Week beginning Sunday 8th December 2024

PLEASE NOTE:   St Mary’s Fair which was due to have taken place on Saturday 7th, but which had to be postponed due to the severe weather, will be rescheduled and the new date advertised in due course.

On this 2nd Sunday of Advent our attention is drawn to the prophetic voice of both Micah from the Old Testament and John the Baptist. It is also a Sunday when the advent theme of “Peace” is forefront.  Prophets often come as messengers, but they are not necessarily associated with being peaceful. I doubt that the company of John or Micah would have been comfortable, with their message of repentance and a promise of God who will act like a refiners fire!

However, it is a reminder to me that peace is hard won, however uncomfortable that may be. That the deep work of God that is needed in each of us even as it calls us to a place that can feel difficult and challenging. How can that be a good thing? What is God doing in this?  I hold to the knowledge that each of us is made in the image of God. That God works on us, and keeps working on us, because God loves us. God is never done with me or you. In that way I believe we will arrive with God, ourselves and others at a place which is refined as like gold and silver.

A prose that I came across this week by Casey Overton and is one I have found helpful for Advent – I offer it to you.

Advent is an irrational commitment to a better future.
Advent is a protest demand.
Advent is still believing we are loved even when we have forgotten what love feels like.
The scriptures cannot promise us smooth pathways nor can they entitle us to happiness.
Instead, we are given recipes for the audacity to await our collective salvation even from the brink of death.

May we know God’s prophetic call to peace.

This weekend’s worship offering.

8:00am – Holy Communion – All Saints

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

10:30am – Service of the Word– All Saints (Link)  and Nativity Rehearsal (Church)

7:15pm – Generations – Christmas Treats – All Saints

THE WEEK AHEAD

Monday 9th Dec    

10:30am – Tiny Tots Christmas Party – All Saints 

7:30pm – Advent Home Group 

Tuesday 10th Dec

10:30am – M4T Christmas Party – St Mary’s 

Wednesday 11th Dec

9:00am – Celtic Morning Prayer – All Saints 

2:00pm-3:30pm – Advent Group – St Mary’s

Thursday 12th Dec

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

Friday 13th Dec

1:00pm – Concert – St Mary’s

All Day – Briarwood School – All Saints

Saturday 14th Dec

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

Sunday 15th Dec

8:00am – Holy Communion – All Saints 

10:00am – Holy Communion with Bishop Viv– St Marys 

4.30pm – All Saints Nativity Service 

A reminder that next Sunday (15th Dec) is All Saints Nativity in the afternoon – please donate toys that are given to children who do not receive much at Christmas.

Blessings and Peace

Revd Lizzie

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