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For All the Saints

For All the Saints

by Rev. Alexandra Robinson on October 29, 2025


Reading: Genesis 35:16-29

This Sunday, November 2, we will celebrate our All Saints Sunday in one worship service at 10:30 a.m. This is the annual honoring of those who have died in our lives this year, and who have shaped and formed us into the Christians we are today. In the United Methodist Church, All Saints is not for people who are canonized or recognized for performing supernatural miracles. All Saints Sunday is for the holy ordinary of those who live in love of God and neighbor daily, and have served the church and its purposes during their lifetime. It does not mean that our saints are perfect, but that their miracles are ones where grace has given new life, their actions have offered healing, and their service has shared hope with the world. The saints we will honor are your loved ones who worshipped and served just like you and I do. We give thanks for them because God’s love through them has given us a glimpse of heaven on earth. This Sunday gives us space to remember their blessing in our lives. So this week I am mindful of the many of our church who have died this past year, and those relatives and friends you have grieved in loss this year. We want to honor them in our worship service, and invite you to submit their photo to be included in our slideshow .

I pray that this All Saints Sunday will be a balm for your soul and a comfort for your spirit, as we will gather for holy communion, lighting candles in honor of our saints’ place at the table. In the grieving of the absence of their presence, we will honor the presence of their absence. We will feel how the sacredness of their lives has shaped and formed us to be the church we are today. Our role is to continue their legacy – how their lives not only shaped ours, but the church itself. The mission of the good news of Jesus Christ continues because of the foundation our saints over millennia have laid for us. Just as in Genesis, we hear of Racheal and Issac’s death, we know that young and old leave this earth. As we grieve and mourn, our faith reminds us that death never has the last word. God’s love unites us between heaven and earth, and gives us courage to face the future unafraid. It draws those of us in this life closer to one another so that we might love God and our neighbor in all that we do. The holy ordinary continues as we keep sharing God’s love. So let us feel the assurance this Sunday: our faithfulness continues their journey. May we honor our saints and their place at the table, as we live out the mission of the church.

In Christ’s love

Pastor Alex


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