Monday, February 27, 2012

love without condition does not mean to love without concern

 

What can we say about God's love? We can say that God's love is unconditional. God does not say, "I love you, if..." There are no ifs in God's heart. God's love for us does not depend on what we do or say, on our looks or intelligence, on our success or popularity. God's love for us existed before we were born and will exist after we have died. God's love is from eternity to eternity and is not bound to any time-related events or circumstances. Does that mean that God does not care what we do or say? No, because God's love wouldn't be real if God didn't care. To love without condition does not mean to love without concern. God desires to enter into relationship with us and wants us to love God in return. Let's dare to enter into an intimate relationship with God without fear, trusting that we will receive love and always more love.”

A Quote from a friend’s blog (see http://prodigal.typepad.com/ )

 

Sunday, February 26, 2012

irrationally exuberant or boring beyond reason - a view on modern church

In yesterday’s Press supplement the modern church was described as being either irrationally exuberant or boring beyond reason.  While the critique is simplistic it probably conveys both a lot of truth and sums up many people’s perceptions. Our dream here at Spreydon is to create services that are engaging, intellectually credible without being academic, alive, honest and real but most of all services that give glory to God from start to finish challenging and comforting us in the way we live every day of the week.

 

 

Saturday, February 25, 2012

Worship and Mission - our new series

Missions is not first and ultimate. God is![1]

The aim of this preaching series at Spreydon through February and March 2012 is to show how worship and mission are interlinked, both are eternal, both the call and work of God and together they involve us as whole people in our doing and being.

The diagram above which shows the Gloria Dei (worship of God) already existing in the Trinity of love to which we as the people of God are invited to join. And it shows the Mission of God in which the church is sent by the Father, Son and Holy Spirit and being sent is called back into the worship and love of God.

So worship and mission are not to be held separately or in completion or given priority over each other but rather, from a biblical perspective, the work and worship of God and God’s people are interconnected and support each other.

The practical outworking of this series is for us as a mission focused church to understand, value and incorporate into our lives the complementary importance of worship as the fuel and goal of our mission work.

This is not a diminishing of the importance of Mission. John Piper states “When the flame of worship burns with the heat of God’s true worth, the light of Missions will shine to the darkest peoples on earth[2].” Where passion for God is weak, zeal for missions will be weak.

Worship is not a gathering. It is not essentially a song service or sitting while someone preaches. Worship is not essentially any form of outward act. Worship is essentially an inner stirring of the heart to treasure God above all the treasures of the world. . . it is right affection in the heart toward God, rooted in right thoughts in the head about God becoming visible in right actions of the body reflecting God. Worship is reverence, respect and honour brought in spirit and truth, lived out in service. It involves our whole lives.

 

 



[1] P38 - John Piper - Let the Nations be Glad - The Supremacy of God in Missions

[2] P36 - John Piper - Let the Nations be Glad - The Supremacy of God in Missions

Friday, February 17, 2012

The anniversary approaches

 

As we approach the anniversary of the devastating earthquakes that hit our city I have re-listened to the message that Prof John Lennox (Professor of Mathematics at Oxford University) gave here a few days after the earthquake. It is the most listened to message of all the messages we have on line and is an excellent caring engagement with the pain and unfairness of the tragedy.  He opens with someone asking him the hardest question he faced and he replied ‘Christchurch’. Why not listen - http://admin.resonate.org.nz/media/1537

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Going through 'Dry times' in faith.

As part of their preparation for the Salt and Light festival last weekend I was asked a few questions on the ‘dry times’ of Christian faith and the need for personal rhythms of life to sustain our faith for the long haul. If your interested here is the video clip that was shown to the Young Adults at the festival- : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zi3nNj1xHBo&feature=youtu.be

 

Sunday, February 12, 2012

A new book

A good friend, Paul Fromont, has highlighted a recently published book on his blogsite. It looks like it is well worth reading. Prophetic Jesus, Prophetic Church: The Challenge of Luke-Acts to Contemporary Christians  By Timothy Johnson (Eerdmans, 2011).

 

There is a review of the book at http://prodigal.typepad.com/ if you would like to read more; but what caught my eye was a quote about the radicalness of worship. Johnson states:-

 

…. The single greatest countercultural act Christians perform is to worship together and proclaim that Jesus is Lord. To cease from the constant round of commerce and consumption, to resist the manipulation of media that insists that working and possessing defines worth, and to proclaim with the body language of communal gathering that Jesus, not any other power, is Lord is to enact the politics of God’s kingdom and to embody the prayer ‘your kingdom come.’ (124)…”

 

A quote worth contemplating and a book worth reading.

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Work and ethics - great opportunity

Two Public Lectures at Laidlaw College

By visiting lecturer William G. Messenger (Theology of Work Project)

 

v  What the Bible says about Work: Some Surprises

 

v Workplace Ethics: Creativity and Conflict

 

Monday evening 27 February 2012

 

The first 45 minute lecture will begin at 7.00pm and the second at 8.30pm. 

Each will be followed by a 15 minute opportunity for questions.

There will be a 30 minute break with refreshments from 8.00-8.30pm.

 

Will Messenger works at the interface of academia, theology and business ethics. He is Executive Editor of the Theology of Work Project Inc. and is based in Belmont, Massachusetts. He also serves as an adjunct professor of business ethics at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

Will is ordained in the Episcopal Church. He holds a B.S. in Physics from Case Western Reserve University, an M.B.A. from Harvard Business School, a Master of Divinity from Boston University School of Theology and a Doctor of Ministry from Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary.

www.theologyof work.org

 

The lectures are free.

 

No need to register – just come along.

 

Location

Christchurch Campus, 70 Condell Avenue, Papanui, Christchurch.

 

Thursday, February 2, 2012

the heroes become villains

Not that many months ago Peter Whitthall and Bob Parker were the heroes. Today they have become the villains. At the last local government elections Bob Parker was swept in on a landslide of positive opinion and his prime opponent could only pull out. Yesterday thousands stood outside the council buildings asking for Bob to resign, for a new election or the appointment of government commissioners. Similarly Peter Whitthall who was the trusted face of the Pike River Mine tragedy has become the focus of anger and frustration for grieving families and disgruntled West Coasters. There is substance to the concerns being expressed in both cases but they have also become the scapegoats and bearers of our grief turned to anger, our frustration turned to protest and complaint.

 

As followers of Jesus we know that the crowd can quickly turn from adulation to cries of ‘crucify him’. And we know that the crowd mentality lives in side us too. The question is what does following Jesus look like in Christchurch and Greymouth? Below is a very good article from the Anglican Bishop, Victoria Matthews that is well worth reading and reflecting on.  Personally I sense that our anger and frustration is a predictable and understandable part of our reality. Like the people of God in the wilderness years between leaving Egypt and finding the promised land we have got sick of waiting. Our waiting and grief and pain is leading to frustration and angry outbursts. Like the disciples on Easter Saturday cooped up in the upper room waiting and unable to go anywhere or do anything it is hard. It is hard to hold our grief with God and hold onto the promise of the future. But the Jews had to hold on to the promise of hope and so too did Jesus first disciples and so too do we.

 

In this waiting time maybe we can most productively share our grief and frustration with God and each other through prayer, writing our own psalms or songs of lament, listening to each other and caring for others who are suffering. And secondly to remind ourselves of the hope of God for the future – to hold on to the Christian promise that resurrection life comes only through suffering.

 

Here’s what the Bishop wrote:-

 

The present climate of discord in Christchurch is doing more damage to our beloved community than any of the earthquakes that have ravished our city over the past sixteen months.  The deep unhappiness and speed with which we accuse one another is unfortunate but understandable.  It is part of the process of grieving.  We have all lost so much.  There is no turning back and reclaiming what was.  But there also is a future and that future is of our making.
   
Last 18 March on a beautiful sunny day in Hagley Park we gathered to mourn our dead and to grieve the extensive injuries to people, and vast damage to property and possessions.  Nevertheless the day was bright with more than sunshine.  There was hope and Prince William reminded us of his grandmother’s wisdom: “Grief is the price you pay for love.”  We began by watching a somber silent video of the destruction of the city and concluded with another video that celebrated the strength of Canterbury’s sons and daughters.  We stood and cheered the USAR team members and emergency services personnel who had risked their own lives to help find others.  We laughed, cried and prayed together, and we were strong.  What has happened to us?

The two emotions we most often hear expressed now are anger and disappointment.  There is a sense of betrayal and many, many accusations.  Like everyone else I have my opinions about what could and should be done, but I actually do not think that is the point.  The point is that a new chapter in the history of New Zealand and disaster recovery is being written by our lives.  The events of the last year and a half are not what most countries experience with earthquakes. There was a transition that happened long before we recognized it was happening. We moved from experiencing an earthquake or two to living in the midst of a long term seismic process.  It is not unlike finding out the diagnosis of your illness is not an easily curable disease but a life changing condition.  It requires huge accommodation and great emotional maturity.  Getting angry is part of the coming to terms with the new reality but in actual fact the anger is less than helpful if it not dealt with.

At this time there is community wide angst and  traumatic stress that will not go away over night.  It has us in its grip.  Even visitors get caught up in the pain and distress.  So the need to be patient with one another has never been more important.  We need to listen and to consider our words before speaking.  We need to acknowledge each other’s pain and distress as well as living as best we can with our own.

In Desmond Tutu’s book No Future Without Forgiveness, he writes of remembering his theological training at a pivotal point in the proceedings of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.  He was hearing horrific stories of torture and injustice and he was sickened by it all.  He began to think of those who did the terrible deeds as monsters and then he caught himself.  He reminded himself that far from being monsters and less than human, they were children of God and no better or worse than himself.  Desmond has a lot to teach Christchurch.  No we are not at our best at this moment in time, but we are still a human community, and we have the opportunity to find the way forward together or trample each other under foot.  Last March I dared ask Christchurch residents, ‘What story will you tell?’, as we move ahead.  I ask the question again and I ask it now of our community.  This is a moment of crisis which offers us both threat and opportunity.  What future will we choose to create for ourselves and our children?   Will our descendants say, “They served us well by the decisions they made in very difficult times?”  Or will they ask why we ignored the needs of those most damaged and ravished by the quakes?

When I find myself absolutely frustrated with the present situation, I know I have a variety of possible responses.  I can get angry and let that anger fuel my speech and action, or I can focus on others’ needs and situations and try to offer constructive assistance.  The strange thing is when I decide to help another person, I feel better.   It is the same when I choose to be thankful for what I have rather than resentful about what I have lost.  I only wish I remembered that more often.  Maybe it is something we should do together.