After the Fire Series: Community of Believers | Dave Mitchell at 7pm | 27 June 2021

What does it look like to live in step with the Spirit?

27 June 2021 - 7pm Service

After the Fire Series: Community of Believers

Over month of June we’ve been exploring what the Church looks like after Pentecost and how we can hold onto the power of the Spirit in our everyday lives.

We’ll be looking to the Bible to see what the early Church was like after this transformed experience of the gift of the Spirit. What should we look like today if the Spirit is at work in our midst as a Church?

Also - remember our 11am and 7pm services looked at the same topic and Rachel Dave Mitchell and Matt Dobson shared with us. Check it out!

DISCUSSION NOTES

INTRODUCTION

Read Acts 2:42-47 and Ephesians 4:11-13

We believe that Church is a society that exists for the benefit of its non-members! Of course that doesn’t mean we don’t care for one another, quite the opposite. To be a minister has three dimensions. A minister is a ‘servant’ literally. We minister to the Lord, to one another and to the world.

We understand some people’s ministry is more ‘Church centric’, for others it is very much in the market place. We hope that for most people ministry is ‘both and’!

  1. The phrase ‘ministry to the Lord’ sounds a bit quaint. What does it actually mean?

  2. I use the phrase ‘God loves to turn victims into ministers’ as I think about people in the Bible and in my experience who have been able to be used by God despite (and sometimes because of) where they have come from. Is there anything that disqualifies us from being ministers?

  3. Ministry is for everyone but everyone should be equipped or trained as Ephesians 4 puts it. Where do you feel drawn to minister? What equipping do you need?

  4. As we re-open Church post pandemic, there are many needs in our Church programmes for volunteers, or ‘ministers’. What needs are you aware of at Woodlands? What training programmes are you aware of? Where might you be able to serve?

  5. Ministry can be both in practical service and more overtly spiritual realms. What does God value most? Do we over promote some aspects of ministry as a community to the detriment of others?

  6. Do you know which Woodlands team members most champion volunteering in and out of the Church?

After the Fire Series: Community of Believers | Rachel Riddall at 11am | 27 June 2021

What does it look like to live in step with the Spirit?

27 June 2021 - 7pm Service

After the Fire Series: Community of Believers

Over month of June we’ve been exploring what the Church looks like after Pentecost and how we can hold onto the power of the Spirit in our everyday lives.

We’ll be looking to the Bible to see what the early Church was like after this transformed experience of the gift of the Spirit. What should we look like today if the Spirit is at work in our midst as a Church?

Also - remember our 11am and 7pm services looked at the same topic and Rachel Dave Mitchell and Matt Dobson shared with us. Check it out!

DISCUSSION NOTES

INTRODUCTION

Read Acts 2:42-47 and Ephesians 4:11-13

We believe that Church is a society that exists for the benefit of its non-members! Of course that doesn’t mean we don’t care for one another, quite the opposite. To be a minister has three dimensions. A minister is a ‘servant’ literally. We minister to the Lord, to one another and to the world.

We understand some people’s ministry is more ‘Church centric’, for others it is very much in the market place. We hope that for most people ministry is ‘both and’!

  1. The phrase ‘ministry to the Lord’ sounds a bit quaint. What does it actually mean?

  2. I use the phrase ‘God loves to turn victims into ministers’ as I think about people in the Bible and in my experience who have been able to be used by God despite (and sometimes because of) where they have come from. Is there anything that disqualifies us from being ministers?

  3. Ministry is for everyone but everyone should be equipped or trained as Ephesians 4 puts it. Where do you feel drawn to minister? What equipping do you need?

  4. As we re-open Church post pandemic, there are many needs in our Church programmes for volunteers, or ‘ministers’. What needs are you aware of at Woodlands? What training programmes are you aware of? Where might you be able to serve?

  5. Ministry can be both in practical service and more overtly spiritual realms. What does God value most? Do we over promote some aspects of ministry as a community to the detriment of others?

  6. Do you know which Woodlands team members most champion volunteering in and out of the Church?

After the Fire Series: Community of Believers | Neil Edbrooke at 8:30am | 27 June 2021

27 June 2021 - 8.30am Service

After the Fire Series: Community of Believers

Over month of June we’ve been exploring what the Church looks like after Pentecost and how we can hold onto the power of the Spirit in our everyday lives.

We’ll be looking to the Bible to see what the early Church was like after this transformed experience of the gift of the Spirit. What should we look like today if the Spirit is at work in our midst as a Church?

Also - remember our 11am and 7pm services looked at the same topic and Rachel Dave Mitchell and Matt Dobson shared with us. Check it out!

DISCUSSION NOTES

INTRODUCTION

Read Acts 2:42-47 and Ephesians 4:11-13

We believe that Church is a society that exists for the benefit of its non-members! Of course that doesn’t mean we don’t care for one another, quite the opposite. To be a minister has three dimensions. A minister is a ‘servant’ literally. We minister to the Lord, to one another and to the world.

We understand some people’s ministry is more ‘Church centric’, for others it is very much in the market place. We hope that for most people ministry is ‘both and’!

  1. The phrase ‘ministry to the Lord’ sounds a bit quaint. What does it actually mean?

  2. I use the phrase ‘God loves to turn victims into ministers’ as I think about people in the Bible and in my experience who have been able to be used by God despite (and sometimes because of) where they have come from. Is there anything that disqualifies us from being ministers?

  3. Ministry is for everyone but everyone should be equipped or trained as Ephesians 4 puts it. Where do you feel drawn to minister? What equipping do you need?

  4. As we re-open Church post pandemic, there are many needs in our Church programmes for volunteers, or ‘ministers’. What needs are you aware of at Woodlands? What training programmes are you aware of? Where might you be able to serve?

  5. Ministry can be both in practical service and more overtly spiritual realms. What does God value most? Do we over promote some aspects of ministry as a community to the detriment of others?

  6. Do you know which Woodlands team members most champion volunteering in and out of the Church?

Woodies Kids | Saying Sorry

Welcome to the Woodies Kids blog.

this week are thinking about…

saying sorry

Today we are thinking about saying sorry and being forgiven.

Even though it’s not always easy, when we do something wrong it’s important to

say sorry, and Jesus will always forgive us! In the Cheeky Panda treehouse, Benji is

enjoying his favourite pizza and leaves one slice in a labelled box in the fridge to enjoy later. CJ finds the slice and eats it, and learns that it's important to say sorry, just as the woman said sorry to Jesus in the bible.

When was the last time you said 'sorry'? Saying ‘sorry’ can often be one of the hardest things to say. In today's, Elle reflects on when she’s upset someone or has disappointed God, she feels like she has let people down. Elle notes pride as something that gets in the way of her saying sorry to other people, or to God. We need to say sorry when we’re in the wrong – breakthrough and freedom comes, when we say sorry.

I wonder why we find it so hard to say sorry? Vote on the top reason:

1) I don’t like being wrong

2) I am scared I might get punished

3) I feel guilty if I own up

4) It is easier to say “It wasn’t me”

5) No one really knows that I did it anyway so it doesn’t matter.

Choose five friends you could pray for this week. Draw around your hand and write their names in each finger! Is there anyone you need to say sorry to?

Chat and Catch: Tell God what upsets or disappoints you. Ask God to help you to say sorry when you need to.

After the Fire Series: Caring for the Poor | Andrew Street at 8:30am | 20 June 2021

20 June 2021 - 8.30am Service

After the Fire Series: Caring for the Poor

Leading on from our Holy Spirit series, over the month of June we are going to be exploring what the Church looks like after Pentecost and how we can hold onto the power of the Spirit in our everyday lives.

We’ll be looking to the Bible to see what the early Church was like after this transformed experience of the gift of the Spirit. What should we look like today if the Spirit is at work in our midst as a Church?

This week we’re having a special offering for International Justice Mission to raise funds for another rescue mission supported by our church members. If you would like to give, please visit our IJM page:

Also - remember our 11am and 7pm services looked at the same topic and Dave Mitchell and Matt Dobson shared with us. Check it out!

DISCUSSION NOTES

INTRODUCTION

Read Acts 4:32-36 and Galatians 2:10

One of the revolutionary and attractive qualities about the early Church is the way they cared for the poor, and not just their own poor but vulnerable people in their wider communities. 

  1. Why do you think there was such generosity in the Church as described in Acts 4: 32-36.

  2. What do you think the impact of the Church’s charitable work is on its witness into the world?

  3. What is your definition of poverty? Where would you find that kind of poverty in Bristol?

  4. The Galatians passage seems to indicate care for the poor as being absolutely central in Church planting. How does Woodlands ‘care for the poor’?

  5. Care for the poor is for everyone, part of the normal Christian life, what coaching or equipping do you need to help you in this ministry?

  6. What should the proportion be of caring for the poor inside the Church, as opposed to those outside of it, from the perspective of the New Testament?

  7. How has the work of the Holy Spirit in your life hanged your attitude towards generosity?

After the Fire Series: Caring for the Poor | Dave Mitchell at 11am | 20 June 2021

What does it look like to live in step with the Spirit?

20 June 2021 - 7pm Service

After the Fire Series: Caring for the Poor

Leading on from our Holy Spirit series, over the month of June we are going to be exploring what the Church looks like after Pentecost and how we can hold onto the power of the Spirit in our everyday lives.

We’ll be looking to the Bible to see what the early Church was like after this transformed experience of the gift of the Spirit. What should we look like today if the Spirit is at work in our midst as a Church?

This week we’re having a special offering for International Justice Mission to raise funds for another rescue mission supported by our church members. If you would like to give, please visit our IJM page:

Also - remember our 7pm service looked at the same topic and Matt Dobson shared a message with us. Check it out!

DISCUSSION NOTES

INTRODUCTION

Read Acts 4:32-36 and Galatians 2:10

One of the revolutionary and attractive qualities about the early Church is the way they cared for the poor, and not just their own poor but vulnerable people in their wider communities. 

  1. Why do you think there was such generosity in the Church as described in Acts 4: 32-36.

  2. What do you think the impact of the Church’s charitable work is on its witness into the world?

  3. What is your definition of poverty? Where would you find that kind of poverty in Bristol?

  4. The Galatians passage seems to indicate care for the poor as being absolutely central in Church planting. How does Woodlands ‘care for the poor’?

  5. Care for the poor is for everyone, part of the normal Christian life, what coaching or equipping do you need to help you in this ministry?

  6. What should the proportion be of caring for the poor inside the Church, as opposed to those outside of it, from the perspective of the New Testament?

  7. How has the work of the Holy Spirit in your life hanged your attitude towards generosity?

After the Fire Series: Caring for the Poor | Matt Dobson at 7pm | 20 June 2021

What does it look like to live in step with the Spirit?

20 June 2021 - 7pm Service

After the Fire Series: Caring for the Poor

Leading on from our Holy Spirit series, over the month of June we are going to be exploring what the Church looks like after Pentecost and how we can hold onto the power of the Spirit in our everyday lives.

We’ll be looking to the Bible to see what the early Church was like after this transformed experience of the gift of the Spirit. What should we look like today if the Spirit is at work in our midst as a Church?

This week we’re having a special offering for International Justice Mission to raise funds for another rescue mission supported by our church members. If you would like to give, please visit our IJM page:

Also - remember our 11am service looked at the same topic and Dave Mitchell shared a message with us. Check it out!

DISCUSSION NOTES

INTRODUCTION

Read Acts 4:32-36. Galatians 2:10

One of the revolutionary and attractive qualities about the early Church is the way they cared for the poor, and not just their own poor but vulnerable people in their wider communities. 

  1. Why do you think there was such generosity in the Church as described in Acts 4: 32-36.

  2. What do you think the impact of the Church’s charitable work is on its witness into the world?

  3. What is your definition of poverty? Where would you find that kind of poverty in Bristol?

  4. The Galatians passage seems to indicate care for the poor as being absolutely central in Church planting. How does Woodlands ‘care for the poor’?

  5. If care for the poor is for everyone, part of the normal Christian life, what coaching or equipping do you need to help you in this ministry?

  6. What should the proportion be of caring for the poor inside the Church, as opposed to those outside of it, from the perspective of the New Testament?

  7. How has the work of the Holy Spirit in your life hanged your attitude towards generosity?

Woodies Kids | Giving Thanks

Welcome to the Woodies Kids blog.

this week are thinking about…

Giving Thanks

In the Cheeky Panda treehouse the pandas are trying to think of a gift to get CJ for her birthday. They order pink ice skates, but pink iced cakes arrive and are all broken.

They are really sad that they messed up her birthday, but CJ reminds them that it's their friendship she is most thankful for! They learn that there is always something to be thankful for, because every good gift comes from God.

The Birthday Gift I wonder how you might have felt if your

birthday gift had arrived all broken? How might you feel if the gift you had given to

someone arrived all broken? What did you think about CJ’s response to her friends?

I wonder how you might have felt if your birthday gift had arrived all broken? How might you feel if the gift you had given to someone arrived all broken? What did you think about CJ’s response to her friends?

After the Fire Series: All Nations | Tim Dobson at 7pm | 13 June 2021

What does it look like to live in step with the Spirit?

13 June 2021 - 7pm Service

After the Fire Series: All Nations

Leading on from our Holy Spirit series, over the month of June we are going to be exploring what the Church looks like after Pentecost and how we can hold onto the power of the Spirit in our everyday lives.

We’ll be looking to the Bible to see what the early Church was like after this transformed experience of the gift of the Spirit. What should we look like today if the Spirit is at work in our midst as a Church?

It’s our Global Partners Weekend and we are celebrating the forty different ministries we support around the globe. Remember, our 11am service looked at the same topic and Hazel Askew shared a message with us. Check it out!

DISCUSSION NOTES

INTRODUCTION

One of the big themes of the New Testament is that of ‘Inclusion’; of the inclusion of the non-Jewish or Gentile world into the community of the people of God. 

Acts 10 tells the story of one Gentile household becoming part of the Church, as evidenced by a remarkable flow of supernatural signs and a Pentecostal outpouring in the home of Cornelius, a Roman Centurion.

This weekend we have focused on our own global partners, and I hope you can pick up on things they shared on Saturday and Sunday. Some questions you could consider are

  1. If you have been on a global mission trip can you tell your story to your group? What short term or long term affect did it have on you?

  2. Is ‘missionary’ a rather negative word nowadays, associated with imperialism? What is your perspective on the role of global mission?

  3. What is a ‘reverse missionary’? Have you met one? What is that movement about?

  4. What do you think is the link between global mission and God’s ultimate plan of Salvation- including Jesus’ return!?

  5. Should we still encourage people to travel on mission? Isn’t it cheaper, more relevant and more environmentally appropriate for mission to be local and indigenous?

  6. What is the role of the Holy Spirit in sending people to all nations?

Consider ‘adopting’ a global partner as a group, and inviting them to your group on Zoom and finding out about their story and calling.

After the Fire Series: All Nations | Hazel Askew at 11am | 13 June 2021

What does it look like to live in step with the Spirit?

13 June 2021 - 11am Service

After the Fire Series: All Nations

Leading on from our Holy Spirit series, over the month of June we are going to be exploring what the Church looks like after Pentecost and how we can hold onto the power of the Spirit in our everyday lives.

We’ll be looking to the Bible to see what the early Church was like after this transformed experience of the gift of the Spirit. What should we look like today if the Spirit is at work in our midst as a Church?

It’s our Global Partners Weekend and we are celebrating the forty different ministries we support around the globe. Remember, our 7pm service will be looking at the same topic and Tim Dobson will be sharing a message with us. Check it out!

DISCUSSION NOTES

INTRODUCTION

One of the big themes of the New Testament is that of ‘Inclusion’; of the inclusion of the non-Jewish or Gentile world into the community of the people of God. 

Acts 10 tells the story of one Gentile household becoming part of the Church, as evidenced by a remarkable flow of supernatural signs and a Pentecostal outpouring in the home of Cornelius, a Roman Centurion.

This weekend we have focused on our own global partners, and I hope you can pick up on things they shared on Saturday and Sunday. Some questions you could consider are

  1. If you have been on a global mission trip can you tell your story to your group? What short term or long term affect did it have on you?

  2. Is ‘missionary’ a rather negative word nowadays, associated with imperialism? What is your perspective on the role of global mission?

  3. What is a ‘reverse missionary’? Have you met one? What is that movement about?

  4. What do you think is the link between global mission and God’s ultimate plan of Salvation- including Jesus’ return!?

  5. Should we still encourage people to travel on mission? Isn’t it cheaper, more relevant and more environmentally appropriate for mission to be local and indigenous?

  6. What is the role of the Holy Spirit in sending people to all nations?

Consider ‘adopting’ a global partner as a group, and inviting them to your group on Zoom and finding out about their story and calling.

Woodies Kids | Praising God

Welcome to the Woodies Kids blog.

this week are thinking about…

praising god

Even on bad days, it does us good to praise God because it reminds us of how good he is, and how much he loves us. In the Cheeky Panda treehouse the pandas have been nominated for an award but don't win it. They learn that praise is important in every situation, because it shows God how much we love him. Just as Paul and Silas praised God when they were locked in prison, we should praise God because he is good every day!

Let’s make!

Find a small, empty plastic bottle with a screw top. Half fill it with either dried beans, rice or lentils. Seal the top, tightly. Make sure it makes a great sound when you shake it. Decorate your shaker with stickers, glitter, paper shapes etc!

After the Fire Series: Spreading the Flame | Rob Scott-Cook at 8:30am | 6 June 2021

6 June 2021 - 11am Service

After the Fire Series: Spreading the Fire

Leading on from our Holy Spirit series, over the month of June we are going to be exploring what the Church looks like after Pentecost and how we can hold onto the power of the Spirit in our everyday lives.

We’ll be looking to the Bible to see what the early Church was like after this transformed experience of the gift of the Spirit. What should we look like today if the Spirit is at work in our midst as a Church?

Remember, later today at the 11am and 7pm services we’ll hear Rob Scott-Cook and Rachel Riddall share about the same topic. Go check it out!

DISCUSSION NOTES

INTRODUCTION

In the 1920’s a quietly influential book was published called ‘The Spontaneous expansion of the Church’ by Roland Allen, an Anglican minister and former missionary in China. He celebrated the natural evangelism of often uneducated new believers as opposed to the formal professionalism of missionaries and bishops. Church growth happens when ordinary Church members have had real encounters with Jesus and have confidence to share what they have found with their communities.

In the book of Acts, (Read 11:19-22) we hear of the spontaneous establishing of a Church in Antioch. We don’t know anything about the women and men who shared the good news, but we do know it spilled out to the gentiles as well as Jews. The world changing dynamic of the gospel being shared and a church founded with non-Jews was initiated not by the apostles but an anonymous group of people who had WITNESSED and been changed by the events of Pentecost!

  1. What was the global impact of events that started in Jerusalem (Acts 2) at Pentecost? Do you think the people in Acts 11:20 were the same as those in Acts 2? How were they equipped to be evangelists?

  2. What is your definition of the word witness? What is the link between what you experience and what you say?

  3. What could you be a witness about as far as your faith is concerned? How does the Holy Spirit help you?

  4. Witness intimidation is a real phenomenon. How does witness intimidation affect you?

  5. Sometimes people say ‘everyone is a witness, but some are bad witnesses’. What do they mean?

  6. It is sometimes said witness can be divided between those who ‘go and tell’ and those who say ‘come and see’. Which are you? Where do you feel confident to invite people to come and see?

Usually churches grow because their members have confidence to invite people to their services. As we come out of pandemic what would Church look like for you to want to invite your friends to it?

After the Fire Series: Spreading the Flame | Rachel Riddall at 7pm | 6 June 2021

What does it look like to live in step with the Spirit?

6 June 2021 - 7pm Service

After the Fire Series: Spreading the Flame

Leading on from our Holy Spirit series, over the month of June we are going to be exploring what the Church looks like after Pentecost and how we can hold onto the power of the Spirit in our everyday lives.

We’ll be looking to the Bible to see what the early Church was like after this transformed experience of the gift of the Spirit. What should we look like today if the Spirit is at work in our midst as a Church?

Remember, our 11am service looked at the same topic and Rob Scott-Cook shared a message with us. Check it out!

DISCUSSION NOTES

INTRODUCTION

In the 1920’s a quietly influential book was published called ‘The Spontaneous expansion of the Church’ by Roland Allen, an Anglican minister and former missionary in China. He celebrated the natural evangelism of often uneducated new believers as opposed to the formal professionalism of missionaries and bishops. Church growth happens when ordinary Church members have had real encounters with Jesus and have confidence to share what they have found with their communities.

In the book of Acts, (Read 11:19-22) we hear of the spontaneous establishing of a Church in Antioch. We don’t know anything about the women and men who shared the good news, but we do know it spilled out to the gentiles as well as Jews. The world changing dynamic of the gospel being shared and a church founded with non-Jews was initiated not by the apostles but an anonymous group of people who had WITNESSED and been changed by the events of Pentecost!

  1. What was the global impact of events that started in Jerusalem (Acts 2) at Pentecost? Do you think the people in Acts 11:20 were the same as those in Acts 2? How were they equipped to be evangelists?

  2. What is your definition of the word witness? What is the link between what you experience and what you say?

  3. What could you be a witness about as far as your faith is concerned? How does the Holy Spirit help you?

  4. Witness intimidation is a real phenomenon. How does witness intimidation affect you?

  5. Sometimes people say ‘everyone is a witness, but some are bad witnesses’. What do they mean?

  6. It is sometimes said witness can be divided between those who ‘go and tell’ and those who say ‘come and see’. Which are you? Where do you feel confident to invite people to come and see?

Usually churches grow because their members have confidence to invite people to their services. As we come out of pandemic what would Church look like for you to want to invite your friends to it?

After the Fire Series: Spreading the Flame | Rob Scott-Cook at 11am | 6 June 2021

What does it look like to live in step with the Spirit?

6 June 2021 - 11am Service

After the Fire Series: Spreading the Flame

Leading on from our Holy Spirit series, over the month of June we are going to be exploring what the Church looks like after Pentecost and how we can hold onto the power of the Spirit in our everyday lives.

We’ll be looking to the Bible to see what the early Church was like after this transformed experience of the gift of the Spirit. What should we look like today if the Spirit is at work in our midst as a Church?

Remember, our 7pm service will be looking at the same topic and Rachel Riddall will be sharing a message with us. Check it out!

DISCUSSION NOTES

INTRODUCTION

In the 1920’s a quietly influential book was published called ‘The Spontaneous expansion of the Church’ by Roland Allen, an Anglican minister and former missionary in China. He celebrated the natural evangelism of often uneducated new believers as opposed to the formal professionalism of missionaries and bishops. Church growth happens when ordinary Church members have had real encounters with Jesus and have confidence to share what they have found with their communities.

In the book of Acts, (Read 11:19-22) we hear of the spontaneous establishing of a Church in Antioch. We don’t know anything about the women and men who shared the good news, but we do know it spilled out to the gentiles as well as Jews. The world changing dynamic of the gospel being shared and a church founded with non-Jews was initiated not by the apostles but an anonymous group of people who had WITNESSED and been changed by the events of Pentecost!

  1. What was the global impact of events that started in Jerusalem (Acts 2) at Pentecost? Do you think the people in Acts 11:20 were the same as those in Acts 2? How were they equipped to be evangelists?

  2. What is your definition of the word witness? What is the link between what you experience and what you say?

  3. What could you be a witness about as far as your faith is concerned? How does the Holy Spirit help you?

  4. Witness intimidation is a real phenomenon. How does witness intimidation affect you?

  5. Sometimes people say ‘everyone is a witness, but some are bad witnesses’. What do they mean?

  6. It is sometimes said witness can be divided between those who ‘go and tell’ and those who say ‘come and see’. Which are you? Where do you feel confident to invite people to come and see?

Usually churches grow because their members have confidence to invite people to their services. As we come out of pandemic what would Church look like for you to want to invite your friends to it?

Woodies Kids | How much do we mean to Jesus

Welcome to the Woodies Kids blog.

this week are thinking about…

unsplash-image-GwpXDLjNZ2E.jpg

How much do we mean to Jesus?

We are all like the sheep that wander away from the Shepherd, but Jesus always

comes to find us because he made each one of us and loves us. In the Cheeky Panda

treehouse Milo loses his custom-made guitar pick that is very special to him. They learn

that when God made each one of us, He only made one of us in the whole world, and He

loves us more than we could ever imagine!

Print out the image of the sheep below, cover it with cotton wool balls or Cheerios and mark the eyes and legs out in black. Play a game of hide and seek with the sheep!

Our Tiny Treasures Team are telling us all about their favourite bible stories over the next few weeks

Holy Spirit Series: Wind: Mystery of the Spirit | Neil Edbrooke at 8:30am | 30 May 2021

How can we thrive by living in partnership with the Holy Spirit?

30 May 2021 - 11am Service

Holy Spirit Series: Wind - Mystery of the Spirit

We wrap up our preaching series Holy Spirit with a message from Philip Jinadu on ‘Wind - Mystery of the Spirit’.

This May, we’ve been looking at key symbols used in the Bible to help us understand how to encounter and live life with the Spirit of God.

In this series, we’ll be unpacking scripture’s use of symbols describing the Holy Spirit as we try to better understand what it means to be a new creation and anointed with spiritual gifts. What is it that makes us well up from a deep place or speak in tongues? How do we deal with the mystical and transrational? How does God guide through the Spirit?

Remember, our 11am and 7pm services will be looking at the same topic and Philip Jinadu and Steve Ballard will be sharing with us. Check it out!

DISCUSSION NOTES

INTRODUCTION John 3:8, John 20 and Acts 2

In many languages, including Greek and Hebrew, the words for Wind, Spirit, Breath are interchangeable. Interestingly in two post resurrection accounts of impartation of the Spirit on the disciples, John 20 says ‘Jesus breathed on them and said receive the Spirit’ in Acts 2 as well as fire the Spirit comes like a mighty rushing wind.

  1. The wind of the Spirit is very tangible, but also mysterious (John 3:8). How do we recognise the tangible presence of the Spirit with us corporately or individually?

  2. Jesus said in John 5 ‘I only do what I see the Father doing’. He spoke about driving out demons by the Spirit of God. It seems as if Jesus sought to be guided by the Holy Spirit. How does God guide us through the Spirit?

  3. What keeps us in step with the Spirit, (or not) (Gal 5: 22-25)?

  4. How do we distinguish between our subjective experiences, our imagination and the

    guidance of God? What would you say to someone who says ‘God told me to do this..’ but it

    seems unwise or not quite right to you?

  5. How does the gift of discernment work in our lives as a Church community (c.f. Acts 13:2-3)

Holy Spirit Series: Wind - Mystery of the Spirit | Steve Ballard at 7pm | 30 May 2021

How can we thrive by living in partnership with the Holy Spirit?

30 May 2021 - 11am Service

Holy Spirit Series: Wind - Mystery of the Spirit

We wrap up our preaching series Holy Spirit with a message from Steve Ballard on ‘Wind - Mystery of the Spirit’.

This May, we’ve been looking at key symbols used in the Bible to help us understand how to encounter and live life with the Spirit of God.

In this series, we’ll be unpacking scripture’s use of symbols describing the Holy Spirit as we try to better understand what it means to be a new creation and anointed with spiritual gifts. What is it that makes us well up from a deep place or speak in tongues? How do we deal with the mystical and transrational? How does God guide through the Spirit?

Remember, our 11am service covered the same topic and Philip Jinadu shared a message with us. Check it out!

DISCUSSION NOTES

INTRODUCTION John 3:8, John 20 and Acts 2

In many languages, including Greek and Hebrew, the words for Wind, Spirit, Breath are interchangeable. Interestingly in two post resurrection accounts of impartation of the Spirit on the disciples, John 20 says ‘Jesus breathed on them and said receive the Spirit’ in Acts 2 as well as fire the Spirit comes like a mighty rushing wind.

  1. The wind of the Spirit is very tangible, but also mysterious (John 3:8). How do we recognise the tangible presence of the Spirit with us corporately or individually?

  2. Jesus said in John 5 ‘I only do what I see the Father doing’. He spoke about driving out demons by the Spirit of God. It seems as if Jesus sought to be guided by the Holy Spirit. How does God guide us through the Spirit?

  3. What keeps us in step with the Spirit, (or not) (Gal 5: 22-25)?

  4. How do we distinguish between our subjective experiences, our imagination and the

    guidance of God? What would you say to someone who says ‘God told me to do this..’ but it

    seems unwise or not quite right to you?

  5. How does the gift of discernment work in our lives as a Church community (c.f. Acts 13:2-3)

Holy Spirit Series: Wind - Mystery of the Spirit | Philip Jinadu at 11am | 30 May 2021

How can we thrive by living in partnership with the Holy Spirit?

30 May 2021 - 11am Service

Holy Spirit Series: Wind - Mystery of the Spirit

We wrap up our preaching series Holy Spirit with a message from Philip Jinadu on ‘Wind - Mystery of the Spirit’.

This May, we’ve been looking at key symbols used in the Bible to help us understand how to encounter and live life with the Spirit of God.

In this series, we’ll be unpacking scripture’s use of symbols describing the Holy Spirit as we try to better understand what it means to be a new creation and anointed with spiritual gifts. What is it that makes us well up from a deep place or speak in tongues? How do we deal with the mystical and transrational? How does God guide through the Spirit?

Remember, our 7pm service will be looking at the same topic and Steve Ballard will be sharing a message with us. Check it out!

DISCUSSION NOTES

INTRODUCTION John 3:8, John 20 and Acts 2

In many languages, including Greek and Hebrew, the words for Wind, Spirit, Breath are interchangeable. Interestingly in two post resurrection accounts of impartation of the Spirit on the disciples, John 20 says ‘Jesus breathed on them and said receive the Spirit’ in Acts 2 as well as fire the Spirit comes like a mighty rushing wind.

  1. The wind of the Spirit is very tangible, but also mysterious (John 3:8). How do we recognise the tangible presence of the Spirit with us corporately or individually?

  2. Jesus said in John 5 ‘I only do what I see the Father doing’. He spoke about driving out demons by the Spirit of God. It seems as if Jesus sought to be guided by the Holy Spirit. How does God guide us through the Spirit?

  3. What keeps us in step with the Spirit, (or not) (Gal 5: 22-25)?

  4. How do we distinguish between our subjective experiences, our imagination and the

    guidance of God? What would you say to someone who says ‘God told me to do this..’ but it

    seems unwise or not quite right to you?

  5. How does the gift of discernment work in our lives as a Church community (c.f. Acts 13:2-3)

EcoChallenge for June: Pray for the Climate

EcoChallenge - June 2021.png

At Woodies, we are keen love God's creation and our People + Planet group is key in helping us to reduce our impact on the environment as a church. Our monthly EcoChallenges help everyone in church to take part from home.

June 2021: EcoChallege - “Pray for the Climate”

There are many actions we can take in the face of climate change. Some are personal, changing our own habits or what we buy. Some actions are collective- joining with others to call on those in power to act. But the most important thing we can as a church is pray! 

We would recommend using some of the Tearfund prayer resources, which will help you pray alongside other Christians about current live issues. You can find these at https://www.tearfund.org/campaigns/reboot-campaign/prayer-for-the-climate.

In particular we would suggest accessing Tearfund’s weekly prayer updates via SMS text messages which this year are focussing on the climate emergency. June will see the G7 conference hosted in Cornwall, in the lead up to the critical COP26 climate conference in Glasgow later in the year. We need to pray for wisdom and soft hearts for world leaders as they seek to craft a deal that will lead to meaningful action and change. Success will no doubt require countless miracles both small and large!

If you’d be interested in finding out more about the Woodlands People + Planet group, or have some feedback about the challenges, connect with us: