Category Archives: General

General posts on my blog

Hope To See You on Sunday

Well, the sabbatical has ended. We finished with a great week’s holiday in York where Bella revisited some sites of her younger years. And while we were the the Queen decided to pop in as well, some photos are below.

I started back yesterday and am busy preparing the services and my sermons for Sunday. I know that the Sunday after Easter is traditionally called ‘Low Sunday’ because attendance is low, but let’s make it high Sunday. As an incentive the Vicar has a special gift for everyone who comes to our morning service, 10.30am at St Paul’s.

We will also be having a special ecumenical evening service with the HOTS team and anyone else who wants to come at 6.30pm (there might even be some special gifts left over from the morning!).

Hope to see lots of you on Sunday,

Sandy

 

Blogs, Links & Quotable Quotes

Firstly an apology, I am in the process of changing the appearance of my website and installing a new theme, yesterday WordPress emailed a number of sample posts to everyone. Please delete and ignore them. Normal service is renewed and the site will be undated in the coming days with a new look.

Here are things that I’ve found to be interesting and that I’ve been reading, hope you enjoy them as well.

Links & blog Posts:

Quotable Quotes:

  • “95% of today’s church activities would continue if the Holy Spirit were removed from us. In the early Church, 95% of all her activites would have stopped if the Holy Spirit were removed.” Billy Graham
  • Jesus didn’t go to the cross so we wouldn’t have to. He went to the cross so we could join him there. Dallas Willard
  • There’s no such thing as a junior Holy Spirit.
  • We need to stop being unbelieving believers.
  • Some of us, our heart got saved years ago but our faces never got the message!
  • The light that shines the fathest shines the brightest at home.
  • The move of God is always strengthened when it goes out.
  • You can either impact the world or you can have the best party on the Titanic.

Things I've been Reading & Watching

Here are some links to blogs I’ve been reading and some videos I’ve been watching. Hope theyre helpful:

 

 

Water walking is risky but worth it

I was walking round Langstone harbour one day praying for guidance on what we should do as a family after I finished Bible College. As I walked I noticed that the waves gradually became bigger and bigger and God asked me whether I was willing to move to the place where the seas were rougher and the waves bigger but that would also be the place of greatest blessing? Was I willing to get out of the boat? That was part of God’s calling on us some 28 years ago which has led us eventually to Sarisbury Green, but the challenge to get out of the boat has happened more than once for me.

The analogy of walking on water comes from the amazing and incredible experience of Paul as he did just that, he actually walked on water! It is this story, from Matthew 14:25-32, that is at the heart of John Ortberg’s book If You Want To Weak On Water You’ve Got To Get Out Of The Boat, which I’ve just read. I found the book both encouraging and challenging. Encouraging because I recognised and remembered some of the times in the past where I’ve dared to step over the side of the boat and have seen God do amazing things. Challenged because I also recognise and remember times when I’ve stayed in the boat and been unwilling to take the risk. I also recognise times that are somewhere between the two where I’ve stepped over the edge, but not had the courage to let go entirely!

When you see Phil or myself (or others during my sabbatical) leading public worship you may think we are confident and in control, at times nothing could be farther from the truth! A few years ago I introduced an element to our worship that felt very much like stepping out of the boat, we called it Bus Stop Prayers, an opportunity to stop for just two minutes during our worship to pray for healing for each other. I can still vividly remember the first time we did it. We had a visiting preacher and I was incredibly nervous and almost chickened out from introducing it. For me I felt I was taking a real risk and that sense continued each and every time I included it in our worship. Each time we included Bus Stop Prayers I, as the leader, had to step out of the boat.

Some of our regular congregation may rightly ask: What are Bus Stop Prayers, I don’t remember them? Your right, I did chicken out and stopped including them many, many months ago. Why did we stop? Because I chose the security of the boat and what I, and we, are more comfortable with. Will they become part of our worship again? I don’t know, it depends on what we feel God is saying and on whether I am willing to take the risk of stepping out of the safety of the boat!

I’d like to finish this post by quoting a most remarkable description of the church that John Ortberg includes in his book, it is well worth reading:

If I wait until I’m feeling 100 percent certain about having a spiritual conversation with somebody who is far from God, I may never have it. I will have to take the risk first. I have to get my feet wet.

Jeffrey Cotter tells about one time—an unforgettable plane ride—when he took the risk. As a pastor returning from a job interview and dressed in blue jeans, he found himself sitting next to a pinstripe-wearing, attaché case–carrying, Wall Street Journal-reading businessman. Cotter’s initial impulse was to avoid all conversation (especially about jobs), but when Mr. MBA greeted him, that option was lost. The man worked in what he called the figure salon business. He spoke of how they could change a woman’s self-concept by changing her body; he talked of his excitement about the power and significance of what he did.

Cotter was struck by the man’s pride in his work and accomplishments. He wondered why Christians are not more like that; why we are so often apologetic about our faith. He realized he had been in avoidance mode during the whole flight because of fear.

Looking skeptically at Cotter’s clothing, Mr. MBA asked about his line of work. Let Cotter tell it from here:

The Spirit began to brood over the face of the deep. Order and power emerged from chaos! A voice, in a whisper reminded me: “Let him who boasts, boast in the Lord.”

“It’s interesting that we have similar business interests,” I said. “You are in the body-changing business; I’m in the personality-changing business. We apply basic theocratic principles to accomplish indigenous personality modification.”

He was hooked, but I knew he would never admit it. (Pride is powerful.)

“You know, I’ve heard of that,” he replied hesitantly. “But do you have an office here in the city?”

“Oh, we have many offices. We have offices up and down the state. In fact, we’re national; we have at least one in every state of the union, including Alaska and Hawaii.”

He had this puzzled look on his face. He was searching his mind to identify this huge company he must have read or heard about, perhaps in his Wall Street Journal.

“As a matter of fact, we’ve gone international. And Management has a plan to put at least one office in every country of the world by the end of this business era.” I paused. “Do you have that in your business?”

“Well, no. Not yet,” he answered. “But you mentioned management. How do they make it work?”

“It’s a family concern. There’s a Father and a Son . . . and they run everything.”

“It must take a lot of capital,” he asked, skeptically.

“You mean money?” I asked. “Yes, I suppose so. No one knows just how much it takes, but we never worry because there’s never a shortage. The Boss always seems to have enough. He’s a very creative guy. . . . And the money is, well, just there. In fact, those of us in the organization have a saying about our Boss, ‘He owns the cattle on a thousand hills.’”

“Oh, he’s into ranching, too?” asked my captive friend.

“No, it’s just a saying we use to indicate his wealth.”

My friend sat back in his seat. “What about with you?” he asked.

“The employees? They’re something to see,” I said. “They have a ‘Spirit’ that pervades the organization. It works like this: The Father and Son love each other so much that their love filters down through the organization so that we all find ourselves loving one another too. I know this sounds old fashioned in a world like ours, but I have people in the organization who are willing to die for me. Do you have that in your business?” I was almost shouting now. People were starting to shift noticeably in their seats.

“Not yet,” he said. Quickly changing strategies, he asked “But do you have good benefits?”

“They’re substantial,” I countered with a gleam. “I have complete life insurance, fire insurance—all the basics. You might not believe this, but it’s true: I have holdings in a mansion that’s being built for me right now for my retirement. Do you have that in your business?”

“Not yet” he answered wistfully. The light was dawning. “You know, one thing bothers me. I’ve read journals, and if your business is all that you say it is, why haven’t I heard about it before now?”

“That’s a good question,” I said. “After all, we have a 2,000 year old tradition. . . . Want to sign up?”

 

Investing for the best return

Over the past week something that I heard Mike Breen talk about some years ago has kept coming to mind so I am grateful that I took some notes and more grateful that I managed to find them!

Capital is something we invest to seek a return or that we use in significant ways for our benefit. Capital is about investment & return or giving & rewards. This normally relates to financial things, but Mike talked about five Capitals that we all have and use.

For us, as Christians, the most valuable is Spiritual and the least valuable in financial. Spiritual capital is about our relationship with Jesus, not our understanding about God (that would probably come under intellectual capital). Nothing else in the world is more valuable than that.

The way you grow any of the capitals is to invest the ones beneath. For me that means at present that I am investing my financial capital in funding my sabbatical. One of the priorities has been to grow my physical capital because at the end of December I was utterly exhausted and living off paracetamol on a regular basis! To do that I have invested in the cost of joining a health club and I know that physically I am vastly better than a couple of months ago. I will have to decide if I need to continue to invest financially in my physical capital by continuing to be a member of a health club after my sabbatical.

The next step for me will be to invest my financial, intellectual and physical capital for spiritual return as I visit Bethel Church shortly. I was physically depleted at the end of last year but I was also spiritually empty and this investment is vital if I am to continue to lead and disciple others.

Mike suggested that each level of capital is worth ten times the level below. This would mean that Spiritual capital is 10,000 times more valuable than financial capital!

I have had this at the back of my mind ever since Mike talked about it (as an aside during a conference). I find it really helpful in thinking about what capital to save, what to spend and how to invest to grow the more important ones.

Much of our society has however reversed the priorities with financial capital being seen as the most important to acquire by investing the others. Our society has suffered spiritually and relationally as these are pushed to the bottom whilst the others are given greater priority.

Helpful questions to ask are what am I investing or drawing on at the moment, and am I investing the less important capitals for the benefit of the more important ones?

I hope this helps others as it has helped me.

 

"So What?" Practical Bible Reading Tips

I read this today and thought others might find it helpful. Its from Alex Absolom and focusses on helpful tips to read the Bible to hear God speaking to you. I hope you find it helpful as well.

If you are stuck, or always finding Bible reading dry, or you’ve just not read Bible for ages, here are some practical ideas to restart regular Bible reading.

They fall within the big point of Bible reading, which is answering the “SO WHAT?” question.

If discipleship is hearing Jesus and obeying Him, and if the primary way Jesus is revealed is through the Bible, then we need to learn to hear and obey His voice in Scripture.  Thus, when I read something, the key question is, “So what am I going to do in response?”.  My goal is not to gather more knowledge (although that is helpful) – my goal is to become more like Jesus, which means I respond to His word to me that I am reading or hearing.

As I read the Bible, I try to be always attentive to the “SO WHAT?” question, so that I can be shaped by Jesus.  These ideas are trying to help people find practical ways to refresh that process when it has grown a little stale (which, of course, is a universal experience!).

1. Stop and listen – Take time to listen (that is what it means to come as a lover of God).  The point is to stop, even if time is short and it is simply reading a verse from the Psalms and bowing your head in genuine stillness for 1 minute.
2. Have a realistic plan – eg it is better to do a few minutes every day than to do 1 ½ hrs on day 1 and then give up!
3. Come in worship – I love playing loud live worship music, such as Jesus Culture/ Bethel Church, Hillsongs United, Matt Redman and then reading the Bible.  Work out what works for you.
4. Use a Bible reading plan (try something on youversion.com).
5. Use a devotional book or Bible reading notes.
6. Different lengths – Some days take one verse and meditate on it, while on other days read a long chunk of the Bible.  Have variety!
7. Use a different translation – That will cause you to see familiar passages differently.
8. Read with kids – They see things so well, that we tend to hide from.  Use both ‘full’ Bibles and children’s Bibles eg The Jesus Storybook Bible
9. Picture it – Visualize the scene in your mind and see what Jesus says to you.
10. Eat your PEAS! – Is there a… Promise to claim?  Example to follow?  Attitude to change?  Sin to confess?
11. a verse/ write it on a card/ put it on your phone, and then look at it throughout day.  Allow it to shape your day.
12. Listen to the Bible in an audio version – Find times when that will work for you, such as in your car, when you are cooking or when you are exercising.  There are free versions available at youversion.com, or you can buy it on CDs/MP3s.
13. Read it out loud – You will experience the Bible differently.
14. Read at unexpected times – eg Put a Bible in your bathroom, in car for when you are waiting for the kids, download a Bible app for your phone, etc
15. Physical location – Create a regular place at home where you go to worship, read the Bible and pray.
16. Read a parallel book/novel based upon the Bible – This should make you want to go back and check out the original version of the story.

Finally, if you are in a dry place with Bible reading, it is worth simply asking God why.  What’s going on?  Sometimes He withdraws to invite us to pursue Him.  Other times there is sin in our life that is causing the blockage.  It might be that we are simply lacking in self-discipline and need to work around that.  Don’t be afraid to do this, because Jesus will challenge us deeply while also showing us the way forward.

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Why we must continue to change

There are two types of people in this world: those who like change, and those who don’t. Those who prefer the status quo are in the majority (about 75% of the population) and so change happens slowly most of the time. I admit to being in the minority, I like change and I get bored easily if everything stays the same for too long.

For centuries the life and ministry of the church has changed very little. In fact from 1662 up to 1980 the Church of England used and maintained the same authorised liturgy for all it’s services, thats 318 years with no change! But in the last 30 years lots has changed, and I believe that the pace of change in the life and ministry of the church must increase and not slow down, as uncomfortable as that is for many!

Why?

Well I did some statistics for a recent service at St Paul’s:
Our Parish has a population of approximately 9,000, our average Sunday Attendance is 70 = 0.8% of the population
Being generous on average approximately 140 people attend services each month = 1.6% of the population
But I hear you say, we’re not the only church in the area! The population of the Western Wards is approximately 35,000. I have guestimated average attendance at church services on a Sunday at 1,100 = 3% of the population
Say each month double that attend at some point = 6% of the population
That means that 94% of the population of the Western Wards have no meaningful connection with the Church

Now I know that every Church has a fringe of people that know us and may be exploring the Christian faith at any time. BUT that still means that the vast majority of people in our community today have no meaningful connection with the church or with a Christian who is introducing them to Jesus.

We need to realise that the vast majority of the people who today are outside of the Christian faith in our community will never connect with the Christian faith in the ways that it has traditionally been expressed. Apart from baptisms (and there aren’t really many of these), weddings (these have reduced greatly) and funerals (even these are less common today), people in our community see little point in attending a service in a Victorian (or even a modern) church building, especially on a Sunday morning, there are far more attractive things happening most Sunday mornings!

If our friends, neighbours, work colleagues, those we meet in the Co-Op or in the bus queue are to have the opportunity to meet Jesus in a way that is meaningful to them it is us who must change not them! But how?

Restaurant or Bring & Share?

I was reading this morning from 1 Peter 2 about Christians as newborn babies craving spiritual milk that helps them grow up. That started me thinking about how we as Christians are fed – and that’s just the point, the impression I have is that’s most Christians in our churches expect someone else to feed them. It’s as if they have been drinking mothers milk ever since they were born and have never progressed to solid food and then to providing their own food.

The picture I had was of the church resembling a restaurant. People come to a restaurant to be fed with food that someone else (hopefully a professional cook) has created and in a setting where that food is served up on a plate be someone else. This restaurant is open once a week, every week, and also for special celebrations. The diners may come regularly but that isn’t every week, and they always expect the restaurant to be open even if they have missed a few weeks or even months.

When I read the bible I don’t see anything like this picture of the church. The picture I see is more like a bring and share supper. Everyone brings something and what everyone brings is different. Some of the food is cordon bleu cookery and other food is just edible. Some have had a tough week so they’ve only brought a little and others have had a great week and have brought plenty. Everyone gets to share in the feast and everyone helps everyone else. There may be a professional cook, but their offering is only a small part of the whole.

What would our Sunday and weekday Christian gatherings loom like if they resembled a bring and share meal more than a restaurant?

What foundation is the church built on?

20111027-211838.jpgIn September whilst on holiday in France I used to go each morning to collect our croissants for breakfast. It was about a ten minute walk each way and each day I listened to the Bible on my iPhone. This year I decided to listen to Ephesians, and over the two weeks listened to the whole book a number of times.

Various passages stood out for me. One of those was Eph 2:19-20: “Consequently, you are no longer foreigners and aliens, but fellow citizens with God’s people and members of God’s household, built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, with Christ Jesus himself as the chief cornerstone.”

This raised in my mind the question of what is the foundation that the church is built on today?

In the time of the early church the foundation was the Apostles and Prophets. The Apostles who were missionary evangelists commissioned by God. They went and were sent to new places, new cultures and new communities. They were there with a purpose, to pioneer with the Gospel so that new people came to know the love and life of Jesus for themselves and to establish new expressions of the community of faith, which came to be called the church. They also had a role in supporting established communities of faith and challenging em to remain true to the Gospel and to continue to share the Gospel with new people. The prophets where those who spoke the living word of God into lives, hearts and minds. They didn’t so much ‘foretell’ what was to come as ‘forth tell’ God’s living word to individuals and communities. The Apostles and the Prophets worked well together (at least most of the time). The Evangelists, Pastors and Teachers then built on the foundation that had me laid by the Apostles and Prophets.

So what about the church today? My reflection is that for the past centuries the foundation of the church hasn’t been Apostolic and Prophetic but has been the foundation of the Pastors and Teachers. So much so that the title that many church leaders are called The Pastor. Pastors are gentle people who offer support and promote unity and loyalty.