Join in with all things Easter, as we reflect on the cross and celebrate in the hope of the resurrection.
Back in the time of Jesus, there was a little phrase that people used. Whenever a rabbi was attracting followers, they would say to potential followers, “are you willing to walk in my dust?” For us, it seems like a strange invitation! However, in Jesus‘s day, it reflected the dusty path that they walked on and the invitation to stay close to a potential teacher and instructor. ……….Read more here
Why not come along, eat breakfast with others in a relaxed and friendly setting, and listen to an interesting and inspiring talk?
We will be gathering in the auditorium to eat together, followed by a talk. This month our breakfast will be sausage and bacon baps, fruit and croissants.Click here to book
Easter Sunday 9 April
The Nine o’clock in Church
The Ten-thirty in the Centre
The Six-Thirty in the Centre
Join in as we celebrate the Good News of the risen Lord Jesus! All services will also be live-streamed.
Back in the time of Jesus, there was a little phrase that people used. Whenever a rabbi was attracting followers, they would say to potential followers, “are you willing to walk in my dust?” For us, it seems like a strange invitation! However, in Jesus‘s day, it reflected the dusty path that they walked on and the invitation to stay close to a potential teacher and instructor.
To walk in the dust of a rabbi meant that you were close enough to hear them, close enough to follow them, and close enough to follow their example. The process of following in such a way, also reminded the follower that the journey was more often than not dusty.
As we approach this Easter season, our theme at St Michael’s is Dust and Glory. In following the rabbi, Jesus, we experience a dusty journey. We are often aware of our own shortcomings and the fragility of life. Discipleship is a dusty business. But the journey does lead somewhere. The dusty journey of Jesus‘s ministry led to the cross, where he carried all the wrongdoings of the world on his shoulders.
The dusty and rough cross was, three days later, replaced by the glory of His resurrection.
Jesus is still the rabbi to follow. But he is the friend who experienced the dust of life for himself, and replaced it with the hope of glory. Where life might feel dusty for us at the moment, know that Jesus can lead us through the dust to a place of glory.
Dust and glory are often close together, one follows the other and can be as little as three days apart.
May you walk in the dust of Jesus and know him leading you to glory.
Join us on Wednesday 29 March at 7.30am for our online prayer meeting.
Bring your own breakfast, and we’ll see you there!
Long-time Church family member Jeanne Callow passed away in February aged 92. Details of her funeral are below:
Her coffin will be received into St Michael’s Church on Wednesday 15 March at 4.30pm and there will be a very short service as the coffin is received. All welcome.
The funeral service is at Westerleigh Crematorium (Waterside Chapel) on Thursday 16 March 10:15am. Family flowers only. The service will be followed by a reception at Westerleigh.
All are welcome to one or both services, but please let us know if you are coming to Westerleigh – email admin@stmichaelsbristol.org or call the church office.
Alternatively the service is being live streamed – details below:
Please go towatch.obitus.com and enter the username and password exactly as below:
Username: buda6275
Password:239159
We are so excited to be going to Spree South West this year! Spree SW is an amazing youth festival run in partnership by South West Youth Ministries and Urban Saints. The festival has a huge range of activities on offer as well as different teaching streams aimed at young people across all stages of faith. This will be a fantastic time to grow closer to God, each other and have amazing fun!
This Lent we are all invited to explore how we can live well with the mess of everyday life.
Dust and Glory encourages us to take a fresh look at the frustrations and failings that every day brings and, rather than pretending we can always avoid them, seek to learn from them and grow closer to God through them.
The Archbishops’ Lent Book and Course
Dust and Glory: A Lent journey of faith, failure and forgiveness is the Church of England’s Lent theme for 2023. This year’s resources are informed and inspired by the Archbishop of Canterbury’s 2023 Lent Book, Failure: What Jesus said about sin, mistakes and messing stuff up by Bishop Emma Ineson, who has also co-written the daily reflections booklet for adults
At St Michael’s we are recommending this book for Lent which is available from all good booksellers.
Daily reflections – booklets, app, audio
The weekly themes of the Archbishop’s Lent Book are also explored in daily reflections from the Church of England.
Dust and Glory: A Lent Journey of faith, failure and forgiveness offers a daily Bible reading, a short reflection and a practical challenge, as well as a prayer linked to the week’s theme. Co-written by Bishop Emma Ineson and Abbie Martin, the booklet is designed to be used either in parallel with the Lent Book or independently. The booklet is available to order now from Church House Publishing
An update to the Church of England app for iOS and Android – including daily audio – will be available in mid-February. Anyone who has the Church of England’s #FollowTheStar app installed will automatically get the Lent update. The reflections will also be available via email and also via the Church of England’s smart speaker apps – as well as on the free Daily Hope phone line (0800 804 8044).
The aftermath of the earthquake in Turkey and Syria has been devastating.
We join – with so many others – in praying for all those impacted.
In terms of practical support, our Mission Action Group has made a £1000 donation to Tearfund as an initial response to the situation.
If you would like to give financial support, we are directing this to DEC (Disasters Emergency Committee). DEC charities (including Tearfund) and their local partners are among the first responders, working with locally-led relief efforts in Turkey and Syria.
We welcome all recent arrivals to the UK to join us on the Hong Kong Welcome Course running at St Michael’s Centre from Sunday 19 February to Sunday 26 March.
Each week we will eat together at 1pm and then run through the course from 1:45pm, finishing by 3pm.
We invite people to bring their friends and relatives to join the course as well – it is for people of all faiths and of none.
Please register here to join the course so we can plan for the food and the activities.
For more information please talk with James Wong, Elsa Ma or Chris & Lucy Reveley.
We are delighted to have a temporary art exhibit in the auditorium in St Michael’s Centre by artist Malcolm Bourne. The piece has come to us directly from Bristol Cathedral where it was recently exhibited.
Covenant is a depiction of a dream. The image is a symbolic representation of the almighty power, light and love of El Shaddai manifested in the person of Jesus Christ. The painting seeks to show the reality of the new covenant, Jesus metaphorically being divided into two as the ultimate covenant sacrifice-reunifying the people of the world to El Shaddai.
The piece has been painted on two 8 x 4ft plywood boards that were originally installed on College Green in 2014 as a prayer wall. The prayers of the Bristol public literally provide the base of this painting.
Produced by KiC November 2022
A symbolic journey from the old covenant to the mediator of the new covenant, Jesus Christ, depicted in Hebrews 12 v 18-24
Malcolm Bourne Biography
“As a painter, I’ve held exhibitions for my work and have limited edition prints of several of my paintings. I love to paint and draw, and rarely leave the house without a sketchbook. When I first moved to Bristol in 2005, I became a resident artist in the Leeky Gallery on Park Street. It was during this time that I realised how inspiring it is to belong to an active creative community. This became one of the sparks that envisioned the inception of Joseph Studios, the workshop and artist collective that I co-founded in 2015. I have a passion for the wellbeing of individuals and communities and have become an advocate of the great health benefits of engaging in the creative process. As a result, this has become an important focus in the coaching and mentoring work I do with individuals and businesses.”
Covenant Dream
“I remember experiencing a most vivid dream. I was in an intensely light-filled environment: the brightness of the light was physically painful and it seemed to penetrate every part of my being. Simultaneously there was a sound, or many sounds at once, it was overwhelming; a bass that created deep vibration and a piercingly sharp tone all of which emanated from the light. I felt transparent to the light and sound. The power, energy, vibration and brightness were unbearable, and they rendered me paralysed. I was terrified. My only response was to drop to my knees and remain as still as I possibly could. I sensed that if I moved even a centimetre, I would explode into a million pieces under this force that was pulsating through and around me.”
“From the centre of this light, I started to see a shadow form growing towards me. The shadow took the shape of a man. Once the shadow had fully formed the shadow began to stand, no longer being the projection of another being but somehow the shadow itself becoming a person. As soon as the form of the man was clear to be seen the atmosphere began to change: I sensed a deep love and peace around me although the sense of being transparent remained. I was no longer afraid. I knew immediately that it was Jesus standing in front of me revealed in this moment in the Trinity, confirming that he was my personal mediator, saviour King. Jesus walked towards me, and we began to talk. I woke up, my whole body shaking from the experience and reflected on its significance.”
Malcolm Bourne 2006
Our Mission Partner of the month for February is Univida