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Print-first church bulletins · launching October 1, 2026

Drop in last week’s bulletin.
Get your Saturday back.

QuickBulletins reads the bulletin you already make and rebuilds it as a living template that knows the church year. The order of worship stays put; the parts that change each week become fields you fill in minutes — and it prints fold-perfect the first time, on the copier you already have.

One or two notes between now and launch, then the opening-day email. Unsubscribe anytime; your address never goes anywhere else.

Every Sunday of the year, pre-created with its day, color, and readings — this one already knows Advent 2 is blue.

The promise, in four parts

How it works

From last week’s bulletin to every week’s.

  1. 1

    Drop it in.

    Last week’s .docx or .md. PDF import and the free Publisher rescue arrive at launch.

  2. 2

    Confirm what changes.

    Your bulletin comes back restructured — sections typed, weekly fields highlighted as pills. One look, one click. About 90 seconds.

  3. 3

    Print every week from a 25-minute edit.

    Fill this week’s fields, watch the print preview repaginate live, let the pastor approve from a phone — and the booklet comes out folded in the right order.

October 1, 2026

Publisher’s last day is our first day.

Microsoft Publisher leaves Microsoft 365 on October 1, 2026 — after a generation of church bulletins were built in it. Microsoft’s own conversion advice concedes layouts “may vary.” QuickBulletins opens to the public that morning with a free Publisher rescue: upload your .pub bulletin, get it back as a clean PDF and a living template.

Be there when the doors open →

Who it’s for

Built for the person who actually makes the bulletin — the office admin, the volunteer, whoever inherited the job and the Saturday nights that came with it. Lutheran, Episcopal, Methodist, Presbyterian, and every congregation that still folds paper on Sunday morning.

QuickBulletins is built by Heavenly Technologies — a company of one, with Lutheran roots and a print obsession. Volunteers will always be free, and your data will always export as plain files.