Worship - meaningful and cheesy - Paul Ad

28. September 2011 21:04

I began to prepare a sermon on the theology of worship and it turned into a poem – rather meaningful yet cheesy in places.

Worship means to come towards to kiss

It means to accept and be accepted.

It means to forgive and be forgiven.

It means to recognise and be recognised.

It means to value and be valued.

It means intimacy

It means to be seen close-up

It means vulnerability

It means to be seen to care.

It means submission

It means sacrifice.

 

Worship with attitude

Worship with words

Worship with singing

Worship with shouting

Worship with groaning

Worship with silence

Worship with action

Worship with serving

Worship with giving

Worship with writing

Worship with looking

Worship with eyes closed

Worship while motionless

Worship full of movement

Worship full of food

Worship full of nothing

Worship full of thinking

Worship with arms full

Worship with hands up

Worship with knees up

Worship with knees down

Worship with instruments

Worship with rhythm

Worship with melody

Worship in harmony

Worship with growling

Worship with howling

Worship with pencil

Worship with paintbrush

Worship with glue stick

Worship with post-it notes

Worship with mis-placed jokes

Worship with serious tones

Worship with microphones

Worship with flags

Worship with hand bags

Worship with track pad

Worship with I pad

Worship with wallet

Worship in Sonnet

Worship with airtime

Worship with pantomime

Worship with bread and wine

Worship with friends of mine

Worship with stranger

Worship alone

Worship with the masses

Worship at home

Worship with family

Worship in twos and threes

Worship in light or dark

Worship with field and trees

Worship on gym machines

Worship with flat screen TV 

Worship with animals

Worship in cathedrals

Worship with bricks and mortar

Worship with son and daughter

Worship in sackcloth and ashes

Worship by growing or shaving beards and moustaches

Worship with clothes on

Worship in the nude

Worship on the tube

Worship with perfume

Worship with food

Worship by fasting

Worship by baking

Worship by hurrying

Worship by waiting

Worship in the cold

Worship in the warm

Worship at sunset

Worship at dawn

Worship in a cave

Worship on mountain

Worship in desert

Worship by fountain

Worship while bleeding

Worship while needing

Worship while sowing

Worship while reaping

Worship by helping

Worship by receiving

Worship in celebration

Worship while grieving

Worship in private

Worship in public

Worship in secret

Worship with announcement

Worship by being seen

Worship by sharing dream

Worship through fears

Worship through loss

Worship with tears

Worship while you floss

Worship with sad eyes

Worship on spiritual highs

Worship wherever

Worship whenever

Worship together

Worship forever

Worship with who you are

Worship with what you do

Worship in faith

Worship with proof

Worship in spirit

Worship in truth

Who is worthy of all this?

To draw near to kiss?

Who’s nature, who’s claims?

Who’s attributes, who’s ways?

 

God – Father, Son Spirit.

Creator of cosmos

Holding all in his great loving hands

Giving life and identity from I am to I am.

Tags: ,

Bear Blog | General | News

Tangled - Paul Ad

21. September 2011 01:44

On Sunday we sang: “forever I am changed by your love” repeatedly, almost until it sank in (we were singing about God).  And it struck me that that is what happens when you get drawn into a relationship with somebody – they affect you.  Whatever is going on in them, be it good or bad, starts to demand a change in you.  And it is not always comfortable, indeed it is not always good, but it is inevitable.

Last week my mother presented me and Emily with a crystal bowl (not ball).  And it’s not just any crystal bowl – it has meaning.  It represents 15 years of tangling, 15 years of two people increasingly wrapping themselves up in each other to the point where, whilst we are still individuals, we are no longer independent.   It’s quite scary really – risking being hurt, risking being changed, risking freedom – all in the hands of another imperfect human being!  I’d like to say I am proud of achieving 15 years of marriage, but really I am wrecked by it, changed, affected – I might be able to say I am proud if I had had stayed the same whilst taming a wild animal to meet my demands – but I can’t.  In truth I have been changed and it is humbling and wonderful all at the same time.

Emily and I have been wound into each other’s identities.  We have both changed, it has not always been comfortable, but we have embraced it and it has born real and remarkable fruit, in our lives, in our community and not least in the form of our three children.

As we are drawn into God we find that we are increasingly required to change.  Not because he tells us we have to, but because of who he is.  Fortunately, unlike people, God doesn’t have psychological and emotional problems.  Drawing into a closer relationship with him means being drawn into love – after all that is who he is (1 John 4).  It’s not always comfortable because it doesn’t always come naturally to us – for example I have never found it natural to respond to somebody abusing me with the words “forgive them for they don’t realise what they are doing”.  But nevertheless that’s where we are headed – that’s where being tangled up in God takes us.

Emily and I didn’t get married so we could get a crystal bowl after 15 years, but it is amazing to look at it and reflect on how much change and shaping it represents.

When I look at my heart and reflect on Paul’s words: “you are a letter from Christ.. written not with ink but with the Spirit of the living God, not on tablets of stone but on tablets of human hearts.” (2 Cor 3:3)   I find it absolutely mind-blowingly wonderful and awfully worrying at the same time.

Will it be painful?

Yes!

Will it be worth it?

…………!   

Tags: , ,

Bear Blog | General | News

Back from Uganda - Sean

9. September 2011 03:19

Our friends and children have just returned from a life changing time in Uganda. For some it has deeply challenged their worldview. For other it caused them to reevaluate their understanding of faith and justice. For weeks / months (maybe even years) they will be making comparisons between life in London and what they have seen. Some may be quiet and withdrawn, others may be angered and frustrated by injustice. No one will remain unchanged.

So how can we help them to process? How can we partner with God as He forms them? Let me make some suggestions:

1. Listen to their stories. And celebrate them.

2. Help them to tell not only what happened but how it makes them feel.

3. Don't try to answer their complex questions - allow them to grapple.

4. Pray for them.

We have invested much in this trip - much money and time and faith and energy. Through this team many have been blessed in Uganda. But more than that, our friends have been changed. And through them, we too have been impacted. Let us do everything we can to protect that investment and secure the change that God has wrought.

Sean C

Tags: ,

Bear Blog | General | News

I missed the riots - Paul Ad

24. August 2011 03:05

For my part I completely missed the riots.  I was sitting in the sun in the Pyrenees when I received a text from Nick Jones to say that Deptford was burning.  What a shock – no TV, no internet, no legible papers and no data roaming on my phone...  No way of finding out what was going on!

Two weeks later I’m back home and, other than a plywood door on Greggs and some uneven tarmac outside the Albany where a car had been burnt out, I could hardly tell that anything had changed.  Life goes on; but what happened?

A short quote in the week summed up my feelings so well:

"If the young men are not initiated into the village they will burn it down - just to feel it's warmth" 

(An old African proverb in the Week quoted from the observer – most likely quoted from Dale Vorster’s blog)

If belonging to our ‘village’ is being modeled as material comfort then it is hardly surprising that our young people don’t feel very initiated.  The promise of debt, overinflated house prices and no pensions - yet the medical advances to ensure that 33% of children born this year will live to 100 – means that the future probably looks more bleak than cosy.   The proverbial ever-receding carrot of consumerism seems, not to be dangling before their noses, rather, it’s pretty much out of sight.

I guess we need to consider what we are modeling to our children and the young people we have an impact on; To value community above consumables and social conscience above social mobility.   Can we consider love, peace, joy, patience, kindness, goodness, gentleness, self-control and faithfulness as more valuable than possessions? 

In the meantime I stumbled across a verse in Psalm 90 that seems appropriate:

17" May the favour of the Lord our God rest on us; establish the work of our hands for us— yes, establish the work of our hands."

I love the fact that the Psalmist repeated the line – “establish the work of our hands”.  It’s as though he thought about it and reiterated his intent. 

He doesn’t want to be idle, he doesn’t expect God just to provide everything without him working for it, rather he wants God to be involved in it all, to establish the work.  And, to me, it suggests that this will provide a deep sense of meaning and inner peace – and warmth!

It’s a worthy prayer and it's worth modeling – pass it on!

Tags: ,

Bear Blog | General | News

'Love Wins' by Rob Bell - Paul Ad

14. July 2011 02:34

A lot of fuss has been made over Rob Bell’s latest book - Love Wins.  It is definitely the most talked-about book in the ‘religious’ circles I move in. 

So I oiled up the old mentals and dived in:

I found it easy to read and full of great stories and anecdotes.  And I am left bemused as to why some people have been so upset about it.  Have they even read it?  Maybe I will ask them.  The odd one or two anyway.

Bell starts the book by telling a story of how a person in their church produced a piece of artwork with a quote from Ghandi on it.  Somebody had then attached a piece of paper to it saying:

‘Reality check:  He’s in hell’

 Bell responds:

Really?

Ghandi is in hell?

He is?

We have conformation of this?

Somebody knows this?

Without a doubt?

And that somebody decided to take on the responsibility of letting the rest of us know?

 

Talking about what hell is, where hell is and who is going to hell, is a fascinating conversation.  It is a debate that has been ‘burning’ away for thousands of years and it is not likely to go away. 

In ‘Love wins’ Rob Bell is the latest high profile Christian leader to enter the conversation publically.  He doesn’t really introduce us to any new ideas or concepts; but he re-writes them in an easy-to-access writing style using great stories and examples.  He doesn’t present us with ‘new theology’, rather he encourages people not to think that Christianity is about going to heaven or hell - it is so much more!  (And I agree with him). 

If anything Rob Bell seems to be saying that ‘Judgment is God’s call, not ours’ and ‘nobody has been to the after-life place that we have learnt to call hell and returned to tell us exactly what it is and who is there - so nobody really knows’ (difficult to disagree with this).

I particularly liked the chapters ‘Here is the new there’ and ‘There are Rocks everywhere’.

If I were being picky, which clearly I am about to be, my only gripe, and it’s a small one, is that I think it is a shame that he points out (page10) that the words ‘personal relationship’ aren’t in the bible.  I can see why he has said this because I think he is reacting to the western idea of conversion to Christ and ‘knowing him as your personal lord and saviour’ because it excludes so many who don’t understand the culture.  I felt the context of his comment could have been explained a bit better because I think that ‘personal relationship’, for want of a better phrase, is directly implied all over the bible; from the moment Adam and Eve walk with God in the garden everyday, through Moses who spoke with God as though a man spoke to his friend, to Jesus who says: “I no longer call you my servants, but I call you my friends”.  I could go on…  But that is really not the point of the book - clearly Rob Bell is not suggesting we don’t get to know God and Him us – quite the opposite I think. 

Go on – it’s well worth a read.

Tags: , ,

Bear Blog | General | News

Bear finances: A new need and some Bible thoughts

4. July 2011 20:41

By Charlie Parker,

Firstly, let me cut to the chase. The Bear needs more money than we currently have coming in and I want to address that here. I need to ask everybody in the congregation to look again at their giving. It is a new situation that has emerged in the past months and we need to talk about it.

We don’t ask for more money very often, so I hope you know that we do not do so lightly.

As you know I chair the trustees at the Bear and am ultimately responsible for ensuring that we are able to pay our bills and look after our staff properly. I know you are all busy but if you can spare five minutes to hear my thoughts I would really appreciate it. If you haven’t got time for that then skip to the end for the details of the Bear’s money situation…but please try not to. When we consider money we go to the Bible, then the accountant.

GOD DIDN’T MARRY YOU FOR YOUR MONEY

There is a company I know well which when it launched received an investment of several million pounds from a billionaire entrepreneur. The entrepreneur is pretty ruthless in driving the business forward, demanding more from people, asking it to do better.

You could be forgiven for thinking he was somebody obsessed with wealth and full of greed. Yet ten years into this company’s life, after he has had back many times over his investment, I discovered that in fact he has given every single penny he has earned to charity.

Why is this impressive? Arguably he has lots of money so what does it matter to him if he gives it away? Surely his offering is much less valid than the widow who gives her penny, to quote Christ’s parable.

Well no actually. In truth both offerings are valid. Yes the widow deserves special respect for the fact that she has given in a deeply sacrificial way but both the widow and the billionaire have understood one central reality of Christian life.

Charles Spurgeon put it like this: ‘Economy is half the battle of life, it is not so hard to earn money as to spend it well’

If we put Spurgeon’s quotes in the context of the recent scripture that Iain spoke about: ‘For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms.’

Getting to the right place about money is a spiritual battle. But it is also a side-show. If we spend our whole lives worrying about money then how on earth are we going to get on with the real fight for the kingdom of God? If we spend our lives fighting ourselves then we have no energy left to fight for God.

I know what you’re thinking. It feels pretty tough to earn money half the time. Yet the reality is that Christian life is much more about using what we have effectively, rather than simply trying to get more. We are not called to be successful (although we celebrate it when it comes) Much more we are called to be faithful.  God has chosen you as his bride. He certainly did not choose you for your money, he has plenty of that already.

There is an old Yiddish joke. Izzy Shultz says to Yahwah: ‘Yahwah is it true to you that a thousand years is just a second,’ ‘yes Izzy’, says God, ‘it is true.’ ‘Then Yahwah, is it true that for you a million pounds is just a penny’ ‘yes Izzy it is true’. ‘Yahwah, lend us a penny’. God replies ‘Of course Izzy, it will only take a second’

At the Bear we all have a responsibility to ask ourselves whether we are spending our money well. Whether we make choices about our money out of fear or out of faith? Whether we spend out of habit or out of necessity?

It is hard to underestimate quite how crucial this is to our church life. I know there are many of us who struggle with money.

For me if I’m honest the struggle is not so much whether I physically have enough to get by, it’s much more about whether I will live my life with a sense of control and happiness with what I have got now, or whether I will constantly try to find more in the belief that I do not have enough yet.

I do not want that life. Economists have analysed the reality that almost everyone the world over believes that they need about 20% more money than they have now. Do the sum in your head now and you will probably come up with about that amount. This is true of the very rich and the very poor. What does that 20% represent? Basically it represents the amount that we think we would need so that we didn’t need to think about or worry about money. If we had 20% of purely discretionary spending we muse, then we could just relax and not worry about money.

But the bible teaches a radically different approach. It teaches that we should stop worrying about money NOW and start giving God authority over our wealth.

Does that sound a little too close to the bone? Maybe I don’t understand your financial problems and you are different?

Well maybe I don’t. But I do understand that if we can’t hand God our fears about money then we will never truly submit our life to him.

Martin Luther said: ‘There are three conversions necessary; the conversion of the heart, mind and the purse.’

I would like us to answer these questions, which I have been asking of myself in recent weeks.

1)      How have I decided the percentage I give to The Bear of my income?

We are not pushing for everyone to tithe here at the Bear (that is to say give 10%) there is indeed a valid debate about whether the Bible really instructs us to do that in the new testament. Certainly it doesn’t explicitly, yet many give testimonies about how tithing has had a wonderful affect of many different aspects of their lives.

But we do believe that we are called to give our first and best to God. Have you decided how much you give out of a fear of not having enough yourself? Or out of a desire to give an appropriate sacrificial amount to God?

Oswald Chambers wrote: ‘Worship is giving God the best that He has given you. Be careful what you do with the best you have. Whenever you get a blessing from God, give it back to Him as a love gift. Take time to meditate before God and offer the blessing back to Him in a deliberate act of worship. If you hoard a thing for yourself, it will turn into spiritual dry rot, as the manna did when it was hoarded. God will never let you hold a spiritual thing for yourself; it has to be given back to Him that He may make it a blessing to others.’

He refers of course to this Bible verse at Proverbs 3:9 ‘Honour the LORD with your wealth, with the firstfruits of all your crops.’

2)      If you don’t give because of debt then have you got your approach right across your finances?

There are some who argue that we should not give if we have any debt. For the record I have my fair share. I understand this position. Clearly if you are currently in breach of a contract you have made with a creditor then it is your first priority to put that right. For example if you have exceeded your overdraft limit, become late paying your mortgage or are in arrears on a credit card.

However, debt is broadly a function of life in the Western world. Unless we are going to reject home ownership for Christians then we will probably have to live with it. If you are managing your debts effectively then you should consider giving again. Overwhelmingly, it has to be said that the testimonies we hear from Christians who have resolved debts include them saying that they found that when they got on top of their giving they also got on top of their spending and their debts. So often the problem is actually not income, but spending.

3)      Your conscience is your guide.

The Apostle Paul advises us to use our Spirit-filled conscience as a guide for how much we should be giving. If you feel pangs of guilt when you think about how much you give, then you probably have a problem. It could be the Spirit reminding you that you have responsibilities to those Christians around you. But remember, the Bible does not teach us that our conscience is the arbiter of what is right and wrong. Rather our conscience is the mechanism that our brain uses to apply the standard or right and wrong that we have learned. If our attitudes about money come from places other than scripture then we will not be given an accurate gauge by our conscience. That is perhaps one reason why Jesus spoke so much about money.

Let’s be clear. God doesn’t need our money. He is not trying to secure his own financial status by asking us to give. He is trying to win our hearts.

Richard Halverson puts it like this: ‘Jesus Christ said more about money than about any other single thing because, when it comes to a man's real nature, money is of first importance. Money is an exact index to a man's true character. All through Scripture there is an intimate correlation between the development of a man's character and how he handles his money.’

When God asks for your money, what he really wants is you.

THE BEAR’S SITUATION

There are many people in the Bear who give generously but we need to recognise two current facts. One our giving has for a variety of unconnected reasons gone down in recent months. We are now about £1,000 a month below the budget. I absolutely do not want to have to make sacrifices on the staff we employ or the standards we set in the service we deliver to our community. That means we need more money. We are not wasting any that I can see and our other trustee Roberto and I went through the budget at the start of the year with a fine tooth comb to be sure of this. You are very welcome to see the budget yourself on request.

Secondly, at the moment a minority of people at The Bear are carrying out a majority of the giving. We want this situation to become a bit more balanced.

Why do we need this money you ask? Well we have lots of things we would like to do. As you know the evening service is in need of more support and it would be wonderful if one day we could have a pastor for that. Think of all the hope that would bring to people’s lives. We have a wonderful and growing group of youth and there is nothing that we take more seriously than how we are going to nurture them properly. It would be great to employ a youthworker for them.

The truth is though that in order to take a step up in terms of growth we need a step up in giving. So can I ask everyone to prayerfully consider their giving?

If you have any questions about how to give, how to ensure you give with the full use of gift-aid, or would like a more detailed breakdown of where the money goes then do get in touch with me.

Tags: ,

Bear Blog | General | News

Thank God for Church............. (By Andrew Pickering)

21. June 2011 20:08

We thank you God for your church

we thank you for your church in deptford

we thank you for the bits we like and the bits we dont

we thank you for catholic, pentecostal, evangelical, orthodox, anglican, quaker, ecunemical and others

we thank you for worship with loud guitars, church organs, brass bands and tambourines

we thank you for NIV, KIng James and the message

we thank you for charles wesley, graham kendrick, matt redman and sigur ros

we thank you for setting up, rotas and sound desks

we thank you for infant baptism, full emersion, confirmation and birthing pools

we thank you for spring harvest, new wine and greenbelt

we thank you for speaking in tongues, liturgy, and the book of common prayer

we thank you for incense, meditation, marching and waving flags and banners

we thank you for sunday school, scouts, youth church, family services, and coffee mornings

we thank you for door to door, street preaching, mother and toddler groups and gig nights

we thank you for hymn books, mission praise and powerpoint

we thank you for sunday bests, skinny jeans and maternity tops

we thank you for spires, school halls, front rooms and old pubs

we thank you for pews, beanbags and stacking chairs

we thank you for kneeling, shaking and raising hands

we thank you for weddings, baptisms and funerals

we thank you for tea urns, donuts and quiche

we thank you for wine, blessed wine and fruit juice

we thank you for coffee before, after, during or not at all

we thank you for feeding the hungry, giving to the poor and healing the sick

we thank you for cafe church, street church and church church

we thank you for the bits we like and the bits we dont

we thank you for your church in deptford

We thank you God for your church

Tags: , ,

Bear Blog | General

We are for a church that....... (Thanks to Andrew)

20. June 2011 23:55

We are for a church that....
has fun, is friendly, grows together, comes together as one,
responds creatively through the spirit,
shares in each others pain and suffering,
is open 7 days a week,
loves the marginalised as much as the middle class,
is encouraging and releases people in the community,
prays, worships and praises in the spirit,
has good community spirit,
is comforting,
serves the lord before anything

and loves people in Deptford, Uganda and Central Asia
We are for a church that....
breathes life and hope,
loves what Jesus loved,
tastes of donuts and looks like Darth Vader,
shares everyday life together,
welcomes, celebrates, embraces all,
has a passion to serve,
embraces difference,
realises that we don’t have all the answers,
is for the sermon on the mount,
gives outrageously,
and heals me of my itching.

We are for a church that...
likes a laugh and appreciates all,
has music games and is awesome,
is loving, peaceful, joyful, patient, kind, good, gentle, faithful and self-controlled,
is where god can meet his believers,
is interesting and makes me think,
does pantomimes and has balloons,
doesn’t mind me being an introvert,
has friends,
loves Jesus and one another.

We are for a church that...
makes room for God to ‘be’,
cooks, has fireflies and sofas,
embraces business, babies and baptisms equally,
questions, thinks, sifts, embraces, sings, bows down and lifts up,
is a close loving family,
inspires and is relaxed,
tries to understand,
keeps its eyes on Jesus,
enjoys the presence of the lord,
and loves me as I am.

We are for a church that...
bonds,
praises the one and only true god,
enjoys the presence of god,
lives to serve others,
sacrifices (not animals) serves and celebrates
loves you,
is very much like the Bear
and brings heaven on earth

Tags:

Bear Blog | General

Lent 40/40 Go. Bex Keer

26. April 2011 00:41

'Suddenly there was Jesus himself. He met them and said 'greetings!'  They came up to him and took hold of his feet, prostrating themselves in front of him. 'Don't be afraid', said Jesus to them. 'Go and tell my brothers that I'm going off to Galilee. Tell them they'll see me there'. Matthew 28:9-10

Greetings

Do not be afraid

Go. Tell. 

With this missional theme of the 40day lent blog I read the story of Easter Sunday in a way I've not done before.  Mary and Mary are the first two to meet Jesus after he has risen from the dead.  I read with anticipation what Jesus' first words would be. Jesus welcomes, he meets Mary and Mary where they are at (physically and emotionally) and he commissions them. Greetings. Do not be afraid. Go. Tell.

Living in the resurrection, in the coming of Jesus, in the miracle that there is more beyond death - where might I 'go' (whether 1steps in front or to the moon and back)? And who is He asking me 'tell' (maybe with the kindness of friendship or a grand act of witness) that there is so much more to life than a dead end, a full stop, even death itself?

. . . .

40 days of lent.  40 days of blog posts.  A montage of making space for Jesus. 

It is finished.  Phew.

Bex Keer

 

 

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Bear Blog

Lent 39/40 the day in between

23. April 2011 03:03

This is a Holy Saturday moment.  On Holy Saturday there is nothing we can do except wait.  Sometimes God will do what God will do, in God's own time.*

* Tom Wright, Lent for Everyone, Matthew  

 

 

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Bear Blog | General

Powered by BlogEngine.NET 1.5.0.7