Thy Kingdom Come

Prayer is such a vital part of every Christian’s life and in the Lord’s Prayer we are taught to pray for God’s kingdom to come and His will to be done on earth as it is in heaven. (Matt 6:10)

thy kingdom comeThe Archbishops of Canterbury and York have launched an initiative called ‘Thy Kingdom Come’ within the Church of England, urging Christians to pray, especially during the week 8-15 May 2016 as we prepare to celebrate Pentecost next Sunday. In their letter, sent to every parish priest in the UK, they say:

“At the heart of our prayers will be words that Jesus himself taught us – ‘Thy kingdom come, thy will be done.’ It is impossible to overstate the life-transforming power of the Lord’s Prayer. It is a prayer that is reassuring enough to be on the lips of the dying and yet dangerous enough to be banned in cinemas. It is famous enough to be spoken each day by billions in hundreds of languages and yet intimate enough to draw us ever closer into friendship with Jesus Christ. It is simple enough to be memorised by small children and yet profound enough to sustain a whole lifetime of prayer. When we pray it with sincerity and with joy, there is no imagining the new ways in which God can use us to his glory.”

In our church, we are praying for 2016 to be a ‘yield year’, so this venture, asking us to pray for every Christian to receive new confidence and joy in sharing our life-transforming faith, is very much in line with how we feel God is asking us as a church to pray. Let’s be willing to look at new ways to pray, to seek out opportunities to pray (individually and corporately), to pray for friends and family, to pray for our community and to believe that God is willing to hear and answer our prayers! A variety of resources are available here, but ultimately, all we need is the determination to set aside the time to pray and the willingness to actually pray!

Coming soon…

Don’t forget the AGM tomorrow (Saturday 7th May) at 6 p.m. This is an opportunity to look back on the past year and look ahead to all that is in store for us as a church, so do come along if you are able. We’ll have cake and tea/ coffee as well! Please remember this meeting isn’t really suitable for small children, but we do hope as many people as possible will be able to attend.

Meetings on Sunday 8th May will be at Cherry Tree Court in the morning (10.30 a.m.) and at Market Street in the evening (6 p.m.)

Tickets are still available for the Rend Collective concert at the O2 Academy in Sheffield on Friday 13th May at 6.30 p.m. The concert will feature Urban Rescue as well as Rend Collective and is sure to be a crazy night of worship. See here for more details.

Rend CollectiveOn Saturday 14th May the next ‘Churches Together’ meeting will start at 6 p.m. at Furlong Road Methodist Church (Bolton-on-Dearne). This will be a meeting to celebrate Pentecost with other Christians from local churches, so do come along to that if you are able. It will be a very relaxed service; children are welcome to attend.

Goldthorpe Parish Church on Lockwood Road is celebrating its centenary in May, with a series of special meetings. On 20th & 21st May from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. there will be a ‘carpet of flowers’ running the length of the church nave; it will cost £2 for adults to enter, with free admission for children. Refreshments will be available at this event. See the parish church website for more details.

Logo Pantone 485 yellow 1235 CP

Different roles and functions

In celebrating diversity and unity (1 Cor 12:12-31), Paul reminds us that there are many different roles and functions within any church. The ‘lists’ of gifts here (apostles, prophets, teachers, miracle workers, gifts of healings) obviously reflect the Corinthians’ emphasis on the supernatural, but ‘helping’ and ‘administration’ are also mentioned (far less visible gifts!) In other parts of the Bible, the lists include other, less spectacular giftings (eg Rom 12:2-8, where prophecy and teaching are linked to service, encouragement, showing mercy and generous giving.) The point of this is to remind us forcibly that just as each part of the human body is vital (especially the ‘less honourable’ parts!), so it is with the church. Some roles may well be more visible than others (as the hand, adorned with jewellery, is more visible than the foot, covered in socks and shoes), but this does not mean these are more important.

Paul reminds Timothy that ‘godliness with contentment is great gain.’ (1 Tim 6:6) He tells the Romans ‘Do not think of yourself more highly than you ought, but rather think of yourself with sober judgment, in accordance with the faith God has distributed to each of you.’ (Rom 12:3) In thinking rightly of ourselves, we have to:

  1. know the truth and be set free by this truth (see John 8:32)
  2. accept God’s evaluation of us over and above our own feelings (or what anyone else may tell us – the Message version of Rom 12:3 says ‘The only accurate way to understand ourselves is by what God is and by what he does for us, not by what we are and what we do for him.’)
  3. be content with the person God has made us to be (recognising that we’re now new creations in Christ, see 2 Cor 5:17)
  4. accept others unconditionally as Christ accepts us (Rom 15:7)

John Piper comments ‘like all issues it comes down to a radically God-focused issue—do you trust God?’ We have to be prepared to trust God’s sovereignty in placing us (and others!) in the body of Christ exactly where He wants us (1 Cor 12:18) and learn to serve Him right where we are.

body of Christ 1 Cor 12

Diversity Abounds

Paul’s reference to the diversity of body parts (1 Cor 12:12-31) is a vivid reminder that diversity is everywhere. We see it in the animal kingdom, with animals categorised in different ways (carnivores, herbivores, birds, reptiles etc.) and then within categories a wide variety (wild cats such as lions and tigers, domestic cats such as tabbies and Siamese.)

kissing rabbitsWe see it with food types (carbohydrates, proteins, fats, vegetables & fruits and dairy produce, for example, with a whole range of differences within each category– sprouts, beans, carrots, onions, cauliflower, cabbage, broccoli and cucumber all being vegetables that are vastly different to each other!) We see it in people – different genders, races, ethnicity and so on.

It seems that God likes diversity! As the saying goes, ‘variety is the spice of life’! Yet for many of us, it’s this very diversity in life which causes problems. Wars break out because of the differences; we can’t cope with people who look different to us, who act differently, who eat different foods, who follow different traditions.

sushiMany of our differences are simply due to differences in personality or taste or traditions, however. Personality varies enormously; tests such as the Myers Brigg Personality Indicator or the ‘animal test’  look at how our personalities manifest themselves and can go a long way to explaining why we find X congenial and Y so irritating! It can be helpful to understand the difference between the gregarious extrovert and the contemplative introvert, between someone who is rational and methodical in their way of working and someone who is impulsive and emotional, if only because we tend to assume that everyone is like us, only to be shocked when we discover they’re not! This huge range of personality is just another area of diversity in the creation God has made.

Instead of hating diversity, we do well to embrace it, for it’s surely here to stay! I sometimes think different denominations are more to do with our different personalities than different doctrines! – people care about the style of worship (liturgy or spontaneity, hymns played on organs or modern music with a church band) as much as they do about right beliefs. If variety really is the spice of life, then we do well to explore and embrace variety, understanding that there is a place for each one of us in God’s church. No one is superfluous to requirements; no one is all-important. Church is a great leveller and it’s important we reflect on Christ’s headship of the body to understand our role as servants, not lords. (Eph 1:22-23, Col 1:18)

diversity in God

Unity in Diversity

unity in diversity 2Paul’s discussion of the church as a body (1 Corinthians 12:12-31) reminds us that there is unity in diversity. The Godhead mirrors this perfectly; Jesus said ‘I and the Father are one’ (Jn 10:30) and prayed for His followers to know the same kind of unity (see John 17:11, 20-21); unity does not equate with uniformity, however. As Rend Collective say, the beauty of church is that it champions unity while adamantly rejecting uniformity.’

In Corinth, it seems that – as everywhere else! – people struggled to embrace unity without uniformity. We tend to like the people who are like us and there can be two extremes which are equally dangerous to church life: feelings of inferiority (being a foot but longing to be hand, to continue Paul’s body analogy) and feelings of superiority (believing that because we’re an eye, we don’t need ears.) Paul adamantly rejects both extremes and by using the picture of the human body – which is made up of many different parts but which is one complete body – shows us how ridiculous these extremes are. A body that was all eye would look utterly strange; a body that had great hearing but no sense of smell would not be perfect.

feethandWhether we realise it or not, ‘God has placed the parts in the body, every one of them, just as he wanted them to be.’ (1 Cor 12:18) This is true of the church as well as of the human body: ‘Now you are the body of Christ, and each one of you is a part of it.’ (1 Cor 12:27) Our task is to find our ‘part’, our role, our function, in the body of Christ and work for His glory. We all need each other; there is no place in the church for self-sufficiency (pride or arrogance) or for feelings of uselessness (which ultimately do not reflect the truth that we are valuable and chosen by God.)  The Message version of 1 Cor 12 says the human body is a model for how our church lives fit together: ‘every part dependent on every other part, the parts we mention and the parts we don’t, the parts we see and the parts we don’t.’ Lone rangers and condescending arrogance have no part in the church. We’re called to love each other, suffer with each other, rejoice with each other and bless each other, because we’re all needed, important, loved and put in our particular place by God Himself.

Senescence or ever-increasing glory?

Senescence, a lovely word, comes from the Latin word senesere, meaning ‘to grow old’. It is all about our gradual deterioration as organisms: ‘the condition or process of deterioration with age or loss of a cell’s power of division and growth’, so its meaning is not quite as nice as the sound of the word! None of us particularly relishes ageing and it can be very daunting to face increasing fragility, whether that is physical, mental or emotional. Certain ‘age’ milestones (hitting 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80 and so on) may leave us feeling depressed, insecure and melancholy as we look back at what we have achieved and look ahead with apprehension. We may feel we have not used our time wisely or be plagued by regrets; we may look back nostalgically and wistfully at the past, seeing there our ‘glory days.’ We may look ahead with trepidation, unsure as to how our bodies will cope with growing old and how we will carve a meaningful identity for ourselves after work or if we are isolated by physical ailments.

elderly people road signLife is made up of different areas, defined by some as ‘quotients’. These are:

  1. PQ – physical – Human Living – To Live
  2. IQ – intellectual – Human Doing – To Learn
  3. EQ – emotional – Human Being – To Love
  4. SQ – spiritual – Being Human – To Leave a Legacy

It’s unwise to focus on one area only; we have to realise that life is not just about what we know or what we can do, but also involves our ability to forge relationships and to love.

The exciting thing for Christians is to realise that even though we may face ageing and deterioration in some areas of our lives, this is not the whole story. Paul tells the Corinthians we all, who with unveiled faces contemplate the Lord’s glory, are being transformed into his image with ever-increasing glory, which comes from the Lord, who is the Spirit.‘ (2 Cor 3:18) Whilst we may deteriorate with age in many areas, spiritually God continues to transform us into his image and renew us on the inside: Though outwardly we are wasting away, yet inwardly we are being renewed day by day.‘ (2 Cor 4:16) As we progress with God, we learn more of His faithfulness and character: David reminds us ‘I was young and now I am old, yet I have never seen the righteous forsaken or their children begging bread.‘ (Ps 37:25) We also learn that our value and worth do not depend on our ability to do things for God; we absorb the truth thatthe only accurate way to understand ourselves is by what God is and by what he does for us, not by what we are and what we do for him.‘ (Rom 12:3, The Message) That can be hard to grasp when we are young, vigorous and full of energy, but God’s unconditional love and acceptance for us are not dependent on our age or ability.

Today, let’s pray Eph 3:16, knowing that our inner strengthening comes from the riches of God’s glory and not from our own strength!

strength in the inner being