Patience

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Transcript

Well good morning! Welcome to Festival Church Online and thank you so much for joining us and logging on today, our first Sunday in February. Let’s pray it’s going to be a great month, in Jesus name, Amen. Well, I just want to take a very quick opportunity to say a massive thank you, a big thank you and I just want to honour all of our lead pastors. From every location from Towyn, Derby, Chester, Llandrindod Wells and Prestatyn and of course, our newest online location, which is brilliant. I just want to say thank you to Tim and Emily, Anthony, Erold and Klara, Rob and Roger for everything that they have done and are doing for us as a church family within this difficult and challenging season. They have gone above and beyond in making sure that we’re all cared for, that we are fed the Word week in, week out and that we’ve stayed connected with each other. It’s just brilliant. So thank you so much – we honour you and we love you and we continue to pray for you for good strength, wisdom and guidance, and of course good health as we continue our Festival journey throughout 2021. Thank you so much lead pastors, you’re awesome. 

Well today is my privilege and such an honour to bring God’s Word to you this morning and I’m thankful for the opportunity for that and what a great first month we’ve had. A great series we’ve gone through on steadfast and a great verse of scripture in 1 Corinthians chapter 15 verse 58 and it says:

Therefore, my dear brothers and sisters, stand firm. Let nothing move you. Always give yourselves fully to the work of the Lord, because you know that your labour in the Lord is not in vain.1 Corinthians 15:58

What a great piece of Scripture to start us off, to bring us into this year of 2021 and I just give thanks to Tim who brought us a great message on being immovable and being steadfast in our lives and being immovable in our faith in this season, which is great. So we’re going to touch on a few of those points a bit further on this morning but before I do that I just want to pray to open your heart, open your mind and let’s get ready to hear from God this morning.

Father we just thank you for your love and your grace and your mercy that is new to us every day. Father, I pray as we log in online this morning, as we watch online service Lord, that you would just speak to us, maybe in a brand-new way today. Lord, I pray that you’ll open our hearts, let our hearts be sponges for what you want to fill us with. In Jesus’ name. Amen

Okay church, let’s do this. In my life, and certainly over the last six or 7 weeks, specifically over the Christmas period and Christmas break that the team had, God really planted on my heart the word patience. Patience is obviously a very big word. I really felt like God wants to teach me and my family patience this year because, quite honestly, and I’m sure I’m not the only one, I can be quite an impatient person. When it comes to waiting for things or sometimes when it comes to people, I can be quite impatient with them too. But that’s okay because we’re human and we have a God that forgives us in Jesus name. But you know what the definition of patience is:

The capacity to accept or tolerate delay, problems or suffering without becoming annoyed or anxious.

I think I could do with a little bit more patience this year, in this season, I think we can all do with that as well. If you think that this is a time where maybe the questions seem too many and answers are too few, well please don’t lose courage, trust your heart to the Lord. He knows what He’s doing and He knows exactly what He’s doing for His good and for His glory. We just have to be patient in this time. So as I said, the word patience is a word that I believe God has put on my heart for me and my family for 2021 and maybe for you too. God wants to produce patience in us to slow us down and just believe. Tim mentioned a couple of weeks ago, that’s all we need to do. We just need to go back to the basics and just believe in the one that God has sent and that is Jesus. To show us how to trust in Him, that’s all we need to do, we need to slow down and believe so that He will show us how to trust in Him. God does not test us just for the sake of testing us. He tests us to teach us to walk in His ways and to trust in Him and it’s all a part of being children of God. Tim brought us a great message on us being children of God, we are His sons and daughters and God isn’t testing us for the sake of testing us, He tests us to teach us to walk in His ways and that we would trust in Him in everything that we do. Patience.

Why don’t we look at some good examples in the Bible where we see real patience that could encourage us today and tomorrow and so on. Who showed patience in the Bible? Well, the obvious one is Job. We’ve all heard the saying of “Have you got the patience of Job” or “you need the patience of Job”. I remember my mum and dad saying “Oh, I need the patience of Job with you James”. Full name of course. Job inspires us even today as Christians who face times of struggle and suffering and difficulties. No matter what happens we are called to follow Job’s example. We patiently serve and worship the Lord. We need to serve Him patiently and worship Him. Remember that our God is full of compassion and full of mercy.

Joseph, another good example. We all know that Joseph had to wait 13 years before his prophetic dreams were fulfilled. During that time he went through trials and tribulations. Through 13 years he faced so many challenges, so many trials and went through tribulations, but throughout it all he knew that God was with him through it all. He knew that God was with him through it all.

The women of God who showed good patience, people like Rachel. Rachel waited 7 years to have a child, of course that was Joseph. Hannah waited 3 years to have a child, but in the waiting she was tormented. Her patience with people was tested but Hannah was a great woman of patience.

Another great and inspiring example is Abraham. He was patient and waited 25 years before God’s promises were fulfilled in him. When I was reading the story of Abraham, I really felt that the phrase “with longevity, comes reward”. If we show patience in the longevity, we will be blessed and God will reward us in that waiting.

Another great example would be Moses. Moses wandered the desert for 40 years, 40 years, four decades in a journey that should have lasted 11 days. Just 11 days until he got the promised land that God had for him. He had to wait 40 years for the promised land. He waited for the promise through decades, absolute decades. Four decades, could you imagine going through that for decades? He was obedient. There we go. He was obedient. We need to be obedient people because he was courageous through his patience. Moses was obedient and courageous through his patience. We have to journey through seasons like this, through challenging situations and circumstances with patience. That’s what God is really telling me at this time that we need to journey this through with patience. We can’t be losing patience with our family, our brothers and sisters, our children when you’re homeschooling or with your kids losing patience with you because you’re getting frustrated with them. We need to have patience. The patience of Job, the patience of Abraham, Moses and Rachel and Hannah and Joseph. We need to have patience with each other and we have to journey through with so much patience. Maybe that’s not the way to live our lives anymore, maybe it’s a generational thing. We know that we can find things out almost instantly in this day and age. We can say “Google can you find so and so”. And then almost within seconds, in fact it’s at the top of your page, it tells you how quick it finds a page for you to find an answer for these days. That’s almost instant. Well actually, I think that God is calling us in this season to be much more patient so that we can hear from Him and put our trust in Him.

Another great example of someone who showed patience is Paul, you could say that he experienced a similar situation as us, some sort of house of house arrest or lockdown. You know, of course, Paul was in prison but he showed so much patience. In his patience, he wrote the epistles or the letters like Ephesians, Colossians and 2 Timothy, etc… In that time he knew God was with him and, ultimately, God was speaking to him in that time. So in our patience, we need to listen to God. Listen to Him in your patience. Wow. You just never know, like I said earlier on, sometimes we need to slow down and just believe and say God what you got to say today and listen to him in your patience.

Let me quickly recap those points. He knew God was with him through it all, I know that God is with us through this season. With longevity, comes reward. Let’s be obedient to him. Let’s listen to him in our patience and we have to journey through this whole season with patience like never before and listen to him in your patience.

Now there are a few Bible verses that I’ve come up with or come across during my study as I was preparing for this word. There were lots of them and I’m not going to bombard you with Scripture upon Scripture today because I’m sure you can go and look yourselves in the Word, but I’m going to share one or two verses that really stood out for me and one of them is James chapter 1 verse 2-4 from the Passion Translation:

My fellow believers when it seems as though you’re facing nothing but difficulties see it as an invaluable opportunity to experience the greatest joy you can. You. See it as an invaluable opportunity to experience the greatest joy you can for. you know that when your faith is tested, it stirs up power within you to endure all things. And then as your endurance grows even stronger, it will release perfection into every part of your being until there is nothing missing and nothing lacking. James 1:2-4 TPT

Endure all things and then as your endurance grows even stronger, it will release perfection into every part of your being until there’s nothing missing and nothing lacking. It says in the the new King James version:

My brethren, count it all joy when you fall into various trials. James 1:2 NKJV

Some of us may be facing various trials right now, knowing that the testing of your faith produces patience. Your faith produces patience. With Jesus, with God, we lack nothing.

Then let me go to the book of Romans Chapter 5 verse 3-5 in the ESV version, and it says:

Not only that, but we rejoice in our sufferings, knowing that suffering produces endurance, and endurance produces character, and character produces hope, and hope does not put us to shame, because God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit who has been given to us. Romans 5:2-5 ESV

Amazing, I love that. Knowing that suffering produces endurance or you could say knowing that suffering produces patience and patience, produces character and character produces hope. Thank you Lord. That is so encouraging that we can hold on to the truth of these Scriptures that have been written for us.

One last piece of scripture, I want to share with you is this. This really inspired me and it’s from the paraphrase of the Message Translation and it says this:

It won’t be long now, he’s on the way; he’ll show up most any minute. But anyone who is right with me thrives on loyal trust; if he cuts and runs, I won’t be very happy. But we’re not quitters who lose out. Oh, no! We’ll stay with it and survive, trusting all the way. Hebrews 10:39 MSG

Now, in just those few small lines, a few scriptures, what I got from that was: Be patient. Don’t quit and trust Him all the way, all the days of your life. Yes, we as humans, we do sometimes just want to throw the towel in. We do sometimes want to quit and walk away. But let me encourage you today, be patient in this season. Don’t quit. Don’t quit with your homeschooling. Keep going, do what you can and that’s the most important. If you do your best, God will do the rest. That’s a phrase I use quite often, the youth will know that. You know we just need to put all of our trust in Him and be patient and journey through ready to listen to Him so that He can show us how to be more and more like Him in our patience.

Why do I encourage you with this message this morning? Just a few nights ago I was doing the final thoughts and preparations for this message today. A verse from an old hymn that my Nain, or my grandma – and she is a heroine of the faith, I love my Nain so much and many of you who are watching know who my Nain is and and she’s the best. If I ever want to know anything about the Bible, in any shape or form, who do I phone first? It’s usually her because she knows Scripture inside out. She’s just brilliant and amazing. This verse from an old hymn:

Because He lives, I can face tomorrow
Because He lives, all fear is gone
Because I know He holds the future
And life is worth the living, just because He lives

Be patient everyone. Don’t quit, trust in Him because He lives we can face tomorrow. Let me pray for you.

Father. We just thank you for your Word. We thank you for who you are. We thank you that you are for us and not against us. Lord we thank you that you live inside of us and because of that we can face tomorrow. Lord I pray as we go on about our days Lord that sometimes when we just feel like things are getting on top of us, we just need to say stop and just believe, fix our eyes upon you and be patient through this season and say Lord speak to me, help me. Lord, you are for us and not against us. Lord, I thank you that we can look to you at any time, any day. Lord I thank you that you are a forgiving God, that you just love us completely and you send your Holy Spirit to live within us. God, Father, I pray that you fill us afresh today with your love and your Holy Spirit. Lord, I pray that this week, as we go on about our day to day life, that we’ll just remember you at the beginning of the day. Tune in to you first thing we do every morning. We just thank you that you are with us, that you are for us and not against us. Bless us today, pour out your favour upon us. Lord, teach us to be patient in our ways so that we can trust in you more and more, in Jesus name, Amen.

Remember everyone, be patient this week as you live your day to day life, we love you, God loves you, keep being awesome. God bless.

This Sunday- Your labor in the Lord is not in vain New to Festival? Get Connected!

Steadfast – Your labour in the Lord is not in vain

Got questions about life? Try Alpha This Sunday let nothing move you

Transcript

Hi there thanks for being with us today, I’m so glad that you’re here! Whoever you are, wherever you’re from, make yourself at home. Whether you’re part of Festival Church or just checking things out, you are most welcome today. Please say hello in the chat, there’ll be plenty of people that would love to say hello back and get to know you. I’m looking forward to spending a few minutes with you now, looking at a few verses from the Bible together.

I can’t believe it’s the last Sunday of January already, we’re about to embark on a whole new month in 2021 and today we draw our current mini theme to a close. For January, we’ve been looking through the verses that we find at the end of 1 Corinthians chapter 15. And yes, if you’ve been here for a couple of weeks, or if you’ve been tuning in regularly, you’ll probably know these off by heart by now.

57 But thanks be to God! He gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.
58 Therefore, my dear brothers and sisters, stand firm. Let nothing move you. Always give yourselves fully to the work of the Lord, because you know that your labour in the Lord is not in vain.
1 Corinthians 15:57-58 NIVUK

We’ve called this mini theme our Steadfast theme and as we were planning it in the back end of last year, we just felt it was a really important theme to get our teeth into. So much around us is uncertain, and it seems even more uncertain at the moment – we’re living through a particularly difficult time of history. In this kind of Covid season, in other countries there seems to be political unrest, who knows what the implications of Covid are going to be. My guess is they’re going to be far reaching and challenging. So it just felt really right and actually kind of felt in our hearts that God would just want to remind us to be steadfast to stand firm in him. Which is why we started off the month, started off the year, with those great words “But thanks be to God, He gives us the victory”. If nothing else this year, if you don’t remember anything else, come back to these verses and start off with thanksgiving. Reminding yourself that there’s so much to be thankful for from God and actually because of Jesus, because of the resurrection, we can live a life that is hallmarked by his victory and that just touches everything we do. We carry this winning attitude because of the resurrection of Jesus. Whatever that is on your plate today or for the rest of this year, keep bringing everything to Him, keep giving Him thanks. Remembering that ultimately that you and I have the victory in Jesus.

Whatever that is on your plate today or for the rest of this year, keep bringing everything to Him, keep giving Him thanks. Remembering that ultimately that you and I have the victory in Jesus. Click To Tweet

There are some great words that we’ve been looking at, great phrases and sentences here. I spoke a couple of weeks back about standing firm in God. That’s that steadfastness. Kaz spoke brilliantly on “let nothing move you”, about being immovable. Last week, I delved into giving ourselves fully to the work of the Lord and was in many ways surprised at how simple that is – Jesus said that “the work of God is to believe in the one that God sent”. I need to believe in Jesus and I hope you got something out of that. If you weren’t here last week, don’t worry you can catch up on these preaches by just going on the website. But as we draw this theme to a close, we’re just going to land on this last line:

Because you know that your labour in the Lord is not in vain. 1 Corinthians 15:57-58 NIVUK

Always give yourself fully to the work of the Lord, that says that you can put everything in, you can give it 100%, you can go for this because doing the work of God is not in vain. It’s like Paul has put this in here to begin to encourage us to persevere, to be patient, to have faith, to have hope, to keep going for it, to keep taking a step at a time in following Jesus, to keep doing all we can to make the biggest difference we can for Jesus in this world, to keep growing in him. Paul is encouraging us to keep doing it, keep that work of the Lord going, keep believing in Jesus, it will pay off, it will be worth it. Every last drop of energy that you and I have and will expend in following Jesus, every last drop is worth it.

Paul says “you know that your labour in the Lord is not in vain”. It won’t be wasted, it’s not futile. It can sometimes feel a bit like that. Belief in Jesus takes some effort. It’s the work of the Lord. It’s described here as labour – that sounds like hard work doesn’t it. But you can do it, we can do this, we can keep following Jesus, we can make a difference in the world. I’ve read this and straight away I thought of another famous verse in the Old Testament, I guess it’s the use of that word labour, that use of the word work as it were, and it’s in Psalm 127, let me read it to you:

1 Unless the Lord builds the house,
the builders labour in vain.
Unless the Lord watches over the city,
the guards stand watch in vain.
2 In vain you rise early
and stay up late,
toiling for food to eat –
for he grants sleep to those he loves. Psalm 127:1-2 NIVUK

Try and picture this, unless the Lord builds the house, the builders labour in vain. Unless the Lord watches over the city, the guards stand watch in vain. I think one of the secrets of doing well in following Jesus and doing the work of the Lord, understanding that our labour that effort is not in vain, is to understand that we are building with God. Unless the Lord builds the house, it says, we’re building in vain. Unless the Lord is watching over the city, we’re standing guard in vain. But with Him, it’s worthwhile. With him, it has credibility. With him, things happen. It’s this word ‘with’, to really comprehend and grasp hold of our labour not being in vain – it’s helpful to understand that we’re working with God. God is at work in the world today. I wonder if you’re aware of that. God is on mission. His mission is the church. God is working through his church, through his people, making a difference in His world. We are just stewards and we’re here with some responsibility, working alongside our amazing God. So to do well – to really grasp hold of this, it’s helpful to understand the word ‘with’. We are co-workers with God. We are co-builders with God. Everything we do, we should understand that we do it with Him. There’s no better way to live, than to live with God.

We are co-workers with God. We are co-builders with God. Everything we do, we should understand that we do it with Him. There's no better way to live, than to live with God. Click To Tweet

It’s so encouraging – it takes the weight off our shoulders and helps to see that God has got this. We can do this. We can grasp hold of the work of the Lord in our generation. We can make him known. “With God.”

I want to share with you three verses that really encourage us in terms of doing life with Him. There are so many, I’ve had to narrow it down and the first one I want to share is just Jesus’s words actually from Matthew’s gospel, Matthew 28. This is part of Matthew’s gospel that’s labelled the Great Commission. Jesus rounds it off, He’s commissioning. Let me read it to you:

18 Then Jesus came to them and said, ‘All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. 19 Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptising them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, 20 and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.’ Matthew 28:18-20 NIVUK

What a promise that Jesus is always with us. We could stop there, that is enough to fill our encouragement levels up and to fill our hearts up. Jesus is always with you. You’re not called to live life on your own. We are made to live with God. You read that throughout Scripture. It’s almost like God’s intention for us was to live with Him and Jesus reaffirms that He’s always with you, always, always, always, whatever you’re going through – the highs and the lows. Whatever you’re up to – the good and the bad – He promised He will never leave you. God is with you. What does that do for your sense of well being? Makes me take a big sigh. What does it do for that sense of outlook on the future? What does it do for your sense of hope? What does it do for your plans? Just for me, it’s like the light gets switched on, everything comes into colour. I feel I can take on the world because Jesus is always with me. No matter what I go through, the hopes and fears of all the years are met – yes in Bethlehem, but because of Jesus in Bethlehem – they are met in him. You can take steps in confidence because He’s always with you. Don’t forget that.

Here’s another great famous ‘with’ verse and I’ve actually preached on this a few times. Its Psalm 18 verse 29. Here the psalmist, David, is in a really tricky situation, he’s been running from his enemies. They’re out to kill him but then he pauses and writes this amazing song, this Psalm, he says:

28 You, Lord, keep my lamp burning;
my God turns my darkness into light.
29 With your help I can advance against a troop;
with my God I can scale a wall. Psalm 28:28-29 NIVUK

There’s that word “with my God I can”. The other verse was very much Jesus saying he’s with us. This is the other way around this is us looking up and saying “with my God”, it’s like we’re with Him. Jesus has already affirmed that He’s with us, this is coming from us now, we’re looking at Him saying “My God, we are with Him”. I actually purposely put it on the screen like this “with my God I can”. There’s so much of life that tries to tell us we can’t. There’s so much of life that tries to pull us down, to subject us to other people’s expectations and limitations, but with God, I can. Whatever is in front of you, whether it’s a hurdle, whether it’s a wall, you can overcome it because you are with God. Yes, He’s with you, but you’re firmly putting your hand in His hand and you can say that He’s your God. With your God, you can overcome whatever comes your way. Now that’s quite a statement. If this verse is true, and it’s true, I believe it is, so again whatever you’re facing, whatever difficulty life is throwing at you currently – and it tends to throw things at us most days – whether it’s I don’t know relationships, finances, promotion, work, study. There’s a whole list of things that can often present themselves as a hurdle, as a wall. But with God you can overcome.

Sometimes it feels that I’ll work for God, living for him is hard work. Well, it is sometimes, but even that you can find ways of overcoming and generating a way of living well for Him because you’re with God. Your labour in the Lord is not in vain because today you are working with Him and whatever comes in the way is actually God’s problem – yes it’s yours too, or should I say it’s God’s too, it’s a joint problem that with God you can overcome. He can give you wisdom and He can give you the resources you need, He can change the circumstances, He can bring a healing, He can bring deliverance, He can bring change. Sometimes He can just help you walk over that thing, sometimes you have to go through it to grow in Him, but He’ll be with you in that moment. Just find out from Him the best way to approach what’s in your way in this season of life.

One more verse and this is another great statement, Matthew chapter 19. I didn’t mean to use this quote from Matthew’s gospel today but never mind. Matthew 19:26 this is a famous story about the rich and the Kingdom of God. It’s got the whole eye of the needle statement about camels going through it. I know it sounds bizarre, have a read for yourself. Then in Matthew 19, in the second half of this sentence, and Jesus says:

but with God all things are possible. Matthew 19:26 NIVUK

The crowd are trying to get their heads around the example that he’s used about a camel going through the eye of a needle and Jesus looked at them and said

With man this is impossible, but with God all things are possible. Matthew 19:26 NIVUK

The thing is obviously he’s talking about a particular scenario, the context is the story that Jesus is telling him, but you know what the principle is true all the time. That nothing is impossible with God. But with God all things are possible. I heard someone talk about this and say “it doesn’t say but for God, all things are possible, it says but with God, all things are possible”. It puts you and me into the picture with God and basically you and I, with God, can experience possibilities where at face value and through just normal human outlook, things seem impossible – with God, all things are possible. Know that your labour in the Lord is not in vain. Jesus says He’s with you always, you can say “with my God I can”. We can really lean into this scripture in Matthew 19 and again look at the future, look at problems that need solving, impossibilities that seem to lie before us and say “with God all things are possible”.

I speak that over your life today, I declare it about who I am and the things that I’m working through and facing, my plans for the future, our plans as a church as Festival, for whatever God has for us next over the course of this year. Yes, we’ll be steadfast in Him, but we’re always going to come at every obstacle and every challenge and say “with God all things are possible”. Let these verses fill you with hope today. Let your faith be built up, built strong. So yes, as we take February on, as we take 2021 on and the years to come, we’re going to be serving God with our whole heart. We’re going to be shouting out “Thanks be to God! He gives us the victory”. We’re going to be making sure we’re standing firm, making sure that we’re immovable, that we’re giving ourselves fully to the work of the Lord – believing in Jesus – knowing that our labour in the Lord is not in vain because with God all things are possible.

Know that your labour in the Lord is not in vain. Jesus says He’s with you always, you can say “with my God I can”. Click To Tweet

So here we everyone, here are the verses again. I would encourage you to do some of your own studying and reading around these. I’ve basically just read it out to you, but let’s do it once more:

57 But thanks be to God! He gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.
58 Therefore, my dear brothers and sisters, stand firm. Let nothing move you. Always give yourselves fully to the work of the Lord, because you know that your labour in the Lord is not in vain.
1 Corinthians 15:57-58 NIVUK

Keep taking steps in his direction, keep growing in your relationship with God and allow him to unfold before you a bright future. It’s been so good to share with you today. I’m looking forward to spending the rest of our service together with you. Stay connected everyone, I’m looking forward to all that God has got for us!

This Sunday- Your labor in the Lord is not in vain New to Festival? Get Connected!

Steadfast – Always give yourselves fully to the work of the Lord

Got questions about life? Try Alpha This Sunday let nothing move you

Transcript

Hi everyone. Thanks for joining me today as we come together for a few minutes to look at some great verses in the New Testament. In 1 Corinthians chapter 15 we’ve been working our way through these verses:

But thanks be to God, He gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. Therefore, my dear brothers and sisters, stand firm. Let nothing move you. Always give yourselves fully to the work of the Lord because you know that your labour in the Lord is not in vain 1 Corinthians 15:57-58 NIV

If you’ve been able to join us over the past couple of weeks, you’ll know that we’re studying these verses, unpacking them throughout the month of January. If you’ve just stumbled across us today, or if you’re new here today, well first of all it’s so good you’re here – please make yourself at home, say hello on the chat and I’m sure you can catch up on some of what’s being said by just visiting the website.

There are some great verses here, 1 Corinthians 15 in itself is an amazing chapter, and this is kind of the end of it, Paul’s summary in these great verses we’ve been unpicking it bit by bit. We’ve had “Thanks be to God, He gives us the victory”, that’s how we started off the year. I spoke about standing firm, then last week Kaz did a great job talking about being immovable and here today I want to have a look with you at this sentence, these words here:

Always give yourselves fully to the work of the Lord 1 Corinthians 15:58 NIV

Give that some thought for a moment, “Always give yourselves fully to the work of the Lord”. I guess if we had loads of time, all the time in the world, we could probably go word by word here. It’s all in, it’s all or nothing, every minute of every day and go for it in trying to achieve this. There’s no room really for backing away or being half hearted. It’s “always” and “fully”. It’s great and actually I think that’s how we should approach faith in God – let’s give it our best – I think that’s how we should approach life. “Always” and “fully” with the sense of giving and not taking, some great words here. But it’s not actually what I want to think about or talk about today because this sense of always and fully, this giving, is all about something – it’s about the “work of the Lord”.

'Always give yourselves fully to the work of the Lord'. It's all in, it’s all or nothing, every minute of every day. There's no room really for backing away or being half hearted - it's “always” and “fully”. Click To Tweet

I wonder what do you think the work of the Lord is? I’ve got a little roadwork sign here and I’ve heard lots of jokes about what this man is doing. Is he digging into a pile of sand or is he putting up his umbrella? It almost feels like there are questions around what is the work of the Lord, just like there might be questions about the guy in the picture here. What would you say is the work of the Lord? I reckon it’s worth finding out because if we’re going to give ourselves always and fully to it, it’s worth knowing what is the work of the Lord.

There are different ways we can approach this and try and find this out. It’s one of those moments where you wish that Paul, the writer, had been a bit more specific and just told us exactly what the work of the Lord is. He clearly in his own mind knows what it is. We can think about the life of Paul, do you know what his work was? Did you know that he was a tent maker? That was how he earned his living, he made tents. But I don’t think he’s saying that, he’s not saying “always give yourselves fully to making tents for Jesus”. Though, for sure, whenever you read Paul’s writing, there’s definitely the sense of whatever you do, do it all for the glory of God. I don’t think he’s saying that, I think specifically in this context, Paul is probably talking about sharing the gospel, that’s the good news about Jesus.

And then building one another up, serving each other in the local church – that’s kind of a summary of Paul’s life really, that’s what he did, he went sharing the good news about Jesus and establishing churches. Perhaps specifically in this verse these words, Paul is talking about that. Do you know what I think? There’s more to it and it got me thinking. I’ve been thinking a lot about this thought, it was going to be that easy, maybe not easy, but there is some simplicity to it. I thought to myself, “Okay I want to give myself fully to the work of the Lord” – and I’m sure you do too – so what is that?

In John’s gospel, John 6, Jesus was asked this very question. He’s with a whole group of people and they asked him:

28 Then they asked him, “What must we do to do the works that God requires?”.

29 Jesus answered, The work of God is this: to believe in the one he has sent.” John 6:28-29 NIV

You couldn’t get more simple than that and straightforward. What is the work of God? What Jesus says is “to believe in the one that God has sent”. In other words, to believe in Jesus. Is that too simple? There’s something about our human nature that wants to make it a little bit more complicated, a lot more about doing stuff. What should we be doing Jesus? Jesus does answer that, but it’s not that tangible. He’s just saying the work of God is this “believe in me”. Believe in Jesus. What if Paul is referring to that? When he says “always give yourselves fully to believing in Jesus”. Could we substitute “work of the Lord” with “believing in Jesus”? I think this is really interesting and I also find it interesting exactly where Jesus is saying this. I encourage you to dig out the Bible or find your usual Bible.

John 6 is the famous story of the feeding of the 5000, Jesus feeds all these people. At the end of that bit of the story it says that he escapes everyone. He’s needing a bit of time out and it says “he withdrew again to a mountain by himself” and no one could find him. We read that the disciples got in their boat and decided they were going to go to Capernaum to see if Jesus was there. They actually went through a storm to get to Capernaum. They arrived in Capernaum and that’s where Jesus was, they were so surprised. They say in verse 25 of chapter 6 it says that when they found him on the other side of the lake, they said “Rabbi. When did you get here?” They couldn’t get over the fact the last they saw him was the other side of the lake, feeding loads of people, he kind of disappeared, they had to go through a storm and there was Jesus in Capernaum. That’s when they asked him about this, what’s the work of God?

One of the reasons my ears really pricked up when I read this again is because he’s in Capernaum. For those of you that have been tuning in over the past 6 months or so, I shared a little bit about the story of Jesus. He went into the wilderness and came back and settled in Capernaum, even though his home was in Nazareth. It got me thinking about the lockdown, this Covid season that we’re in. It’s like we’ve gone into the wilderness. I’ve been trying to see what does it mean to come out of the wilderness and settle in a different kind of landscape, not Nazareth, but Capernaum. Even in this story the disciples had to leave one side of the lake, go through a storm and end on another side of the lake and find Jesus where? In Capernaum. And what does Jesus say in Capernaum, he says “The work of God is this, believe in the one that God has sent”. As we start to look forward, have hope for the future, as we come through this storm, like the disciples came through a storm, as we come out of this wilderness season, like Jesus did, we land in Capernaum figuratively speaking.

Maybe the message that Jesus has for all of us in the new season to come, in the brighter future that we have in Him, is that maybe it’s time to realign what it means to serve God. Maybe it’s time to rediscover that the work of the Lord is, first and foremost, to believe in Jesus. To take down all our lists of things to do, all about doing this, doing that, being busy with this, doing that and judging others because they’re not quite as busy as me or you, turning up to this and reading this and that. Maybe it’s about taking a bit of a rest, maybe that’s not what you want to hear. I’m going to really question myself on that, because in many ways, I want to get going as soon as we’re out of this wilderness time. But just maybe, it will be a time to reassess what it means to serve Jesus in our world. By the sounds of it, by the sounds of Jesus’s message, we’re not going to go too wrong if we make the work of God all about belief in Jesus Christ. Wouldn’t that be great if we are defined, first and foremost, by our belief in Jesus. Nothing else, not some kind of moral standard – though that is important – not by some great work ethic – though that is important – not by some kind of success or achievement – though that’s important too.

'The work of God is this, believe in the one that God has sent' Maybe it’s time to realign what it means to serve God, maybe it’s time to rediscover that the work of the Lord is, first and foremost, to believe in Jesus. Click To Tweet

But what about you? Do you believe in Jesus today? Would you say that is the most important thing when it comes to faith, when it comes to living a Christian life. In many ways it’s no surprise that John cottons onto these words of Jesus, because for John, the writer of this gospel, belief, being a believer, is one of the big themes of his writing. If you’re like me, you might think, okay Tim, surely there’s got to be more to it? What does it mean to just simply believe in God, to believe in Jesus? That sounds really passive, it’s like some sort of acknowledgement, some distant “oh yeah, I believe in him”. There’s much more to it than that. I found a few verses that speak of what it means. Right at the beginning of John’s gospel, this is the first thing we read, the sound of a reflection on Jesus coming and says:

Yet to all who did receive him, to those who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God John 1:12 NIV

To believe in Jesus, to believe in the one that God has sent, means to live out of this place of relationship with Father God. It’s about your heart, it’s about my heart. The most important thing is not ticking off the list of all the things I should be doing to live a Christian life. If I can tick off one thing, it should be this, that I know my heavenly Father with all of my heart, and day by day I’m growing to love Him and know Him more and more. Everything should come out of this innocence and childlike pure faith in God. I’d like to challenge you to rediscover that childlike faith. Everything about following Jesus is about believing in Him and it comes out of this being a child of God. Understanding that, first and foremost, God is your heavenly father and He cares for you and He’s created so much of this world for you to enjoy, so that you can live and glorify Him in everything. It means we need to take more time to be with Him. To contemplate on him more and spend more time just fuelling the fire of that relationship with him. I think that this next season, this Capernaum season, is about belief in Jesus Christ.

But because we’re just naturally human, I want to get on and do some stuff too. I don’t know if you noticed but the word work is in there “the work of the Lord”, well just to help us out in terms of what we should be doing as well. Let’s not forget that all that comes out of this relationship with God, this heart for God, this heart for God as children of God, does produce action. Towards the end of the gospel too, in John 14:12, it says this about those that believe:

Very truly I tell you, whoever believes in me will do the works I have been doing, and they will do even greater things than these…John 14:12 NIV

One of the hallmarks of believing in Jesus is that we would do greater things than what He did. I went with this picture, I don’t know if you recognise it, it’s a picture of the Grand Canyon. I had the privilege of being able to visit the Grand Canyon once, it was probably this sort of time of year, about five or 6 years ago. I actually had this mad experience of being able to throw snowballs into the Grand Canyon because it had been snowing. I couldn’t quite comprehend it, it was greater than anything I’d seen before. I’d try and look down on a particular valley and I could see there was another valley beyond it. I wouldn’t be exaggerating, it blew my mind. I can’t comprehend this, and God has got such great things for you to do, greater than the things He did, can you imagine that? That believing in God started from that place of good relationship with him as children of God and leads on to doing some great things in our world for Him, as great possibly, as the Grand Canyon.

Another great place to go if we’re trying to work out what we could do is Micah, one of the Old Testament prophets. Again really simply, it just says:

… And what does the Lord require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God.Micah 6:8 NIV

If you did have to have a tick list, if you live by lists, well maybe put these three on your list: Act justly, love mercy, walk humbly with your God.

It’s a fantastic verse, but let’s not forget though, the simplicity of what Jesus said. Here’s what he said “believe in the one he has sent”. To begin – and even me saying begin it shows it’s actually even though it’s simple it’s quite difficult to grasp – because actually the truth is not just to begin but to fulfil the work of the Lord means simply believe in Jesus. How easy is that? How hard is that? It can be quite challenging. In this sort of season, we’re in, I know for lots of people that their belief in God has been challenged, for others it’s really grown.

Here are a few verses to help us out in believing in Jesus. I’ve got this picture here of a guy with some shopping bags and one of the bags is labelled belief, one is labelled unbelief. I am picturing in life that we carry these bags with us all the time. We actually end up carrying lots of baggage that we pick up from life, one’s labelled belief, one’s labelled unbelief. I think we think sometimes we should only be carrying this bag that says belief and if we’re not just full of belief all the time then maybe we’re not being good Christians. It’s not true. We all carry unbelief and belief with us. Of course, we want to see belief grow, but firstly don’t beat yourself up if you’re carrying an element of unbelief along with you in life. That’s perfectly normal and quite natural. What we have to do is make sure that we’re filling the belief bag up as much as we can. There will be some things in life where you naturally go to the belief bag but I know there are other things that really seem to challenge that and you find yourself dipping into the unbelief bag. Well, I think the first thing I want to say is just don’t beat yourself up if you’re carrying both bags. Where you are carrying both bags, maybe just learn to lean more into, to look into and to fill the belief bag.

We all carry unbelief and belief with us. We want to see belief grow, but don't beat yourself up if you're carrying an element of unbelief along with you in life. 'I do believe; help me overcome my unbelief!' Click To Tweet

There’s a great paradox in Mark’s gospel in chapter 9 verse 24. This is where a guy comes up to Jesus and says:

“I do believe; help me overcome my unbelief!” Mark 9:24 NIV

I love his honesty. He’s saying “Oh Jesus, I believe in you” – and holds up the bag of belief – “but I’m carrying this unbelief too. I need you to help me” and Jesus has compassion on this guy. But what a statement, “I do believe, help my unbelief”. Then just to emphasize it really is that simple, in Mark chapter 5 verse 36, this is the raising of Jairus’s daughter. Everyone’s getting quite upset because things are going from bad to worse. What did Jesus say?

Don’t be afraid; just believe Mark 5:36 NIV

That’s it. Whatever you’re going through, whatever comes next, whatever you’ve been through, my message to you today is don’t be afraid, just believe. Embrace all that God has made you to be, with the unbelief and the belief, and maybe just rest. Doing the work of the Lord is quite simply what Jesus said to do, believe in Him. Begin to nurture and cultivate that relationship with Him, your heart for Him as children of God, and out of that base, begin to take those steps in finding out what He’s got for you to do. Don’t be afraid, just believe.

There’s some amazing stuff in the Bible, especially these gospels, anyway here’s our verses in Corinthians:

But thanks be to God, He gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. Therefore, my dear brothers and sisters, stand firm. Let nothing move you. Always give yourselves fully to the work of the Lord because you know that your labour in the Lord is not in vain 1 Corinthians 15:57-58 NIV

Always give yourselves fully to believing in Jesus. Go for it! Keep taking those steps towards Him, if it’s a first step then I applaud you today. Take that step in believing in Jesus, you will not be disappointed. You will discover life as it’s meant to be lived. Well thanks for being with us today and just taking the time to come around God’s word with me, thanks for sharing this moment with me and I look forward to seeing you again soon.

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Steadfast – Immovable

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Transcript

Good morning Church, it’s a pleasure to be with you today. We’re going to carry on looking at 1 Corinthians 15:57-58, but before we go into that portion, just before the bit we are looking at is one of my most favourite bits of exciting scripture. I love the bit in 1 Corinthians 15:55

Where, O death, is your victory? Where, O death, is your sting?”1 Corinthians 15:55 NIV

Maybe for me it’s more powerful because of some of the work I do (in funerals). I get this sense that whatever happens, God has the victory. The first week of the year, we were looking with Tim at Victory and how we have the victory, this is a winning year. The second week, we looked at Stand Firm and then this week we’re going to be looking at Immovable.

Immovable
The best thing that I can come up with, I’m not going to do a dictionary definition, is that everyone has seen a toddler who is immovable. I think that is a more powerful definition of what the term immovable is. I had two very powerful immovable objects as toddlers. One, particularly one, could “starfish” when getting into the car in such a way that you couldn’t get him into the car. There was this one time where my youngest son decided he was not getting into the car after pre-school and so after a couple of rounds of yes you are, I’m going to bend your body and he was doing the starfish, which you’ve all seen, and refusing to bend, I got him in the car seat. I just thought that this was a winning day. I then drove to get my other child from school, so we’re talking a few years ago now, back when you sent your children to school, those crazy heady days we used to have! I went to pick my eldest son up from school and the youngest son wouldn’t get out of his car seat, he’s now immovable in that as well. So I locked the door, like every good Mum or Dad does, and ran to the school gates and I picked up my eldest and ran back. At that moment I got back to the car, I couldn’t see my son anywhere and I, in that moment, can remember the sheer panic outside as I had thought my son had been kidnapped. I actually said “I think my child has been kidnapped”. It took me less than two minutes realise that #1 if he had been kidnapped they had also managed to move an immovable object and I would probably have heard it and #2 there is not a person in the land or in the universe who has enough mayonnaise to keep my child happy. So it wasn’t very long before I realised that he was not, in fact, kidnapped. Oh no, my immovable object child had in fact unclipped his seatbelt and decided to lie in the footwell under some coats and be immovable there. After a few moments of deep breathing exercises and almost having a heart attack at the side of the road, chaos was resumed as both sons were then in the car and we carried on with our journey.

We’re going to talk about being immovable. There’s this old spiritual song that we hear very often in protests. It says “we shall not be moved”. We will have heard it throughout the years as “we shall not, we shall not be moved, we shall not, we shall not be moved”. Do you know what’s really interesting Church? The next line from that is actually about being planted. But before we get to that, let’s look at the scripture for today, it says this:

56 The sting of death is sin,
and the power of sin is the law.
57 But thanks be to God!
He gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.
58 Therefore, my dear brothers and sisters, stand firm. Let nothing move you.
Always give yourselves fully to the work of the Lord,
because you know that
your labour in the Lord is not in vain 1 Corinthians 15:55-58 NIV

This thing – being immovable, we shall not be moved. It was a chant that they would use, it’s an old slave song. We shall not be moved from this, we shall see our freedom for the civil rights movement. Actually the line carries on and it’s from Psalm 1 and I want to share this with you today, it says:

1 Blessed is the one
who does not walk in step with the wicked
or stand in the way that sinners take
or sit in the company of mockers,
2 but whose delight is in the law of the Lord,
and who meditates on his law day and night.
3 That person is like a tree planted by streams of water,
which yields its fruit in season
and whose leaf does not wither—
whatever they do prospers. Psalm 1:1-3 NIV

We shall not be moved. We should be like the tree planted by streams of water – immovable. When you think of an immovable object, you tend to think of huge trees, you tend to think of rocks, you tend to think of men or women who can climb mountains. We saw last week the imagery was up of Luke, my husband, climbing. Notice I’ve never been photographed climbing because I am the one from the staff team who can fall down a set of stairs in their house, so I am not necessarily an immovable physical object, I can fall over air, but in myself I am immovable on so many things. Maybe today you are like me, actually you could trip up over thin air in one sense, you’re not like a rock, you’ll fall over the rock rather than be the rock, but actually inside you there is a resolute sense of “I will not be moved on this issue”.

I grew up in Church and one of the things we would sing often when I was in Sunday school, when I was four or five or maybe even six was:

The foolish man built his house upon the sand
The foolish man built his house upon the sand
The foolish man built his house upon the sand
and the waves came down, the floods went whoosh

My favourite bit because we’d always raise our arms and go a bit crazy. You then got to:

The wise man built his house upon the rock
The wise man built his house upon the rock
The wise man built his house upon the rock
And the house on the rock stood firm

It stood firm. And that’s a story found in Matthew 7 and it goes on and Jesus talked about if you build your life on God’s word, you are that house built on rock. But if we build our lives on other stuff, on sand, things will shift. We know that more than ever right now. I don’t know about you but 2 and half weeks ago I was planning for my kids to go back to school, I had a plan – 2020 was an experience and I am not naturally a home-school mother – but I planned for my children to go back to school. Then a day into the school term, my youngest was at home again, that was not my plan, that was a sand shift. It felt like something moved beneath me because I had these plans, I had these things that I so wanted to do and I had to sit back and relax and have a night of going “this is just ridiculous” before I again gathered my thoughts, gathered myself and go “do you know, I’ve built my life on God and on Christ the solid rock I stand”. Because of that He knows what’s going to happen and I can carry on. God will make it all work for me right where I am. The house on the rock stood firm.

I’ve built my life on God and on Christ the solid rock I stand, He knows what’s going to happen and I can carry on. The house on the rock stood firm. Click To Tweet

I don’t know where you are today, I don’t know where you are on your journey of faith, I don’t know how long you’ve been in church, maybe you’re a “seasoned professional” like me – I was in church 9 months before I was born – I’ve been there, bought the t-shirt, got the video, the lot! I know for some of us, we come and we look at this simple scripture of building our lives on solid rock and we go “we’ve heard this before”. But what about if during the year 2020 and these past few weeks, your life was built on rock but actually you’ve just built an extension on to shifting sands. Or maybe this morning, you’ve come and your house is built on sand, it’s built on what other people say, on what other people are saying what’s going to happen. You know, it’s so easy right now to build our lives on sand, to build on what we see being said on the TV every evening, to see our work being challenged, suddenly we’re working from home and we’re not sure if we’ll have a job, maybe we’re looking financially and we’re seeing this it just isn’t going to work. It can be so easy in the moment we are in, in the day and generation that we are in, to build our lives on sands that shift. And things just seem unstable, it can be so easy to do that. We have to stop ourselves don’t we, “come on God you’re more than this, you’re bigger than this!”.

One of my favourite verses of the bible is found in Psalms and it’s this:

when my heart is overwhelmed…
Lead me to the rock that is higher than I Psalm 61:2 AMP

I don’t know this morning where you are building your life, or whether you have perhaps joined us for the first time and are thinking “building your life? I’m just doing what I want to do”, can I encourage you to build your life on the rock. The rock that does not move, be immovable on what you build your life on. Be like those trees planted by streams of living water, who flourish and prosper.

I find it amazing that in seasons where things change – like I’ve said before – for me what sticks out the most is the immovables of my life. It’s the Bible verses and the truth of the Bible that pours out of me. Some of you heard me say last week, “if I’d won a roller coaster, I’d start singing worship songs” because I grew up in an atmosphere of worship and it’s the bedrock of my life. Today I just want to challenge you on two points, and they won’t rhyme because if you know me, they just won’t! It would be a miracle if they ever did.

Choose where you will build – choose what you will build on
What are you building on? Seriously though, think right now “what am I actually building on?” Am I building what the newspapers are saying? Am I building on what my bank balance is saying? Am I building on what my school is saying? Am I building on what life is telling me? Or am I building on the Word of God? Am I building on something that never changes that is tested and tried and true? That holds fast? I love that the Word of God is so powerful in our lives. I love that I was brought up loving the Word of God and being found in huge chunks of the Bible that come out of me at times when I need them. My life was built, and is continuing to be built, on the rock that is God. Choose what you build on.

Choose what you are immovable on
We have to be immovable on the Word of God! It is true! It is tried! It is tested! We have to be immovable on the fact that we love God and we love others and we want to see them do well. We want to see during 2021 people come to know Him. Why? Because we know He is the true answer, He is the way, the truth and the life. Choose what you are immovable on.

There was a guy, one of the mighty men of 2 Samuel 23, his name is Shammah. Shammah decides that his immovable thing is a field of lentils. For you meat eaters out there, a field of lentils may not be much, but for us vegetarians that’s like “preach brother!”. Bags of lentils is what I live on, and vegetables obviously, part of my healthy diet. But a field of lentils! To Shammah, the field of lentils meant something. Can I challenge you to find things that you are immovable on that maybe other people might think “why are you arguing over a bag of lentils? why are you stood in the middle of a field of lentils with a sword?”. It says that his sword froze to his hand as he continued to fight because he knew it was worth something. Right now your field of lentils might be that you and your family are going to pray together once. Right now your field of lentils might be that you’re going to bless your neighbours. We as a group of four of us, we’ve decided to be encouragement to our neighbours in this season. We go out and do stuff, we’re always the ones first out clapping and making a noise. I chat to our neighbours and really want to be a person who actually controls the atmosphere. We can be immovable on the hope that is Jesus. In this season you can be immovable. Maybe it’s on Facebook, you could be the one that brings hope. Maybe it’s on social media, maybe it’s in your workplace, you have those “Tea and Toast” type things now and all sorts of different things. Choose what you are going to be immovable on. Make a real physical decision today, I’m going to be immovable on this thing.

We can be immovable on the hope that is Jesus. In this season you can be immovable. Click To Tweet

Those are my two points, what are you going to be immovable on? And also what are you building on this morning?

Are you building on the truth of God’s Word. If you’re not and want help, speak to a local pastor. We love to talk about the Word of God, it’s one of my favourite topics, it’s one of my favourite things to do. Give me a chance to find it and I know it’s in the Word of God, I know that I can find it in there.

In conclusion I want to say this, for a few years me and my family were really privileged to be based in Prestatyn. One of the things I would do at times when I wanted to think was to go and stand and look at the sea. I’d walk along the beach down by the Ffrith on the sand and by the sea. I’d try to stand in the sea with the tide coming in, as it’s coming in my feet are planted, but the sand underneath me is moving. I know today there are people watching and you really feel like that. You feel that in this moment you have planted your feet and you think that you have a steady grasp, you feel that you’re ok, your feet keep on moving but you want to brace, you want to be in the right place. Can I encourage you to come off the sand. Come off the sand and stand on the rock. It talks time and time and time again in the Bible about the rock. Lead me to the rock that is higher than I. He is the rock. He is the one that we can build our life on. Maybe you’ve never said yes to Jesus. In a few moments there will be a little button that will come up to my left and maybe you need to click that and say yes. If it feels like sinking sand, if you feel like your feet are moving constantly, then say yes to Jesus. He is the way, He is the truth, He is the life. For whatever point of the journey, you are one, He is the one we choose to build our life on.

Come off the sand and stand on the rock. Lead me to the rock that is higher than I. He is the rock. He is the one that we can build our life on. Click To Tweet

Church wherever you are right now, I pray that you are a person who builds your life on the rock and I pray that if you see people on sand you would be those who rescue. Let’s pray:

God, we thank you that you are the rock on which we stand. God, we thank you that we can stand in your work and we can be planted and found in you. God, we choose today in our homes, to be immovable, we choose to be those people of hope. Immovable in the season we are in and immovable in the fact that you are the way, the truth and the life. Jesus we love you and we honour you and we thank you for the lives that have been changed today. In your name, amen.

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Steadfast – Stand firm

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Transcript

For this month we are looking at some great verses in the book of Corinthians. In 1 Corinthians 15 verses 57 and 58 we read these verses:

But thanks be to God! He gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.
Therefore, my dear brothers and sisters, stand firm. Let nothing move you. Always give yourselves fully to the work of the Lord, because you know that your labour in the Lord is not in vain.1 Corinthians 15:57-58

I love these verses, they are so positive, they are so full of life. I’ve enjoyed digging into them and meditating on them over the past couple of weeks. I hope that you were able to connect in last week and perhaps think these through a little bit more too. If you weren’t here, don’t worry, pick it up today and run with us.
Last week we looked at that first bit “Thanks be to God” I thought that was a great way to start the year. We discovered that it’s one of the apostle Paul’s favourite statements – he’s the guy who wrote to the Corinthian church – he wrote this statement “Thanks be to God!”. We looked at how God gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ, brilliant verses, so encouraging.

This week we are going to concentrate on two words that appear in this line here

Therefore my dear brothers and sisters, stand firm1 Corinthians 15:58

I think that in this season, in 2021, there is so much uncertainty around that if ever there were a time to stand firm, it is now. Just like “Thanks be to God!” is one of Paul’s favourite statements, stand firm is another one of his favourite ones too. In fact he says this in one way or another at least once to everyone of the churches that he writes to in the New Testament, with the exception of Romans and Hebrews – but we could have a whole conversation about who they are being written to anyway. In terms of the classic epistles to churches – Corinthians, Galatians, Colossians, Thessalonians, Philipians, Ephesians – this statement “Stand Firm” is found in each of those.

It is interesting to note that Paul is actually just echoing some of Jesus’ words, everyone of the first three gospels recalls Jesus at some point saying “Stand firm”. This one I especially love is in Luke’s gospel. The background to this is that Jesus is saying to his disciples that there could come a point in your future where you are going to be persecuted because of me. So He says:

Stand firm, and you will win lifeLuke 21:19

It seems to connect with what we said last week, which is why I’ve used the same picture about victory. Standing firm is key to that winning mentality because of the resurrection if you remember it affects everything that you do, so Jesus says “Stand firm and you will win life”. And just maybe Paul felt it really important in his letters to the churches, to keep saying “stand firm” because just like here there’s this threat of persecution, this sense that the world is an uncertain place, things might not go as we always expect. But in the midst of that, stand firm.

I don’t know if it’s a phrase that you use a lot, or are familiar with. In some of the older translations, the word that is often used instead of the two words Stand Firm is this word, the word “Steadfast”. In fact, I don’t know if I mentioned this last week, I remember memorising that verse in 1 Corinthians as “Be ye steadfast, immovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord”. There it is, “Be ye steadfast”. I love this definition I found in a dictionary:

Steadfast:
Not changing or losing purpose

It’s about our identity, who we are, what God has called us to do. When Jesus says “Stand firm”, when the apostle Paul says “Stand firm”, he’s saying don’t lose sight or change that sense of purpose that God has given you. I wonder what your purpose in God is today? Don’t lose sight of that, that’s what we mean when we say “Stand firm”, it’s all about belief in God, it’s about our faith in him. In fact, Paul, one of the things he does when he unpacks this idea of living a steadfast life, or standing firm, is he often follows it by “in”. He’ll say “stand firm in the Lord”, “stand firm in God”, “stand firm in the will of God”, “stand firm in the one spirit”, “stand firm in the faith”. It’s that sense of purpose and strength of purpose, keeping hold of it in our relationship with God.

Steadfast: It’s about our identity, who we are, what God has called us to do. When Jesus says “Stand firm” he’s saying don’t lose sight of the purpose that God has given you. Click To Tweet

The picture that conjures up in my mind is one of those classic lighthouse pictures that you often see in restaurants, well maybe not, I don’t know if I’ve ever seen a picture like this in a restaurant, but you’ve probably seen these pictures, it’s kind of like this foreboding waves about to crash over this lighthouse and what does the lighthouse need to do in this moment? It needs to stand firm. In fact it comes into its own in the face of the storm. It comes into its own by being a lighthouse and standing firm. In our world today, I think our world is going through a huge storm, it needs you and me to stand firm in our faith, to stand firm in our walk with God, the way that we shine for Him in the midst of the storm. Let’s do our best to live steadfast lives.

That’s a bit of background really to what this is about, what Paul is trying to say to us but how can we live steadfast lives, how can we stand firm. I’ve already hinted at the way that Paul talks about “Stand firm in the faith” “stand firm in God”, there’s the classic verses in Ephesians that then go on to talk about the full armour of God. I want to take it somewhere different perhaps, to capture our attention in a new way. I’d like us to head over to the Psalms, the Old Testament. There’s these wonderful verses here in Psalm 20 which again talk about standing firm. This is David who’s written this Psalm and I’m assuming it’s David talking:

Now I know that the LORD saves His anointed;
He answers him from His holy heaven
with the saving power of His right hand.
Some trust in chariots and others in horses,
but we trust in the name of the LORD our God.
They collapse and fall,
but we rise up and stand firm.Psalm 20:6-8

You might be familiar with these verses, I think there are another set of verses that I remember being in a song, the chariots and horses bit. What really captured my imagination here was this last phrase, you can see the stand firm bit here: “But we rise up and stand firm”. The first thing that struck me there was I’ve always thought of steadfast and stand firm as stopping and just standing still. I guess that there is some truth in that, it’s part of the definition, but I like the moment here, while others are losing their trust in God, when things around us are falling down, we actually rise up, there’s movement. We rise up and stand firm. We can rise up in this season and be affirmed in the purpose that God has for our lives. Wherever you are, whatever you are going through, you can rise up in the circumstances that you are facing. You can rise up above it and stand firm in all that God has got for you.

While others are losing their trust in God, when things around us are falling down, there’s movement - we rise up and stand firm. Click To Tweet

It’s a great Psalm, I would encourage you to read the whole of Psalm at some point. It’s quite an unusual one because the first half of the Psalm is full of blessings but it’s interesting that it uses the word “we”. It says “may we shout for joy over your victory and lift up our banner in the name of our God”. It’s not at this point just one person, it’s a corporate, we’re all together here, let us all shout for joy, let’s all rejoice in each other’s victories. Lift up our banners in the name of our God, it’s like we’re all here praising God together. In Psalm 20 it is almost like they are praising God for their king, they are proclaiming blessings over the king which is why we get to this point where it switches from “we” and “our”, the king responds with “I” and “me”, he’s responding to those proclamations of blessing from the people. So even though I landed on this bit here, the “we rise up and stand firm”, the question is how can we live steadfast lives? How can we stand firm? It struck me that there are a couple of other questions I found myself asking within these verses which helped me answer that bigger question. So now I know that the Lord saves, Some trust in chariots and others in horses,but we rise up and stand firm.
Here’s a few questions I want to challenge you with and want you to ask yourself these questions and as we unpack them, the way that we answer them helps us ascertain and understand what it means to live a steadfast life.

Who do I know?

In those verses we read this Psalmist saying “now I know”, it has this resounding sense of assurance, “now I know that the Lord”. The psalmist is saying that he is really sure and certain that in knowing God. My question to you is, do you know God? It’s the question that I’ve been asking myself recently, how much do I know God? Who do I know? My prayer for you, for myself, my family and for my friends is that we would grow in our knowledge of God, that was our theme towards the end of last year. We based this again on some of Paul’s writing to the Ephesian church. Ephesians chapter 1 verse 17 says:

I keep asking that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the glorious Father, may give you the Spirit of wisdom and revelation, so that you may know him better.Ephesians 1:17

I want to know God with all of my heart. In fact I would go as far as to say that the whole purpose of life is to grow in relationship with God.

If you weren’t here last week, you might be wondering why on earth I have this picture of kerplunk. It’s because I thought it was a great example of how Jesus holds everything together. If you know the game, you have to pull out these plastic straws to try not to let the marbles fall down. It struck me how often in the game, you pull out one, everything seems to be resting on one of these plastic straws, everything about the game comes down to that one straw, everything is held together by that one straw. In Colosians Chapter 1 it says:

He is before all things, and in him all things hold together.Colossians 1:17

Who do I know? I want to know Jesus. Who should we know? That’s Jesus. And Jesus shows us something of who God is. If you have never taken steps towards him, I would encourage you to do that today. If you are well on your way to taking steps in his direction, go for it! Keep finding out as much as you can about Him, keep developing your friendship with God. It is key to standing firm.

Who do I know? I want to know Jesus. Who should we know? That’s Jesus. And Jesus shows us something of who God is. Click To Tweet

Who will save me?

The thing that he seems to know in the Psalms is that “now I know that the Lord saves His anointed; He answers him from His holy heaven with the saving power of His right hand.” I think standing firm, to live a steadfast life, we must have settled who our saviour is. I think we all need a saviour, we all need to be able to answer that question “Who is going to save you?” “who is going to save me?”. That’s not just a nice way to talk about doing well in life, who is going to save me from my problems? Who is going to save me from myself? They’re good things to work through but there is an ultimate question though in terms of eternity, who is going to save your soul? Who is going to rescue you and make sure that you get to live forever with God? Who will save you? Who will save me?

This dog in the middle here is Daisy. This is a story I saw in the news last summer. The funny thing about it is that Daisy is a St Bernard dog, a mountain dog, and basically Daisy got really tired in the Lake District and had to be rescued. All these mountain rescue people carried Daisy off on a stretcher. Daisy had found her saviours that day. It’s a great story.

Who will save me? Jesus is our saviour. Make him your saviour today.

Who do I trust?

The verses go on with this horse and chariot analogy, it says:

Some trust in chariots and others in horses,
but we trust in the name of the LORD our God.Psalm 20:6-8

Most of us don’t trust in horses and chariots these days but we often find ourselves trusting in things that perhaps we should be trusting God for. I think you can rely on God, He’s the source of life, He’s trustworthy, you can bring all your worries to Him, all your hopes to Him like we saw over Christmas “Our hopes and fears of all the years are met in Him tonight”. Do you trust Him? I would encourage you to find new ways to trust Him, evaluate your sense of trust in God.

I think you can rely on God, He’s the source of life, He’s trustworthy, you can bring all your worries to Him, all your hopes to Him. Click To Tweet

In my picture here we’ve got the one and only Luke Gratto, adventurer, mountaineer extraordinaire. This is taken in 2017 where Luke and I were doing some climbing in Snowdonia, this is on Tryfan on a section of route called the Yellow Slab, it is quite hard work. The thing about climbing is that you always have to climb with someone unless you’re a nutter, and there are some nutter climbers around, because it’s about safety and trusting one another. As you can see, there are two ropes on the go here because another friend of ours, Paul, was with us. It could be that I’m at the top of this purple rope and Paul is at the bottom of this orange rope. We have to trust each other, we have to know, we have to really trust the person you are climbing with. I’m trying to work out the expression on Luke’s face, I think it’s one of trust but it could be one of apprehension. Trust for me just captures this idea of being connected to God and when you feel like you’re going to fall you can hold on. When you feel that things around you are insecure or moving in this constant change around, you can trust in the faithfulness of God and you can trust in God. You can hold on to Him, He’s got you tied to Him, He’s got you covered, He’s there all the time.

Who do I trust? I trust in God.

Let’s look at these verses again, the psalmist says:

Now I know that the LORD saves His anointed;
He answers him from His holy heaven
with the saving power of His right hand.
Some trust in chariots and others in horses,
but we trust in the name of the LORD our God.
They collapse and fall,
but we rise up and stand firm.Psalm 20:6-8

Here’s our verses from Corinthians:

But thanks be to God! He gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.
Therefore, my dear brothers and sisters, stand firm. Let nothing move you. Always give yourselves fully to the work of the Lord, because you know that your labour in the Lord is not in vain.1 Corinthians 15:57-58

You’ve seen lots of pictures on the screens today, this is definitely my favourite one, it’s the one of the lighthouse. It’s secure in its purpose. To be steadfast to mean not to change the purpose that God has for us, let’s stand firm together today as a church, as families, as individuals, I want to encourage you to work through those questions again: Do you know God? Is Jesus your saviour? How much do you trust in Him? Let’s stand firm, let’s rise up and stand firm.

That’s me done from God’s word today, it’s been great to share with you and I look forward to seeing you again soon. God bless.

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Steadfast – Thanks be to God!

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Transcript

Today is our first Sunday together of 2021, I hope that you have had a good Christmas, I’m sure that some things were different, I’m hoping that you were able to make the most of the opportunities that you had to be with friends and family. And if you weren’t able to do that, well I hope you get to see those dear to you again fairly soon.

As we are coming into this new year, I’ve got a great couple of verses to share with you. This month of January we’re going to be basing our preaching theme on a couple of verses from the book of 1 Corinthians. This is the apostle Paul’s letter to the Corinthian church. In these two verses here in 1 Corinthians 15, they really caught my attention towards the end of last year. Have a listen to them:

57 But thanks be to God! He gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.
58 Therefore, my dear brothers and sisters, stand firm. Let nothing move you. Always give yourselves fully to the work of the Lord, because you know that your labor in the Lord is not in vain. 1 Corinthians 15 57-58 NIV

What an amazing two verses, they’re so encouraging. Wouldn’t it be good if this year, we could build our lives on these verses. It’s actually a great chapter that I would encourage you to have a good read of. It’s a long chapter and it’s titled “The Resurrection of Christ”. This is Paul the apostle really making his case for why the resurrection, why Jesus rising from the dead, was and is so important. He starts of the chapter by saying:

1 Now, brothers and sisters, I want to remind you of the gospel I preached to you, which you received and on which you have taken your stand. 2 By this gospel you are saved, if you hold firmly to the word I preached to you. Otherwise, you have believed in vain.
3 For what I received I passed on to you as of first importance: that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, 4 that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day according to the Scriptures 1 Corinthians 15 1-4 NIV

And it goes on, Paul unpacking the importance of the resurrection in our lives. It is in these final two verses that he brings it all together. He’s saying that because of the resurrection, it’s like he’s quoting a song:

55 “Where, O death, is your victory?
Where, O death, is your sting?”
56 The sting of death is sin, and the power of sin is the law. 57 But thanks be to God! 1 Corinthians 15 55-57 NIV

I would love it if you could dig deep into these verses this January, maybe this year. What are they saying to you? What difference can these verses make in your life?

Today though, we’re going to concentrate on verse 57, just this verse:

57 But thanks be to God! He gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. 1 Corinthians 15 57 NIV

What a great way to start the year by confessing this, speaking this out, making this the theme of our lives. But thanks be to God! He gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. For the preachers amongst us today, wherever you are tuning in from, you might have already spotted that this verse divides itself quite nicely into three points. For our remaining time together in this preachy bit these are three things that I want to highlight.

But thanks be to God!
Isn’t it great, such a great statement. It’s one of the apostle Paul’s favourite statements. He doesn’t just say “Thank you God”, or “Thanks Lord”. It’s bigger, more emphatic, “Thanks be to God!”. I’ve used this little picture of a thumbs up, we’re quite used to liking things aren’t we in today’s social media age. But Paul’s doing more than just giving God a thumbs up, he’s more than just saying “the resurrection is great, that must mean something, Thanks God, well done”. I think that in this verse, and in this statement, the power of acknowledgement going on. Acknowledging one another is so important in terms of affirming each other, giving value to one another. It says something about me when I acknowledge you, it’s speaking about my relationship with you, my connection with you, it’s affirming that in my life. I think that acknowledging one another is so important in staying connected. I don’t know if you’ve ever been to a party or maybe just even Church or some other type of gathering? You might not get to speak to all the people you wanted to, but you’ve managed to give a quick thumbs up from across the room, or a quick nod, that moment of acknowledgement is so important in terms of developing good friendships and relationships. I noticed when I was preparing this that the word “knowledge” is hidden inside the word “acknowledgement”. When Paul says “Thanks be to God”, it’s more than just a thumbs up, he’s acknowledging something. I think that he’s acknowledging that all of his source of energy and light comes from God. It’s that acknowledgement that I’m only here today because of God in my life. It grounds me, it keeps my direction set in the right direction. It’s a good reminder, a humility bringer, gratitude and humility working together in this statement where we’re acknowledging that all that we have, all that we are, all of life is because of God.

I would encourage you today to find new ways of acknowledging God, referencing Him, making Him your point of reference, your grounding, your anchor and foundation, the whiteboard on which you write all the stories and plans that you’ve got for this year. Making the One the source of everything.

When I was thinking about acknowledging God, I was reminded of an old song. I found the verses that it comes from, maybe you’ll recognise it when I read it to you. It’s in Psalm 124:

1 If the Lord had not been on our side—
let Israel say—
2 if the Lordhad not been on our side
when people attacked us,
3 they would have swallowed us alive
when their anger flared against us; Psalms 124 1-3 NIV

I think it’s again emphatic. It actually says it twice “If the Lord had not been on our side”, it’s a big WOW. “If the Lord had not been on our side” all our enemies “would have swallowed us alive”. At the end of the Psalm, David acknowledges that:

8 Our help is in the name of the Lord,
the Maker of heaven and earth. Psalms 124 8 NIV

It’s like David had learned to live a life that acknowledged God. Often it starts with just thanking him, giving him praise, and this is how Paul concludes these important verses, in this important chapter: “Thanks be to God”. If you’ve got time, search out that phrase, I think Paul uses it 6 or 7 times.

He gives us the victory
I guess that in the context of Paul’s writing here, it’s talking about the effect of the resurrection. That because Jesus rose from the dead, we can access eternal life, we can live forever with God, death won’t hold us down, sin doesn’t have to be the authority in our lives anymore, we can win over all those things. That is so important. Here’s what struck me about this, wouldn’t it be great if we could always live with that sense of victory permeating through everything that we do, our thinking, our decision making, our conversations? I think in some circles, certainly sporting circles, I’ve come across the phrase about needing to have a winning mentality. I quite like that, some of you might be cringing already, I love this idea of a winning mentality, a winning outlook on life. And why not? If death has been beaten, if sin no longer has a hold on us, Thanks be to God He gives us the victory. I think that that sense of victory, the reality of that victory, should surely permeate every part of our lives.

I don’t know if you ever have hung around people who seem to win a lot? Or maybe you’ve played a game and won? Or maybe you’ve been part of something where you came out on top? Did you notice how that made you feel for at least a short time afterwards? For me I’ve only got to win at Connect 4 and my day is set up. The opposite could be true too. I was definitely one of those little kids that used to cry everytime I lost at something. It’s interesting isn’t it that Liverpool supporters are still riding high on winning the league last season. Winning makes a difference. It buoys us, it lifts us up. You know what it feels like when you’re not winning. So I do think that because of the victory of cross, of the death and resurrection of Jesus, that actually we can carry that into every part of our lives, into our outlook, into our way that we think, the way that we treat others, the way we encourage one another. It is because in God we win. We are overcomers, we are victorious. In Romans 8 it kind of implies this, that it should be making a difference all the time, this sense of victory in Christ. It says:

If God is for us, who can be against us? Romans 8:31 NIV

It goes on to say:

38 For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, 39 neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord. Romans 8 38-39 NIV

And though I keep saying this, the context is definitely about the resurrection, I have this sense that because of that we can carry the hallmark of that into everyday life. Today, because of Jesus, because of His resurrection, you are victorious. What would it be like if every part of life was somehow hinting at that victory? I think it would make us stand up a bit straighter, maybe make our smiles a bit bigger, we would be quicker to encourage one another.

Today, because of Jesus, because of His resurrection, you are victorious. What would it be like if every part of life was somehow hinting at that victory? Click To Tweet

Through our Lord Jesus Christ
Everything comes back to Jesus! Our Christian faith, this last year that we have experienced, which was very difficult, the year ahead of us which is going to have its challenges too, we’re going to do well if we make sure we keep on bringing everything back to our Lord Jesus Christ. We’ve just celebrated His birth at Christmas. Why can’t everyday be a celebration of who He is, He is God, He is the Lord, He is the Christ, He’s our saviour, He is the One that makes the biggest difference in our lives. He really is the answer to all the world’s needs and problems, I believe that with all of my heart. I do like the way that Paul grounds it in the person of Jesus Christ. Today if you don’t know Him, I would love it if you were able to say yes to Jesus so perhaps just find some time and space at the beginning of this year to ask Jesus to show himself to you in a new way. It’s all because of Him that we can learn to acknowledge God in every aspect of our lives. It’s because of Him that we have the victory. I think it is this relationship with Him that is going to be the key to how well we approach and work our way through 2021.

We’ve just celebrated His birth at Christmas. Why can’t everyday be a celebration of who He is, He is God, He is the Lord, He is the Christ, He’s our saviour, He is the One that makes the biggest difference in our lives. Click To Tweet

You might be wondering I’ve gone with a picture of the classic children’s game, actually it’s an adult’s game as well, the classic game Kerplunk! Who remembers playing Kerplunk when they were little? I certainly do. Just before Christmas this year, I found myself on eBay ordering myself some games that I used to play as a kid, one of them was Kerplunk. I quite enjoyed that, I enjoyed winning not so much losing. Here’s the the verse I want us to think about when it comes to Jesus, Colossians 1:15

15 The Son is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn over all creation.
17 He is before all things, and in him all things hold together. 18 And he is the head of the body, the church; he is the beginning and the firstborn from among the dead, so that in everything he might have the supremacy. 19 For God was pleased to have all his fullness dwell in him, 20 and through him to reconcile to himself all things, whether things on earth or things in heaven, by making peace through his blood, shed on the cross. Colossians 1 15-17 NIV

I think that’s profound, in Jesus all things are held together. We find our bearing in Jesus, we find that sense of security, we’re anchored in Him, He’s our compass. It says in Colossians “In him all things hold together” I couldn’t help but wonder if the opposite was true. Without him I wonder if all things actually slowly fall apart. He’s the One that restores and mends and shapes us, and in those moments where we feel like we’re falling apart, He brings us together.

So why Kerplunk? Well in my mad imagination, I’m always intrigued by how everything in this game, if you don’t know the game by the way, all the marbles are placed in this tube and you take it in turns to pull out these plastic straws and the idea at the end of the game is to not have any marbles. But you know what it’s like, you pull one and all of the marbles start falling. I’m always surprised by, perhaps intrigued by, everything is generally held together by just one plastic straw. You pull out that one plastic straw, and it’s the one that everything was balancing on and it all falls apart. When you pull that out, that one straw. Our life is a bit like that without Jesus. He is the one that holds it all together, He holds us together and when He’s not in His rightful place, it’s like losing at Kerplunk. You have to have Him front and center holding you together. And today if you do feel like things aren’t held together, my prayer for you is that you find that wholeness again in who Jesus is. In our service today there have been plenty of opportunities to pray, to come before Him, and there will also be an opportunity to connect with some of us, if you want to say yes to Jesus and want to let someone know about it, there will be an opportunity in the chat to let us know that you want to find out more about Him today.

So, that’s it everyone, our two verses at the start of 2021, let’s start with praise, let’s acknowledge God today and throughout the year because He gives us the victory, it is because of Him that we have overcome, it is because of Him that we can walk with a spring in our step and why? Because of, and through our Lord Jesus, the One that holds everything together.

It has been so good to share with you today and again have a great week. Settle into 2021 well, keep bringing it to Jesus. My prayer is that this year that you would grow in your knowledge of God. God bless, looking forward to seeing you soon, thanks so much for being with us today.

Let’s acknowledge God today because He gives us the victory, it is because of Him that we have overcome, it is because of Him that we can walk with a spring in our step and why? Because of, and through our Lord Jesus, the One that… Click To Tweet
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Advent – Hope

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Transcript

Here we are for the fourth Sunday of advent celebrating Christmas and all that means to us. I hope that you were able to tune in last week, Emily preached a great message on joy. We’re going to be landing on Hope today. I wonder if hope is something that you’ve thought much about, it’s been the theme of our service today, there’s been a fair bit about it. I wonder what you’re hoping for, if you had to write a wishlist perhaps, that maybe includes plans for the future, what would you be writing down? What are you hoping for in your life in the future?

Perhaps at Christmas time, who are you hoping for? I’ve got my Father Christmas top on, we’re all hoping that Father Christmas turns up, or at least I certainly am, and brings us all those presents that we’re after. I was having a bit of a laugh, I discovered that not everyone refers to Father Christmas as Father Christmas. This might not be news to you but it’s news to me. I found this map that tells us all the different names that Father Christmas, or Santa Claus, has in different countries. I find it quite funny. All of this red, we’re in the red, Father Christmas, we know where we stand. I don’t exactly know where that is up there, I’m guessing that’s Iceland, it says Christmas Lads! This bit here, I’m not that great at Geography, I think Finland is one of these, it says Christmas Gnome! And in Russia here Grandfather Frost, that’s pretty good. Saint Basil down there (Greece) and the Christmas Goat (Finland). It changes everything doesn’t it if you’re writing your Christmas list to the Christmas goat.

What are you hoping for this Christmas? And who are you hoping for this Christmas? There’s the great verse:

In his name the nations will put their hope.Matthew 12:21 NIV

What a great verse, maybe you’ve not seen this verse before. I wonder who it’s talking about. Of course “in his name” is talking about the name of Jesus. Isn’t it brilliant that hope has a name and that name is Jesus. The name Jesus means rescuer or deliverer or saviour. Actually Jesus’ full name is Jesus Christ. Christ meaning messiah or anointed one. Who is it, whose name is it that the nations will put their hope, that you and I can put our hope in today? It’s Jesus Christ, our rescuer, our deliverer, the anointed one, the one who is authorised to rescue us. In his name the nations will put their hope.

What can you hope, what can I hope, what can we hope for Jesus to do? In the verse before this, some great words here:

A bruised reed he will not break, and a smoldering wick he will not snuff out, till he has brought justice through to victory.Matthew 12:21 NIV

I love the way this is phrased, until he has brought justice through to victory, I can picture Jesus grabbing hold of justice and bringing it through, bringing justice through for us until it is evident, until it is winning, until justice is acting on our behalf. I wonder what justice means for you today? Justice, I think, means fairness, it means putting wrongs to rights and this is what we can hope for Jesus to do in our world. That he can put wrongs right. I think about my life, I love life and I love God has made me to be – but I’m also really aware of my fallen humanity. It feels like I’m carrying wrongs within me. I like the fact that in Jesus I can have this hope that He will work in me and he will put those wrongs to right.

I can picture Jesus grabbing hold of justice and bringing it through, bringing justice through for us until it is evident, until it is winning, until justice is acting on our behalf. I wonder what justice means for you today? Click To Tweet

I can believe with you today that whatever you are facing, whatever wrongs you think you are coming up against, you can hope in Jesus this Christmas time that He will turn those wrongs into rights. He will bring justice through to victory on your behalf. That’s my hope for you, for me, for us this Christmas time. We’ve already heard in our service a great carol called O Little Town of Bethlehem. I don’t know if you spotted in the last couple of lines of the first verse, it reaffirms this thought of our hopes found in Him. It says “the hopes and fears of all the years are met in Thee tonight”. I love the fact that we have hopes and fears here. All those hopes that you have for life, for your future, for next year, for Christmas, you can bring those hopes to him. Even your worries and anxieties, your doubts and fears, also they can find a rest in Him. I love that our hopes and fears are met in Jesus. Wherever you are today, wherever you are tuning in from, Jesus is the hope of the world, this is our theme for this advent Sunday, hope. My prayer for you is that you will discover Jesus and the hope that He brings in a new way. If you get a chance over the next few days, dig out your bible and look at Matthew 12:20 to 21. These verses are actually about a prophecy about Jesus, it’s quoting Isaiah. “In his name the nations will put their hope.” God bless, if I don’t see you before Christmas, have a great Christmas and I’ll see you again in the new year.

Our hopes and fears are met in Jesus. Jesus is the hope of the world and my prayer for you is that you will discover Jesus and the hope that He brings. Click To Tweet
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Advent – Joy

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Transcript

Today we are going to be looking at Joy. Joy what does that actually mean? I’ve heard it sung J O Y J O Y surely that must mean Jesus first, Yourself last and others in between. There we are sorted, preach done, we’ve had a christmas jingle and we have had a definition of Joy. So that’s it, done. No of course not.

The dictionary definition of Joy often seems to reflect around happiness which is what we might immediately assume Joy is happiness. The dictionary definition would probably say great happiness or great delight. But we understand that actually there is something deeper about joy when we think of it in a spiritual context, there is something much much deeper when we look at it spiritually. So often we find ourselves quoting a little verse of scripture that comes from the old testament that says

…for the joy of the Lord is your strength(Nehemiah 8:10 NIV

From which we get this sense that joy is something that can empower us, that can give us the ability to move forward when things are tough. We can take great courage from that, great strength from that The joy of the lord is your strength. It suggests that there is far more to joy than perhaps just great happiness. The verse that that comes from in the old testament, in the book of Nehemiah, a little bit before that i thought was really interesting. It says:

Nehemiah said, “Go and enjoy some choice food and sweet drinks, and send some to those who have nothing prepared. This day is holy to our Lord. Do not grieve, for the joy of the Lord is your strength.”Nehemiah 8.10 NIV

Don’t you just love that bit that comes before. I thought wow! That’s a great verse for Christmas especially after the year that we have had where many of us have experienced a sense of grief. But here we are, let’s take this to heart, let’s go and enjoy some choice food and sweet drinks. Let’s remember those that don’t have anything prepared and let’s enjoy this time of year. Joy, the joy of the Lord is your strength.

It’s all very well me saying that, where can we find joy? Where is it that we find joy? I know from my own experience that there has been in coming into that close relationship with my father God through the work of Jesus and the Holy Spirit that I have come to experience and really understand this deep and intimate joy and it’s beyond anything i could have imagined, beyond anything that I could have expected in my life before I knew Jesus. It’s God himself who invites us into this close intimate relationship, He really longs for that with every single one of us, He wants that close friendship.

It’s God himself who invites us into this close intimate relationship, He really longs for that with every single one of us, He wants that close friendship. Click To Tweet

If you look at the verse in Jeremiah 33:3 God says:

Call to me and I will answer you and tell you great and unsearchable things you do not know.Jeremiah 33.3 NIV

It’s an invitation here to come into a relationship with Him, to come into dialogue with Him, to ask Him questions: where is it that I can find joy? Where is it that I can come to know and understand these great mysteries? It’s in God himself. It is through the work of Jesus, what He did in dying on the cross that we can come to have that relationship with God. But more than that there is a third person in the relationship, not just God, not just Jesus, there is also the Holy Spirit. I believe that it is in the work of the Holy Spirit that we discover this real deep-seated joy, this spiritual joy that I was talking about. It is in relationship with the Holy Spirit, we need to allow Him to be in us, to work with us, to work in us and in doing so I believe we will find joy. Why do I think that? There’s a verse in Galatians that talks about something called the Fruit of the Spirit. The Fruit of the Holy is something that is produced through the work of the Holy Spirit and that can be in us.

Lets have a look at the fruit of the Holy Spirit. The ingredients are: water, glucose, fructose, sucrose, maltose, amino acids, fatty acids. I once saw this and it said “if you saw this, would you give this to your children to eat?” For most of us we would look at it and think Wow, that’s a lot of chemicals, it doesn’t look very good, all those ingredients, not too sure”. Let me tell you, that is the ingredients of a banana. All of those are what make up a banana. That’s the ingredients. And what fascinates me about the fruits of the Holy Spirit is that we think of it so often as being the different bits of the ingredients but actually I believe that the fruit of the Holy Spirit is something that is complete. In a sense, the bits that we look at almost think of as individual fruit is actually the ingredients. Let’s have a look at that verse properly now :

But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. Against such things there is no law.Galatians 5:22-23 NIV

Isn’t that amazing, here we have it Love, Joy and Peace. So when we get the Holy Spirit in us then we can start to express this fruit of the Holy Spirit. This is what can come out of that. This is where we find joy, it is in the Holy Spirit that we find Joy.

How do we express that Joy?
I wonder how do we express it? To be perfectly honest I would say that our expression is individual as our personalities, we express it however we are uniquely made and according to our unique personalities, that is for us to explore how we express joy so I don’t really want to ask that question, how do we express joy? More so I would like to ask the question not how but what happens when.

What happens when we express joy?
Thinking about personalities and character and things like that did make me think about Jesus himself. There is a verse in John 1:4-5. These are verse we often come across particularly at this time of year. In verse 4 it says:

In him was life, and that life was the light of all mankind.John 1:4 NIV

In Him was life, that was the expression of who He was, that life that came out of Him and is the light to all mankind. That was Jesus’ expression. I would encourage us to express joy as much as we can because we know that it is part of the fruit of the Holy Spirit, a part of that life is Joy. But what happens when we express that joy? If we are talking about light, this next verse really does illuminate that.

The light shines in the darkness has not overcome itJohn 1:5 NIV

This verse has become something that has been a real encouragement to me personally in recent weeks. It started on the occasion when our Jemimah was poorly. She wasn’t well and it was a very difficult time, it wasn’t at all easy. There were moments when I thought “what’s the point”, I don’t know if you ever have moments when things can get tough and you just think “what’s the point?” I did have a few moments like that where I felt that sense of darkness pushing in and pressing in on us. And then a friend contacted me and put the situation into a spiritual context for me. It led me to this verse, “The light shines in the darkness has not overcome it.” I was so encouraged by that image that actually darkness cannot overcome light. It reminded me of a story that I heard in primary school. I feel like probably everybody heard this story in primary school, I heard it several times in primary school. It is a folk tale but it is something that reminds us of the power of light:

There was a gentleman who had three sons and he decided rather than the usual tradition of giving his inheritance to the oldest son, he decided he would give the inheritance to the one who was perhaps the most intelligent, the cleverest, the wisest. He decided to test them and gave them each a penny. He told them to go to market and purchase something with that penny – obviously in the olden days when pennies were still worth something – that would fill his barn. The first son comes back from the market the next and his purchase is as many feathers as a penny would buy him. He tosses them into the barn in the hope that they are going to fill the barn but of course they don’t, there’s not enough to fill the barn. The second son sees the first son make the mistake and thinks that I can do better than that. He goes off to market and comes back with a bail of straw. For a penny! I wish I could still buy a bail of straw for a penny that would be good. I deal with straw every morning, straw does not go far. I’m forever trying to make straw go further than it actually does go because I’m trying to be as economically as possible in sorting out a horse’s bed. On this occasion the straw did not fill the barn. The youngest son had watched the two older sons and he had an idea. He went off to market the following week and he came back with a candle. He then took the candle into the barn, lit the candle and the light filled the barn. And of course he was the one who received the inheritance.

That’s just a simple story but light is so powerful, it can fill dark places. Lets just remember that verse again: The light shines in the darkness has not overcome it. The actual word in there ‘overcome’ can be translated in two different ways, it can be translated to overcome but it can also be translated as understood. “The light shines in the darkness has not understood it”. The darkness can’t comprehend the light, it doesn’t understand how the light works. I find that so encouraging at this time where perhaps there might be moments where we might feel that the darkness is pushing in or things might be worrying us or that there are pressures on us. Remember that the light, the light of Jesus, overcomes that. Is so much more powerful than it, that darkness does not even understand it. It is a really powerful image that we can see just what a difference light makes. I want to encourage you with that today because in the context of joy, if we can grasp hold of the fruit of the Holy Spirit, that walking closely with the Holy Spirit so that joy comes out of us, I believe that it is like the light of Jesus that light then illuminates out of us and can impact the world around us. I really want to encourage you that in the same way as Jesus’ light shines, let your light shine before others. Allow joy to become that expression through you this Christmastime because I believe that it will make a difference in other people’s lives. It will be like the light overcoming darkness. I’ll read that verse again:

In the same way, let your light shine before others, that they may see your good deeds and glorify your Father in heaven. Matthew 5:16 NIV

And we don’t do this for our own glory, we don’t seek to express joy for our own glory but to glorify our father in heaven. Let’s be so full of joy this Christmas that we make a great difference in the lives of those around us.

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Advent – Peace

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Transcript

We find ourselves in this season of advent. I love this time of year, it’s really exciting and fun. I have youngish kids and they love it. There are some scary things too. The average westerner has 7000 calories on Christmas day, that’s quite something when you should only really have 2500. Do you know who the hardest person to buy presents for at Christmas is? It’s Dad! When I was growing up every year I would buy my Dad a roll of Sellotape, to this day I don’t know quite why.

You know I love Christmas, but I don’t really love the cards, they make nativity look cute. You’ve got fluorescent figures; you’ve got Mary dressed like some kind of blue nun. What an impractical outfit for giving birth. You’ve got grinning cows and the ox and the ass look so happy. The hay smells like Chanel no. 5. And the 3 wise men in the same place at the same time, what a miracle. You’ve got this whole scene where it’s like the animals are happy, the straw is perfect, the manger looks wonderful but it just wouldn’t have been like that. This is no Disney princess film where it’s all wonderful and finishes so beautifully. This would have been difficult, it would’ve been hard, it would’ve looked quite different. You see, because of our brokenness and the way that we’ve messed up, the King of the world Jesus comes from the highest heaven to lowest earth. He’s born as a baby. Do you ever think what does that actually look like? The God who threw the stars into space becomes a baby for you and me. You know when babies are first born they can’t get proper eye contact at first, they can’t move their arms properly at first, there are lots of things that they can’t do. The saviour of the world became a baby boy for you and me. Isn’t that remarkable.

Today I want to talk to you about the magi, you might know them more colloquially as the wise men. If you have a Bible would you turn it on or open it up to Matthew 2:1-12

1 After Jesus was born in Bethlehem in Judea, during the time of King Herod, Magi from the east came to Jerusalem 2 and asked, “Where is the one who has been born king of the Jews? We saw his star when it rose and have come to worship him.”
3 When King Herod heard this he was disturbed, and all Jerusalem with him. 4 When he had called together all the people’s chief priests and teachers of the law, he asked them where the Messiah was to be born. 5 “In Bethlehem in Judea,” they replied, “for this is what the prophet has written:
6 “ ‘But you, Bethlehem, in the land of Judah,
are by no means least among the rulers of Judah;
for out of you will come a ruler
who will shepherd my people Israel.’”
7 Then Herod called the Magi secretly and found out from them the exact time the star had appeared. 8 He sent them to Bethlehem and said, “Go and search carefully for the child. As soon as you find him, report to me, so that I too may go and worship him.”
9 After they had heard the king, they went on their way, and the star they had seen when it rose went ahead of them until it stopped over the place where the child was. 10 When they saw the star, they were overjoyed. 11 On coming to the house, they saw the child with his mother Mary, and they bowed down and worshiped him. Then they opened their treasures and presented him with gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh. 12 And having been warned in a dream not to go back to Herod, they returned to their country by another route.Matthew 2:1-12 NIV

I love this passage, the wise men – more correctly the magi, it was originally the name of a Persian clan but later used widely for magicians and astrologers, a numerous class in most countries in Western Asia. I love it when Matthew Henry, the commentator, says “the stars that have been misused came to be put to the right use in leading people to Christ”. With the magi I have three things I want to talk to you about really quickly today that I think are important from this passage for us.

Focus
The first is this, focus. There was once a 100m sprinter called Leroy Burrell, he was faster than anyone else, he was ready to be world champion, he had broken the world record. He was performing in the world championships in the early 90’s. He’s on the start line and he’s looking around, he knows he’s the best. When it comes to the 100m sprint, you have to get out of the blocks quick, keep focused and keep going. Burrell bursts out of the blocks and he was leading coming up to the finish line and as he comes towards the finish line he panics and he wonders where everyone else is. So he looks sideways and as he looks sideways, three runners run past him and he finishes 4th. If he had kept looking, kept focused forwards, he would have won the race and become world champion. But because he lost his focus and looked sideways, three people beat him, he finished 4th and he never competed at that level again.
When it comes to the Magi they didn’t keep focused on what lay ahead of them. They didn’t keep focused on what was in front of them, they ceased to follow the star. Because when looking for a baby king, the natural place to go was a palace. For the magi they had the star in front of them. If they had focused on it they would have ended up in the right place but when looking for a king you end up in a palace. I wonder for some of us, how’s our focus? Are we keeping our focus on Jesus or are we looking elsewhere? In the middle of this Coronavirus pandemic that we’re all facing in different ways, where’s our focus? Let’s not pretend it’s not hard, this is such a hard season for us all. We’re all finding this difficult, we all want it to end but in the middle of it those of us that know Jesus have a chance to show what’s different when you face this pandemic with Jesus. Where’s our focus? Are we keeping our eyes in the right place? If you keep your eyes on the star, you make it to Jesus.

Where’s our focus? Are we keeping our eyes in the right place? If you keep your eyes on the star, you make it to Jesus. Click To Tweet
The Three Wise Men

Location
There is an issue on location. Why wouldn’t you go to a palace to look for a baby king? And the problem here is that God sees things differently to us. We see things down here, He sees things from up there. It’s a little bit like my favourite story in scripture, Phillip and the Ethiopian Eunuch. When Phillip is ministering in Samaria and they’re seeing exorcisms and healings and there are loads of people coming to faith, everything is going really well. And then an angel of the Lord says “go, leave that and go to the middle of the desert”. It makes no sense, what a crazy thing to do. But Phillip’s obedient and he goes. He goes to the middle of the desert and he meets a eunuch. And this eunuch needs explaining from the scriptures. This isn’t just any eunuch, he serves Candace the Queen of Ethiopia, he serves her. And what happens is that Phillip leads this eunuch to Jesus. Then this eunuch takes the gospel to Africa for the first time. Africa now the most on fire continent for Jesus. So what happens is that God sees it up there, Phillip sees it down here. But Phillip trusts enough to go God’s way and ends up meeting a eunuch who takes the gospel to Africa.
Much the same in this passage, God sees things differently, our humanity takes us to a palace but Jesus wanted to meet the magi in the stable so God chose to lead them there. But when man’s wisdom took over from God’s guidance the whole thing got messed up. You know many of us are looking for God in the wrong place. Jerusalem is only 9 miles north of Bethlehem, I’ve been to both, they’re close together, you could run between the two. The wise men had a long intellectual history but they missed their goal by 9 miles. They had miscalculated by just 9 miles. I wonder for some of us, particularly in this season where we are finding it so difficult, that life is so hard, that we’re not always sure where to turn, are we finding God in the wrong place? Are we looking for God in the wrong place? Are we missing him because we’re looking in the wrong space? Are we depending on other stuff? Are we depending on science or the political leaders when actually we should be focusing on God at this time? Where is our focus? Are we in the wrong location?

I wonder for some of us in this, are we finding God in the wrong place? Are we looking for God in the wrong place? Click To Tweet

Obstacles
What obstacles are getting in our way?
When they followed the star again they found their way to Jesus. The obstacle in their way was their common sense. Their common sense took them to the palace, but then in the end they followed the star again and that led them to Jesus. If we persevere even when it’s hard we can make it to Jesus. God’s with us in the middle of the storms we are facing.

I love an old story I was a few years ago of two Iranian pastors. You know Iran has the fastest growing church in the world, isn’t that amazing. There were two Iranian pastors that were effectively Bible smugglers. They would smuggle Bibles to different places in the night in the hope to not get caught. You get caught with one Bible you can lose your life. If you get caught smuggling them, you’re stuffed. These two pastors left at 4am to take 200 Bibles to a remote village. As they are driving along the road, the steering wheel of the car locks and they end up pulling over to the side of the road because the car won’t drive anymore. They pull over in the middle of nowhere and then suddenly they notice outside the passenger window that there’s a guy stood there. He whacks on the window, so one of the pastors winds the window down. The guy outside says “you’ve got Bibles inside”. The pastors are trying not to lie but they don’t want to lose their lives so they say “why would you think we’ve got Bibles?” The guy outside says “you’ve got Bibles in this car, you’ve got 200 Bibles in this car”. The pastors say “what would make you think that?”. The guy outside says “me and my friends have been praying every day for two years that the Lord would bring us 200 Bibles. The Lord told me that if I stood here out on the road here in the middle of nowhere that He would bring us 200 Bibles”. Isn’t that incredible. The pastors give him the 200 Bibles. The community there then have the opportunity to access the word of God. The ultimate obstacles of fear and secret police and other things are overcome because our God is more powerful than the other things that we face.

For some of us it is so easy to miss the star and miss the way to Jesus because our focus is in the wrong place, we are looking in the wrong location or the obstacles are too much for us. With the magi, they find their way to no ordinary king, they find their way to Jesus. This baby boy born in a manger grows into a man giving food to the hungry, health to the sick, life to the dead. He eventually dies upon a cross taking every wrong thing upon himself that you ever could do, ever might do, that you needn’t be punished for it. That you would be set apart from your brokenness. Life in all of its fullness now and life in all of its fullness for eternity. This Jesus gives us the opportunity for a personal relationship with the living God. That’s what Christmas is about.

They come to the baby with three gifts. They come with gold, frankincense and myrrh. We all get those Christmas cards with gold, Frankenstein and myrrh but actually it was frankincense. Why gold? Gold is a symbol of kingship. Christ is the king of kings. Here in the manger is the king of kings. Secondly frankincense, frankincense is a symbol of prayer and communication. The king has not left his people to get on with it. The king has come to communicate with his people. Myrrh is about death and burial. The king came in order to give his life for every one of us.

The invisible god becomes visible in Jesus. Sometimes we leave him as a baby. To understand the significance of the birth of Jesus, to understand the significance of Christmas, you have to move from the cradle to the cross. And it’s on that cross that Jesus gave his life so that we could live. You see the real gift of Christmas is Christ. As my friend says “if you take Christ out of Christmas you’re just left with M&S”. My challenge to you this Christmas is don’t miss the Christ in Christmas. The Sadducees and the Pharisees missed it, they needed only to walk 5 miles to get to Jesus.

The invisible god becomes visible in Jesus. Sometimes we leave him as a baby. To understand the significance of the birth of Jesus, to understand the significance of Christmas, you have to move from the cradle to the cross. Click To Tweet

You can be religious and not know the truth. The Bible means library, there are 322 old testament messianic prophecies – how, where, what, how he would die, even the number of coins for betraying him. Jesus fulfils all of these prophecies the messiah, the saviour of the world, his very name means saviour redeemer. Christmas is about the birth of the saviour who changes everything for every one of us.

King Herod missed it too. Herod was a king, but Christ was THE king. For some of us at Christmas we start chasing the things of the world, what’s that really about? In the coming years, if COVID has been a wave, what’s coming after is going to be a tidal wave. The coming years we’re going to struggle economically in this nation, but I tell you something, God is still good. Jesus still reigns and he still gave his life for you and me.

When I received this gift of Jesus, when I received this gift of Christmas, it changed my world. People started saying that you’ve been brainwashed, I needed brainwashing, I needed changing, I needed to know that something was greater than me, I needed to know that hope has a name, and it’s name is Jesus. On his promises and on what he has done for me, I will build my life and put my faith. The gift of Christmas is really Christ. We receive stuff that we really don’t need whilst God offers us the gift we can’t live without.

They call him Immanuel. It means God is with us. It’s not a prayer but a statement. So ultimate, so inclusive, God has got to us in this way. Jesus is the way the truth and the life. The greatest promise in the bible is that He is with us. Right now, with all that we are facing, with all that is going on in the middle of the pandemic, we can pin this advent season to the absolute truth that hope has a name and that name is Jesus. Hope has got to us by giving his life on that cross but before that by coming from the highest heaven to the lowest earth as a baby who was born at Christmas time. That the baby chose to be man changes everything.

We can pin this advent season to the absolute truth that hope has a name and that name is Jesus. Click To Tweet

My question to you is, this Christmas do you know Jesus? This Christmas do you know life in all its fullness? Maybe you have been a follower of Jesus for many years but are you focused on him or are you distracted by that around? The magi could so easily have got to Jesus by following the star, by keeping focused, by keeping going. Instead they took their focus off the star and ended up in a palace. Because you go to a palace when you’re looking for a king. Common sense kicks in. The reality is that their intellect was their obstacle, they let their common sense take over from actually following the ways of God. Which sometimes can feel like foolishness to the world, but they’re the right ways to go. This Christmas time are you focusing on Jesus? Are you following him? In the middle of this pandemic are you standing on the rock of ages or are you standing on shifting sands of culture changing around us. Are you clinging to hope, because hope is Jesus. There is an old hymn that says “Turn your eyes upon Jesus, look full in His wonderful face, and the things of earth will grow strangely dim in the light of His glory and grace”. This Christmas season, those words seem more relevant than ever. Let’s pray.

“I wonder if you are watching this and you have never chosen to surrender your life to Jesus. Today would be a great time to do this. There will be different ways to do it, but I would love to just pray for you now. If you have never chosen to follow Jesus, you have never known what it is to surrender your life to Jesus, perhaps this Christmas season is the time for you to do so. Maybe you have strayed, maybe you have known Jesus but have walked away, this is a great time to recommit, dust yourself down, say Lord I am going to go for it with you and I’m sorry that I have walked away from you. Whether it’s the first time or a recommitment, perhaps you would pray with me now. We say:

Lord Jesus I surrender my life to you.
Lord I ask you to come into my heart.
Please forgive me for my brokenness.
Set me free from all the stuff that I have done wrong.
Might I know you today as my best friend but also as my King.
Might you journey with me this Christmas season and for the years and months beyond.
Might I today know life in all of its fullness.
Might I know that forever too.
Amen.

If you prayed that prayer, do be in touch with someone in the Church. But secondly, maybe for some of us who have just taken our eyes off of Jesus, we’ve just been messing around a bit in this season, we have been so overwhelmed by how hard this year has been, we have forgotten that our primary focus needs to be on the Lord just like those magi we have let other things kick in and distract us when our primary focus needs to be on the Lord. This Christmas time let’s just take a moment to remind the Lord he is our primary focus.

Lord, I pray for each of my friends.
I pray that they would turn their eyes to you.
I pray that they would focus on you this Christmas time.
Lord we’ll have nice food, good family time, great presents but our focus this Christmas time is on you.
I pray Lord, that unlike the wise men that we would not be taken of course by the distractions around us but we would stay focused on you, that we know you better, love you more and go deeper in our relationship with you.

Finally I pray for Festival Church, that it would grow, I pray that it would bring hope to its communities and I pray Lord Jesus that it would do all that it could to share your hope with all those around it. Lord, would their ministering words work some wonders making You known in an incredible way. As we step towards a new year, would 2021 be an amazing year for this wonderful family of churches, we pray. Amen

God bless you friends and go for it. Happy Christmas.

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