Hazelwell Church

​Hazelwell Weekly Contact 30th March 2025

27 Mar 2025 • Weekly Notices

Communion Service Led by Rev Matt Churchouse

11.00am at St Bede’s Brandwood

Mothering Sunday

  • A prayer for the week from Matt

    Faithful God, who walks with us through Lent, as indeed through our times of weakness as well as our strength, fill us with your Spirit. Would your holy presence pervade us and make clean and renew our hearts. Help us to take courage in the example of Jesus, who remained faithful in the face of temptation, and may this time of discipline be edifying and help us to worship you more truly in accordance with your will. Amen

    Please also pray for

    Matt as he prepares the service for us this Sunday.

    Residents of Moss Grove and Denshaw Road

    Remember in your prayers Mothers throughout the world, remembering especially those living in fear for their children’s safety


    Parish Update

    Remember our ACM was postponed (not cancelled and will now take place on Sunday

    May 11th)

    Don’t forget to put your clocks forward on Saturday night


    Easter Services and events Come and join us at this - the most precious season in the church calendar

    Palm Sunday (13th April): All-age guest service

    Tuesday 15th: Easter Stay-and-play (for parents and 0-5s), 10-12am

    Thursday 17th: Seder (taster) meal*, 5.30pm

    (* Having an idea of numbers for this would be helpful-please contact Matt or Val)

    Friday 18th: Contemplative Good Friday service, 2pm at St. Bede’s

    Saturday 19th: Easter Saturday fayre, 10-12.30 at St. Bede’s

    Saturday 19th: Easter Vigil, 8pm at St. Bede’s

    Easter Sunday: Light breakfast followed by all-age Easter celebration service, 9.45 (at Hazelwell)

    Reflection on God’s role as a loving parent taken from the parable of the prodigal son (Luke 15:11-32) (Compilation from a variety of sources)

    This story is one of the most powerful depictions of God's role as a loving parent. In it, Jesus illustrates God's boundless love, grace, and willingness to forgive, even when we stray far from Him.

    At the heart of the story is the relationship between the father and his two sons. The younger son, after demanding his inheritance and squandering it in reckless living, finds himself destitute and decides to return home, repentant and hoping for a place as a servant in his father’s house. However, his father, seeing him from a distance, runs to him, embraces him, and welcomes him back with open arms, throwing a feast in his honour.

    This act of forgiveness and unconditional love mirrors God's relationship with us, His children. The father doesn’t hold the son’s mistakes against him or scold him for leaving; instead, he rejoices that his lost son has returned. It is an expression of love that is not based on the son’s worthiness but on the father's deep, unshakable love.

    The father's actions reflect God's desire to restore and heal broken relationships. Even when we fall short, make mistakes, or stray from the path, God remains ever-present, ready to embrace us. This reflects the divine nature of God as a parent—one who does not give up on us, but instead continually calls us back with open arms.

    The older son, however, who stays behind and dutifully serves his father, struggles with feelings of injustice when the younger son is welcomed back. His reaction echoes the human tendency to measure worthiness, but the father reminds him that everything he has is also his. The message here is that God's love does not operate on a system of merit or deserving; it is simply grace.

    God’s role as a loving parent in the parable demonstrates his unwavering love, compassionate, and restorative. No matter how far we may wander or how many mistakes we make, God's arms are always open, ready to receive us back into His embrace with joy.