Two adult Sunday School classes, Royal Priesthood andPrayer in the Night, continue on Sunday mornings, and the Thursday Evening Zoom Bible Study is reading “He Speaks To Me” by Priscilla Shirer.
All Saints’ Bible Trivia Hour March 2!
Legacy Coalition Grandparenting Summit 2025
January 2025 Adult Discipleship Offerings
Grief Share Online begins January 13
New Adult Sunday School Class Starts Dec 8
Kitchen Help for the Bishop’s Visit
Adult Discipleship Offerings in October
Surviving the Holidays: Online Seminar November 8
Foundations for Ministry
4-6 p.m. in the Administrative Conference Room A workbook (cost: $40) provides weekly homework and guides the class through each lesson. A prerequisite for this class is Foundations for Ministry Year 1 – Old Testament. To register, please call or text Jim Morrison at 571.338.5774 or send email to adultdiscipleship@allsaintswoodbridge.org.
New Fall 2024 Sunday School Offerings for Adults and Youth Begin September 8
For Adults:
Come along with Josh Moore as he leads us through Henri Nouwen’s book The Genesee Diary beginning Sunday, September 8 in the Bishop’s Conference Room.
On finding that, in the clutter of his life, his intimacy with God was lacking, Nouwen spent several months living as a temporary monk at The Abbey of the Genesee in upstate New York. He hoped that there, free from the other distractions of his life, he could spend his time in undistracted work, worship, and meditative prayer.
Copies of The Genesee Diary will be available on the first day of class for $10. Used copies costing around $5 can also be purchased from Amazon or ThriftBooks.
Bible 101 is a revised course offered this fall for eight weeks beginning September 8 between services in the Administrative Conference Room. Led by Walt DeHoust, this class will introduce participants to the entire Bible using the central framework of the “Kingdom of God.”
The Kingdom of God is defined as God’s people, in God’s place, enjoying God’s rule and blessing. The course will be a composite overview with occasional “stop-offs” for a closer look at God’s kingdom. The intent is to give participants a greater understanding of the central message of the Bible and the relationship between the Old and New Testaments, and a stronger confidence in personal Bible study.
For Youth:
Middle School Our brand new Sunday School class for all middle school students starts September 8 in the Multi-Purpose Room. Each week, we’ll explore aspects of our Christian faith through the Sunday readings, our liturgy, and other Anglican traditions. Join us for activities, snacks, and lively discussions as we grow in faith together!
High School Students in 9th - 12th grade are invited to the downstairs Multi-Purpose Room for a deep-dive into the four gospels of the New Testament.
CCoM Open House September 14
Have Fun, Enjoy Great Food, and Help a Worthy Cause All at the Same Time!
Thursday Evening Zoom Bible Study continues in October
Adult Sunday School Offering: Henri Nouwen's The Genesee Diary
Adult Sunday School Offering: Bible 101
Help Us Give Back to First Fruits Farm on September 4
GriefShare begins September 9
7-9 p.m. on Zoom A GriefShare support group is a safe, welcoming place where people understand the difficult emotions of grief. Register here: www.griefshare.org/groups/245444. Questions? Contact Deacon Julie Tilton.
Stephen Ministers Provide Emotional and Spiritual Support
There are times when every one of us experiences difficulties and could benefit from meeting with a Stephen Minister once a week for emotional and spiritual support while we find our way through the valley.
What is a Stephen Minister?
Stephen Ministers are members of our congregation who have received 50 hours of caregiving training to minister to people experiencing a crisis, facing a challenge, or simply going through a tough time. They are under the supervision of the congregation’s Stephen Leaders (Deacons Andy Terry and Julie Tilton.)
A Stephen Minister will meet with you privately and confidentially on a weekly basis to pray, listen, care, encourage, support, and remind you of Christ’s presence in your life. Women meet with a female Stephen Minister, and men meet with a male Stephen Minister.
How do you get connected with a Stephen Minister?
Requests can be initiated by contacting a member of the clergy, including Deacon Julie Tilton (jtilton@allsaintswoodbridge.org ) or Deacon Andy Terry (andy.terry@andyterry.net), or by emailing caringministries@allsaintswoodbridge.org.
Food Giveaway Blessings Abound
by David Fawcett
The All Saints' monthly Food Giveaway is always a blessing for both those in the church and those who come in for food and for prayer.
To give everyone a closer look at how many blessings flow out of this event, here's a summary from the last one. It captures well how God moves in the most unexpected ways to meet the physical and the spiritual needs.
First the physical.
With the normal leadership group unavailable that day, Walt and Margie DeHoust stepped in to oversee everything for the July food pantry.
Things got off to a rocky start Friday morning (July 12) when Food Lion, the initial supplier, had no fruit or rice they were scheduled to provide.
Thankfully, Featherstone Elementary came to the rescue when they contacted All Saints’ to let us know they had leftover food from their give-away on Wednesday.
They said they had 18 bags. What they really had, though, were 18 very large bags each filled with five smaller bags packed with items the church usually gives out, including pasta sauce, tuna, soup, green beans and the much-needed canned fruit and bags of rice. Thankfully, a young teacher helped the DeHousts load the car since the bags were so heavy.
The blessings continued when Larry Moyer stepped in at the last minute in place of Jim Morrison (who was out of town) and graciously volunteered to drive the 200+ miles round trip to First Fruits Farm in Maryland.
Then unexpected provisions continued the next day at the food pantry. There was a big shortage of maseca. But then Andrew Gray showed up with a truckload of it followed by another person who brought more.
Also, more volunteers stepped in to make sure every role was filled.
“It just seemed to me that every time I thought of something that had to be done I'd turn around and there would be someone doing it on their own, unsolicited,” Walt DeHoust said. “This happened at least five or six times.”
As far as prayer goes, we had four prayer warriors: David Fawcett, Kat Zwingle, David Lee, and in another unexpected blessing, Eduardo Steves, whose schedule allowed him to make it this time. Eduardo is bilingual, which really, really helps with mostly Hispanic people coming in for prayer.
We had 32 individuals come through for prayer, most in groups of two or three.
As always, God was good in giving us the time to pray for each person without feeling rushed or having someone wait too long.
All the prayer recipients were either African or Hispanic with most of them having a home church and a solid faith. Some kids were with adults, but most of those who came through were adults.
We had at least seven come through who are regular prayer recipients.
It was a great opportunity for outreach. One couple planned on signing up their kids for VBS. Another couple planned on coming to a Sunday service. A young pregnant lady got information about Life First
The needs were varied and, in many cases, heavy-duty.
There was a woman from Honduras who, along with her family, said she left everything behind in her native country for fear of being killed. Another woman needed prayer for her 28-year-old son who was going in for his sixth surgery that next day for intestinal issues.
“The biggest takeaway for me was how grateful again these people are for prayer,” David Fawcett said. “Despite the challenges they are facing, they come in with smiles on their faces with hearts full of praise. There is no griping or woe-is-me. It’s very convicting.”

















