The Perfect Getaway

What’s your perfect getaway?

For some, it’s the beach: watching the waves lap onto the sand, feeling the breeze on your face and the sand in your toes. For others, it’s a quiet walk in the countryside savouring the birds tweeting and the wild flowers, the sound of running water in ice-cold streams. Others prefer the bustle of a city break or the activity of a theme park.
Few would choose a place of worship as the ideal getaway, but David says that his one aim is to seek God and dwell in his house all the days of his life: ‘That’s the only quiet, secure place in a noisy world, the perfect getaway from the buzz of traffic.’ (Ps 27:5, The Message)
Eacch Sunday, we have the opportunity to re-orient our lives towards God, to focus on Him, to leave behind the things of the world as we fix our hearts and minds on God. Each Sunday, we have the opportunity to anchor ourselves to God, to allow eternal truth to recapture our imaginations, to fill our souls and refine our thinking. To gather with other believers, to refocus our lives. This is a tremendous privilege.

Modern life is full of bustle and noise, busyness and activity. God gives us an opportunity today to ‘get away’ from it all and to seek His face. Join us today at 10.30 a.m. and 6.00 p.m. to take advantage of this perfect getaway!

The Hope of Salvation

Earlier in February, on a very cold, wet and windy day, we took our grandchildren to see the snowdrop trail at Darfield church. The church grounds were covered in snowdrops:

Inside, there was a trail about Dropsnow the Dragon and activities for children to do. One of the things that was mentioned was the snowdrop being a messenger of hope, since it is such a beautiful, delicate flower bursting through in winter, when life seems so barren and empty. The snowdrop acts as a reminder of the hope we have in this world of trouble and distress, a hope that exists because of the faithfulness of God to His creation.

Paul, when writing to the Thessalonians, says, ‘since we belong to the day, let us be sober, putting on faith and love as a breastplate, and the hope of salvation as a helmet.’ (1 Thess 5:8) A helmet protects the head, protects our thoughts. Despite the many difficulties we face on a personal and international level at present, we have to hold on to faith, love and hope. Perhaps the snowdrop can be a symbol to us that all is not doom and gloom, but that there is hope in God for every situation.

Be ready! Be alert!

In the third of our mini-series looking at the topic of ‘the day of the Lord’, we looked at references to this portentous day in the New Testament, focussing especially on Matthew 24, Mark 13:32-37, 1 Thess 5:1-11, 2 Thess 1:6-10 and 2 Peter 3:1-14.

These passages show us that Jesus frequently took the words of Old Testament prophets to describe this day at the culmination of history when God will personally intervene to right all wrongs and bring about His rule in sovereign power and that the apostles echoed the words of Jesus himself in declaring that the timing of this day is beyond our knowledge but the certainty of this day is not in doubt. Many will scoff at the idea of a day of reckoning, but Peter reminds us that God’s timings are not like ours and His faithfulness not in question. We are, therefore, urged to be ready and alert, for this day will come as a thief in the night (2 Pet 3:10) or as a bridegroom returning (see Matt 25:1-13) or as a master returning home after a long absence. (Mark 13:36-37) Theology always informs behaviour; what we believe about the day of the Lord should lend urgency to our evangelism, purity to our discipleship and peace to our understanding of the world.

The day of the Lord is not something to treat lightly (for it involves punishment and judgment and everlasting destruction for those who do not obey the gospel), but it is not something to be feared by believers who trust in the justice of God’s judgment (see Ps 11:7). Paul tells us that God will be glorified in His holy people and will be marvelled at among all who have believed (2 Thess 1:10) and John reminds us that since God is love, we do not have to fear judgment or punishment (see 1 John 4:16-18). Instead, the truth of this doctrine should motivate us to live pure, holy, godly lives and should motivate us to share the gospel with others.

 

 

February Family Fun Day (2)

We’ve had a great day today exploring the theme ‘Love Is…’ through a variety of crafts. In total, we had 113 people attend, with 47 adults and 66 children present. A very big THANK YOU to each church who helped today (GPCC, the Salvation Army, St Helen’s in Thurnscoe and Furlong Road Methodist Church in Bolton-on-Dearne) and to all who volunteered and helped with setting up, serving food and tidying away.

February Family Fun Day

Today we held a Family Fun Day on the theme ‘Love Is…’ We had lots of things to remind us of God’s love:

We had a range of crafts for people to do:

Our thanks to the Salvation Army for providing the food for today. We had a wide range of sandwiches and pancakes to sample!