Saturday, June 6, 2020

worship for June 7th


Sunday, June 7th    2020
Welcome to Worship
Good morning!
For those back worshiping in the building welcome.  For those  worshiping at home – Greetings.
You can follow the material written here.  We hope to live stream the  service on the churches facebook page https://www.facebook.com/stcolumbataradale
We will post the sermon on youtube and update this blog with the correct links by lunchtime (hopefully).  There are no working links to youtube videos yet. 

The God who speaks comfort to us calls us here.
The God who addresses us with tenderness meets us here.
The God who guides us with gentleness cares for us here.
We come to prepare a way for the Lord.
We come to ready ourselves for the transformation of our lives.
For the glory of the Lord will be revealed,
and all people will see it.
  
Our opening prayer

We praise you God for who you are:
You are the comforter – who spoke to comfort your people – assuring them of your presence and power.
You are the good shepherd who tends to your flocks every need.
You are the God who speaks reassurance and peace, offering guidance and wisdom.
We come with our brokenness, our pain and our failures – and you do not turn us away
We come having been beaten and pummelled by the world and by life itself - and you comfort us.
We come with our stress, our sorrows and our fears and like a heavenly father you welcome us.
You have placed us in a family and a community of fellow Christians to give us support. 
So we have inner strength and the support of those around us.
So in the ace of every trouble we will not be afraid. In the face of every failure we are not overwhelmed. WE know there is forgiveness, a new start and new path that we can choose.
So thank you God for all the ways you make us strong and resilient.

Let us say the lord’s prayer together
Our Father, who art in heaven, Hallowed be your name
Your kingdom come and your will be done on earth as it is in heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread.
And forgive us our sins as we forgive those who sin against us. And Lead us not into temptation
And deliver us from evil.
For yours is the Kingdom, the power and the glory. Forever and ever amen
 

If you are with others share your highs and lows for the week. If you are doing this with just you and God, pause and ponder the things of your week that you are grateful for:  the people you know and love, the company you have shared….

Don’t forget the low points – what have you struggled with this week?


Opening Songs at St Columba this week are
2.     Come Now is the time to worship
 Brett talks to the children about how a flat ball is not as much fun and how you can inflate a balloon my mixing Baking soda and vinegar in a bottle.
The children sing – he’s got the whole world in his hands




Bible Readings:
 Isaiah 40:1-15

Romans 8:1-11, 14-17



Brett’s Message:  Resilience –Advancing despite Adversity

My first argument with Sue was over a piece of rubbish. We were going for a walk and I bought a can of drink and when I had finished the drink I threw the can in the gutter. She would not take another step until I picked it up.  This was very early in our relationship and it could have been over.  I picked up the can. And today when we go for a walk she still carried a bag to collect rubbish. On my bike ride yesterday I saw a great pile of rubbish heaped on a side road.  It made me think about all the plastic bottles and beer bottles and cans you see everywhere.
As a boy scout I used to help with the Bottle drives because bottles were valuable in those days.  It made me think about the recent call to ban plastic bottles- my thought was make them valuable.  If you could cash for a plastic bottle or a can or glass bottle, say 10c each there would be no litter anywhere.  Rubbish we throw away today would be valuable.  And people would collect it.
It reminded me about a church I read about called –scum of the earth. They take their name from 1 Corinthians 4:13 “We are no more than this world's garbage; we are the scum of the earth to this very moment!”
This is a church that says if you feel like the word is has treated you as garbage – the church is the place for you.
If you feel like you are washed up – finished, failed, squashed and dented – the church is the place for you.
If you feel like you don’t fit in because you are garbage – the church is a place for you.

When Paul wrote that line he was reflecting how the world treated the Christians of his time, Garbage, scum – unimportant. But God values things differently.  He looks beyond the failure, and brokenness and pain and sees potential, he sees his children, he sees those he values and loves.  God is on a bottle drive – no – a people drive.  What others throw away he sees as valuable and precious. Sometimes when we go through adversity and we have taken a beating – we wonder has God forgotten about us –has he thrown us on the garbage heap. Or is this just a step in God building a new sense of resilience in us – that we can advance despite adversity.  That our bruises and brokenness are beautiful in his eyes.

In Isaiah 40 we have the prophet announcing to people who had been defeated, whose nation had been destroyed, its people deported and who had endured 70 years in Babylon. They must regularly have thought they had been forgotten by God. And God tells the prophet to announce the good news.  God does see them as defeated and disillusioned – he sees his people and announces God is the one who will rescue them and now is the time.  This chapter talks about the character of God
A God of compassion – speak tenderly to Jerusalem v1
A God whose word is eternal (the grass fades and the flower falls but the word of the Lord endures forever v8
A God who will take care of his flock like a shepherd. v11
A God who is incomparable in power and wisdom (v12-14)
This is the same God who sees us in our brokenness and troubles we are not destined for the scrap heap but for renewal and regrowth – we can Advance Despite Adversity.

In Romans 8 – the power wisdom and compassion of God is not external to people.  It isn’t just worked out in the history of nations as in the days of Isaiah.  It is worked out in the lives of ordinary people who get to experience the same compassion and care and incomparable wisdom and power in their own lives.
It starts by announcing the great conclusion of the first 7 chapters of Romans that there is no condemnation to those in Christ Jesus (v1) for what the law and human effort could not do, God has done through Christ.  Removing our guilt, taking away both the punishment for our sin and also the rule of the point scoring system where one’s approval is measured by keeping the law.

God has done 2 things –  he did away with sin by giving us Jesus who lived the perfect life and therefore completing the requirements of the law, and allowing all who believe in him to be credited with the same righteousness Jesus achieved. V 10 describes this as being put right with God (made righteous v4.)

And then giving us the Spirit of Jesus who enables us to fulfil the law by allowing the Spirit of God to direct us.  Paul reminds the Romans that “Whoever does not have the Spirit of Christ does not belong to him” v9.  The Christian is to have the heart and mind controlled not by our humans wants and desires but by the Spirit.

The Paul moves to the Central thrust of these verses – How having Jesus and having the Holy Spirit – are central to a new way of thinking and living (v14-17)
“Those who are led by God's Spirit are God's children. 15 For the Spirit that God has given you does not make you slaves and cause you to be afraid; instead, the Spirit makes you God's children, and by the Spirit's power we cry out to God, “Father! my Father!” 16 God's Spirit joins himself to our spirits to declare that we are God's children. 17 Since we are his children, we will possess the blessings he keeps for his people, and we will also possess with Christ what God has kept for him; for if we share Christ's suffering, we will also share his glory.

Paul is telling us that God has rescued us and given us new value. Not based on human effort or merit but on God’s merit and the spirits presence in our life.

This connects with our resilience donut model I introduced last week.  The center of which is the inner core of how we see ourselves. Today I want to focus on “I am” or our self-belief.
In order to face adversity and overcome trauma and difficulty – we need to believe that our lives matter to God and to others. 
I would like to suggest that we take a personal inventory.
Who am I?   I think this should be made up of 2 parts.  My sense of identity and my skills
My Sense of identity:
·         Do I think of myself as a child of God, one who God valued so much that he sent Jesus, and even now gives me his Spirit?
·         Do I see myself through his eyes, a sheep of his pasture, a person of promise and purpose?
My Skills: Someone suggested these 5 skills ae helpful for resilience but what are yours?
  • Do I have clarity – a sense of purpose about what God wants from Me?
  •  Can I collaborate – am I friendly, and able to work with others?
  •   Do I have composure (or do I awfulise). Can I stay calm and in control in the face of adversity?
  •  Can I reason and problem solve (Cognition)?
  •  Do I have commitment , tenacity?

Paul as he looks at this list would say – these are all good things to have but they are not the main thing.

DO you have God, are you connected to eh source of compassion, wisdom and power.

Christians look to Jesus for our sense of Clarity and direction.

Christians look to Jesus  who has already connected us with God and with each other in the body of Christ.

Christians look to Jesus for our Composure – he is our peace and he gives the peace that passes understanding.

Christians look to Jesus for our wisdom,

Christians look to Jesus for our role model I commitment and allow the Holy spirit to grow his fruit including patience.

 

When I got my flat tyre and the car fell off the jack- there was no way I could solve that problem alone – I needed to call the AA.  Just as we need to call on God, trusting he has sent Jesus and the Holy Spirit, and he has given us the family of the church.

One of the strengths of the resilience Donut is that while it emphasize the inner Core – it also talks about the Ring of other skills and more importantly other people, the parents, peers, partners who you can call on. Because to survive you are not this alone.

 

If I was designing this image I am not sure I would have used the word Donut because the centre is more like an hub than a hole .  It is our core beliefs about who I am that help us to advance despite adversity. That enable us to recover and bounce back from trauma and trouble. But I wheel without a tyre full of air is also not that useful unless you like a bumpy ride.

 Can I suggest you take the time to write down your core beliefs about yourself. What value to put on yourself – do you accept the words valuation – the scum of the earth – or do you accept God’s valuation – Forgiven Child of God , someone in whom God dwells by his Spirit

Maybe you need to add a second list of who around you brings what Skills, including what has God offered and given  

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 Is there other connections between your bible readings and your highs and lows for the week?
Was there a word, sentence, or phrase that stood out to you in the readings today?

Pray for those who shared their highs and lows giving thanks for the blessings and asking for God’s help with the struggles.

This Prayer for others was written by Keith Woodcock  
Shall we pray together
Loving, Holy God, we ask for the gift of your Holy Spirit to help us to pray and for the peace and joy of your spirit to over flow our lives with a peace that passes all understanding.
We ask for the hope and comfort of your Spirit as this pandemic sweeps all around and over us. Precious lives have been lost due to the virus, families have not been able to be at a loved one’s side to say their farewells as they have passed away. Work has dried up and jobs have been lost due to the lockdowns causing unexpected financial pressures to be placed upon us due to no income. Homes and businesses have been lost through no fault of the owners or renters, and faith communities have not been able to physically meet to worship and fellowship together.
We ask for the energy and vision of your Spirit because we are all aware that it has been difficult for all of us in one way or another. We lift up to you all who have been affected by this virus. Wrap your loving, comforting arms around those who grieve, those who have lost jobs or homes, and those whose lives have changed dramatically over these past few short months. 
We ask for guidance and strength of your Spirit that we can read the scriptures that encourage and enlighten our lives. For the stories of ordinary men and women like Jonah who you called to reach out to others and to tell them about your love for all your earthly children.  We thank you for technology that we have been able to think outside the box and have worship services online and to be able to see each other in online meetings. We pray for Brett who has so ably lead us through this difficult time involving not only the adults but the youth as part of our worship together each week.
We ask for the courage of your Spirit to help and guide our national and local leaders. Our leaders have kept us informed and were ready to make the hard decisions that needed to be taken during these troubling times. Give them the wisdom and the courage to make these difficult and unpopular decisions that have affected our daily lives until this crisis is over.
Loving God, we ask for the assurance of your Spirit and that we as your earthly children come to know your presence in us and with us in our daily lives, in our relationships, in our work and service, in our daily worship, in times of joy and pain. Holy Spirit help us.

We ask for the love of your Spirit to be with us Holy God with your protective armour as we commit our lives to each other and all those we love to your tender care.
In the name of your Son Jesus the Christ.
Amen.









Say this to one another – (and yourself)

The Lord bless you and keep you;
May the Lord be kind and gracious to you;
the Lord look upon you with favour and give you peace.
Numbers 6:24ff

Go now in peace, Go now in peace. May the love of God surround you, Everywhere, everywhere, you may go.


NOTICES

We express our Sympathy to the Family of Bruce Gordon who passed away this week

Help during the health crisis:  We are wanting to be able to offer help where we can and where it is needed.  For example, this might be to pick up some groceries and leave them at the door of someone who feels unable to be in contact with people at that time.  It might be a ride to an appointment.  If you wish your name to go onto a list of those willing to help please let anyone Brett or the church office know.  Please note - in order to protect everyone, you must be in good health yourself to be involved in this.
  The Prayer Team: If you or someone you know would benefit from having some prayer support we have a prayer chain so please feel free to send your requests to office@stcolumba-taradale.org.nz and the team will spring into action. (You can be assured of confidentiality). 
 

Ministers  all the people   Parish contact details   
Church office  8445004
Brett Walker
Home    06 8442256       Mobile  0274083658

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Thanks for stopping by and reading this. You will find links to St Columba's services, helpful information and a few more personal thoughts.

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Married with Children. my wonderful wife is Sue. I have 2 sons Paul in Gisborne David In Napier