Memory Verse

Theme for 2026: Cultivate Christlikeness

 

 

What’s on this month

Sunday Services 10:30 am:

June 7th : Phil Sparkes

June 14th : Sing & Share service followed by a Bring & Share lunch

June 21st :  SJ Harknett – Fathers’ Day

June 28th : Stuart Langston

 

Monday Meet – weekly at 2:30 pm at the Room, excepting public holidays and the summer holiday.

June 1st : Margaret Cook

June 8th : The Leprosy Mission

June 15th  : Fyl Bevan

June 22nd : TBA

June 29th : Darren Rozier

 

Bible Study & Prayer  – Tuesdays 7:00 pm at Margaret’s

June 2nd : Margaret Cook

June 9th : Rita Langston

June 16th : Missionary Prayer – Graham Fuller

June 23rd : Phil Sparkes

June 30th : Margaret Cook

 

Christianity Explored – weekly 7 pm

Commences Thursday June 11th for 7 weeks

Upcoming Events

You are very welcome to come to any of our events:

 

 

 

 

 

Woolpit Village Website

To find out more about Woolpit, visit http://woolpit.org/

Meetings

An excellent way to spend time in fellowship together.

Monday Meet  

  • 2:30pm-3:30pm usually weekly at The Room
  • An interesting speaker
  • A  break for tea or coffee
  • A short word  of encouragement from the bible.

 Contact Margaret 01359 240565

 or Phil & Jan 01359 240502

 Bible Study & Prayer

  • Tuesdays at Margaret's at 7:00pm 
  Contact Margaret 01359 240565

Christianity Explored - What's the best news you've ever heard?

  • Thursdays at 7pm starting 11th June and running until 23rd July
 Contact Rita 01359 760107

Coffee and Prayer

  • Saturday 10:30am once every 2 months at Margaret's 
  • Next Coffee & Prayer will be on July 11th

 

I’ve  done a few things in my life that could reasonably be described as “questionable decision-making with a side of adrenaline.”

I’ve jumped out of an aeroplane—perfectly good, fully functioning, mid-flight—on purpose. I’ve run a half marathon, which is essentially paying money to experience prolonged discomfort in public while questioning every life choice that led you to kilometre 18. I’ve also been white water rafting, where I discovered that “paddling in sync” is less about teamwork and more about not falling out while pretending you know what you’re doing.

And then there’s the small matter of completing a degree in English Literature… while being dyslexic.

Yes, really.

That particular adventure involved a lot of reading, a lot of re-reading, and a deep, personal relationship with spellcheck. If determination burned calories, I’d have outrun my half marathon time just by finishing my dissertation. Still, I did it—which either proves I’m resilient, slightly stubborn, or blissfully unaware of when to quit. Possibly all three.

So yes, I’ve had my fair share of “that’s a bit mad” moments.

But strangely, none of those quite compare to the most unexpected journey I’ve ever taken: setting out to figure out whether Jesus is actually who He says He is.

Now, to be clear, this wasn’t a dramatic, lightning-bolt, fall-off-my-chair kind of moment. There were no booming voices or sudden urges to start wearing sandals all year-round. It was more of a slow, curious wandering—like opening a book you didn’t think you’d be interested in, and then realising you can’t quite put it down.

At first, I approached it like I approach most things: cautiously, with a bit of scepticism, and the quiet confidence of someone who assumes they probably won’t be convinced. After all, believing that Jesus is Lord and Saviour is no small claim. It’s not like deciding to try yoga or take up sourdough baking. It’s… bigger.

Much bigger.

And yet, the more I looked into it, the more I found myself surprised. Not necessarily by grand, dramatic revelations, but by small, steady shifts. Questions I hadn’t thought to ask. Answers that didn’t feel forced. A sense that maybe—just maybe—this wasn’t as far-fetched as I’d assumed.

Which, if I’m honest, felt slightly more unsettling than jumping out of a plane.

Because at least with skydiving, you know exactly when the scary part is coming. There’s a countdown. There’s a door. There’s a very clear moment where you think, “Right, this is it.”

This journey? No countdown. No dramatic leap. Just a gradual realisation that something significant might actually be true.

And that changes things.

It doesn’t mean I suddenly became someone else overnight, or that I stopped being me—slightly cautious, occasionally sarcastic, and still very much reliant on autocorrect. But it did mean I started to see things differently. To think differently. To consider that faith isn’t about switching your brain off, but perhaps about opening it up in a new way.

Looking back, it’s funny. Of all the things I’ve done that sound impressive on paper—the skydiving, the running, the rafting, the degree—the one that has probably required the most courage hasn’t involved physical risk at all.

It’s been the willingness to explore something deeper. To ask bigger questions. To admit I might not have everything figured out.

So yes, I’ve done some “crazy” things in my time.

But this one?

This might just be the boldest of them all.

Rita


Monday Meet

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