I have spent today visiting four churches that are currently linked in a pastorate. There are struggles and joys. There are opportunities and disappointments. That was so in each place. Three of the churches are very small by any standard. The other is larger but not large. It was a busy day talking to four sets of elders, but I have come home with a real sense of hope and realisation that things are happening on the ground wherever God's people are seeking to shine as the light.
One church is a venue for all sorts of community activities. If you want a children's party, that is somewhere you can go. Another attracts people from the community to a weekly coffee morning and, once a month, offers worship at the end of the morning - and it is not just church people who stay. A third were party to a community survey as to what is needed locally and responded to the desire for a local cafe. For the moment the community are proving slow to respond to the provision, but it is early days. The fourth runs Holiday Clubs for children, Holiday at Home for older people, a quarterly Messy Church, a Rambling Club etc.
There are so many ways in which we can be the Body of Christ to those whom we encounter. Let's get on with it!
Wednesday, 27 February 2013
Tuesday, 26 February 2013
Standing in God's Presence
As part of my Lent thinking I have been reading Terry Hinks' book "God's Embrace" (Darton, Longman & Todd, 2012) in which he offers a series of forty reflections on Luke's Gospel. Although it has seemed a bit like Advent, to begin with, as he starts at the beginning of Luke, it is a good reflective process. The second of these reflections particularly focusses on Luke 1:19 - "The angel replied, 'I am Gabriel. I stand in the presence of God, and I have been sent to speak to you and to bring you this good news.'"
That got me thinking about what it is like to be standing in the presence of God. The name we have for that is prayer - and it is worth considering what our prayers should be like. As Hinks reminds us (p. 46) - "Prayer isn't about bombarding God with our wish lists or demands, our successes or failings. Prayer at its truest is waiting on God and discovering the deep silent music of God's grace stirring in our hearts."
That got me thinking about what it is like to be standing in the presence of God. The name we have for that is prayer - and it is worth considering what our prayers should be like. As Hinks reminds us (p. 46) - "Prayer isn't about bombarding God with our wish lists or demands, our successes or failings. Prayer at its truest is waiting on God and discovering the deep silent music of God's grace stirring in our hearts."
Saturday, 23 February 2013
Go - and Be the Church
I have recently been reading Tom Arthur's book The Year of the Lord's Favour Tom was, at one time, one of my colleagues when we were both ministering in Birmingham. The book he has just written takes us on a fascinating journey through Luke's year in the lectionary and Tom has lots of interesting things to say. I was particularly struck by one of his comments which reminds us of the crucial importance of going out and being the church. We often spend so much time trying to gather people together. Tom reminds us that the scattering is the bit that really matters. He writes: "Our only purpose for gathering is to be scattered. Once the church becomes an end in itself, domesticated, seek its self-preservation and stability, it starts to fester. The job of the Church is to live out the life of Christ, the life for others. Church can become too much like home. So leaving church, like leaving home, is what the Church is all about." In other words, we need to stop looking inwards, and start looking out. We don't need to go to church. We need to go and be the church.
Sunday, 27 January 2013
Grace
At the moment I
am reading my way through Romans accompanied by James Dunn’s little commentary
on that letter which is part of ‘the People’s Bible Commentary series’ – Romans by James D G Dunn, 2001, Bible
Reading Fellowship. A couple of days ago
I was reading the first few verses of chapter 11 and particularly noting the comments
on ‘grace’. For instance, verse 6 says: “God’s choice is based on his grace, not on
what they have done. For if God’s choice
were based on what people do, then his grace would not be real grace.” God’s grace is not dependent on anything that
we might do. It is just there for
us. Whenever I think of God’s grace, I
tend to think of Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s writing on the subject. Bonhoeffer distinguishes between ‘cheap’
grace and ‘costly’ grace. Cheap grace is
such because it doesn’t have an impact.
Costly grace is the real grace that, when we recognise it, will provoke
a response in us. “Costly grace is the
treasure hidden in the field; for the sake of it a man (sic) will gladly go and
sell all that he has. It is the pearl of
great price to buy which the merchant will sell all his goods” (Dietrich
Bonhoeffer, The Cost of Discipleship,
SCM, 1959, p. 36).
I also like Dunn’s
little prayer reflection at the end of his comment on these few verses – “’Grace’
– that word again. A word to rest in
when all else is puzzle and confusion. A
fact to rely on when embarrassment and shame threaten to overwhelm. Thanks be to God for his uncalculating and
uncomputable grace.”
Saturday, 26 January 2013
1 Peter 2
One of the most interesting chapters for me
on the whole question of what the church should be like is 1 Peter 2. In verse 5 there is the image of being living
stones – come as living stones, and let yourselves be used in building the
spiritual temple …. When we talk
about the church, often the first thing that comes into our minds is the
building. Our buildings are incredibly
useful and a valuable resource – but it is always good to remember that the
church isn’t really the building. It’s
the people. You can have a church
without a building, but you can’t have a church without people. We are the church. That’s why I like this idea of living
stones. It, in part, serves as a
reminder of the value of the building as it uses a building as a description,
or image, of the church. But it is the
living stones, you and me, who make up the real church.
Staying with 1 Peter 2, in verse 9 there are
four descriptions of the church placed in a list – but you are the chosen
race, the King’s priests, the holy nation, God’s own people, chosen to proclaim
the wonderful acts of God … Four
descriptions and a task. The first of
these descriptions identifies us as chosen.
That is important. We often talk
about discipleship and see it as being called to make a choice to follow the
way of Jesus. That is absolutely fine,
and it is good that we make choices about following Jesus. But we must not forget that, in the first
place, it is God who chooses us. We are
a chosen race.
Then we are the King’s priests. I think there are two big things to say
here. One is that we are the
King’s. The King is Jesus. A King reigns or rules. Here is a reminder to let Jesus reign over
our lives. A simpler way to put that is
to say that Jesus, and his reign, his call, should constantly be influencing
our decisions and our way of living. But
then we are the King’s priests. A priest
is someone who acts on behalf of God, someone who has access to God, someone
who is in relationship with God. In the
Old Testament they thought that they needed special people to provide that link
for the ordinary people. Even today we
sometimes use the title priest instead of minister – and a priest, or minister,
can be very helpful in enabling our links with God. But in our tradition we recognise very
clearly that we don’t need anyone else.
We each have direct access to God.
That is when we mean when we sometimes talk about the priesthood of all
believers. Particular people can have
different roles that can be helpful but, in the end, we are all priests. We all have the opportunity and the
responsibility of direct contact with God.
Prayer is the name that we usually give to that though, when we say
that, we need to remember that prayer is a lot more than saying your prayers,
though it does include that.
Third, in this great verse of descriptions
we are called the holy nation. The
important word here is the word holy, and this is again a reminder of how we
are linked to God. Holy things are God’s
things – how fantastic to be called a holy nation!
And the last description – God’s own
people. It sums it up. We are people – and we are God’s. At the point of his baptism God says of Jesus,
You are my own dear Son. I am pleased
with you. We might not manage to
deserve that level of commendation, but we can know that we belong to God, that
we matter to God, that God cares for us.
I am going to leave verse 9 there, though I
could go on to say, as the verse does, something about being chosen to
proclaim the wonderful acts of God and I could also, like this verse, go on
to say something about being called out of darkness into his own marvellous
light but, as I said, I am going to leave verse 9 there. However, I am not quite ready to leave the
chapter, as I want to move on a couple of verses and look at the first part of verse 11. There Peter says: I appeal to you, my
friends, as strangers and refugees in this world! Here is a slightly less likely image, but one
that is also important. (Part of the
point is that none of these images give the whole story. It is like taking a photograph from different
angles. We get different views,
different perspectives, but they all valuable, all worth having.) Here is the challenge to be that bit different,
as strangers and refugees. Here is the
reminder that we mustn’t just fit in with the world. God calls us to be different, to do different
things. Jesus explained the sort of
thing that this means when he talked about walking about second miles and
giving away second coats or, to push it a bit further, about loving our enemies
– because, actually, I don’t want to love my enemy. I want to get them back. I want to hate them. Here is the reminder that we are challenged
to live a radically different way.
Friday, 11 January 2013
Small Can Be Hopeful
We
tend to think that big is best. Most
churches certainly aspire to grow – and there can be nothing wrong with
that. However, smallness also has a lot
to commend it. CWM (Council for World
Mission) Europe is doing some work on small and hopeful congregations. As their website (www.cwmeurope.org) points out: “A small congregation can be light on its feet,
quick to respond to the changes in its community. The members are likely to
know each other well, and care for each other, in ways that, in a large church,
have to be found in small groups within the church.” Of course, there
is nothing wrong with big churches, but they work best if they are broken down
into smaller units. Jesus began with a
group of twelve – and look where that got the church! One of a number of new mugs arrived in our
home at Christmas bearing the caption ‘Size Matters’. It is a large mug, so I think the message was
about the value of bigness. Size does
matter, but what matters is being the right size, the size we are called to be,
the size that God has in mind for us. If
God wants us to be a big church, ‘great’ – but if God wants us to be a small
church, that, too is ‘great’!
Thursday, 10 January 2013
What Kind of King?
Some reject the portrayal of
Christ the king. They have difficulty
with this idea, suggesting that the metaphor is too hierarchical and distant
for the loving shepherd. They want to
emphasise a different view of Jesus.
Perhaps, if Jesus had fitted the traditional profile, the criticisms
would be merited. But Jesus is not an
ordinary king. He is vested not in fine
silks and jewels, but in garments of humility and suffering. He is concerned not with power, but with
liberation. The traditional king doesn’t
fit the bill. But the idea of a shepherd
king, or a servant king, touches a deep chord in us. There is a rightness of balance, a wholesome
combination of authority and practical caring, which rings true and speaks of
safety and security. And the tradition
is already there in David, the shepherd boy made king, a tradition that is now
given an even more powerful meaning.
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