Looking inside…

You may well wonder (as this child did!) what was inside the goody bags we gave out:

DSC_0522Each bag had an assortment of mini-eggs or other form of chocolate as well as different Christian leaflets. Some of these outlined local church services; others gave explanations about Easter:

One FridayEaster voicesSome of the leaflets were for children and included activities to complete:

Egg huntPlease pray that these leaflets which all contain the Word of God will touch people’s hearts and that many people will come to know God for the first time this Easter.

Fellowship & food

After the march, we all went back to church to enjoy lunch together! People had been helping at the coffee morning and in preparing food:

IMG_20160326_111555878As a result, we could all enjoy a lovely lunch!

DSC_0540The centrepiece was the cake made at the Salvation Army cake decorating class, complete with icing flowers, butterflies and bees:

IMG_20160326_112549971This looked just as tasty on the inside!

DSC_0542Inside our church, we were giving out goody bags and Christian literature:

IMG_2816At the parish church, ladies were busy cleaning brasses and their Easter scene looked beautiful:

IMG_2820

IMG_2821Thanks to all who helped in so many different ways: assembling goody bags, preparing food, washing up and tidying away, singing, playing music, giving out bags, taking photographs. It’s always good when the different churches join together and proclaim that Jesus is Lord!

Don’t forget the next ‘Churches Together’ is on Saturday 14th May at 6 p.m. at Furlong Road Methodist Church in Bolton-on-Dearne.

Easter March of Hope

We gathered at the Pentecostal Church this morning for the ‘Churches Together’ Easter March of Hope:

IMG_2819Then we moved on to the Parish church to collect lots more people!

DSC_0509Garry set off with guitar to lead us to our first singing point!

DSC_0512… and we dutifully followed!

DSC_0514Singing on the main road:

DSC_0519Handing out goody bags:

DSC_0515Moving on:

DSC_0521Singing at Asda:

DSC_0529DSC_0530Singing by the bus stop:

DSC_0534… and finally singing at Market Street:

DSC_0538You may well notice we gained people en route! – there were more at this final stop than at the previous stopping points! It was great to sing songs proclaiming Christ’s victory:

  • When I Survey The Wondrous Cross
  • Above All
  • Thine Be The Glory
  • The Cross Stands Above It All
  • Amazing Grace
  • Counting On Your Name
  • Here I Am To Worship
  • Forever (We Sing Hallelujah)

Blameless and free from accusation

During our Good Friday service, we looked at Col 1:15-23, verses which stress the supremacy of Christ and all He has done for us.  Through Christ’s death on the cross, we have reconciliation with God: ‘For God was pleased to have all his fullness dwell in him,  and through him to reconcile to himself all things, whether things on earth or things in heaven, by making peace through his blood, shed on the cross.’ (Col 1:19-20, see also 2 Cor 5:19) We also have peace with God (Rom 5:12). Death was the penalty God prescribed for sin: ‘the wages of sin is death.’ (Rom 6:23) But through Christ’s death, that penalty has been paid and so we gain access to the free gift of God: ‘eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.’ (Rom 6:23)

Paul gives us more reasons for rejoicing, for he goes on to say that Christ’s ultimate purpose is ‘to present you holy in his sight, without blemish and free from accusation.’ (Col 1:22) God doesn’t just allow us to come crawling into His presence as a disgraced person, head hanging down in shame. He clothes us with the very righteousness of Christ and gives us the same holiness as the sinless One. He’s working in us to make us holy, without blemish, free from accusation. We don’t have to come into His presence wearing moth-eaten cloaks but instead are given robes of righteousness and garments of salvation to wear (Is 61:10). God intends for us to be holy and blameless (Eph 1:4), presented as a radiant church, without stain or wrinkle or any other blemish, but holy and blameless.’ (Eph 5:26-27) This may seem impossible to us now to believe, but because Jesus was the sinless Lamb of God, because He was ‘a lamb without blemish or defect’ (1 Pet 1:19), He has the power to remove all blemishes and stains from us. We can look better than any blemish-free skin!

blemish freeGood Friday reminds us that Jesus has finished the work God gave Him to do and because of this, all we have to do is ‘continue in your faith, established and firm, and do not move from the hope held out in the gospel.’ (Col 1:23) All we have to do is come to God and accept that Jesus has done everything that was required to reconcile us to God, to give us peace with God, to break the chains of the enemy, to cleanse us and make us holy and blameless. We accept the hope held out in the gospel and we take that hope into ourselves and live by that bond of trust. We are so grateful to Jesus for all He has done for us at Calvary; we look ahead to Easter Sunday knowing that the fact that Jesus is no longer in the Tomb is the reason for the hope we have, because it’s proof that His sacrifice was acceptable once and for all to God. We are blessed people because we have a God who loved us enough to die for us. We are blessed because nothing now can separate us from that love.

Celebrate!

Rend Collective sing a song called ‘Celebrate’ reminding us that we are called to praise God in every situation (see 1 Thess 5:17). Over this Easter weekend, there is so much to celebrate, for Jesus has died for us and because of this we are now reconciled to God! No matter what difficulties, troubles or trials we face, we know Jesus is the Victor and that the work of the cross is finished.

We’ll be holding a Communion service tonight (Good Friday) at 6 p.m. It’s good to pause in our busy lives and give thanks for the most significant day in history, when Jesus died to take away our sins.

Tomorrow (Saturday 26th March), the coffee morning will be on at 10 a.m. as usual, but we’ll also be involved with the ‘Churches Together’ March of Hope around Goldthorpe, leaving church at 10.15 a.m. Join with us and Christians from other churches to sing God’s praises in our community and to give out goody bags. We want to be salt and light in our community and it’s good to demonstrate that our God is alive to local residents!

After the march (which won’t be strenuous – we’ll be stopping off regularly to sing and engage in conversations!), we’ll be having lunch at GPCC on Market Street. Come along and have fellowship with Christians from all denominations and celebrate the relationships that we have because of Jesus! The cake decorators from the Salvation Army have been busy making us an Easter cake, and there are other goodies on offer…

IMG_2808 IMG_2810 IMG_2813On Easter Sunday, services will be at 10.30 a.m. and 6 p.m. Although many people are away on holiday, let’s celebrate loudly and exuberantly because Jesus is alive!

Golgotha and Garden

GOlgothaGolgotha.

The Place of the Skull.

Hollowed-out rocks.

Scary shadows.

Gloom.

Darkness.

Grimness personified,

So men could be punished.

 

A skull without flesh and blood,

No longer a living face

Transformed by smiles, eyes reflecting joy,

Sadness, hope, pain,

But bone only:

Concave sockets where once eyes shone brightly.

Hollow space where once a nose wrinkled in fun or distaste.

Sunkenness.

Cavities.

Shape without substance.

 

Here, in that place of bleakness,

Jesus died for our sins.

Here, in that place of hollowness,

The Son of God breathed His last,

And blood and water gushed forth from His side.

Let none sanitise this forsaken place.

Let none pretend life could flourish here.

 

But remember: this is not

Journey’s end.

Come instead to the garden

And see flesh known by His scars.

Not bone,

But resurrection skin.

Not death,

But pulsating life.

Vibrancy.

Death-defying vitality.

Walk through Golgotha.

See the empty tomb,

But linger in the garden,

Where the second Adam

Defeated sin and death

And spoke peace to those who mourned.

 

Allow hope to rise,

Life to blossom,

Faith to stir.

Eden recaptured,

Everything restored.

Life reborn.

Leave the ghoulish gloom of Golgotha with gratitude,

For the skull has been transformed

By the sacrifice of the Saviour

And we will never be the same.