Articles
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- Written by: Dale
- Category: Weekly Reflections
Afraid?
Last Sunday at the 10am service we were asked what stops people in our congregation inviting their friends to church. A variety of answers was given, but the most frequent reply was fear.
Fear of rejection, fear of ridicule, fear of losing friendships and so on. These are good answers. Some fear comes from experience. Some comes from imagination. But fear is not necessarily bad. It may indicate that we are in the right place.
Michael Harvey said that fear is the boundary edge of the kingdom of God. It goes with God’s presence (and forms a nice tension with the comfort of God). Avoiding things that make us afraid is a natural (and often wise) human strategy.
Not everything can be avoided.
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- Written by: Dale
- Category: Weekly Reflections
Would you like to Upsize that?
What will heaven be like? Part of the answer is that we will be with Christ. If that is the case what else would one want. Someone said, whoever has God and everything else has no more than the one who has God only.
That may be a way of thinking about heaven. What about life on earth. Does the same apply? God only, or God and everything else?
Actually it can appear sometimes the other way around when we talk to people who have everything already. Or if not everything, quite a lot. Enough to make them feel comfortable, and not really in need (except, of course, for those niggly things they wish they could afford).
Do they need God? How can we talk to them about God? One of the ways we are tempted to speak is to offer God as an Upsize. Would you like to Upsize your life by adding God to it? Sounds harmless, and even attractive.
Except that God doesn’t do Upsizes.
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- Written by: Dale
- Category: Weekly Reflections
A bet both ways?
The recent discussion of drugs in sport has produced a few surprises. Not least that we were surprised. Well not all of us were surprised. Drugs must have bulked up muscle in some codes of football. How else could men get to look like that – and indeed protect themselves from serious damage?
But another controversy has developed along with performance drugs. That is the rise of gambling advertising. The two issues are not entirely separate. If the players can make so much money out of sport why shouldn’t the spectators. Of course it is not the punter that makes the money out of gambling, it is the bookmakers.
Watching sports events on TV we no longer see the boundary ads telling us which cigarettes to kill ourselves with. Now we are told the websites of corporate gambling dens where we can bet online – even while the match is on.
And at least one News Channel (in prime time family viewing) before the sports report shows a regular ad for one of the big bookies.
So? Is this a bad thing?
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- Written by: Dale
- Category: Weekly Reflections
At one ment
A new year is under way. However our new congregations are only five months old. Last September we concluded our 9am service and started two new congregations, at 8.30am and 10.00am. One of our aims was to make it possible for more people to join in. Another was to provide some variety so that at 10am especially we could provide a different context for families and children to join.
Behind all this is our desire to see many people come to know the Father of the Lord Jesus Christ. As month number six starts, let us keep praying, inviting, welcoming, befriending and generally looking forward to helping people experience the love and power of Jesus and helping them understand what he has to say to us.
That is one reason we spend the period leading up to Easter thinking about the death and resurrection of Jesus. It is his death and resurrection that is the centre and foundation of our Christian life. No death of Jesus, no life. No resurrection, no hope. No atonement, no Christianity.
Atonement? Apparently it first turns up in Tyndale, to mean being at one with God. What a wonderful thing, to be at one with God, with nothing between us, no resistance or fear on our part, no list of sins hanging over us on his part, no outstanding accounts. An unrealistic fantasy were it not for the death of Jesus.
It is his death that makes it possible for humans to clear their debts, to expunge their sins, to be rid of their wrongs, to have their judgment cancelled. Not that we humans have much to do with any of that. It was all done by Jesus for us. That’s what his death was about. Taking our debts, sins, wrongs to death so that we could share in what happened next. Actually he was taking us to death, so we could share in what happened next – a new life lived at one with God. With nothing between us except God’s Spirit himself. How wonderful.
Is that your life? Is it not a wonder? Are you not really happy?
Too right.
Dale
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- Written by: Dale
- Category: Weekly Reflections
Why Jesus came
Not long ago we celebrated the birth of Jesus (does it seem a long time ago?). Although to say it was about the birth of Jesus is to hide quite a lot of information. It was about God becoming a human. About the creator of everything taking on created flesh, joining himself somehow with what he had created. In a real human baby, in a real human man.
What happened can be understood in part, but the whole story is more than we can grasp. John comes closest to describing it in the beginning of his gospel. The creator becomes flesh.
And with what motive? Love for the humans he created. A desire to have them enjoy fellowship with him forever. To show his glory, power and kindness.
With what purpose did he become human?
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- Written by: Dale
- Category: Weekly Reflections
Growing the King’s Kingdom
Last year was quite an eventful year at Christ the King. We took a couple of big decisions. One was to continue to support and encourage the church planting ministry at Canning Vale. The other was to change from one morning service to two.
So far we have survived both changes. More than survived. Both morning congregations have thrived and we have seen some small increases in attendance. More importantly we continue to welcome new members into the fellowship of Christ’s church.
So far we have paid all our bills. This year we will have an increase in expenditure as we take on two full stipends. I hope you are encouraged by the way the Lord continues to supply our needs, just as he continues to supply your needs. I ask you to keep on praying that we will see sufficient money given to pay all our bills, and indeed that we will have vision for expanding the kinds of ministries we undertake through Christ the King.
So what exciting things will we do this year?
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- Written by: Dale
- Category: Weekly Reflections
Wise?
Were they really wise men? They must have been clever at least. They studied the sky and knew quite a lot about the stars it seems. Enough to recognise an unusual star. Whether it was what we would call a star is another question. Perhaps they had different ways of classifying the heavenly bodies. Anyway, this one was different, and its position in the heavens set them on a quest.
They thought it pointed to a new ruler amongst the Jews. Why this should interest them is not made clear in the story. But it did. So much so that they wanted to visit and show him honour. They prepared gifts appropriate for a King. Wise gifts as it turned out: implying not only royalty but suffering and divinity.
Did they know what they were doing?