As we look ahead to Christmas here’s a message from Shelley outlining our plans

Dear friends

This Sunday we look back at our series on the body as well as looking forward to hearing a few different perspectives on what God has said about the body through the bible and through the whole series. We have an activity for our younger ones, a live band as well as a live stream on the Moortown Baptist Youtube channel.  The service will start at 11am and be finished by 12midday. 

A lot went into last week’s remembrance ’what are you standing on?’ service and although I couldn’t be there in the end, I wanted to let you know that I was able to watch some of the livestream in Dad’s hospital room in St James’s Bexley wing. It was wonderful to feel connected and hear encouragement from all who were in the building or tuning in last week. One of the Oncology nurses looking after dad has been chatting about God with my dad and she wants to come to MBC over the next few weeks.

Also this weekend we have the Table Top sale on Saturday 20th November.  Do pop along and get some bargains between 2pm and 4pm.  All proceeds going to various charities.  Thanks to Karen Ross and all who are helping to arrange it. 

Thanks also to all those who are joining in with leading any of our activities and ministries at the moment or encouraging those who are. Its a season of ‘trying things out’ and we are thankful to all those who serve and join in each week with all sorts of things (even if you think its really small).  God is faithful.

We are already half way through our experiment with Romans but it’s never too late to dip into it.  So this week why not make a drink and see what God is saying to you and your world through this letter by Paul.  There’ll be opportunity to share, words, pictures, challenges, thoughts and dreams in an informal way on 2nd December, choose to pop up to church 12-2 or come along 7-9pm (or come to both if you like).     

I’m pleased to share that on Sunday 28th November we start our Advent journey ‘The Impossible Promise’ at 11am in church and on the live stream.  Each Sunday a part of the Christmas story will be unwrapped with music, cartoon, sharing, craft, bible story and prayer.  We also have plans for other get togethers including an all age nativity, wreath making and Carols, candles and croissants.  There’ll be more news on our Christmas worship in the next few days along with invitations for each one of you to join in and include others.  I’ll be getting in touch with a follow up email to see who might like to help too with some suggestions!   

However, I wanted to encourage you that as I was considering all this in relation to MBC and our communities, I felt God give me a picture of a stick of seaside rock.  Through the rock was not the word Blackpool or any other seaside town, but the word Immanuel.  It encouraged me that through everything, God reminds us that one of His names, His identity, is Immanuel, God with us.  

“…the Lord Himself will give you a sign: The virgin will conceive and give birth to a Son, and will call Him Immanuel.” — Isaiah 7:13–14”

It’s my prayer that we don’t just learn about Him but we actually know Him as Immanuel in this season.

Shelley

 

 

Table top sale – this coming Saturday

 After a postponement and then a change of date MBC’s long awaited Table Top Sale is going ahead this coming Saturday – November 20th. 
 
The event will take place in church between 2pm and 4 and all proceeds will go to various charities.
 
Items on sale will include: Bric-a-brac, Jewellery, Romanian crafts, hand made Christmas and greetings cards, Body Shop products, dolls, jigsaws, toys, cakes, knitted items, plants and lots more.  

News from Andrea and Mark in Chad

Above you can see the beginning of Mark and Andrea Hotchkin’s latest newsletter.  In it they write about the unfairness of distribution of Covid 19 vaccines and there hopes that despite their hospital having all the equipment they need to begin an immunisation programme they have still to receive any vaccines.

You can read their letter in full by clicking on the LINK.  

Janet Walker

The death has been announced of Janet Walker. Janet’s funeral service will take place at 1pm on Tuesday 30th of November at Lawnswood Crematorium. 

Remembrance Sunday – 10.50am start

Dear friends

Just a reminder that Sunday’s service we’ll be starting at 10,50am not 11am because we’ll be joining with the national act of remembrance at 11am.  We’ll be showing the BBC coverage for this as part of the service in the building, marking the 2 minute silence and then going into our service which will include elements of remembering, communion, a focus on the next part of the body (linked to the feet) and a story and activity for our younger ones. 

We’ll be live streaming the service on the Moortown Baptist Church YouTube channel but this will start at about 11.03 as we cannot live stream the BBC. 

We therefore encourage those who are joining from home to watch the BBC coverage at 11am and then turn to the YouTube channel for our service together.

You may want to have some bread and wine/juice ready to share communion so that we can do this together.

A special thanks to all those who have made poppies to decorate the church and the steps and to all those who have prepared songs, readings, prayers, tech and insights to share on the day.

See you then

Shelley

A storied prayer for Remembrance Sunday

Haddon Willmer is leading our prayer time on Remembrance Sunday. He urges you to read this story in advance.

II Sam 23.13-17

13 Towards the beginning of harvest three of the thirty[a] chiefs went down to join David at the cave of Adullam, while a band of Philistines was encamped in the valley of Rephaim. 14 David was then in the stronghold; and the garrison of the Philistines was then at Bethlehem. 15 David said longingly, ‘O that someone would give me water to drink from the well of Bethlehem that is by the gate!’ 16 Then the three warriors broke through the camp of the Philistines, drew water from the well of Bethlehem that was by the gate, and brought it to David. But he would not drink of it; he poured it out to the Lord, 17 for he said, ‘The Lord forbid that I should do this. Can I drink the blood of the men who went at the risk of their lives?’ Therefore he would not drink it. The three warriors did these things.

It is war.  Men are armed and alert.  Some are scared, others are looking for a fight and glory.  There is killing and being killed. 

David and his mighty men are holding out in the caves of Adullam, the Philistines are in the valley of Rephaim, blocking the way to his hometown of Bethlehem. 

David is a warrior.  He also writes songs, sensitive songs, reaching the heights and depths of human experience.  But now his sword is handy and he has no heart for his harp.  He is not happy.    He thinks of home and what life was like before the war engulfed him.   He remembers the simple things, the basic blessings that made life good and joyful.  The boy David breaks back through the shell of the hardened man, and David is shaken. 

He says longingly:   ‘O that someone would give me water to drink from the well of Bethlehem that is by the gate!’ 

Humanity hardly survives in war, but it holds on in sad and tenacious memory, in the longing to have afresh what is missing.  Humanity is there in the sorrow of the widow and the orphan, in the vulnerabilities of the refugee and the exiled, in the ongoing pains of the injured, in the poverty of burnt harvests.

He speaks longingly, but, being a practical man, calculating the odds, he dare not let himself hope too much.  Really, a leader should not even let on that  he is thirsty for home and wants to  taste water from that well by the gate.

 But the sigh has escaped him and three of his mighty men hear him.

They are loyal, they like him.  They are wild and self-confident – give us a chance, and we’ll gladly enjoy tweaking the nose of the Philistines.   So, with whatever mixed motives, they set off on a daring adventure, cleverly sneak through the enemy lines, and find the well by the gate of Bethlehem.  

They fill their horns and flagons with water and leg it back to David. 

David takes the water, it is just what he asked for, what he thirsted for.  But he won’t drink it.

This ordinary water is now more than water.  It is water that is given him by his friends, by his clever brave generous friends. 

He cannot drink it with nostalgic pleasure.  He cannot drink it to celebrate a great little victory over the Philistines.  This ordinary water has become something more: it is the blood of men who went at risk of their lives for him.  He holds in his hands the love of ordinary people, people who are great, skilful, giving people, people who think less of themselves than their friends.   They show this kind of love for David, for their comrade even though they are hard men, who have no love for Philistines.  Does their resolute hate of the enemy utterly forbid recognizing the practical, adventurous, risking love that they show for David?  It certainly shows its limitations.  They and David have a long way to go before they love with the perfect love of God for all.  But is it not right to see and cultivate the seed of love even when it is sown in the hard dark trodden soil of war? 

David sees all this.  He will not drink this water.  Once drunk, this water would be disposed of,  just another drink, lost in the natural routine of the body.   There would be no story for Remembrance Sunday.

It will not do for David to consume this water, using it to satisfy his longing.  It will not do for David to act as though he is the entitled consumer, for whom other people give their lives. 

But something must be done with this water.  He cannot give it back to them, refusing it would be an insult.   And he may not drink it. 

Thank God, he knows a way to give it to God, who will give it eternal appreciation.  David can pour it out to the Lord, by pouring it on the ground.  We see that as no more than making a little puddle which soon disappears.  But with God, the ground is more than mere ground.  David knew it gave him a way to give it to God, to free himself from grabbing and consuming  what he had no right to, what he could never do justice to.  It is a way to join with his men in an act of giving which sets us free from the tyranny of self, and selfish demands and longings.  By the grace of God, it is an act of giving to God in which we celebrate God the giver, and we bring earth and water together in creaturely thankfulness, joy and wonder.  

Even though wars end, the misery continues, there is weary exhaustion, sheer perplexity and fear, because we see that all this fighting has not solved the human problem, but given it a new shape – the old enemy may now be a friend, but we still have enemies.  

When wars end, there is much we remember with pain and with shame.   We cannot glorify war, or pretend that it is a good thing for anybody; it may even be a worse thing for the winner than the loser, because in victory we more easily hide the truth of ourselves  from ourselves.  

But even in the darkness of war, even against all discouragement, little candles are lit, seeds of love and generosity spring into fragile life, signs of good hope appear.  Even while whole nations or groups are mobilized to achieve War Aims, some are planning for peace.  Even when doing good is very risky and exacts an appalling price from human beings and from the earth, good is still done, even if it is little and frustrated.  People care for others, even enemies, at great cost.    Even when God is hidden by the man-made irradiating clouds, God is present as God is in Jesus the suffering saviour and Lord, sowing seeds, lighting candles. 

And on Remembrance Sunday, it is in the light of the Lord we may pray.  And it is to God that we can dedicate the relative absence of war in which we are able to live and flourish.  We live to God,  not for ourselves.  Peace after war is not given so that we may consume and waste  the earth and one another, for private satisfactions.  Peace is given to us as freedom to love and serve God and others with all our being.  The Lord forbid that I should drink the cup of salvation for myself.  That is the ultimate corruption.

Lockdown crafts

Last Sunday we focused our attention on hands and Shelley invited anyone who had made anything during lockdown to bring it along with them. 

There are a few still images above but if you follow this link you will find a video showing many more. 

On the road again – Rod’s Tours

This dropped into my inbox today. I could have spent hours trying to dream up some clever caption, but instead I’ll simply tell you what Rod Russell told me…

Hi, John, another Rod’s (geriatric) tours, this photo in Barmouth, staying in Llandudno, cumulative age 637 years !!!!

That ladies and gentlemen is an average of 79,625 years per person. 

Left to right in the top pic – Malcolm H and Sheila, Malcolm R and Rosemary, Frank and Kathy Harrison and bus driver Rod. 

Roger Robson reports on the Global Day for Climate Justice march through Leeds

To coincide with the COP26 meetings in Glasgow, last Saturday was designated Global Day of Action for Climate Justice. There were around 100 demonstrations in the UK and 100’s in other countries worldwide. In Leeds a small group of local Churches from Chapel Allerton and Meanwood joined a throng of organisations – including many Environmental groups, Trade Unions, Fair Trade organisations, The Salvation Army, and Tearfund – in Millenium Square prior to a march round the city centre. They included one member of MBC and several former members now with other churches.

We followed the banner of the Chapel Allerton and Meanwood churches, with one side reading “No Copping Out”. The atmosphere was friendly and enthusiastic as we listened to speeches urging us to chant “What do we want? Climate Justice. When do we want it?  NOW”.  The emphasis was on the need for fine words to lead to real change and particularly for justice for the developing nations, many of which are experiencing the most immediate consequences of global warming whilst being the smallest emitters of greenhouse gases. Surely all Christians can join with others in working for Global Justice?

We then set off following the Unite union brass band to march into City Square (where we passed the impressive 8 metre cube which shows what just 1 tonne of CO2 looks like); then along Boar Lane to The Headrow and back up Cookridge Street to Millenium Square.

Here we were entertained by the band and could begin to reflect on the event:

  • What impact did the March have on the shoppers who had to wait to cross the roads or whose buses were held up for 15minutes? – some looked with curiosity and took photos, others pushed across the long chain of marchers (all of whom politely paused to let them pass)
  • How good the wordings on the Tearfund placards were!! How great to meet up with old friends!
  • What is our own individual carbon footprint? And how many of those huge cubes of CO2 are we producing every year?
  • Are we really prepared to change our consumerist lifestyles to help people in far off lands who have the misfortune to be in the forefront of the consequences of Climate Change?
  • Are we even thinking of our children and grandchildren?

In many ways going on a demonstration is an uplifting and enjoyable day out, with a strong sense of belonging with fellow marchers. BUT it is what we do now, after COP26 is no longer in the headlines, which will be the real test.

 

The Beatitudes… Jane Coates’ Monday Thoughts and Prayers

3.Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the earth. Matthew 5 v 5 KJV 

“You’re blessed when you’re content with just who you are—no more, no less. That’s the moment you find yourselves proud owners of everything that can’t be bought. The Message 

“Blessed (inwardly peaceful, spiritually secure, worthy of respect) are the gentle, the kind-hearted, the sweet-spirited, the self-controlled, for they will inherit the earth. AMP 

Contentment is a beautiful word. I am told that the word contentment comes from the Latin word contentus which means ‘held together’ or ‘intact, whole’. Contentment is a sense of being complete, of wholeness, accepting who you are, what you have and your situation. The ability to be satisfied despite circumstances. 

In our western society we pursue goals, happiness, our desires, ambitions, financial gain, control, validation, success, and stuff. We look for external sources of happiness. We compare ourselves with others and with who they are and what they have. But perhaps contentment is about appreciation, the reality of the present and satisfaction.  

A group of isolated nomads, high in the Himalayas of Eastern Bhutan, were shown images of various emotions and asked for their own words to describe each emotion. When asked for the word that described contentment one of them said “It’s hard to translate it exactly, but the closest word is chokkshay, which is a very deep and spiritual word that means ‘the knowledge of enough.’ It was the idea that right here, right now, everything is just right as it is, regardless of what you are experiencing outside.” Daniel Cordaro Research Anthropologist. 

I need to know that ‘I am enough’. I am who I am, and I will not compare myself with someone else. How whole do you feel inside? Of course, it is always possible to change and to grow as an individual. ‘My situation is enough’. It may not be ideal, it may be challenging, it may be painful, but I can have an attitude of gratitude for the bits that are good. I can accept the reality of the present without kicking against it. I can be intentional about accepting my situation and choose to be content, while making any adjustments that are possible. 

I want to be in this ‘enough’ place- held together, intact, whole, and content. If I can reach for this then I may become a gentler person, sweet spirited, self-controlled, kind, gracious, not brash or boasting, and my life will have a positive influence on others. If I can be at peace with myself and willing to wait and let God take control of my life and my circumstances, then I will have more of the meekness and contentment that He wants for me. 

I have learned to be content, whatever the circumstances may be. I know now how to live when things are difficult, and I know how to live when things are prosperous. In general, and in particular, I have learned the secret of facing either poverty or plenty. I am ready for anything through the strength of the One who lives within me. Paul Philippians 4 

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