Thanksgiving

Yesterday was ‘Thanksgiving’ in the US, a reminder that during the Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln proclaimed a national day of “Thanksgiving and Praise to our beneficent Father who dwelleth in the Heavens” and now celebrated on the fourth Thursday in November. It’s a reminder to me that being thankful is a sure sign of God at work in our lives and God’s will for each one of us (1 Thess 5:17 TNIV). We have so much to give thanks for: God’s love endures forever; He has blessed us in the heavenly realms with every spiritual blessing; He protects us and guides us each day!

More intriguingly, the day after Thanksgiving (today) is known as ‘Black Friday’ in the US. Apparently, historically this day happened on September 24, 1869 and was caused by two speculators’ efforts, Jay Gould and James Fisk, to corner the gold market on the New York Gold Exchange. It was one of several scandals that rocked the presidency of Ulysses S. Grant. Nowadays, Black Friday is often regarded as the beginning of the Christmas shopping season. In recent years, most major retailers have opened extremely early and offered promotional sales to kick off the holiday shopping season, similar to Boxing Day sales in the UK. As one who doesn’t particularly like sales shopping, I can see why this might be called a ‘black’ day (!), but it does seem odd to me that this is so named immediately after a day given over to thanksgiving!

Let’s give thanks every day and rejoice in God’s goodness!

Dates for your diary!

December is always a busy month, so it is good to make a note of the special services we will be holding during December.

The family service will be on Sunday 1st December at 6 p.m. There will be Sunday meetings as usual throughout December, with Communion services starting at 10.30 a.m. and evening services at 6 p.m.

The carol service will be on Sunday 22nd December at 6 p.m. This is always a fun occasion with lots of games and activities as well as refreshments after the service. It’s a great opportunity to invite friends, family and neighbours to church, so do pray about this. Posters, flyers and invitations will be available on Sunday 1st December.

Midweek services will be held on 5th, 12th and 19th December, but there will be no midweek services during Christmas week (i.e. no service on Christmas Day or Boxing Day).

Advance dates for January include the traditional New Year’s Day party on Wednesday 1st January, starting at 4 p.m. There will also be a celebration service on Saturday 4th January, starting at 6 p.m. This will be to thank Mark and Diane for all their work in leading the church for the last eight-and-a-half years and to welcome Garry and Julie to their new roles. Please see Diane if you are able to bring any refreshments to either the New Year’s Day party or the celebration service.

December prayer topic

Throughout December we will be praying in particular for our church.

Pray God will:

• empower and envision the leaders as they preach the Word and lead Bible studies

• use each member of the congregation in a mighty way in the church

• give each member of the congregation grace and vision to do all that He has called us to do

• pour our His Spirit on everyone in the church

• help us to show people what Christmas means to us and can mean to them

• help us to invite non-Christians to the Carol Service on 22nd December and the New Year’s Day Party and that we may have opportunity to speak to them about God

• enable us to truly worship God with all our heart, soul, mind and strength

• lead, bless and protect Garry and Julie as they take up their new role next year as pastors of the church

We have collated all the prayer topics which have featured throughout 2013 into a ‘2013 Prayer Booklet’ and these will be available on Sunday for all members to take. On the last page you can record some of the answers to prayer you have seen. Hopefully we can share these during the last evening service of the year on 29th December so that we can reflect on all that God has done during 2013 and can encourage each other with how God has answered prayer and led us throughout the year.

Prayer meetings will be held on Thursday 5th and 19th December, with the first prayer meeting being a prayer walk. We started the year with prayer walks throughout Goldthorpe in January and have done a few prayer walks since, so it will be good to end the year with another prayer walk. We will be leaving church at 7.30 p.m. on that evening, so please make sure you bring a coat and are prepared for the cold weather on that occasion!

The Father’s Love

Following on from the morning’s service about praising God for the current things He is doing in our lives, three people gave testimonies last night. Diane spoke of how she had had the opportunity to speak of God’s love to a man attending the coffee morning on Saturday and Eileen spoke about a conversation with a Christian lady at hospital that week and how God had given her boldness to speak about the church’s ministries to the medicar driver on the way home from hospital. Debbie spoke of how God had given her wisdom and words to speak to her neighbour during a difficult home situation and how God was moving in the neighbour’s son’s life. Such testimonies remind us of how God is at work in and through ordinary people and how He is answering our prayers for boldness this month!

It was also Diane’s turn on the birthday box:

Stephen then spoke from Luke 15:11-32 TNIV on the Parable of the Prodigal Son, looking particularly at the Father’s love as revealed in that story. His love is seen in his initial reaction to his son’s request for his inheritance (a dishonourable request to make since the father was still alive!) The father was generous enough to give his son blessing and wealth. God the Father lavishes blessings on us each day; He loves us so much that He gave His only Son for each one of us. Such a love is total and selfless.

The father waited for his son to return home and during the years of famine must have been worried about his son’s wellbeing. He never stopped looking out for him and eventually the son made the wise choice to return home and seek forgiveness. The father’s love knew no measure and was willing to embrace his son and restore him to his position in the family, rather than simply accepting him as a servant. His love put sandals on those tired feet and fed both body and soul. There is a better robe, a better treasure, for each one of us in God, for our heavenly Father longs to pour out blessings on us and there is an unlimited supply of love available to us.

Are we a taker, someone who takes from God and then leaves Him? Or are we living in God day by day?

God of Wonders

This morning’s sermon looked at the happenings in Exodus 14 and 15, particularly looking at Exodus 15:11 TNIV: “Who among the gods is like you, LORD? Who is like you— majestic in holiness, awesome in glory, working wonders?” When we see God move in power and majesty and might, our whole lives are changed and we can ‘let that confidence in God seep into the very depths of our hearts and minds, forming a holy confidence on the inside of us.’ (Matt Redman)

The story of Exodus is rooted firmly in history and is a story of deliverance. It’s a story that unfolds over years: the chapters leading up to these events have shown us the providence of God in protecting Moses, ensuring he was brought up as a ‘prince of Egypt’ and commissioning him to do God’s work. God’s ‘hand of providence is guiding us through choices that we make… is reaching out to help us on our way… has been our best defence, though His ways are sometimes hard to understand.’ (Michael W. Smith, ‘Hand of Providence’)

At this point in history, Israel has seen the deliverance of God in getting them out of Egypt through the Passover, but things do not look so rosy now. Pharaoh has come to regret his decision to let them go and he is now considering what to do to recover his slave labour (Ex 14:5 TNIV). The Israelites are now terrified and see only disaster ahead. They feel God has only brought them this far to die in the desert and can only see death ahead (either by drowning in the Red Sea or through slaughter by the Egyptians.) Moses encourages them: ‘Do not be afraid. Stand firm and you will see the deliverance the LORD will bring you today. The Egyptians you see today you will never see again. The LORD will fight for you; you need only to be still.’ (Ex 14:13-14 TNIV) There are many times in our lives when there is nothing more we can do and we need simply to trust in God to make a ‘third way’ for God can come up with solutions which are completely beyond our comprehension or imaginations, beyond our wildest dreams. (see Ephesians 3:20-21 TNIV)

Exodus 14:16 TNIV shows us God’s miraculous solution by which the Red Sea was parted and the Israelites walked through on dry ground, only to see the Egyptians subsequently drowned as the waters came crashing back down. This was obviously a miracle (‘a surprising and welcome event that is not explicable by natural or scientific laws and is considered to be divine’), but one that was witnessed by the people. They saw with their own eyes first-hand what God could do and their response was a song of praise (see Exodus 15:1-11 TNIV). When we see God’s deliverance, providence and provision, our response is awe and wonder and praise. We felt this way in 2010 when we finally got the keys to this building. How could it possibly be that a church with just over £7,000 in the bank could move into a building valued at over £160,000? How could it be that a secular funding organisation, CRT, would give us a grant of £150,000 not once, but twice, after we’d been forced to give it back to them because of the timescales? How could it be that a church with a congregation of our size could move in to this building and renovate it so quickly? How could it be that a church like ours could cope with the everyday, long-term running of the building and pay back everything we owed even before the building on Beever Street was sold? When we were asked about the long-term viability of the project by CRT, it was difficult to answer their questions because we did not really know how we were going to finance the everyday running costs, but here we are, over three years later and we see that even though we have spent about £11,000 this year on the renovation and refurbishment of the building in providing a new kitchen, a new boiler and other works, we have more than £1000 more at the end of the financial year than we did at the start, and that’s not even mentioning the £5000 or so we have given away to missionary work! How can it be? Our only answer is that God is majestic in holiness, awesome in glory, working wonders and we are simply part of this amazing work that He is doing!

Whatever else God has done for us, His love has come down to us. He has called our names. He has drawn us to His heart through the cross. He has washed all our shame away. He has made a way for us just as He did for the Egyptians. Because of that, we can open up our hearts and pour His praises out. Matt Redman says ‘there is a reason behind our rejoicing. There is substance to our shout. Joyful worship is the freedom cry of a rescued soul.’ Let’s sing and shout to the God of wonders, for He has done wonderful things. ‘I will come and proclaim your mighty acts, Sovereign Lord; I will proclaim your righteous deeds, yours alone.’ (Ps 71:6) We sing because of all God is and all He has done. We shout because we have seen His right arm made bare. He is our King of Wonders and praise and worship are our response to who He is and what He has done and continues to do in our daily lives.

Yet more walking…

Tonight’s Bible study looked at 1 John 1:7-10 TNIV. Here, we read about ‘walking in the light’ and the benefits this brings. ‘Walking’ is often used in the sense of ‘living’, having a moral sense indicating the habitual course of life, outward and inward (see also Mark 7:5 TNIV, Acts 21:21 TNIV). The benefits of this are that we have fellowship with God (in the sense of association, communion and joint participation with), fellowship with other Christians and purification from all sins. The verb ‘purifies’ is in the present continuous tense, indicating that not only has Jesus cleansed us, this is an ongoing work available to us every day, giving us ‘unimpeachable purity’. In chemical situations, it is very hard to achieve total purity (think of the ‘traces’ of other substances in bottled water, for example), but Jesus is able to purify us totally and utterly.

This cleansing leads to a change in our behaviour; we do not wish to continue in the same sins, but want to grow in our understanding of what it means to walk in the light. It’s like the first gleam of dawn, becoming brighter as the day goes on (see Proverbs 4:18 TNIV). However, John is realistic about the fact that sin is still present; to claim otherwise is to deceive ourselves and to make God out to be a liar. We need continual purification because we continue to be contaminated by sin! God has made provision for all our sins to be forgiven – and at such a cost, the price being the blood of Jesus – but we need to confess our sins in order for this forgiveness to be realised and made effective in our lives. If we do not avail ourselves of the forgiveness which is freely offered to us by confessing our sins, we do not receive the forgiveness for which Christ paid. It’s like having a gift voucher for a certain shop – the voucher is only effective when redeemed. If we do not confess our sins, we are effectively ‘going it alone’, acting as though we do not need the forgiveness of Christ and therefore as though His sacrifice is not sufficient. When we confess our sins, we find He is faithful and just and will forgive us all our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness. Not only is there forgiveness for individual sins, there is an ongoing cleansing from everything which would make us unrighteous.

In this first chapter of John’s first letter, we have seen how ‘the disciple whom Jesus loved’ is urging us to walk with Jesus, knowing fellowship with Him and with other Christians and living in the light. The fellowship and benefits of this life encompass far more than just the forgiveness of sins, but the cleansing Jesus brings to our lives enables us to ‘walk tall’ with Him, knowing cleansing and forgiveness in our everyday living.