July Prayer Topic

July looks like being quite busy and we are very much looking forward to the Community Open Day on Saturday 9th July to celebrate 6 years since our move to Market Street. Please pray for this event which will see us opening from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m., serving refreshments and doing craft activities (glass painting, making key rings, building Jenga towers and houses and all kinds of other craft fun) as well as giving children the opportunity to have their faces painted! There will be a pilgrim trail to find out more about the church, and photos and displays on show in the church building so you can discover what has been happening in the past six years since we moved to Market Street.

In the evening at 6 p.m., we will be holding a family film night, so if you’d like to watch a film and enjoy some supper with us, please do come along to that.

Prayer undergirds everything we do as a church, so we want people to pray for all the church outreach to the community (through the different activities run here) and especially that the community will come along to the Open Day and have a great time. If you want to help to advertise this event, some of us will be giving out invitations on Saturday (2nd July) after the coffee morning. Come along for 12 noon if you want to help with this!

Other prayer requests for July will focus on future church projects and plans, asking God to lead and guide us as we continue to trust Him. The Christian life is often likened to a journey: we can’t afford to stand still, but need to keep pressing on in God!

 

Instinct vs learning

Some things are instinctive, innate, patterns of behaviour that are not learned. Sea turtles, newly hatched on a beach, will automatically move toward the ocean. A kangaroo climbs into its mother’s pouch upon being born. Honeybees communicate by dancing in the direction of a food source without formal instruction. Other examples include animal fighting, animal courtship behaviour, internal escape functions, and the building of nests. A baby doesn’t have to be taught to breathe or cry; these things happen instinctively as it emerges from the womb.

Much of the rest of our behaviour has to be learned, however: a child has to learn how to walk and talk, how to feed itself, how to behave in ways that will enable it to fit well into society.

Psalm 89 teaches us to focus our attention on God and teaches us who God is. He is unique among the heavenly beings: ‘more awesome than all who surround Him.’ (Ps 89:6-7) He is mighty, ruling over the surging sea (Ps 89:8-9). His power is manifest over all His enemies (Ps 89:10) and through creation (Ps 89:5). HIs arm is endowed with power and His right hand is exalted. (Ps 89:13) Yet power alone can be terrifying (and both corrupting and corruptible), but God is also faithful (Ps 89:8) and the foundations of His throne (or His rule) are righteousness and justice (Ps 89:14) God always does what is right, and love and faithfulness are intrinsic attributes of His nature. (Ps 89:14)

Because of this, we can sing of God’s great love for ever (Ps 89:1). This is a learned response: ‘blessed are those who have learned to acclaim You, who walk in the light of Your promise, Lord.’ (Ps 89:15)

We don’t automatically know what God is like. He reveals Himself to us through His word, through creation, through the many wonders He does, and as we learn of His nature and power, we learn to acclaim Him. We learn, the Message version says, ‘the passwords of praise.’ Praising God is all to do with acknowledging who He is and what He has done. Today, read Psalm 89 and find out more about who God is. It sets your heart singing and gives due focus to the day ahead.

Talking Point: Immigration (2)

The Bible has much to say about foreigners living in the land of God’s people, with the laws applying to both native born and foreigners equally (Numbers 15:13-16; see also Lev 18:26, Lev 24:16). Foreigners were to be treated well (see Lev 19:10,34; Lev 25:35). Lest anyone think that foreigners are somehow inferior to the native born, we should remember that in the lineage of Jesus, two foreigners are specifically mentioned: Rahab from Jericho and Ruth from Moab (Matt 1:5) The parable of the Good Samaritan (Luke 10:25-37) also reminds us that Jesus broadened the concept of ‘neighbour’ to include all people.

There are incredible opportunities for Christians to share the love of Christ with immigrants and refugees. Lebanese church leaders Camille and Stefan, for example, are seeing hundreds of Syrian refugees arrive destitute on their church doorstep, turn to Christ, experience miraculous healings and even express gratitude for their trauma – because it has enabled them to discover a God of love. Stefan’s exhortation is worth pondering: ‘I have a word for Europe,’ he says. ‘They are going in millions to Germany, to Britain, to all Europe. You should now move quickly for them, show them love. Tell them about Jesus. If we don’t do it quickly, their hearts will become rocky. There are Islamists there; they will reach them. There are fish; go fishing now. If you wait, they will become sharks later. We need to go quickly and help them before ISIS take them and send them to fight you, and send them back to fight us here. You couldn’t go to Iraq or Syria to reach them, but now God is sending them to you.’

We often feel helpless to do anything, believing that political solutions are beyond our grasp. Change can only start from within. In 2013 the Independent reported that the UK made £12.bn from arms sales to repressive regimes around the world, most of which are in the Middle East and Africa – such behaviour cannot help an already explosive situation. Christians need to be involved with politics and seek to campaign and work for righteousness at all levels. On a personal level, we often feel there is little we can do to effect change. Matt 10:16-17 reminds us of the need for wisdom, but Jesus also commands us to show mercy to all, even those with whom we might feel little affinity (see Luke 10:36-37). We are called to be peacemakers (Matt 5:9) who love even our enemies (Matt 5:43-48). The standard is high.

 

Talking Point: Immigration (1)

Garry’s ‘Talking Point’ topic tonight was on the contentious and highly topical issue of immigration, one of the major debating points during the recent EU referendum. Many people in the UK are afraid of the rise in numbers of immigrants and refugees entering the country, often associating these with an Islamic agenda and being angry that these people are ‘taking our jobs’ and using our services (such as the NHS and claiming social security benefits.) Some of the prejudice against immigrants borders on xenophobia and certainly this topic arouses feelings to an extent few others do.

Britain has a long history of people from other countries settling here, most recently Jewish refugees during the period 1930-1940 (70,000) and Hungarian refugees in 1956 when Hungary rose up against Soviet rule. Asian Ugandan refugees fled here from the dictatorship of Idi Amin in 1972 and the Vietnamese boat people fled from the incoming Communist government in the 1970s and 1980s. Kosovar refugees settled here in the 1990s and since 2011 over 5,000 Syrian refugees have fled to the UK. A refugee is someone who flees persecution, conflict or war, whereas a migrant is someone who voluntarily moves to another country, intending to live for at least a year there. Net migration in 2015 in the UK form the EU was 184,000 and from non-EU countries was 188,000.

Thursday’s EU referendum vote for the UK to leave the European Union will obviously have an impact on this situation, for according to EU laws, one of the four freedoms enjoyed by EU citizens is the free movement of workers. This includes the rights of movement and residence for workers, the rights of entry and residence for family members, and the right to work in another Member State and be treated on an equal footing with nationals of that Member State. Restrictions apply in some countries for citizens of Member States that have recently acceded to the EU. The rules on access to social benefits are currently shaped primarily by the case law of the Court of Justice. EU citizens living and working in the UK are estimated to be about 3 million, with Vote Leave giving unequivocal assurances that any new immigration system would not affect EU citizens already in the country. “There will be no change for EU citizens already lawfully resident in the UK,” it said, promising on its website that such people would “automatically be granted indefinite leave to remain in the UK and will be treated no less favourably than they are at present.” Such guarantees will not necessarily apply to UK citizens living and working in other European countries after the referendum.

There is no doubt that a simplistic view of immigration may seem to offer easy answers, but the true situation is more complex. Fears of infiltration by ISIS members are real; the terrorist attack in Paris last November demonstrates that clearly (see The Washington Post.) Nonetheless, many of those fleeing persecution are Christians, and it should be noted that being granted asylum is by no means a foregone conclusion (only 43% of asylum cases were successful in 2015; indeed, the UK is home to less than 1% of the world’s refugees, according the UNHCR.) Many UK Christians would fail the asylum questions on Christianity, and it does not help that the Home Office answer to the question ‘Why did God send Jesus to earth?’ is to ‘teach us how to behave’, rather than to ‘save us from our sins.’  Though the political situation is clearly fraught with difficulties, it does not help to treat all immigrants and refugees as enemies, and as Christians, we are called to look beyond the surface to the individuals for whom Christ died. There can be no place for hatred towards people in our debates on immigration, even though we may deplore the actions some take. As Paul wisely reminds us, our struggle is not against flesh and blood (Eph 6:12) and our opinions and solutions to problems must be rooted in Biblical thought.

Faithfulness

Dave continued his series on the fruit of the Spirit (Gal 5:22-23) this morning, speaking on faithfulness. Faith is defined as ‘complete trust or confidence’, a ‘firm belief (often without logical proof.)’ Our faith rests, however, on the faithfulness of God’s character (see Deut 7:9, Ps 33:4). Everyone has faith in something (doctors, cars, the cleanliness of restaurants and their desire not to poison their clientele!) and we need to understand that the fruit of faithfulness is grown in us by God’s Spirit because God Himself is faithful. He has called us into fellowship with His Son (1 Cor 1:9) and therefore our duty is to grow in faithfulness. We want to be ‘good and faithful servants’ who will do what God asks us to do, growing into people who are reliable, trustworthy, honest and dependable.

Our faithfulness is manifested in different ways. We need to be faithful first and foremost to God, who must have our first love and commitment. Next, we need to be faithful to our families (to wives or husbands, children and parents), honouring God’s desire for love to be seen in the family. We need to be faithful to the church and to our friends, faithful to God’s word, to prayer and to fellowship, and faithful also in our work, showing God’s character to our employers through the way we work. We need also to be faithful to the people God has called us to be, understanding our identity in God.

1 Cor 4:1-2 reminds us that those who have been given a trust must prove faithful. Faithfulness is not the same as intelligence or talents; it is a steady reliability which is committed to doing God’s will, regardless of feelings. We are encouraged to meet together and build each other up, reminding ourselves that we can only do this because God Himself is faithful. (Heb 10:23) John reminds us that we are required to be faithful ‘even to the point of death’, but that God promises ‘the crown of life’ to those who overcome. (Rev 2:10) May faithfulness abound as we rest in the faithfulness of God.