with Hymns – All Saints

The Week Ahead

Monday 17th

No Tiny Tots – Half term!

Tuesday 18th

No Music for Toddlers – as its half term! 

Wednesday 19th

9:00am – Celtic Morning Prayer – All Saints 

Thursday 20th

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

Saturday 22nd

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

Sunday 23rd

8.00am – Holy Communion – All Saints 

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

10.30am Cafe Church – All Saints 

Blessings and peace to you all.

Revd Lizzie

Week beginning Sunday 2nd February 2025

This Sunday we begin our Candlemas celebrations. A pivot point between Christmas and the beginnings of Lent. In the gospel story from Luke, we hear how Mary and Joseph bring Jesus to the Temple to be “presented”. A ritual of thanksgiving for a new child and also what was the re-entry into society for a mother. It is a delicate, vulnerable and yet heart warming pilgrimage that they make. At one point Mary hands over the baby Jesus to Simeon, an ancient priest who had been waiting for that moment all of his life – to hold the Saviour of the World in his arms. We all have to delicately hand over precious people at times in our lives. With hearts in our mouth that we hope that the person receiving them will not drop them (always my fear with babies!) and to entrust to others the care of our most dear and loved ones. It happens at baptisms, weddings and funerals. It happens at the school gate, the work door and thresholds to nursing homes. We do so always in trust – that like Jesus,  that they will be received, blessed, adored and recognised for who they are. It is a source of trust that needs a lighted path, and so as we begin our Candlemas festivities come to church to have your own candles blessed, to hear the good news and to trust that the God holds us tightly in love and care.

This Sunday’s Services – 2nd February 2025

10.00am – Creative Church – St Mary’s – (Theme is Scripture)

10.30am  – Holy Communion with Junior Church and Band – All Saints

6.30pm – Choral Candlemas Evensong – St Mary’s.

THE WEEK AHEAD

Monday 3rd Feb

10:30am – Tiny Tots – All Saints

Tuesday 4th Feb

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

Wednesday 5th Feb

9:00am – Celtic Morning Prayer   All Saints 

Thursday 6th Feb

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

Saturday 8th Feb

 12–2:00pm – Saturday Lunches  – St. Mary’s 

Sunday 9th Feb

8:00am – Holy Communion – All Saints

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

10:30am – Muddy Church – All Saints 

7:15pm – Generations – All Saints Link 

With my prayers and blessings to you all.

Revd Lizzie

Week beginning Sunday 19th January 2025

This Sunday, we reach the centre point of the Epiphany season. It is a season when we remember the way Jesus was revealed to the world. This week we reach what John refers to as the first of Jesus’ signs. Yet all our readings through Epiphany are signs that point to Jesus. The gifts of the magi, the Holy Spirit at Jesus’ baptism, the power of Jesus’ miracles, his fulfilment of the Old Testament prophecies and his presentation at Temple all show facets of who Jesus is and why we can put our trust in him.

Our opening hymn at St Mary’s this Sunday gives a summary of this revelation or “manifestation”. Starting at Jesus’ birth, we sing of the events that we hear about in the Epiphany readings. Yet the hymn asks for more than just “Songs of thankfulness and praise”. It prays that we may learn more of Christ from the bible and that we grow to be more like him in all we say, do and are. 

This Sunday morning, we have chances to reflect on these themes with Holy Communion at St Mary’s at 10.00 and at All Saints at 10.30. In the evening, there is the Epiphany carol service at St Mary’s at 6.30. This gives the following services for this Sunday 19th January:

10.00 amSt Mary’sHoly Communion
10.30 amAll SaintsHoly Communion
6.30 pmSt Mary’sEpiphany carols

During the week, we have our normal midweek services 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.

Next week follows our normal fourth Sunday pattern, with Holy Communion at All Saints at 8.00 am and at St Mary’s at 10.00 am. At 10.30 am at All Saints we have our café church, where we will be continuing our look at Paul’s letter to the church in Rome. This week’s theme is salvation, which Paul writes about in chapters 3 and 4.

This gives the following Services for the coming week:

Wednesday 22nd9.00 amAll SaintsCeltic morning prayer
Thursday 23rd10.00 amSt Mary’sHoly Communion
Sunday 26th8.00 amAll SaintsHoly Communion (said)
 10.00 amSt Mary’sHoly Communion
 10.30 amAll SaintsCafé Church

So, as we start a new week, let us pray that we can see that revelation of Christ and follow in his way, using the words of Christopher Wordsworth’s hymn:

Grant us grace to see thee, Lord,
Mirrored in thy holy word.
May we imitate thee now,
And be pure, as pure art thou.
That we like to thee may be
At thy great Epiphany,
And may praise thee, ever blest,
God in Man made manifest.

Yours in Christ

Mark

Week beginning Sunday 15th December 2024

Rejoice in the Lord Always

Happy Gaudete! What a great word to say and reflect on. It is a word that has been set to many a tune, but the one that always springs to my mind is the Steeleye Span 80’s version – a gift of an earworm for your weekend!

Here in the middle of Advent the season makes a slight change of step. This Sunday coming has been known as Gaudete Sunday – a word that means “Rejoice”. The pink candle on the advent ring is lit. It marks a moment when our eyes can see in the faint distance the manger that we are asked to move towards in order to wonder at the gift of Jesus that God brings us all at Christmas. 

“Rejoice” is the word that springs from one of the readings that we are given this Sunday – St Paul in his letter to the Philippians says this

Rejoice in the Lord always; again I will say, Rejoice. Let your gentleness be known to everyone. The Lord is near. Do not worry about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God.”

It is an encouragement that despite the darkness that enfolds us that in everything by prayer we can bring our needs to God, and to be assured that the Lord is near and to be gentle with each other. Amongst the fever of Christmas preparations, I want to continue to cling to Advent, to stay in that place a little while longer in this season. Yet the call is to keep going, step by step, till we finally arrive prayerfully able to give over all that we need to God who comes to love the world. 

We have the joy of being able to welcome the Bishop of Bristol, Bishop Viv, to celebrate holy communion and preach at 10am at St Marys. Our rejoicing continues at All Saints in the afternoon at 4.30pm with our children sharing with us the Nativity. Both services full of the glimpses of hope, love and rejoicing that we are called to be part of. Bring yourselves, your families, your neighbours and friends to rejoice and join in the joy.

Worship – Sunday 15th December

8:00am Holy Communion – All Saints

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

(10:30am    Rehearsal for the Nativity– All Saints)

4:30pm     Nativity Service – All Saints

THE WEEK AHEAD

Mon 16th December

10:30am Tiny Tots Christmas Party 

7:30pm – Advent Group 

Weds 18th December

9:00am – Celtic Morning Prayer – All Saints 

12:00pm – Funeral of David Godfrey 

6:00pm – Fishponds School Carol Service 

Thursday 19th December

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

11:00am – Advent Group – St Mary’s

Saturday 21st December

12:00pm – 2:00pm – Saturday Lunches  – St Mary’s 

1:00pm – D&D fundraiser “Yuletide Ball”– All Saints  

Sunday 22nd December

8.00am – Holy Communion BCP – All Saints 

10:00am Sung Holy Communion – St Marys 

10.30am Holy Communion– All Saints 

18.30 – Carols by Candlelight – St Mary’s 

In gentle prayer

Revd Lizzie

Week beginning Sunday 1st December 2024

Advent Sunday

With trepid anticipation I have been waiting for something to arrive in the post for the last few weeks, and when it finally did a few days ago, I was as excited as a small child who waits for Christmas. The object of my eager longing – a new diary. 

Each year the church starts again at Advent. Not January, or New Year, but Advent. This is when the new diaries, new lectionaries, new readings all start over. For me the arrival of a new diary is a chance to start again, with good intentions, that my new diary will not end up as haphazard, dilapidated, worn and scribbled on as last years. I am just as hopeful this year as I look at my well kept new diary, with entries in December looking neat and ordered.

As we begin Advent, we are asked to begin again. To start afresh with God. To come with all the hopes, dreams, worries and fears and lay them out to the Almighty. A spiritual cleaning is asked of us. I find that not only a good thing to do, but an essential thing for my soul. It helps me get things in order, builds a healthy spiritual perspective and confronts me with my need to listen more attentively to God, in worship, in Advent Groups, in fellowship at special services. Starting Advent well, like any new year gives sustenance for all that lies ahead.

I hope and pray that as we start Advent together, you are as expectant and excited as I am.

Our worship this weekend helps us to enter into that space of listening to God afresh – everyone is welcome to join us at all or any of them.

WORSHIP THIS WEEKEND – SUNDAY 1st DECEMBER

10:00am – St Marys – Toy Service – Guides and Brownies

10.30am – All Saints – Advent Holy Communion with Band and Junior Church

6.30pm – Advent Candlelit Service

THE WEEK AHEAD

Monday 2nd Dec

10:30am – Tiny Tots – All Saints 

Tuesday 3rd Dec

10:30am – M4T  – St Mary’s

Weds 4th Dec

9:00am – Celtic Morning Prayer – All Saints 

Thursday 5th Dec

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

Friday 6th Dec

11:00am – Living After Loss – St Marys

Saturday 7th Dec

11:00am – 2:00pm  – St Mary’s Christmas Fair  

Sunday 8th Dec

8:00am – Holy Communion – All Saints 

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

10:30am – Service of the Word and Nativity Rehearsal – All Saints 

7:15pm – Generations – All Saints 

God of hope, who brought love into this world, be the love that dwells between us. God of hope, who brought peace into this world, be the peace that dwells between us. God of hope, who brought joy into this world, be the joy that dwells between us. God of hope, the rock we stand upon, be the centre, the focus of our lives always, and particularly this Advent time Amen

Blessings

Revd Lizzie

Week beginning Sunday 24th November 2024

Christ the King

I wonder what our first thoughts are when we think of what a King is. 

There are the historic kings with their penchant for lopping off heads (I see you Henry VIII) and sending troops off to conquer places that don’t belong to them. Then there are the kings depicted in art and media, those of fantasy and biography. Some are heroic forces for good, others evil and destructive, and some are comic.

Kings can be seen as vital links to heritage and tradition. Others see them as outdated and irrelevant. These sides can veer towards extremism in their passion, and history attests to this.

But then, is a king someone surrounded by pageantry and wealth, even if (like in the. UK) their role is ceremonial, or someone who may not embody this overt history but actually have more power? 

Here is the modern quandary we encounter  this weekend when we celebrate Christ as King. Is this imagery still helpful? It counted for much before, but even then it was used to believe that monarchs were chosen directly by God, rather than emphasising how Jesus’ kingship is entirely different to the human concept of monarchy.

Jesus is a leader, a figure of power-the highest power of all-that of God, yet unlike any king or earthly leader he serves, he avoids any of  the palaver attached to royalty or indeed any type of earthly leadership. 

Whilst the term king conjures up certain images that can be equally helpful and unhelpful, no other modern leadership term is free from positive of negative interpretations whatever field it appears within-sacred or secular. 

We see his leadership with power and authority, which so often can corrupt and destroy. Politics can become a game of ambition and ego. However, there are leaders such as Nelson Mandela and Desmond Tutu who were fully human,  their humanity creating leaders of principle and integrity. Others like John F. Kennedy, Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jnr. were killed for their integrity but their influence continues to inspire. 

But Jesus as leader embodies, explodes and transforms whatever concept of leadership that society may create. His leadership is beyond our limited forms as he embodies the human and the divine. He leqds  without corruption or selfish ambition . He leads to serve and serves to lead. He redefines  the word king, as he redefines what it is to be human and held in the love of God.

Sunday 24th November Christ the King/Sunday next before Advent

10:00am: Holy Communion – St Marys

The Week Ahead

Tuesday 26th Nov

10.30am: Music for Toddlers – St Marys

Thursday 28th Nov

10:00am: Holy Communion – St. Mary’s

Saturday 30th Nov          

12.00 – 1:30pm: Saturday Lunches – St Mary’s

Sunday 1st Dec (Advent Sunday)

10:00am: Creative Church – St Mary’s

6:30pm: 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

Fr Kester de Oliveira

Week beginning Sunday 17th November 2024

One of my favourite story books as a child was “The owl who was afraid of the dark” by Jill Tomlinson.  For me it evokes good memories, it was both a book that my mother read to me and also one that I was first able to read by myself. The baby owl Plop (what a great name!) discovers new things about the dark, that it can be a place of excitement and discovery and need not always be a place to be feared.  

Yet the darkness can be a scary place. As the nights draw in and the days shorten, so too do the readings we hear in church take on more sombre and darker notes. The bible stories remind me that the whole compass of life will involve rupture and darkness, uncertainty and fragility. How do God’s people navigate the darkness and yet remain a people of light and hope? That is a question that has been asked time and time again.

These past weeks of elections, budgets, remembrance and fracture illuminate a vulnerability and fragility of the world. The Church is not immune from the darkness, and it necessitates a need to be both repentant and reflective about how harm done is acknowledged and amendment keenly sought. 

In the Letter to the Hebrews it speaks of “how to provoke one another to love and good deeds” and to “not neglect meeting together”. I was struck by how important both elements of this were to being able to discover the guiding lights when it feels dark outside.  That we are called to be a people who “agitate” ourselves and others in love and that this is done most effectively when we meet others. Some of the most poignant, challenging and yet hopeful of moments in life are when we seek to be with others in the flesh, face to face. 

I wish to encourage us to do so, be it in church, cafes, parks or elsewhere in the spaces we work, play and encounter others. Meeting together, even when fragile and wobbly, is a possible way to be able to see in the darkness, so that it doesn’t confound or frighten us, but allows us a path of light to follow.

This week we meet to worship together – Sunday 17th November

10am – St Marys – Sung Holy Communion with Baptism

10.30am – All Saints – Holy Communion with Hymns

THE WEEK AHEAD

Tuesday 19th

10:30am – M4T – St Mary’s parish room.

Weds 20th

9:00am – Celtic Morning Prayer – All Saints 

Thursday 21st 

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

12:00pm – Funeral – St Marys 

Saturday 23rd

12.00  Wedding – St Mary’s  

Sunday 24th

8.00am – Holy Communion – All Saints

10:00am – Sung Holy Communion – St Marys 

10.30am – Cafe Church – All Saints

Blessings

Revd Lizzie