Showing posts with label Children's Work. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Children's Work. Show all posts

Monday, 30 June 2008

The Church: A Place Of Grace

June is almost over, and within the children's work we've finished our program for June. We spent the last month looking at Mission, with a particular focus on the nations. Within the fifty or so children we have, I've got no doubt that within that contingent there are many missionaries. We are all missionaries anyway, just as Jesus described himself in Luke 19:10.

The heart for mission is birthed in vision, which is one reason why Jesus gave us the Great Commission in Matthew 28:16-20. So to stir vision for mission, I wanted to get real life stories in to speak to the children. People who were living and breathing mission, because they were following a vision bigger than themselves to take the gospel to the nations.

To do this I didn't have to look any further than people within my local church in Hastings. Over four weeks, our friends weren't outside visitors or guest missionaries but ordinary men and women with a vision for mission. We had a couple, ex-elders of our church but who moved to South Africa and lived out there for a couple of years. Not stunning, beautiful Cape Town or hustling, thriving Johannesburg. But rural South Africa. With poverty, HIV, crime and cobra's. They were out there, giving of themselves and their gifts, building a local church

The second week we had a young man in, who himself feels called to China - again, to build churches - and he was sharing about his parents, who both moved to Valencia in Spain to start and establish a church in Catholicism dominated Spain. (Well done to Spain as well for beating Germany in the Euro 2008 final. Not only did Spain deserve it with their beautiful passing football, but its always a pleasure to watch the Germans lose!)

Week three had a lady in, who with her husband and a friend, are going to help establish a church out in the Middle East! The children were captivated as they saw video's and photographs of what life would be like, and the sacrifices that these people - especially the ladies, one of whom is pregnant and has a son under two - are willing to make to start a church community that takes the Gospel message of the Kingdom to Muslims.

The fourth and final week saw our lead elder come in to talk about India. He is involved in partnering with a handful of churches out in India, and spoke about his experiences out in the subcontinent. I know some of the children were touched when they heard about some of the poverty that some people their own age live in.

What was exciting for me was knowing that at least twelve children have felt God speak to them about going to the nations. Through Newfrontiers, we have the beauty of an apostolic network where there is a framework and friendship contacts to ensure their God-given dreams can take off as they grow older and want to test their calling.

Even from a young age, I want our children to understand that the bigger picture of God's purposes are always fulfilled through community - through the church. Ephesians 3:10-11 tells us that the church is the way God wants to unveil his manifold wisdom! The church - universal and local - is not an accident or afterthought but as verse 11 says, is a key part of the eternal purpose of salvation, realized in the death and resurrection of Christ!

The Church - my church - is a place of grace for me. A place where God can minister grace, mercy and love to me, through others. A place of grace where I can be used to minister grace, mercy and love to others. A place where together, we can be used to minister grace, mercy and love to a lost world.

I'm a realist - of course I get frustrated. Sometimes in my eyes, things can go too fast. Sometimes things can go too slow. Sometimes I don't agree with things. But is there such a place as a perfect church? And actually I'm a big part of that imperfection. My funny ways, my sin, my flesh, my immaturity, my self-seeking, my ambition, my foolishness, my unenlightened opinions, my lack of faith... someone said that forceful men take hold of the kingdom but I imagine people want to take hold of me by the throat! But at the end of the day, I remind myself that Jesus loves the church. She is his bride. He is passionately committed to her. Jesus said "I will build my church, and the gate of hell won't prevail against it!" (Matthew 16:18). If its good enough for Jesus, its good enough for me!

As people, we were created for worship - for intimacy with God. His plan has always been to walk the earth with a people who are his own (see, there is that plural noun again! Christianity is never meant to be individualistic but interdependent.) We are made to worship, and that is our primary call - its what we will do for eternity. But worship means putting God at the centre of ourselves and mission is one way we do that. In his book on mission entitled "Let The Nations Be Glad", John Piper writes "mission exists because worship doesn't."

So what method does the New Testament show me how we should do mission? Pioneering, planting, and building strong local churches.

The vision for mission means starting and establishing strong local churches that influence and affect their communities for Christ. All other missionary work done outside the context of partnership with a church, however good or well intentioned, ultimately runs the risk of drying up. Only a thriving community of believers will sustain and continue the work as they live the Kingdom in the society around them, influencing and witnessing to those around them.

I think what I am saying is this: when it comes to the purposes of God, where do you see the church? Irrelevant or integral?

Monday, 7 April 2008

Samson & Delilah Sketch Video

In our sunday school we finished our series on David last week. With us due to start some time looking at the book of Acts next week, I had a somewhat inspired idea... to do a one off special looking at the story of Samson & Delilah. But with a difference!

I won't give it away, but you can watch the video of the morning here. Look out for the undiscovered talent that is the Philistine soldier...



There is also a video of behind the scenes work...



And yes, this is a typical Sunday morning for us!

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Listening to: Stealers Wheel - Stuck In The Middle With You
via FoxyTunes

Monday, 11 February 2008

Rushing Ahead

David v Goliath went very well. For some reason, the children found me standing on a chair in cardboard armour hilarious. They also liked my vocal impersonation of the Tasmanian Devil. And David killing me with a thrown inflatable sheep to the head brought the house down. I must say my dramatic death tumble complete with commando roll was the coup de grace. I'm expecting theatre talent scouts to be visiting us anytime soon. Oh, and the small point of the morning was 'God Looks After Me.' He certainly did considering my top class stuntman impressions.

I'm in a place at the moment with much uncertainty. Various things in my life seem to be pressing in, and demanding my affections and attentions. Some of these are good things, some of them are not so good. As with everything, they all have the potential to be distractions or snares. Especially when it comes to faith. If faith is the hope of things unseen, and being a Christian is dependent on pressing onwards in faith, then anything that sucks or robs us of faith has to be dealt with.

So with this in mind, I've been seeking God a lot for direction, wisdom and insight. I need direction to know which ways to go, wisdom to know how to do it, and insight to see things as they really are. I'd felt God draw my attention to 1 Corinthians 2:11-12 when contemplating all the decisions I've got to make. He was saying to me 'if you want to know what I think about things, keep close to my Spirit.' Now, in one sense, I am always close to the Spirit in that He dwells within me. But sometimes I know that I'm far from the Spirit of God - when I quench or grieve Him. The best way I can articulate it is this: there is a difference between union and communion with the Spirit of God.

If I want to know what God thinks or feels about something, I need to be in communion with Him through His Spirit. As those verses in 1 Corinthians show us, He reveals to us the heart of God - in matters concerning us, but also feelings FOR us. As Ephesians 5:18 tells us, we need to be filled with the Spirit. And the Greek in that verse is an ongoing, continuous tense - basically, 'keep on being filled!'

I love 1 Samuel 16:13 which tells us that the Spirit of the Lord 'rushed' upon David. I get a sense of the Holy Spirit holding back, waiting, chomping at the bit, eagerly looking forward to embracing David with all his fullness. And as Christians, that is the heart of God for us. The Spirit of God wants to 'rush upon us', and clothe us with power from on high. But more than that, to reveal the heart and mind of God to us and for us.

When was the last time you asked Him to rush upon you? Remember, there is a difference between union and communion.

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Listening to: Menswear - Stardust
via FoxyTunes

Wednesday, 6 February 2008

Child's Play

I had my first children's session on Sunday morning. Surprisingly, it went surprisingly well! I had planned and pre-planned the morning, and everything went according to plan - although I was supported superbly by a brilliant, versatile and gifted team of serving team members. In total, we had sixty children - which is two-thirds of all the names on our book. Being primary school age there is a wide range of attention span and ability from the youngest to the oldest, so my concern was the pace and variety of the morning - would it captivate them enough? But at the end, a couple of the older children who I've known since birth came up to me really appreciative. Although I am realistic: this could be just because they'd received a Chupa-Chup lolly and colouring sheet! The mercenary nature of children is something that I am not unaware of...

Highlights for me included:

  • Naughty Connect 4 - our discipline aid. Each time someone breaks one of our rules, a counter goes in (green for boys, yellow for girls - apparently boys are darker!!!). Whoever has the least counters gets said lolly at the end of the morning. The kids seemed quite entertained with the notion of a Naughty Connect 4 for some reason!
  • Our amateur dramatics, which were very amateur and dramatically poor. Our profound spiritual point of "God Wants Your Heart" might have been lost with the appearance of David in dressing gown, socks and sandals and carrying an inflatable sheep. Or Samuel and Jesse, David's father, having a swordfight with their walking sticks. Or David being anointed king with water tipped over his head.
  • My visual illustration using the biggest Mint Aero bar in the world. I said the following: "the more you care about someone, the more chocolate you give them. Its the same with our hearts." The children were thinking: "How can I get some of that chocolate without playing Naughty Connect 4?"
  • In the group work, one little six year old praying to Jesus to ask Him to help her give her heart to Him, so she can help her mummy lay the table at dinner time. Awwwwww!!!!

At the end, the children left to go to the front of the morning service because my predecessor was rightly being thanked for honoured for all her hard work. It was somewhat entertaining to see tons of children clutching colouring sheets and sucking furiously on lollies whilst sitting on a stage. Our lead elder was praying that this new generation would be like Samuel's in their lifetime. The thing is, I had dressed up as Samuel in the sketch, wearing a long cloak with a sombrero hat and a jester hat on top of that! I wonder what was going on in their minds....

Currently listening to: N-Trance - Set You Free from Electronic Pleasure

Thursday, 24 January 2008

David - A Man After God's Own Heart

The last few days I've been doing a variety of exciting things. These include procrastination, spending most of my time at my local church offices dealing with various things (no, I'm not paid and no, I've got no intention of getting paid!), debating with my men's group about the clarity of scripture (see my post here for thoughts on that) and letting my washing up pile increase to the size of a small country. In addition to all this, I've spent some time looking at the life of David in preparation for the upcoming children's work I'm now heading up.

For the next six weeks, here are the things we will be spending time looking at together.

Lesson Title Passage Key Verse One Big Point
1 David The Shepherd Boy 1 Sam 16:1-13 Verse 7 God Wants My Heart
2 David The Giant Killer 1 Sam 17:1-51 Verse 37 God Looks After Me
3 David The Friend 1 Sam 18:1-5 Verse 4 God Wants Me To Care For Others
4 David The Outlaw 1 Sam 24:1-15 Verse 10-11 God Wants Me To Do The Right Thing
5 David The King 2 Sam 5:1-4 Verse 2 God Has A Plan For My Life
6 David The Worshipper 2 Sam 6:16-23 Verse 21 God Loves It When I Worship Him

Take some time to have a look for yourself at the life of this extraordinary man, and see how God speaks to you.

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Listening to: Portishead - Glory Box
via FoxyTunes

Monday, 14 January 2008

Story Time

I had my children's worker hat on over the weekend - I had my first meeting with the team that I'm leading. Thirty of us gathered after church this Sunday to talk over pizza and give me the chance to share my vision and thoughts on the way forward with the Mega-Mix age range. That is basically ninety children aged between 5 and 11. On average each Sunday we get about sixty or so, and we've got the task of teaching them the things of God.

My initial thoughts are that so much of what has been done is excellent, and there is no need to fix something that isn't broken. The existing vision is "Making Church Fun & Making God Real" and that for me encompasses exactly what I want to do and where I want to go.

Interestingly, we have had our lead elder preach the last two weeks on the vision for our church and he said many stirring, challenging things. One phrase that lingered with me is the importance to be, spiritually speaking, both radical and relevant. If we only have one, we run the risk of being obsolete and irrelevant no matter tight our doctrine is. On the other hand, having only the other means we will be just the same as the world, and will cease to be salt & light. But rather than reading what I think about what was said, listen to them yourself. You can download both weeks from here. We have an exciting journey ahead!

This gave me thoughts for the children's work. I want the kids to have fun and to enjoy coming out with us. But I also want the children to encounter God through His word and through His Spirit. So with the existing team present - who are a cracking bunch of people - aged between 15 and 65 - I laid out some of my thoughts. I also took the chance to hear their views and idea, and to get to know their strengths - this is a big work, and so team is a huge value that I have every intention of relying heavily on. We are all working together, and I want to demonstrate the biblical value of interdependency with how we work together.

I've been reflecting on how Jesus teaches, and it seems his main way of communicating was the use of parables. He took an everyday illustration from life, or a character people could identify with, and told a simple tale that had one big point. As that point impacted, other depths in the parable would come out as the force of the teaching sunk in to the listener. So as best as I can, I want us as a team to learn from Jesus and teach through stories and illustrations with One Big Point. Rather than saying so much we don't say anything at all, I want our kids to leave with one thing in their mind. Reinforced through slapstick pantomime drama type sketches, colouring pictures and puzzle worksheets that they can do at home with their parents, I'm in faith that the word of God - that is living and active - will begin to shape them.

Isn't it funny that so much of the Bible is stories? We all have our favourite Bible heroes. Even nonbelievers know of certain biblical tales like Noah's Ark or David & Goliath. So I have the privilege, responsibility and daunting task of having to read these stories (and some children's bible's!) to refamiliarise myself with this ancient tales. Romans 15:4 tells us that 'whatever was written in former days was written for our instruction, that through endurance and through the encouragement of the Scriptures we might have hope.'

So we're going to start with my favourite hero - David. A guy of passion, of war, of sin, of stupidity and of mistakes. But a man that God said was a man after His own heart (Acts 13:22). A man who through warfare expanded the Kingdom of Israel, and who designed the Temple but couldn't build it because he was a man who had shed blood (1 Chronicles 28:3). A man who with his last words described himself as 'the sweet psalmist of Israel' (2 Samuel 23:1). This is the man we are going to look at for about six weeks. After that... who knows!? But I consider it a privilege to be able to get down and seek God for Him to write His 'One Big Point' on my heart.

During this season of children's work, I suspect that the children aren't going to be the only ones who learn new things.

Saturday, 5 January 2008

I'm Back!

So, I have internet back now. The charming people at 'Satsuma' finally sorted it out for me, although I had to call them to get a progress check. Which meant the conversation was basically this:

"Hi, can I have an update to my internet connection?"

"Yes Sir, you can"

*awkward silence for a few moments*

"So, can I have an update please?"

"Yes sir, you can. Its been done for you"

"OK thanks... I thought I was going to be notified"

*awkward silence and telephone tumbleweed moment*

"It was done for you yesterday sir"

"Ah, so if i hadn't have paid you guys by calling you, I wouldn't have found out?"

*awkward silence again*

"Its working now sir, thank you for calling Big Fat Evil Money Sucking Unaccountable Corporation!"

I've spent the last day or so ensuring I'm not bitter, but every cloud has a silver lining. I can now blog. I can read. Well, I could anyway, but I can find out what's happening in the world. I'm told that apparently something is happening in Iraq? I can also reply to Facebook messages and mock people once more. Yes, that means you Helen. And you Natalie.

In other news, I had my birthday. I am now officially ** years old. My lovely friend Becky conjured up this amazing Transformers cake. It was Optimus Prime, leader of the Heroic Autobots. But it was done in the style of Mr Potato Head. I am aware that this concept is lost of many of you. Mostly the girls, at least. But there is a link here for you. However, before I provide the link, a disclaimer is required. This link contains pictures of me. Me holding a knife. Me doing unspeakable things to the cake with a knife. So be warned.

The Best Cake In The World

In other news, whilst I am contemplating this life coach malarkey I have decided I need to top up my finance so have entered the job hunting world. So I am gearing myself up for various interviews and such like, whilst studying and finding out a bit more about what I want to do and how to go about it.

I have also been asked to lead the Sunday School children's work at my church. This means leading a team of about thirty people, split into two sub-teams of fifteen or so. Each sub-team will do a month of Sunday school work with around fifty or so kids each week. I'm leading these teams, writing the teaching material and generally organising and delegating stuff. We're gonna go panto story - to show you the level of what I am intending to do, I've asked a guy with a mullet in the 20s group I lead if we can shave his hair in front of the kids one week when we do a comedy teaching of the story of Samson, and he's agreed! Its a challenge to me, but I have a great and experienced team around me so I think my role will be more leadership, management and strategy to be honest.

I played football today for a local team, for the first time in six months. Seriously, I was bad. Well, not bad from a skill point of view. More from a fitness point of view. I'm too embarrassed to tell you we lost 5-2, but considering the last time I even kicked a ball would have been early August, the fact I am breathing without the aid of medical machinery is quite remarkable.

God's provided for me once again in a couple of great ways. Firstly, it seems my on loan house is now not going to be auctioned in February. This means that it won't be sold, but instead will have to be revalued and go through lots of legal stuff like that. With no alternative selling or auction date in place, it means staying here at least till Summer is a real possibility.

A knock on effect of that means that the £300 rent I had coming in from my housemate is now no longer needed for the monthly legal fees. No, I'm not letting him off for free. That will cover my share of all the bills, living costs etc! And this is before I've become an honest working man. So the financial pressure I was under has suddenly been alleviated, and my accommodation situation is now a bit longer than short term!

It just goes to show that God hears prayers. I'd had a major faith wobble over the Christmas period and had a venting session at God on the beach Boxing Day evening, and He's stepped in and changed things. Everything I've been reading recently has been about God as Sustainer - I read a chapter on it in Incomparable, and as I was praying through Psalm 119 the other day a number of verses stood out to me. Psalm 119:90-91 and 119:116-117 make a link between God's sustaining power, and His faithfulness and protection for his children. Great verses to springboard into prayer from! The God who made all keeps all by His power. And if He sustains the galaxies, then He can step in to hold and sustain me!

Currently listening to: Scouting for Girls - Elvis Ain't Dead

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