What are you praying for?

praying

(CREDIT: t-bet via Flickr)

Our church has recently started testing a new, online prayer diary called ‘PrayerMate.’

It enables people to subscribe to prayer points from many, terrific organisations and missionaries.

It also helps us connect with the regular prayer points of our own church.

One benefits is that it gives me a list of people from within our church that I can specifically pray for each week.

But what should I actually pray for each person?

Well, according to Paul’s letter to the Ephesians, I could start by thanking God for each person, and particularly, for their faith and their love, as he writes:

“…ever since I heard about your faith in the Lord Jesus and your love for all God’s people, I have not stopped giving thanks for you, remembering you in my prayers” (Ephesians 1:15-16)

It’s great to start our prayers by thanking God for how he is working in each person, leading them to grow in their trust in him, and in the outworking of that through the love they have for other Christians.

But after that, Paul prays that they would know God better:

“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)

The reason we pray that people would know God better is so that they can enjoy the riches of their relationship with him.

It’s a bit like getting to “know” a friend or a spouse: it’s not so we can pass a knowledge test about them, but it’s so we can grow deeper in our friendship.

So, let’s keep thanking God for each other’s faith and love, and keep asking him to help us know God better.

Jodie.

Coming up this weekend 30th September – 1st October 2017

This weekend we welcome our own Mark Howard who will speak to us on the topic of “Setting your mind on the Spirit” from Romans chapter 8 verses 1 to 17, and Romans chapter 12 verses 1 to 3.

At our 5pm Saturday service we will have an opportunity to meet one of our church members, which is always a great encouragement to us all.

Our 8am Sunday service will be a Morning Prayer AAPB service.

If you’re wanting to check out our church we’d really love you to visit us on Saturday at 5pm for a contemporary service with kids’ program and dinner afterwards, or come along on Sunday at 8am for a Prayer Book service.

If you can’t make it in person, you’re welcome to jump online to watch the service (with the same sermon and many other items) at www.oakflats.tv.

Church news for the week beginning 23rd September 2017

This weekend’s Bible Talk

This weekend Graham Errington is speaking on the topic “Which is better?” from Luke chapter 10 verses 38 to 42.

Next week’s Bible Talk

Next week, Mark Howard will be speaking on the topic “The Spiritual Mind” from Romans chapter 1 verses 16 to 32.

Mission of the month

Triple Care Farm is our mission of the month. Support this ministry through the ‘Mission Table’ in the Hall.

Combined Celebration Service

A reminder that on Saturday 7th October we are bringing our two services together for a celebration night at 5pm and enjoying special Canadian-themed dinner and entertainment.

This combined church service will replace our 8am service on the 8th October which will not be held this weekend. Keep the date free, and bring along your friends and family for this great night of celebration!

KBECET Annual Dinner is coming up

Saturday 14th October at Kiama Anglican Church (Yes, you can make it after our service!) 6.30pm for a 7pm start.Come and enjoy a great meal and hear the latest of Nigel’s ministry at Kiama High. See the order form in the Hall to purchase or order tickets @ $25 each. Contact Vic East on 4236 0525 or see Trevor Lucas.

 

Giving update

Each week we need to receive $6300.00 in order to meet our commitments. In the last calendar month, our average weekly giving was $5402.00, leaving a gap of $898.00.

Olimometer 2.52

Up to the end of the last calendar month we needed to have received $81,900. Compared to that total we received $71,624, leaving a gap of $10,276.

Olimometer 2.52

Electronic giving is a great way to give! It helps us prayerfully plan our giving, and then the bank will help us keep that commitment, even when we may be unable to attend. To give by direct transfer then these are the details. Account name: Church of England Jamberoo. Account number: 10081274. BSB: 062562 .

When it’s safer to defend a lion

lion

(CREDIT: Mathias Appel via Flickr)

Recently I read someone attack a Christian about the Bible, saying, “that’s fine if you want to believe a bunch of goat herders living in tents from 4000 years ago!”

As Christians, our trust in the Bible as the divinely-inspired word of God is increasingly seen as antiquated at best, and dangerously misguided at worst.

As people say, “what could such an ancient text say to us today?”

The question for us is this: how do we defend our belief that it’s God’s word to us today in our modern society, when it was written in a such different time and place?

There is no doubt that our society has changed, but its worth remembering some things haven’t.

Firstly, God hasn’t changed.

God is eternal, and whatever our society thinks of him or his Word, cannot change him.

One of the fundamental characteristics of God is that he is a God who speaks: from speaking creation into being, to revealing who he by sending his Son, the WORD.

God is a God who speaks, and the Bible is where God’s living words are recorded for us.

Secondly, human nature hasn’t changed.

For all our sophistication it’s hard to see how our society has overcome some of its fundamental problems.

The Bible offers an explanation for that: while God is a God who speaks, we are people who do not listen to him.

The Bible is able to penetrate beyond modern appearances to diagnose our real current problems, and prescribe a lasting solution.

We shouldn’t be surprised at the world’s rejection of his word.

But where do we go to convince our friends that it is true, or even ourselves when we are feeling a little shaky about this? We go to the source, the Bible.

Since it really is God’s word to us today, he has the power to speak to us, overcome our doubts and convince us of the truth of his Son.

As the great preacher Charles Spurgeon once said, “Defend the Bible? I would as soon defend a lion!”

Simon Chaplin.

Coming up this weekend 23rd – 24th September 2017

This weekend Graham Errington will be speaking on the topic “Which is better?” from Luke chapter 10 verses 38 to 42.

During our 5pm Saturday service, we’ll have our weekly question and answer time, and Graham will be answering these questions:

  1. Who wrote 2 Samuel, and who is the narrator in last week’s chapter?
  2. Why do we say that David would fulfil God’s promises when God always planned to fulfil things through Jesus?
  3. Why do people in the Uniting Church handle the Bible wrongly?
  4. Why do we choose to ignore the Bible’s teaching about food laws and rituals, yet choose to obey the teaching about homosexuality?
  5. Was the minister in Victoria right to not marry a heterosexual couple because they supported same-sex marriage?
  6. What are the differences between Christians and Jehovah’s Witnesses?
  7. Will Jesus only come back when everyone has heard of him?
  8. What will you say to Jesus when you see him face to face?
  9. How could Jesus not know when he would return when he was on earth, since he is in a complete relationship with his heavenly Father?
  10. Why is the word LORD always in capitals in the Bible?

We will also share the Lord’s Supper at 5pm Saturday, so come along and be reminded again of the great service of Jesus Christ, who died for our sins.

Our 8am Sunday service will be a Holy Communion Second Order AAPB service.

If you’re wanting to check out our church we’d really love you to visit us on Saturday at 5pm for a contemporary service with kids’ program and dinner afterwards, or come along on Sunday at 8am for a Prayer Book service.

Church news for the week beginning 16th September 2017

2 Samuel series continues

This weekend we continue our series looking at 2 Samuel as Simon Chaplin preaches from chapter 11 verses 1 to 27 with the title, “The sin of the King”.

Next week’s Bible Talk

Next week, Graham Errington will be speaking on the topic “Which is better?” from Luke chapter 10 verses 38 to 42.

Mission of the month

Triple Care Farm is our mission of the month. Support this ministry through the ‘Mission Table’ in the Hall.

Our Quarterly Inter-Church Service is on again!

Join with other Jamberoo Christians at 7.00 pm on Sunday 17th for a time of prayer, singing, fellowship and reflection on the theme of Renewal, at Jamberoo Uniting Church, Wyalla Road.

Combined Celebration Service

A reminder that on Saturday 7th October we are bringing our two services together for a celebration night at 5pm and enjoying special Canadian-themed dinner and entertainment.

This combined church service will replace our 8am service on the 8th October which will not be held this weekend. Keep the date free, and bring along your friends and family for this great night of celebration!

New Midweek Service

On Thursday 2nd November at 11am we will trial a new ‘Midweek Service’ which will be followed by a light lunch. We are praying that this service will provide a format that will serve our members who often find the 8am time difficult, and that it will be an ideal service to which we might invite our friends. Keep the date free!

New Rosters

New rosters are out now. If you need a paper version, grab one from the information table, or otherwise log onto www.jamberooanglican.net to see what dates and roles you are scheduled for.

Giving update

Each week we need to receive $6300.00 in order to meet our commitments. In the last calendar month, our average weekly giving was $5402.00, leaving a gap of $898.00.

Olimometer 2.52

Up to the end of the last calendar month we needed to have received $81,900. Compared to that total we received $71,624, leaving a gap of $10,276.

Olimometer 2.52

Electronic giving is a great way to give! It helps us prayerfully plan our giving, and then the bank will help us keep that commitment, even when we may be unable to attend. To give by direct transfer then these are the details. Account name: Church of England Jamberoo. Account number: 10081274. BSB: 062562 .

Your true face on Facebook

Young kids love to dress up and pretend to be somebody else.

Whether it’s Elsa or Buzz Lightyear, they love to play another character.

Adults also enjoy pretending to be someone else, often at a costume party or a masquerade ball.

Sometimes we pretend to be someone else on social media.

Even though Facebook requires the use of real names, people don’t always act in a way that matches their real-life persona.

Sometimes this can be a form of social ‘makeup’, where we try to appear our very best when we’re sharing our photos or making comments.

At other times we keep silent about our beliefs and opinions, especially when discussion rages about controversial matters like same-sex marriage.

We can also appear different to the real world when our comments, likes, and shares clash with the person we claim to be at church or in our daily communities.

There’s a constant temptation to have a different ‘face’ when we’re on Facebook.

In his first letter, the Apostle Peter warns Christians to “rid yourselves of all malice and all deceit, hypocrisy, envy, and slander of every kind.” (1 Peter 2:1.)

This means that when we’re online we need to avoid hypocrisy by making sure we don’t have a different ‘face’ to our real-life persona.

The person we are when we’re engaging with Facebook needs to be the same person we are when we’re chatting in the real world with friends, family and colleagues.

And the motivation is simple and powerful: we “have been born again, not of perishable seed, but of imperishable, through the living and enduring word of God.” (1 Peter 1:23)

God’s word has given us a radical new life, and we are called to live this life online as well as offline, to God’s glory.

Jodie McNeill

This is an excerpt of Jodie’s upcoming seminar at this year’s MTS Mission Minded Conference called, “Can I be a Christian and on social media at the same time?”

Coming up this weekend 16th – 17th September 2017

This weekend we continue our series on 2 Samuel. In the next talk, Simon Chaplin will be speaking on the topic, “The sin of the King”, from 2 Samuel chapter 11 verses 1 to 27.

During our 5pm Saturday service, we’ll have our weekly question and answer time, and Jodie will be answering these questions:

  1. Since God did not require or like riches, why did David give them to the Lord?
  2. What are foot soldiers?
  3. How would Jonathan’s son, Mephibosheth bow down before David when he was lame?
  4. Did Mephibosheth go and fight too, since the whole of Israel fought?
  5. What happened to David’s sons?
  6. Why would the Arameans be on the other side of the Euphrates river?
  7. Would the Israelites have thought that King David had banished the humiliated envoys, since he told them to stay in Jericho until their beards grew back?
  8. Is Hadadezer the same person as Hanun?
  9. How does the Uniting Church interpret the Bible to allow same-sex couples to be leaders of their Church?
  10. Does it matter to God which Christian denomination a person is affiliated with?

Our 8am Sunday service will be a Morning Prayer Sunday service and at both our services, we will have a special update about Triple Care Farm which is our Mission of the Month.

If you’re wanting to check out our church we’d really love you to visit us on Saturday at 5pm for a contemporary service with kids’ program and dinner afterwards, or come along on Sunday at 8am for a Prayer Book service.

See you at 5pm this Saturday or 8am this Sunday, God willing!

Church news for the week beginning 9th September 2017

2 Samuel series continues

This weekend we continue our series looking at 2 Samuel as Jodie preaches from chapter 9 verse 1 to chapter 10 verse 19 with the title, “The kindness of the King”.

Mission of the month: CMS

CMS (Church Missionary Society) is our mission of the month. Support this ministry through the ‘Mission Table’ in the Hall.

Combined Celebration Service

On Saturday 7th October we are bringing our two services together for a celebration night at 5pm. We will be officially welcoming Rayne Orange to our church as our Youth Minister, and will be enjoying special Canadian-themed dinner and entertainment. We’ll also be having some special speeches of farewell and thanksgiving for two of our members.

This combined church service will replace our 8am service on the 8th October which will not be held this weekend. Keep the date free, and bring along your friends and family for this great night of celebration!

New Midweek Service

On Thursday 2nd November at 11am we will trial a new ‘Midweek Service’ which will be followed by a light lunch. We are praying that this service will provide a format that will serve our members who often find the 8am time difficult, and that it will be an ideal service to which we might invite our friends. Keep the date free!

Giving update

Each week we need to receive $6300.00 in order to meet our commitments. In the last calendar month, our average weekly giving was $5402.00, leaving a gap of $898.00.

Olimometer 2.52

Up to the end of the last calendar month we needed to have received $81,900. Compared to that total we received $71,624, leaving a gap of $10,276.

Olimometer 2.52

Electronic giving is a great way to give! It helps us prayerfully plan our giving, and then the bank will help us keep that commitment, even when we may be unable to attend. To give by direct transfer then these are the details. Account name: Church of England Jamberoo. Account number: 10081274. BSB: 062562 .

The prodigal son

This week I was teaching Scripture at our local primary school. The lesson was the prodigal son, and I was once again surprised by how big and radical God’s love is for us. And it wasn’t just me – the students seem to get it too!

The parable you may recall is of a son who treats his father in the most shameful manner, taking off with all his money and then losing it all in equally shameful ways. He is forced to head home with nothing.

He is met by his father who is waiting for him. His father welcomes him home with open arms. He forgives his wayward son, and then does something amazing – instead of exacting a punishment from him, he throws his son a party.

“For this my son was dead, and is alive again; he was lost, and is found”. Luke 15:24

My scripture kids were trying to work this out – “so he could do whatever he wants and get away with it?” 

It didn’t seem fair. But that is what grace is – our Father’s big “yes” to us! 

However, I asked my class a followup question: When the son came home, and received that forgiveness, and was thrown a party, do you think he would go out and do what he did again? “NO!” they all shouted.

God’s grace comes to us whatever we have done, whoever we are. But God’s grace never leaves us as we are.

But God, being rich in mercy, because of the great love with which he loved us, 5 even when we were dead in our trespasses, made us alive together with Christ—by grace you have been saved—

For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them.” Eph 2:4-5,10

Simon Chaplin.