Listen in!

Have you noticed that you can now listen to the sermons from church?

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We have now managed to record sermons and upload them to the website, so if you are not satisfied with reading a summary of the sermon, you can listen for yourself online. Click on the ‘Resources’ tab at the top of the page to choose the sermon; both sermons from Sunday 30th March are available to listen again.

Believe the impossible

Guest speaker Yan Hadley spoke last night about the importance of faith in the life of the Christian. Jesus died so that we may have life; the Biblical principle is of a God who freely gives us all things (Rom 8:32) and who became poor for our sakes so that our lives may be enriched. (2 Cor 8:9) Our part in this participation in life is to commit to trust even though we may not comprehend.

Often, we are slow to believe God’s incredible promises. The Israelites, on the brink of the Promised land, were slow to believe; the disciples on the road to Emmaus were equally slow to grasp all that Jesus was telling them. Prov 3:5 reminds us that we need to trust in the Lord; the church is robbed if we try to ‘work it out’, for we need to accept by faith all that God offers rather than trying to reason it all out; we have to take thoughts captive if we are to experience God’s promises. Our minds must be renewed (Rom 12:1-2), for we have the mind of Christ (1 Cor 2:16) and need to progress in faith to see the greater things Jesus promised.

We need an unswerving trust in God if we are to grow spiritually, and this will involve faith. Faith can be dormant, diverted or dependent, however. A dormant faith is never allowed to be stretched. A diverted faith will believe anything: feelings, fears, what others say, what circumstances indicate. A dependent faith will accept what God says as truth and will accept this whole-heartedly.

God wants us to expect the unexpected and allow Him to use us to touch those we know. He wants us to believe the unbelievable, for ‘all things are possible if you believe.’ Abraham, Joshua and Gideon all discovered the key to success lay with faith. We need to choose to bless the Lord at all times (Ps 34:1) and to be committed to the life of faith.

Being personally productive

Garry continued his series from 2 Pet 1:5-10 today, looking at how we can be personally productive. James 2:14-18 reminds us that faith and works have to go together and Paul is encouraged by the Thessalonians because of ‘your work produced by faith, your labour prompted by love and your endurance inspired by hope.’ (1 Thess 1:3) Our faith motivates us to work, but the most important works we can be involved in as Christians are prayer and worship.

Work can refer to any kind of business, employment or work, which can involve manual work, artistic work, industry or even thinking! There are all different kinds of work, and we must not look down on any kind simply because it is different. We are all called to work in some form or other; labour, on the other hand, is usually associated with intense work which leaves us exhausted at the end of it. In all our work and labour, however, faith and love have to be the motivators.

God also requires us to persevere or endure, not swerving from the tasks God gives us to do, having an eternal perspective, not one limited by time. As we are involved in prayer, we engage with God and feel His heart, seeing what He is doing and joining in. Prayer needs to fuel all our work in order to make it effective. Rockets such as Saturn V require power to enable them to escape earth’s gravitational pull and are obviously very fast, but work is currently being done on ion engines, which would be slower initially but which could keep on accelerating.

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In the same way, we need to keep persevering in prayer, for prayer lubricates all the work we are doing. Prayer can be like labour, wrestling with God (as Daniel did when the angel had to battle spiritual forces to bring the answer to prayer.)

We need to set time aside to be with God, not allowing this time to be squeezed out or just squeezing it in where we can. Prayer needs to be our natural habitat so that God is always only a breath away, not merely a nodding acquaintance. The challenge before us is to learn to work, labour and endure in prayer.

Joint events

Following the ‘Churches Together’ meeting, local churches will be joining together on an Easter March of Witness on Easter Saturday (19th April), starting at 10 a.m. at the Catholic Church on Lockwood Road. We will be marching along Main Street, down High Street, back up Straight Lane and along Doncaster Road, ending at our church for tea or coffee. Come along if you can to this event to demonstrate to our local community the truths of Easter and to show that God is working in our local area.

The next ‘Churches Together’ meeting will be at the Methodist Church on Furlong Road in Bolton-on-Dearne on Saturday 10th May, starting at 6 p.m. We trust this will be another good night of fellowship and growing in faith together.

Churches Together (2)

In the rest of the meeting, we heard testimonies from those attending about how God has worked in their lives. It was good to hear of how people came to faith, how God is providing jobs for people, how God is bringing people to the area and how God has helped people through very difficult personal circumstances. Thanks to Julie, Jimmy, Diane, Anthony and Sue for sharing their stories.

We also prayed for our community, thanking God for all He is doing here and for His promise of what He will do in the future, and worshipped God in song.

Afterwards, the conversations continued over cake and coffee!

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Churches Together

Last night we hosted the latest ‘Churches Together’ meeting and it was wonderful to have people from a variety of local churches in attendance. In order to help us get to know each other, we played a game at the start:

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IMG_0410The game focussed on finding letters to spell out words which were all contained in Psalm 133. Mark took this Scripture about unity to remind us that God says it is good and pleasant when brothers dwell together in unity. It is good for us and it is good for God! Jesus’s prayer in John 17:20-21 is for unity, for the unity of the Godhead is the pattern for our unity. Where there is unity, God commands His blessing; it is like the anointing oil of Aaron running down his beard and body (we need God’s anointing on the whole body of Christ) and like the dew, which is like God’s blessing and provision on us in power. The challenge is for us to work together as different churches, appreciating that unity does not mean uniformity and that there is room for diversity within our working together!