What is a Christian? 28 Feb 10
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- Written by: Dale Appleby
- Category: Weekly Reflections
What is a Christian?
A week or so ago, the youth group did a simple quiz which some of the adults heard about and showed some interest in. So here it is. It is a true or false quiz. How many can you get right?
What do you think MAKES someone a Christian?
a. Being baptised in church T/F
b. Doing good things T/F
c. Trusting in Jesus T/F
d. Believing that God exists T/F
e. Helping others T/F
f. Going to church as much as possible T/F
g. Reading the Bible every day T/F
h. Eating healthy food T/F
Talking about Jesus 21 Feb 10
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- Written by: Dale Appleby
- Category: Weekly Reflections
Talking about Jesus
The first week of our Lenten Studies has produced some interesting discussions. The two groups I was part of got quite animated when we got to talk about how to explain the death of Christ to our non-church friends. Lots of interesting ideas and testimonies bubbled forth.
Many of us have a desire to talk, but get a bit intimidated or tongue-tied when it comes to the talk. Some of this is due to our natural reticence, some due to not feeling sure that we know what to say, and for some there is the memory of making a fool of ourselves on a previous occasion.
And for some there is an assumption that we need to be able to tell the whole story in a coherent manner without leaving out anything important. Well, that might be an appropriate assumption if we were preaching a sermon, but it is not true for normal conversations.
G’day, my name is... 14 Feb 10
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- Written by: Dale Appleby
- Category: Weekly Reflections
G’day, my name is...
Len was a visitor to Canning Vale over Christmas. He wrote this week from Cardiff where he lives. He was feeling depressed, he said, about a football match the Welsh had lost to England. But he was grateful for the fellowship he had while he was in Perth. He has taken back the idea of running the Everybody Welcome Course (which emanates from just over the border in fact).
He asked how we were finding it. I said it has been very good for us in that:
- It has allowed us to talk together about what we actually do and don't do
- It has allowed us to evaluate many aspects of our life in a non-threatening manner (the survey sheets allow everyone to comment - and after they are collated everyone reads what the group has said - so a very flat playing field - no outside experts telling us how bad we are)
- It has provided lots of good ideas - a bit British but relevant to us overall.
- It has generated lots of ideas of our own
Your will be done. 7 Feb 10
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- Written by: Dale Appleby
- Category: Weekly Reflections
Your will be done.
“Your will be done.” Sometimes this is a cry of resignation. Sometimes the best explanation we can work out for some difficult event. Sometimes it is code for “God this is your fault and I am very angry!”
It is also a key phrase in the Lord’s prayer that we repeat so often. But there it is qualified: “the way it is done in heaven.” That changes the meaning considerably. God’s will is always done in heaven. And as far as we can tell, it is done with speed, willingness, zeal, happiness and joy. The inhabitants of heaven love nothing more than to do God’s will.
Which is always good, always perfect, always just right. The prayer prays that this will will be done on earth in the same way – with joy, speed, zeal, thankfulness. The model heavenly example is that of the Son who willingly became human in order to accomplish the purpose of the Triune God.
He is also the earthly model. More than once Jesus said he was just doing what the Father sent him to do. He was the perfectly obedient one, who carried out God’s will. Which brings us back to the cry of resignation, “not my will but yours be done.”
The Cross ... through the eyes of ... Lenten Studies 2010
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- Written by: Dale Appleby
- Category: Studies for Groups and Individuals
The Cross ... through the eyes of ... Lenten Studies 2010
"The Cross ... through the eyes of ..." is available as a downloadable pdf file, ready to be printed as a small booklet. Click here to view, right click to save to your computer |
These Lenten Studies will help us understand more about the death and resurrection of the Lord Jesus Christ by looking at the cross from six different perspectives. We will look at Christ’s death from the point of view of Jesus himself, Isaiah, the writer to the Hebrews, Peter, John, and Paul. The sermons in Lent will follow the same themes and on Good Friday and Easter we will also look at the cross from our perspective, and from the point of view of God the Father.
Our aim is to understand better what the meaning of Christ’s death is, and to see how that applies to us and to our friends who don’t yet believe.
Who says? 31 Jan 10
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- Written by: Dale Appleby
- Category: Weekly Reflections
Who says?
What was the big issue in the Garden of Eden? It wasn’t so much about the fruit as about who was making the rules. The knowledge of good and evil was about who knows what is good and what is evil. It is a claim to knowledge, and therefore a claim to be able to decide what is right and wrong.
Looking back from our day, it seems obvious. That’s how most humans operate today. It seems as clear as day that humans are the ones who have the right and ability to decide right and wrong. At least that is the common practice, even if the theory is not always clear to everyone.
A British Social Attitudes Survey published this week reports that the British are becoming more conservative in some areas (such as finance) but going to church less and are more liberal socially on matters to do with personal lives and family matters. More acceptance of homosexuality and of living together - but less tolerant of cannabis.
Similar trends would be found in Australia no doubt. And why shouldn’t humans decide for themselves what is right and wrong?
Responding to human tragedy 24 Jan 10
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- Written by: Dale Appleby
- Category: Weekly Reflections
Responding to human tragedy
Human tragedies seem to pile one on top of another. Bushfires, floods, earthquakes, drowning, murders. Loss of life on huge scales and loss of life on very personal small scales. But not all human tragedies result in immediate death.
Many tragedies keep on going. The intensity varies from day to day but the pain, loss, despair are always there. All of us know someone who is affected by some great sadness and calamity. Sometimes it is of their own making, sometimes not. Sometimes a bit of both.
Sometimes the person we know is ourselves. And we recognise that tragedies are relative. But estimating the relativity is tricky. “Why me?” is one response. Thankfulness that it is not as bad as someone else is another.
Responding to the tragedy involves more than working out who is worse off. And it is not just the sufferer who has to respond. Friends, family, communities also respond to tragedies and are affected by them. But how best to respond, especially to large scale or chronic tragedies?