Jubilee Fun Day (2)

We were privileged to have Matthew Tiffany from Greentop Circus with us, thanks to funding from the Ward Alliance.

We also had princesses to host our Fancy Dress Parade:

Jubilee Fun Day (1)

The Jubilee Fun Day at Phoenix Park started early, ensuring everyone could find me once I got to Phoenix Park and that I remained aware of who’s really in charge!

I even had crowns on my nails to fit in with the Dearne Churches Together activity of making crowns:

Setting up gazebos is always fun!

It was a busy day, with 1379 people being counted in!

Our thanks to all the volunteers who helpd us today.

 

Great Things

We have recently introduced Phil Wickham’s song ‘Great Things’ into our services at church. This song has been a favourite of ours since its release in 2018 and my older granddaughter particularly loves it. From the first time she heard it, she has sung along happily to the song, and we discovered that perhaps one reason she liked it so much was that she took it very personally. One of the lines in the song says, ‘You’ll be faithful forevermore,’ but Esther at two used to sing ‘You’ll be faithful for Ezzie more‘ (her nickname being Ezzie.) I rather liked this personalisation – and it’s true; God is faithful to us all individually!

Today, as we go to Phoenix Park in Thurnscoe for the first of our Jubilee celebrations and hopefully have a great day of fun activities celebrating not only the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee but the fact that our God is King of Kings and Lord of Lords and will reign forevermore, the lyrics of the song remain on our lips:

.You’ve been faithful through every storm
You’ll be faithful forevermore
You have done great things
And I know You will do it again
For Your promise is “Yes and amen”
You will do great things
God, You do great things
Oh, hero of Heaven, You conquered the grave
You free every captive and break every chain
Oh God, You have done great things.
We dance in Your freedom, awake and alive,
Oh Jesus, our Saviuor, Your name lifted high
Oh God, You have done great things.’ (‘Great Things’, Phil Wickham & Jonas Myrin)
God’s faithfulness in the past becomes the hope of HIs faithfulness in the present and in the future. Jesus is our hero, We exoect to have lots of children dressed up as queens and princesses and superheroes today, but we ultimately will be welcoming not only the Mayor of Barnsley at our event but the King of Kings. He is God over all, unshakeable, the One who conquered the grave and sets people free!

A Chapter Of Questions (3)

The final question in Luke 6 leads to Jesus telling the parable of the Wise and Foolish builders. (Luke 6:46-49) This question possibly sums up all the questions God ever asks us. “Why do you call me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ and do not do what I say?’ (Luke 6:46) At the heart of this question is the connection between what we say and what we do. It’s easy enough for us to pledge allegiance to Jesus with our words, to call Him ‘Lord’ with our mouths. But what really counts is doing what He says. Jesus once told a parable about two sons. The first son was asked to go and work in his father’s vineyard, and initially he refused. Later, he changed his mind and went. The second son was also asked to go and work and promised he would. But he too changed his mind and did not go. (Matt 21:28-32) Jesus asked the question, ‘Which of the two did what his father wanted?’ (Matt 21:31) The answer is obvious: the first son. In the same way, Jesus said, those who seem to be religious might not be the ones actually doing what God wants, whereas all those sinners and tax collectors were entering the kingdom of God, for they repented and actually listened to what God was saying.

We can only really truly say we are Jesus’s disciples if we are not only listening to Him but doing what He says. It’s not enough to be a theoretical disciple. It’s not enough to talk the talk if we are not walking the walk. We must practise what we preach. We must live out our faith in our everyday lives. As James put it, faith without works is dead (see James 1:22, James 2:26).

A Chapter Of Questions (2)

The next series of questions in Luke 6 focuses on our response to other people. “If you love those who love you, what credit is that to you? Even sinners love those who love them. And if you do good to those who are good to you, what credit is that to you? Even sinners do that. And if you lend to those from whom you expect repayment, what credit is that to you? Even sinners lend to sinners, expecting to be repaid in full.’ (Luke 6:32-34) It’s very easy to view relationships in the same way we view credit, helping only those who can help us, but God’s ways point towards mercy, grace and forgiveness, none of which can be earned or deserved. Jesus’s questions take us from the world’s way of doing things to God’s way. They remind us of core gospel values and show us that there are more important things in this world than money, than in the financial ledger so many of us rely on, and that we are called to be imitators of God, to become like God in how we live and respond to other people. (Eph 5:1)

Our attitudes to others are also challenged in Jesus’s questions later in the chapter, when He asks, ‘Why do you look at the speck of sawdust in your brother’s eye and pay no attention to the plank in your own eye? 42 How can you say to your brother, ‘Brother, let me take the speck out of your eye,’ when you yourself fail to see the plank in your own eye?’ (Luke 6:41-42) It’s so much easier to see the faults in other people than it is to see our own faults. It’s so much easier to judge other people harshly and be lenient with our own faults. We understand our troubled hearts and mixed motives, whereas we can’t see what lies behind other people’s actions or words. Jesus’s imagery is comical, but the questions are pointed, all the same, challenging us to look for our own faults before we even see other people’s.

A Chapter Of Questions

It’s always fascinating to learn the collective nouns for groups of animals. Most people are familiar with ‘a pride of lions’, but did you know about ‘a bike of bees’ or ‘a congregation of alligators’? Luke 6 is so full of questions that we might call it ‘a chapter of questions’!

Some of these deal with Jesus’s response to the Pharisees, whose attitude towards the Sabbath (defining almost everything as ‘unlawful’, even healing and doing good) was definitely more concerned with their idea of right than God’s. Jesus’s questions to them reminded them of God’s ultimate purpose (referring them back to 1 Samuel 21 when David ate the consecrated bread, even though he was not a priest) and He told them bluntly, ‘The Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath.’ (Mark 2:27) Later, when challenged about healing a man on the Sabbath, he asked, ‘which is lawful on the Sabbath: to do good or to do evil, to save life or to destroy it?’ (Luke 6:9) It’s a sad indictment of the Pharisees that such a question needed to be asked.

These two episodes remind us that it’s very easy to become self-righteous and to place a higher value on our own rules and regulations than on God’s. We need to be sure that our compliance with man’s rules does not actually break God’s rules. Sometimes, we may need to break man’s rules in order to be true to God’s rules: as the apostles said, ‘We must obey God rather than human beings!’ (Acts 5:29)