Wednesday, 22 June 2016

Pressing on! (Sermon 19th June)

Read: Phil 3:10-16 

Do you have a goal? For the church and for yourself?  Or are you spiritually complacent?

We should make progress, as God says, "be perfect"! But there are problems!

  • How can anyone be perfect? 
  • There is too little time left in my life to make a difference I have often failed before, so discouraged 
  • Or is the problem that you are just lazy? 
  • Why should we bother? 

Gratitude is a response to the grace of salvation - if he has made me his own, we should do what he wants in our life. Then surely we want the "prize of the upward call - the "well done" of the Father because we tried. So what do we do about the problems? Yes, perfection is impossible, we are never good enough, which is why we are saved by grace! Then Adam was "very good", and we should be like him. Then as Christians, we should seek to imitate Christ who was made perfect through suffering. Look at what he did for us! Is there too little time? Yes, but it is God who works, and he can perfect us.

Wesley knew the experience of total sanctification, but it did have to be repeated. What matters is that we must press on - it is in any case good for you (Rom 5:3) So what of past failures? Yes, but we should forget what lies behind (Phil 3:13). After all, God forgets our past to save us, he forgives - so should we! This should be easy for the older folks! And then we are transformed by the power of the resurrection. Paul's plea is that we might know Him better so we are perfected. We should know him in our mind - Read and study And in our spirits - Spend more time with Him

Prof David T Williams Theology (retired)

Wednesday, 11 May 2016

Tithing

The following piece on Tithing was discussed at the recent Anglican Synod in Grahamestown.

The first commandment.

Thou shall love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, with all thy mind and with all thy soul.

Before we speak about tithing can we speak about God?

1. How important is he in our lives? Does he merit full obedience? Is he number one in our lives?

2. This is a decision we have to take at all times in our lives.

3. If the answer is “Yes” then we have to be his representatives to promote our God on our earth, our land and in ourselves. We only have us to tell the world what Jesus did for all our people and how he can ensure our salvation.

4. This has to become important to us.

We will support God Our Father through our ministry and through our tithes and giving. Render unto ……… God those things that are God’s.

Leviticus 27:30 states. “All the tithes of the land, whether the seeds of the land or the fruits of the land is the Lords. It is Holy to the Lord.” All we have belongs to the Lord.

Genesis 28:22 states. “All that thou shall give me, I will surely give the tenth to the Lord”

The desire to tithe will come very readily if we put God first in our lives. Why? We are returning to God what is rightfully his. If we keep it we cannot tell the world God is real and paramount in our lives. We are shortchanging him.

God’s ministry needs these funds very desperately and this is why all our financial obedience is vital.

Giving a tithe is acknowledgement that all we have is from Christ and our tithe is returning a small part of his favour for the purposes for which it is (as you all know) sorely needed for Gods ministry.

Tithing works

(Mal 3:10) Bring ye all the tithes into the storehouse, that there may be meat in mine house, and prove me now herewith, saith the LORD of hosts, if I will not open you the windows of heaven, and pour you out a blessing, that there shall not be room enough to receive it.

Let me give you some examples of how God rewards tithing.

St Patricks in Hogsback started in 2005 to tithe. The first annual tithe amounted to R 600.

Ten years later, with a congregation of not more than 50 persons at the most, and more than half of them not Anglicans, the annual tithe income was R 94 015. This is an increase of approximately 150 times our original tithing income. “Test me and see?”

Why did this happen?

Our chapel council decided to tithe on all our income and religiously paid our 10% to the needy. So in 2015, St Patricks paid out R 16 554 as our tithe. (Test me and see if …)

In addition St Patricks was able, together with our annual Diocesan assessment, able to give 40% of our income to the needy, on top of paying our priest. (Test me and see if I ……)

Tithing, according to Rev Billy Graham, makes us effective partners with God.

An extreme example! Richard Warmbrand tithed his meals to less privileged prisoners, while he was in prison!!!!

Some examples of those who tithed and God rewarded.

Mr. Cromwell of Quaker Oats tithed more than 60% of his income.

Mr. Colgate of Toothpaste fame did likewise.

Mr. Rockerfeller Jnr tithed his first 1.50 dollar income.

Mr. A. A. Hyde even started tithing when he was in debt and God favored his business fourfold. God is the first creditor.

Mr. W. R. Speight says, “Money can’t be put to a higher use than honoring God.”

There are numerous other examples of Christians who have been faithful and tithed and God has prospered them extraordinarily. (Test me and see …..)

Those who receive tithes are still obliged to tithe themselves. We must tithe our tithes received!

A Christian who tithes will be surprised at:

1. The amount of money he has for the Lords work.

2. The deepening of his spiritual life after paying his tithes.

3. The ease of meeting his obligations with the remaining 9/10ths.

4. Ease of increasing the 10%.

5. The ease of managing the 9/10th remaining.

6. The surprise for not adopting the plan sooner.

Our Diocese now has to resort to commercial fund raising to provide the necessary ministry to its people because of the lack of tithing among our congregations. This reflects poorly on our trust of, and faith in God. Jesus died for us for what?

What is the solution?

Each congregation (including the Diocese and the Cathedral) must consciously decide to tithe in faith, at the start, at least 10% of their gross income as the relevant council determines. (Test me and see if I will not reward you). In a short time the 10% will increase but the income will escalate because we are all faithful. We, as representatives of our parishioners, will get this message to our congregants because we put God first in our Churches - but we must start with ourselves.

Finally I pray for Holy Spirit guidance and active support for all our people in our Diocese. Then our finances will overflow and we can truly honor God magnificently. And won’t our Bishop, then, praise God and the Holy Spirit?

Watch the flood gates!!

Monday, 25 April 2016

THE GLORY OF LOVE

Service by Margaret Fourie


Readings:
Acts 11:1-18
Ps 148
Rev 21:1-6
John 13: 31-35
Message
In our reading from St John's gospel this morning, we have another of these mysterious passages which over the years have become familiar enough to us, but which may well have not much meaning for us.  "Now is the Son of Man glorified, and in him is God glorified.  If God is glorified in him, God will also glorify him in himself...."  What does this mean?  What does all this glorifying look like?  Picture the scene.  Jesus and his disciples have just finished the meal, and Judas has, minutes before, left the group to go to the authorities.  In a few minutes, they will leave the upper room and go into Gethsemane, where he will, after some prayer and agonizing, be arrested, tried over and over, and then condemned to death.  Not the sort of glory most of us would choose.

Perhaps we can shed some light on it from this angle:  those of you who are also single will know what I mean when I say that every now and then someone will tell me, "You are looking wonderful!  Is there someone special in your life?"  or "You look so radiant you must be in love!"

In other words, everyone knows that when you are in love, you shine with a special radiance; there is a special happiness about you, a glory.  Certainly being in love is one of nature's great beauty treatments.  We have all seen the very plain person suddenly become beautiful because somebody has taken a special interest in them and has perceived them as beautiful.

Loving and being loved is transforming, a source of glory.

Perhaps Jesus was feeling very close to God at that moment:  he would have needed to!  Perhaps he was suddenly very conscious of being surrounded by love - the love of the Father and the love of these men - and of loving them in return.

In Lystra in Greece, St Paul was preaching the love of God to a crowd of people when his eye fell on a crippled man: "he fixed his eyes on him" says the REB.  He saw him and really looked at him, noting his need and understanding his response of faith.  He was more to Paul than merely someone in the crowd.  Maybe there was something of the glory of God in his face as Paul saw him, for the Bible says, "seeing he had the faith to be cured..." so it must have shown.  Maybe for the first time in his life, this man knew himself unconditionally loved as he heard the gospel.  Paul's response to this man's faith was to pass on to him the glorious wholeness of Jesus, and he is healed.

The effect of love is transformational.

You may have had the experience of falling in love, where suddenly the whole world is beautiful and you are conscious of being powerful and competent beyond your wildest dreams.  Suddenly everything is easy - even getting up in the morning!  Perhaps you have also had the awful experience of having the relationship terminated - that feeling of the light going out, of being worth nothing at all, of being unattractive and of not wanting to do anything at all, in fact not being able to do much.

When we are loved we can do anything; when we are not loved we are paralysed.  Those of you who get the Hogsback Times will also have been as upset as  I was about Shane’s hurt and anger.  The pain of being betrayed by those you have loved is extreme.  It would take a closeness to God like what Moses experienced on Mt Sinai, or Jesus on Mount of Transfiguration to turn that betrayal of Judas’s into glory.

Over the last few days in morning prayer we have been reading about Moses and his time up and down Mount Sinai.  Every time he spent time with God, on the mountain or in the Tent of Meeting, when he came out he had to veil his face because it shone so brightly with the glory of God.  Being with God, spending time with him in closeness transformed the shy, stammering Moses who had to speak through Aaron, into the man who glowed with confidence and glory, and who could address the crowds himself.

Love is a transforming thing.   Jesus tells his disciples after the last supper, "Love one another; as I have loved you, so are you to love one another.  If there is this love among you, then everyone will know that you are my disciples."  It will show, not only in actions, but also because love glows and love transforms.

The awareness and acceptance of God's enormous love for us, and the giving and receiving of love among ourselves will transform our lives.

The main way in which most of us will experience God's love is through other people:  sometimes it is given to us to know that God is directly involved with us - we may have one of those sudden insights, or experience a strange outpouring of God's loving mercy, but usually it is the mediation of other people around us that makes up our experience of God.  It is the privilege of the people of God to love with God's love

Sometimes it is not easy (or even possible) to love someone and we will need help.  You;ve heard me tell of my Mom whose aged mother had moved in with her.  She told me, "I cannot love her.  I just cannot manufacture love for her.  She drives me round the bend.  So I said to God, 'I cannot love her, but I am prepared for you to love her through me'."  In this way she became the conduit for God's love for her mother.  It is the responsibility and the privilege of each of the members of the family of God to express God's love for each other in tangible, truly caring ways.  we are in a real sense the continuing incarnation of our Lord.

Some of you may be feeling
·       insignificant, unimportant in the scheme of things.  Some of you may be
·       downright depressed. 
·       Some of you may have come this morning in spite of the sense you have of not being ready to face God.
·       Perhaps you wanted to creep in and then out again without really being noticed, because you hoped that the familiar rhythm of the liturgy would comfort you. 
·       Some of you may have had disappointments,
·       or be feeling abandoned or unloved. 
You will be having difficulty living life to the full; you may even be having difficulty with living at all.  (We don't like to let others know this, do we?)

Whatever your crippling situation may be, there is a chance of glory for you:  spend a bit of time now meditating on the extraordinary love of God for you; look around you at the people in the pews with you this morning.  This is your family and here you can experience the love and acceptance of people around you and share that love with someone else.  Look to see where you can exercise your own facility for being loving, and then learn to accept the love that is offered to you.

For there is glory in love.  It transforms us and makes everything possible.

"As I have loved you, so you are to love one another.  If there is this love among you, then everyone will know that you are my disciples."  Know both these loves - the love of God and the love for each other so that you too may be transformed and energised, and make everything possible for your sisters and brothers in the faith.


Sunday, 24 April 2016

Pew leaflet 24 April 2016

To download the pew leaflet in PDF printable format click https://goo.gl/eKBM8c