As we prepare for the season of Lent, Bellshill Central Parish Church invites you to journey with us through reflection, prayer, and community. Lent is a time to slow down, to listen, and to prepare our hearts for the mystery of Easter. Through weekly reflections, Holy Week activities, and moments of quiet devotion, we walk together in faith and hope.
Weekly Lent Reflections
Each week during Lent, we share a short reflection with Scripture and prayer—available in worship, on social media, and in printed form. These reflections invite us to consider themes of wilderness, repentance, discipleship, and grace, helping us draw closer to Christ in everyday life.
Holy Week Daily Reflections
From Palm Sunday to Holy Saturday, we offer daily reflections to guide your prayer and contemplation. Each includes a Scripture passage, a short meditation, and a prayer—designed to be read at home, in church, or wherever you find a quiet moment. These reflections follow the footsteps of Jesus through the final days of His earthly ministry.
Holy Week Activities
Monday 30 March – Prayers for Holy Week Join us via Zoom for a quiet time of prayer and reflection as Holy Week begins. A gentle space to pause, pray, and prepare.
Wednesday 1 April – Film Night We gather to watch a film that invites deeper reflection on faith, sacrifice, and hope. All are welcome—bring a friend and stay for discussion afterwards.
Thursday 2 April – Communion Service On Maundy Thursday, we remember the Last Supper and Christ’s command to love one another. Our evening communion service is a time of sacred remembrance and shared grace.
Friday 3 April – Good Friday Open Doors The church will be open from 10am for quiet reflection. Reflections will be offered on the hour at 10am, 11am, 12pm and 1pm. Come and go as you wish. Sit, rest, remember. All are welcome.
A Shared Journey
Lent and Holy Week are not only about solemnity—they are about love, renewal, and the promise of resurrection. Whether you join us for worship, reflection, or quiet prayer, you are part of this journey. Let us walk together toward Easter morning, trusting that God is with us every step of the way.
Leader: The Word has become flesh and dwells among us. The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it.
People: We gather to rejoice in God’s gift of love, still bright in our hearts after Christmas Day.
Leader: Come, let us celebrate the Child who brings peace, the Saviour who brings hope, the Lord who brings life.
People: With grateful hearts and joyful voices, we come to worship the God who is with us— yesterday, today, and always.
All: Glory to God in the highest! Let heaven and earth rejoice, for Christ is born and Christ is here.
Prayer of Approach
God of light and life, we come before you still carrying the glow of Christmas joy. In the quiet after celebration, you meet us with peace that lingers and hope that does not fade.
As we gather in your presence, open our hearts to the wonder of the Word made flesh. Let the story of Christ’s birth shape our living, guide our choices, and renew our trust in your unfailing love.
Draw us close, O God, that we may hear your voice, receive your grace, and offer our worship with gratitude and joy. Through Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen.
Matthew 2:13-23 The Escape to Egypt
13 When they had gone, an angel of the Lord appeared to Joseph in a dream. “Get up,” he said, “take the child and his mother and escape to Egypt. Stay there until I tell you, for Herod is going to search for the child to kill him.”
14 So he got up, took the child and his mother during the night and left for Egypt, 15 where he stayed until the death of Herod. And so was fulfilled what the Lord had said through the prophet: “Out of Egypt I called my son.”[a]
16 When Herod realized that he had been outwitted by the Magi, he was furious, and he gave orders to kill all the boys in Bethlehem and its vicinity who were two years old and under, in accordance with the time he had learned from the Magi. 17 Then what was said through the prophet Jeremiah was fulfilled:
18 “A voice is heard in Ramah, weeping and great mourning, Rachel weeping for her children and refusing to be comforted, because they are no more.”[b]
The Return to Nazareth
19 After Herod died, an angel of the Lord appeared in a dream to Joseph in Egypt 20 and said, “Get up, take the child and his mother and go to the land of Israel, for those who were trying to take the child’s life are dead.”
21 So he got up, took the child and his mother and went to the land of Israel. 22 But when he heard that Archelaus was reigning in Judea in place of his father Herod, he was afraid to go there. Having been warned in a dream, he withdrew to the district of Galilee, 23 and he went and lived in a town called Nazareth. So was fulfilled what was said through the prophets, that he would be called a Nazarene.
Psalm 148 – A Reflective Paraphrase
Praise rises from every corner of creation. From the highest heavens to the quietest places of earth, let all that exists turn its face toward God.
Sun and moon, steady in your courses— shine with gratitude. Stars scattered across the night— glimmer with praise. Skies above, vast and sheltering— hold your breath in wonder.
Let all things praise the One who spoke, and it was so; who commanded, and all things found their place.
Mountains lifting their heads to the sky, hills rolling gently across the land, oceans deep and mysterious, creatures great and small— praise the Lord.
Storm winds that obey His whisper, fire and frost, rain and snow, trees that root and rise, birds that soar and sing— praise the Lord.
People of every land and language, leaders and labourers, young and old, those who rejoice and those who seek hope— lift your hearts in praise.
For God’s name alone is holy, God’s glory stretches beyond the heavens, and God draws near to His people with strength, mercy, and love.
Let everything that has breath and everything that simply is offer praise to the Lord.
Responsive Reading – Psalm of Christmas Light
Leader: The Lord is our light and our salvation; the brightness of Christ still shines among us.
People: We walk in the glow of God’s love, and we rejoice in the hope Christ brings.
Leader: Though the world may grow weary, God’s faithfulness remains steadfast.
People: The Child of Bethlehem is our strength, our peace, and our joy.
Leader: Come, let us lift our hearts in praise, for God’s mercy is new every morning.
All: Glory be to God, whose light no darkness can overcome.
Intercession Fathering, Mothering God, We pray for all children who have never known or who have lost the loving care and protection of their parents… For all children whose days begin and end in fear and uncertainty… For all children who have no one to care for their comfort and wellbeing… For all children unsheltered and uncomforted… For all children alone and afraid….
And we pray too for all those who have lost someone they love through actions driven by the fear and violence of others.
Fathering, Mothering God – keep them all in Your sight, hear their cries and right their wrongs, now and in eternity. Amen
Benediction
May the peace of the Christ‑child rest upon you, the joy of the angels surround you, and the light of God guide your steps as you go into the days ahead.
And may the blessing of God Almighty— Father, Son, and Holy Spirit— be with you and remain with you always. Amen.
Unfortunately all those involved in our Zoom prayers are at an important meeting of the Kirk Session and Board with the Planning and Implimentation Team this evening, so our prayers are once again “virtual”.
GatheringWords
God of love WE COME IN EXPECTATION OF MEETING YOU TODAY
God of justice WE COME TO HEAR YOUR WORDS OF LOVE AND FAITHFULNESS
God of the now and not yet WE COME TO WORSHIP IN SPIRIT AND IN TRUTH
meet us and renew us as we worship together.
Opening Prayer
Almighty God, you have built your Church on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ himself being the chief cornerstone.
Join us together in unity of spirit by their teaching, that we may become a holy temple, acceptable to you:
through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever. Amen.
Prayer of Lament
Lord Jesus, many of us are waiting for you: the war-torn are waiting for peace, the hungry are waiting for bread. the refugees are waiting for a homeland, the sick are waiting for healers. Have you forgotten us? O Lord, come quickly, we pray. Amen.
Malachi 4:1-2
The Day of the Lord Is Coming
4 The Lord Almighty says, “The day is coming when all proud and evil people will burn like straw. On that day they will burn up, and there will be nothing left of them. 2 But for you who obey me, my saving power will rise on you like the sun and bring healing like the sun’s rays. You will be as free and happy as calves let out of a stall.
98 Sing a new song to the Lord; he has done wonderful things! By his own power and holy strength he has won the victory. 2 The Lord announced his victory; he made his saving power known to the nations. 3 He kept his promise to the people of Israel with loyalty and constant love for them. All people everywhere have seen the victory of our God.
4 Sing for joy to the Lord, all the earth; praise him with songs and shouts of joy! 5 Sing praises to the Lord! Play music on the harps! 6 Blow trumpets and horns, and shout for joy to the Lord, our king.
7 Roar, sea, and every creature in you; sing, earth, and all who live on you! 8 Clap your hands, you rivers; you hills, sing together with joy before the Lord, 9 because he comes to rule the earth. He will rule the peoples of the world with justice and fairness.
Thoughts from rev Marjory Mclean on the readings:
Another few weeks and your congregation will be singing these words from Malachi in the third verse of Hark! the herald angels sing: ‘Hail, the Sun of Righteousness! Light and life to all he brings, risen with healing in his wings.’
The challenge here is slotting these words back into their context in this short reading, which contrasts the destruction of the wicked with bringing life and healing to those who revere God’s name – not to the nice and kind and thoughtful – but to those who revere God’s name. What, for you, is the relationship of goodness and faith, of wickedness and faithlessness, in a world containing some highly unattractive holy people and many lovely humanists? And then how does judgement and apocalyptic work in your world-view, assuming you’re not a universalist?
As for the Psalm, which backs up the idea of victory over God’s enemies, notice that it forms a trio of concentric circles: vv 1-3 describe Israel’s cause for rejoicing, vv 4-6 invite the whole human race to praise God, and vv 7-9 extend the invitation to the whole earth and creation.
This psalm can provide a helpful pattern for prayer. Firstly, in vv 1 – 3 we have an opportunity to give thanks and recognise all that God has done, the marvellous works, the steadfast love and faithfulness – perhaps reflecting on how God has been present in our lives individually and as a community.
In vv 4-6 the invitation to praise God might allow us to sing praise together, or to let a new song emerge depending on your style of worship this could be an opportunity to learn a new song that captures this theme, or to hold space for the Holy Spirit to raise up a new song in us and an opportunity to worship in a free and open more charismatic style.
Vv 7 – 9 encompasses the sea and hills, the world and all who live in it, how might we join with Creation in worshipping and honouring God, and how might we join with the rest of the world – either imagining a more missional side to our worship, or an invitation to notice, recognise and join with the wonderful God honouring things that are already going on in our communities.
Please listen to this reflective worship song as we reflect on the Word of God, and the thoughts from Rev Marjory Mclean.
Prayers for others and ourselves
God of today, yesterday and forever, You were there at the beginning. Your Spirit, waiting, Your Word, waiting to be spoken. We seek You now, in this time not just for ourselves, but for those around us that we know and love, for those around us we are unsure of and do not yet know, for those we find it difficult to relate to, and for those who we do not trust or whom we fear. In Your mercy, will You give us the humility and strength, to be Your hands of grace, and to bring Your way of mercy into every encounter and situation where You have blessed us to be, and where we might find ourselves regardless.
We pray now for this church, and the communities in which we live, for the families, friends and neighbours, for all those who have called this home for many years, and for those who are still searching for that place to become real, we bring before You now all those who come to our minds and those who You lay on our hearts to pray for now
we hold silence and lift our prayers to the God who leans in to hear our cry
[a moment of silence is held]
Lord in Your mercy HEAR OUR PRAYERS
We pray for all of creation, where there is famine and drought, where crops have failed or sources of food and sustenance have been damaged, destroyed or cut off, we ask for provision and for abundance where there is scarcity. In the midst of climbing global temperatures that would melt ice caps and irreparably damage habitat, as we see plastic and pollution in the oceans and other water sources, will You help us O God, to live more responsibly, that we might work with You and the creatures of this world, to tend to the earth and live well together.
[a moment of silence is held]
Lord in Your mercy HEAR OUR PRAYERS
As we see conflict and division both near to us and far from us, we seek peace and healing. Where there is violence in word and in action – may it cease. In the senseless attacks and killing of those perceived to be different or a threat, we cry out for mercy, for grace, for love to prevail and to win out over death and destruction. May all that fuels hatred be healed, May any agenda contrary to Your way of peace and love be removed, and may justice roll down like a mighty water, to refresh hearts and minds, to replenish cities laid waste, may hopes and dreams flourish once more that all might live in fullness and without fear.
[a moment of silence is held]
Lord in Your mercy HEAR OUR PRAYERS
We pray for our leaders and our governments. May they hold fast to what is right and just, and may we see policies, decisions and actions that make a fairer place for us all to live. we call for an end to poverty of imagination and of circumstance, an end to political grandstanding, and that isolationist politics would cease allowing a better way to emerge, where the hallmarks are grace, compassion, mercy and equity for all, and that dignity would be recognised and celebrated, rather than despised and denigrated.
[a moment of silence is held]
Lord in Your mercy HEAR OUR PRAYERS
We pray now for ourselves, God of compassion meet us here in our need.
[a moment of silence is held]
Lord in Your great mercy, hear the prayers that have been said, whispered, imagined and felt. We trust them to Your grace and mercy.
And we join now in the words that Jesus taught those early followers to say together Our Father…
PRAYERS FOR BELLSHILL: CENTRAL PARISH CHURCH OF SCOTLAND Please uphold in your prayers tonight the Kirk Session and Congregational Board as we meet with the Presbytery Planning and implimentation Committee. Please pray for those who lead our worship, prepare our sanctuary, look after our finances, and all the work that goes on in the background. Pray that we continue to be a Christ centred, Spirit led church. Reaching out to those who love the Lord, who want to love the Lord, and who are yet to know and love the Lord.
Blessing
God our Maker, may we bring into being the world that You dream of. Christ our Saviour, may we be the followers and healers You call us to be. Spirit of God, may we know You guiding and comforting us and all whom we meet. Send us now to be Your presence in the world, to live out Your will, for Your glory. Amen
As we gather remotely for Prayers this Monday evening we are called to a season of Remembrance. We will honour those who have died for peace on 11th November at 11am.
Let us come together in prayer:
Eternal God, We meet in solemn remembrance of those who lived and died in service of their country. We give thanks for their lives, and pray that You would enable us to be worthy of the sacrifice made on our behalf.
In this space we remember particularly those whose names are etched upon memorials, in town churches, town squares, and in the hearts of family long gone.
May they rest in peace, and rise in glory. May our time of remembrance inspire us to be peacemakers in our own time. In Jesus name, Amen.
Prayer of approach and confession For ever and ever, Lord God. That is Your promise to us. A promise made before time began. A promise kept until beyond eternity. A promise that brings us here today. Because forever starts today, God. It rose with the first glimpse of dawn. It breathed in the stirring of the morning air. It sang in the waking chorus of creation. And it lives in all of us because You, in Your goodness, have made it so.
This moment in time, God, is nothing in the grand scale of Your awesome plan. But it is our opportunity to recognise that every second, of every minute of every hour, of every day is everything, because of Your limitless love.
We praise all that You are, Creator God. We stand amazed at all that You give and we celebrate Your faithfulness to us in our failure to appreciate the price of Your promises and the cost of Your creativity.
When You created the world, Lord, You presented it to us as perfect. A place of growth and fruitfulness. but we misused it and left it broken and disjointed.
When You breathed life into humanity You chose and cherished us. But we broke away from Your gentle arms and dismissed Your love. When You came to us, You wept with us, You suffered for us and You gave up Your all for us. But we forgot the vastness of Your sacrifice and took it for granted. We cannot fathom the scale and the nature Of Your forgiveness Yet still we seek it and need it. And still You offer it.
For ever and ever, God. That is Your promise as proclaimed in Your Son, Jesus Christ. So here today, we proclaim ourselves a forgiven people, refreshed by Your grace and ready to serve You. We proclaim ourselves forever people. Committed to sharing in Your work. We proclaim ourselves Your people, now and always. AMEN.
This passage looks forward to the time that is to come when God’s kingdom will be fully established. It is aspirational, and is communicating about a time when peace and justice will be known fully to the people of God. This reading would be particularly appropriate for Remembrance Sunday as we look forward to a time when there will be no more war, and when the instruments of war will be transformed into objects of fruitful production. The prophet speaks of a time of peace and security for everyone (v3- 4) where people will be able to enjoy the fruit of their labour.
Verses 6-8 communicate a powerful message of those who are outside the norm being welcomed into the fold. God will ensure that those who have been excluded find themselves included, known and part of the family of God.
Micah 4:1-8
The Mountain of the Lord
4 In the last days
the mountain of the Lord’s temple will be established as the highest of the mountains; it will be exalted above the hills, and peoples will stream to it.
2 Many nations will come and say,
“Come, let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to the temple of the God of Jacob. He will teach us his ways, so that we may walk in his paths.” The law will go out from Zion, the word of the Lord from Jerusalem. 3 He will judge between many peoples and will settle disputes for strong nations far and wide. They will beat their swords into plowshares and their spears into pruning hooks. Nation will not take up sword against nation, nor will they train for war anymore. 4 Everyone will sit under their own vine and under their own fig tree, and no one will make them afraid, for the Lord Almighty has spoken. 5 All the nations may walk in the name of their gods, but we will walk in the name of the Lord our God for ever and ever.
The Lord’s Plan
6 “In that day,” declares the Lord,
“I will gather the lame; I will assemble the exiles and those I have brought to grief. 7 I will make the lame my remnant, those driven away a strong nation. The Lord will rule over them in Mount Zion from that day and forever. 8 As for you, watchtower of the flock, stronghold of Daughter Zion, the former dominion will be restored to you; kingship will come to Daughter Jerusalem.”
In our Gospel reading, we hear the words of the Benedictus. These are the first words of Zechariah, father to John the Baptist, who spent the vast majority of Elizabeth’s pregnancy in silence. Zechariah prophesised that a Saviour would come to redeem his people, and that his son, John, would prepare the way for that Messiah.
Luke 1:68-70
68 “Praise be to the Lord, the God of Israel, because he has come to his people and redeemed them. 69 He has raised up a horn of salvation for us in the house of his servant David 70 (as he said through his holy prophets of long ago),
Please listen in contemplative meditation to this version of the Benedictus (by Karl Jenkins) and ponder this season of remembrance.
Thanksgiving and intercession Hear us now as we offer our prayers of thanksgiving for all the good in our lives. On this day, we hold with gratitude the service of those who are peacemakers in their service of our country. We are grateful for a vision that will hold the darker forces of our humanity in check with an ethos of cooperation, harmony and mutual flourishing. We pray for the dedicated service of our armed forces in all the generations, remembering especially those who still remain with us from the Second World War. We thank You for their testimony which reminds us of the tragedy of conflict. Help us to hear it even as we honour the sacrifices made in search of the good.
Ubi caritas et amor…..
Today, we are drawn together from many backgrounds, and with faith flickering, strong, or with no faith, we thank You that there are times and causes around which we can all rally for the common good. Help us to find that common ground more, and to work through our differences. May the example of Jesus, His boundary-crossing life, His open-hearted embrace of all peoples, be the inspiration for our weary and wounded world.
In the visions of Isaiah and Revelation, Your faithful people have penned the dreams and challenges of our deepest thinkers, our most creative and perceptive voices. So we give thanks for the people who will look at our world and will be the dreamers. We pray to for the fixers: for the people who will take the dreams and make them reality. So we hold before You all of our leaders, praying for tenacity, energy, and an open-eyed, open-hearted vision for our communities and the world. Ubi caritas et amor…..
In this season of remembrance, we pray for those who have lost loved-ones in conflict, and through the collateral damage of war. We think of those close to home in our army, navy and air force. We remember those on the other side to us in conflict, and we think of the deep scars of conflict that mark our world whenever there is war.
May our remembering be for new beginnings, so that lives lost are the foundations of new worlds. May the vision of the prophets be our vision too. May Your forgiveness be our forgiveness.
Ubi caritas et amor……..
God of the cross and the empty tomb, God of the road to Emmaus and the breakfast on the shore. You have shown us in Jesus the way that is beyond death, so hold us in the faith of Your future. Help us to rest in the confidence of new light and life, to trust that those we have loved and lost have returned to You, and that our own walk is the way home where You wait for us in the mystery of eternal life.
May our prayers rise to You like incense, God our Maker, our Saviour and Sustainer. Amen
Blessing May the God of love fill Your heart with peace and send You into the world to live it. And the blessing of God Almighty, our Creator, Redeemer, and Sustainer, be with You and those You love, this day and always Amen