News from Bedline

We have received a letter from Fritzner Prince, leader of the Child Development Centre of the Nazarene Church of Sarranzins in Mirebalais, Haiti, which Bedline attends. The centre pays 75% of the children’s tuition there (supported through Compassion) and help also with health care. Children and their families have received funds from Compassion for houses and goats, thus helping them to become self-supporting. As children at the centre grow older, they learn a trade so that they can be equipped to work when they leave school. Recently, the centre received a water tank that benefits the whole community, not just the centre, and a gift given last year allowed them to finish building the latrines, which reduces health risks to the children by providing better sewage and drainage and keeping water clean.

Thanks to your generosity, we have been able to give an additional gift to the centre as well as a gift to Bedline’s family. We pray all the support will help Fritzner Prince to continue the great work at the centre and will bless Bedline and her family.

Easter happenings

We were excited this week to be contacted by Big Local Thurnscoe to ask if local churches would take part in the Spring Event which is being planned. Just as at Christmas we were approached by the Goldthorpe Development Team to help at the Christmas Market, an event which was a great community success, we have been asked to take part in a Palm Sunday procession on Sunday 20th March at Phoenix Park (the former pit site which links Thurnscoe and Goldthorpe which was redeveloped by Groundwork Dearne Valley and local residents in the 1990s and which is now owned and managed by the Forestry Commission.)

Local churches will meet for prayer at Houghton Road Centre in Thurnscoe (where Thurnscoe Pentecostal Church meets, opposite Asda) at 10.15 a.m. and will then move to Phoenix Park car park for 10.50 a.m. to lead a procession with donkeys and palm branches (made of cardboard, in case you were getting excited about that!) We will sing a few songs and Kevin Watts (pastor of Thurnscoe Pentecostal Church) will explain the meaning of Palm Sunday. The event itself will run from 11 a.m. until 2 p.m. and will include a variety of stalls, activities (including a treasure hunt and donkey rides) and we will be giving out Easter goody bags containing leaflets and chocolate eggs. It’s a great opportunity for us to meet local residents and see what is happening in our community – there are loads of other community groups working tirelessly in Thurnscoe and Goldthorpe, but so often, we’re not aware of what is happening. Come along and find out more!

Because of this, there will be no morning service at Market Street on 20th March, but the evening service will be at 6 p.m. as usual.

EasterServices over the Easter weekend will also be slightly different:

  • There will be a short Good Friday service at our church at 6 p.m. on Friday 25th March when we will celebrate Christ’s death and remember His crucifixion. This will last about an hour.
  • There will be a ‘Churches Together’ March of Hope around Goldthorpe on Saturday 26th March, leaving our church at 10.15 a.m. and returning there for a light lunch
  • Services on Easter Sunday (27th March) will be at 10.30 a.m. and 6 p.m.

‘Churches Together’

Don’t forget the ‘Churches Together’ meeting tonight (Saturday 20th February) at 6 p.m. at the Salvation Army. Ps 133 gives us a vivid picture of unity and how God bestows or commands His blessings when brothers and sisters dwell together in unity. Whatever church we belong to, we are part of the universal Church God is building and these meetings are confirmation of the fact that we have more that unites us than separates us! Come along if you can for fellowship, prayer, worship and teaching. Refreshments will be served after the service.

Gay Marriage (2)

The Biblical view of marriage is given in Gen 2:18-25 and is reinforced by Jesus (Matt 19:3-4, Mk 10:2-9). Marriage is between a man and a woman. There are obvious problems with the notion of homosexual marriage, the first being that homosexual practice is not physically or sexually compatible. Anal sex in males frequently leads to tearing of the fragile anal tissue and sphincter and an increase in diseases such as HIV, Anal Cancer, Chlamydia trachomatis, Cryptosporidium, Giardia lamblia, Herpes simplex virus, Human papilloma virus, Isospora belli, Microsporidia, Gonorrhea, Viral hepatitis types B & C and Syphilis[1].

  1. [1] (a) Anne Rompalo. “Sexually Transmitted Causes of Gastrointestinal Symptoms in Homosexual Men.” Medical Clinics of North America 74. 6 (November 1990): 1633-1645. Print;
    (b)“Overview – Safer Sex & STD Prevention for Gay & Bi Men.” LGBT Health Channel. 01 Aug. 2001. Web. 01 Oct. 2010. <http://lgbthealth.healthcommunities.com/stdmsm/index.shtml>.;
    (c)“Overview, Anal Anatomy, STDs, Anal Health, Anal Cancer – Anal Health.” LGBT Health Channel. 01 Aug. 2001. Web. 01 Oct. 2010. <http://lgbthealth.healthcommunities.com/analhealth/index.shtml>.

Homosexual women are also not exempt from physical problems such as bacterial vaginosis (with 30% of women who had had sexual encounters with only other women within the prior year suffering from this), Hepatitis B and Hepatitis C (see here for details.)

Moreover, there is considerable evidence that children living in homosexual households tend to suffer a greater risk of clinical emotional problems, developmental problems, or use of mental health treatment services than those living in heterosexual households. No one wishes to dispute that children living in heterosexual households can also face troubles, but the fact remains that the Biblical view of marriage gives a complementary unit of male and female to help and to guide. Men and women are undoubtedly different biologically, hormonally and neurologically (as proved by a recent study by Ragini Verma, a researcher at the University of Pennsylvania), but God (who is spirit, neither male nor female) has ordained that heterosexual marriage (a committed, loving relationship between a man and a woman) should be the basis for family life, the building block of society.

Where does this leave those who are attracted to members of the same sex, then? Is there no hope? Are they simply doomed to a life of loneliness, condemnation and judgment? The gospel of Christ is good news to us all and, as this video from Living Out shows us, those who experience same sex attraction do not necessarily have to be identified by this; they choose to see their identity as disciples of Christ first and foremost and commit to living by biblical values, choosing not to engage in homosexual practice, even if they are attracted to others of the same sex. Vaughan comments in this video that we are all broken in some way; we live in a fallen, broken world and every one of us has to face the incredibly high standards God has for sexual purity and work with Him to maintain these standards. Nonetheless, with God’s help (2 Cor 12:8-10), acceptance and help from fellow Christians and a daily dependence on God’s grace and power, there is hope for us all. All of us are accepted by God because of His grace through faith, a gift of God we gratefully receive, wherever we are broken. When we are weak, then God’s power can be seen most clearly, shining through our brokenness and leading us ultimately to that perfection we all crave.

 

Gay Marriage (1)

Garry continued his ‘Talking Point’ series tonight, looking at the subject of gay marriage. Homosexuality is a ‘hot potato’ in Christian circules and it is important to stress that we are all sinners saved by grace and that God loves everyone. Jn 3:16-18 emphasises God’s love for the whole world in sending Jesus to die to save us; Rom 5:6-8 reminds us that we didn’t have to change to be loved; ‘while we were sinners, Christ died for us.’ (Rom 5:8)  God urges us to love Him with all our heart, mind, soul and strength and to love our neighbour as ourselves (Mk 12:29-31); not only does He love everyone, but He urges us to love everyone too (including even those we may consider our enemies, see Matt 5:43-45). There is no room for us to hate anyone, whatever their sexual orientation, for God’s love reaches out to everyone.

God hates sin, however (see Is 59:1-3), and we live in a fallen world, where sin separates us from God. These verses show us that there is no ‘grading’ of sin; those whose hands are tainted with blood are separated from God just as are those whose lips spoke falsely. We may perceive some sins as more serious than others, but all sin separates from God and all of us need forgiveness.

There are several passages in the Bible which make it clear that homosexual acts are detestable in God’s sight (see Gen 19:5-7, Judges 19:22-23, Lev 18:20-23, Lev 20:13, Rom 1:26-27, 1 Cor 6:9, 1 Tim 1:9-10). This view, however, sees God as the ultimate authority in our world because He is the Creator and He made the rules. That view has been increasingly challenged in Western society since the 1950s. A pattern of rejection of homosexual practice because it was viewed as sinful gave way to tolerance of such practices to acceptance of these practices to promotion of such practices. Nowadays, homosexuality is seen as just as valid a lifestyle as heterosexuality and justification for this is often given using the following arguments:

  • it’s been around a long time
  • it happens in nature
  • it’s just the way I am

Just because something has been ‘around a long time’ does not, of course, immediately justify it. Nor does what happens in nature immediately strike us as a valid excuse: voles, some fish and wolf spiders eat their young, but no one has ever successfully justified infanticide on the grounds ‘some animals do it’! Even the idea that homosexuality is somehow ‘just the way I am’, an integral part of our identity, does not necessarily mean that it is acceptable. Desire should not necessarily dictate our actions:  as humans, we believe we should not be controlled by our desires but should exercise self-control in how we live.

A rejection of God inevitably leads us to question His authority and His rules for our lives. If we reject God, many embrace an evolutionary theory of life, but even here, there are problems with homosexuality, for the survival of the fittest would not last long without procreation, and naturally speaking, the homosexual lifestyle cannot lead to procreation. “This is a paradox from an evolutionary perspective,” says Paul Vasey from the University of Lethbridge in Canada. “How can a trait like male homosexuality, which has a genetic component, persist over evolutionary time if the individuals that carry the genes associated with that trait are not reproducing?” So often, justification for homosexual practice and for gay marriage is based on conflicting ideas that directly oppose the Biblical view that God is the moral arbiter of our world.