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Lane Cove Uniting Church
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Minister's Message

Sunday 1 September, 2024

30/8/2024

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Reflection: 
               " Actions Speak Louder Than Words"

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Psalm 45:1-2,6-9


Song of Solomon 2:8-13

Mark 7:1-8, 14-15, 21-23

James 1:17-27
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The book of James is an unusual book in the New Testament, as in many ways it is more like the book of Proverbs from the Old Testament and it’s considered to be a part of what is called the “wisdom literature” of the Bible.
Unlike most books of the NT, which are letters, this one is a book of worthwhile sayings strung together.
It was not written for any particular group of new Christians - like most of the Epistles were.
It’s thought to have been written between 50 and 60 AD, two years before James (brother of Jesus) was martyred, and its audience would have been the Jewish Christians scattered throughout the regions outside of Israel, as James was considered a Pastor to those groups. 

He didn’t write, as Paul did, to the gentile Christians, but to the Jewish Christians, who were in disarray and needed to hear again the authoritative voice of James, the leader the Jerusalem church.
His aim was to instruct those who were experiencing tensions between their allegiance to the Torah and their newfound faith in Jesus.


​James knew that it was tough for many of the followers of Jesus scattered around the known world and his advice was to look for the joy in the trials they faced.  
The reason for enduring these trials would be to build up faith, as it does when we put our trust in God.
Faith was vital for James and we have seen many times that real faith results in real action.
Faith wasn’t something airy-fairy to James – he believed that if faith doesn’t result in everyday action, then we’re just kidding ourselves.  


Real faith results in real works - and not necessarily overly “religious” works either, but real works - like being quick to listen, slow to speak and slow to anger.  
Real works like caring for those in need, like orphans and widows.


Just over 100 years ago, the Australian Inland Mission, which later became Frontier Services, was established, with the Rev. John Flynn as its leader.  
I’ve heard that John Flynn very nearly didn’t become a minister of religion, because he kept failing Hebrew. However, one of his professors stuck up for him because he knew that John had such a good pastoral heart. 
I think Flynn must have been paying attention to the Letter of James in theological college, because he showed what practical Christianity is really about, when he ministered in body, mind and spirit to all whom he met across the outback.
And, surprisingly, his lack of Hebrew wasn’t really an issue!!
One reason I support Frontier Services is because it shows the practical Christianity that James was so keen about.


There’s another reason why this practical type of Christianity is so important.  
When we’re under pressure, the best way of finding some joy, in the midst of the trials we face, is to work on showing love to others in simple down-to-earth ways.  
James says when we do that, we not only pass on God’s love to others, but some of that love rubs off on us on the way through, and we then know the joy of the Spirit of God in our life.


James gave the Christian Jews some practical and concrete examples of how to live their lives.
He gave them a list of empathic behaviours described in this section of the letter (empathic meaning to put yourself in the other person’s shoes), along the lines of: “Be quick to listen, slow to speak, slow to anger…”


To treat people this way is a generous way to allow others to fully express themselves in a relationship.
To be open to people is to be open to God; and to be open to people is to participate in, and make known, God’s purposes – to “be doers of the word, and not merely hearers who deceive themselves” – in all aspects of life.


There’s a story about St. Francis of Assisi, who, in the 13th century, gave up his life as a wealthy man, to live in poverty.
He was praying in an ancient church, badly in need of repair, when he heard a voice coming from above the altar.
He heard: “Francis, go and repair my church, which you will see is falling into ruins.”
Francis went to get his tools, but God told him: “Not the bricks, Francis, the people are in need of repair.”
So, Francis went out and took care of orphans and widows.

The voice of God still speaks to us, telling us to go and repair the church - which is falling into ruins - and we know that he’s not talking about fixing the guttering, but he’s talking about the people in Lane Cove, Forbes and other places – i.e. the people who make up his church throughout the world.

So, we should be grateful to James for plainly expressing what we’ve all sensed: namely, that God is the source of all goodness, all blessings and all generosity.
To the secular mind it makes no sense, for example, to thank God for the food on the table - when it was so plainly earned, purchased, and prepared by human hands.
Yet the men and women of faith perceive the behind-the-scenes truth: that all our blessings originate with "the Father of lights" that we read about in Deuteronomy.

I mean, we don’t confuse the one who sorts letters in the mail exchange, or the postman who delivers the letters, with the person who wrote the letter, do we?  So, too, we recognize that God is the actual author of our blessings.

Also, we’re well-rebuked by James' insight on anger.
His joining of "slow to speak" with "slow to anger" is a sobering message to us, because we recognize in ourselves how often quickness to anger is accompanied by quickness to speak our mind.


When we’ve been hurt, indignation always seems like the righteous way to act.
Therefore, we’re tempted to give full vent of our anger to others, convinced that it’s justified and righteous.


James, however, invites us to consider the question of just what our anger produces in the end.
I’ve learned that very lesson, when I look back with regret on what I know my anger has sometimes produced.
Meanwhile, James invites us to ask ourselves how an alternative to anger would produce God's righteousness in any particular situation. Think before you (re)act!


​In another story about St. Francis, a woman went to him to ask what she could do to be forgiven for her gossiping.
St. Francis told her to take feathers and place one at the doorstep of everyone she had spoken ill of in the town.
She did so and returned to the wise saint. Francis told her to then go and retrieve all the feathers.
When she attempted to do so, they were all gone.
By that time the feathers were scattered by the wind - all around town.
Once again, she returned to St. Francis and told him about the feathers.
He said to her, "It is good that you wish to repent and be forgiven of your sin, but the damage of your words is done and cannot be taken back."


Do you remember the old aftershave commercial on TV, that featured a startling slap on the face, followed by the recipient saying, "Thanks, I needed that!"?
So it is that James gives us a bracing, but sometimes well-needed, slap.
His sobering critique is not of people who have no religion, or a different religion.
No, his "slap" is across the faces of those of us whose "religion is worthless" simply because our tongues are uncontrolled and our hearts deceived.


If we are to heed the words of James, then we must ensure that we don’t become too comfortable with our religion and start taking for granted that we have it all together. 
We must be vigilant and keep looking for ways that we can manifest God’s love for his people in tangible ways.

​
Less talking and more doing is a good motto for us to decide to live by. 
God made us with 2 ears to hear, 2 eyes to observe and 2 hands to do things with, but only 1 mouth to speak.
So let’s try to remember to only speak half as much and to never speak angrily to, or ill of, other people.


In other words:  “Preach the gospel daily and if all else fails, use words.”

God’s richest blessings on you all.
Pastor Rick
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Sunday 25 August, 2024

23/8/2024

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Reflection:  "Living a Courageous Life"



​
Psalm 84

1 Kings 8:22-30, 41-43

John 6:56-69

Ephesians 6:10-20
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Last week, I encouraged you to live a “thankful” life, but this week we’re looking at living a “courageous” life.

As human beings, one quality that we don’t like about ourselves is our willingness to engage in war.
Throughout history, we’ve killed each other in the name of our nations, our religions, or many other vague ideals.  
No other species on the planet kills their own kind in the same numbers that we do.  
Human beings engage in war on each other unlike any others in the plant or animal kingdoms.
Because we humans are so warlike, some have an interest in the weapons of war, creating newer and better ones.  
In generations past, it was knives, swords, and spears, but now we’re interested in guns, bombs and aeroplanes.  

An occupation synonymous with past wars was that of the blacksmith.  
Many of you will know someone named Smith and they are named after that famous village “smithy”.  
The smithy was the person who manufactured the weapons for war, usually made of iron and steel.
But every smithy knew that there were two kinds of military arms:  defensive and offensive.  
Armour to protect life and weapons to take life. 

I’m pretty sure that most of us wouldn’t describe ourselves as soldiers, fighting battles, but that’s exactly how Paul describes us all, in his letter to the Christian people around Ephesus, two thousand years ago.
We tend to think of soldiers as people who fight other people in battles.
That is, people who wear armour for protection and carry weapons of war.
But the type of warriors Paul is describing here, are the people who fight against the forces of evil, personified by Satan and his fallen angels.
We know that this war has been going on since Adam and Eve were first tempted in the Garden of Eden, and it’s shown no sign of abating over all that time, so we must remain vigilant and ready to take our places in the front line.

Even though most of us would call ourselves “reluctant” soldiers for the Lord, we can’t afford to be complacent and just leave it to someone else to protect us, because evil forces are working on us every day and we must be vigilant.
Luckily for us, we’re not just left to our own devices in these battles.
We have been well equipped by God with both defensive and offensive items.
True Christian strength is not of the body, but of the spirit - measured in faithfulness, trust, and perseverance.  

Any knight who’s ever worn a suit of armour would know that they need to put on ALL the pieces of armour.  
How foolish would be the person who didn’t protect their head, shoulders, arms, hands, legs as well as feet.  
Paul advises and motivates us to put on the whole armour of God, to use all the resources we have, to protect ourselves from the cunning onslaughts from the powers of evil.
Satan is keenly aware of where we are most vulnerable and he’ll always attacks us where we don’t have any protection - where we don’t have any armour.  

But how do we apply Paul’s lesson, and analogy about the armour, to those of us who live in Australia at the beginning of the third millennium?
​
Firstly, we have to understand that we’re living in a battlefield and that we’re engaged in a vicious warfare.
Paul tells us that we’re fighting with the powers of darkness, the powers of evil, that live inside and around us.  
Inside, we’re fighting with our own egos, our own selfishness.  
We’re not merely fighting battles with alcohol, or drugs, or gambling, or other material pleasures.  
The Bible says that we’re also fighting with an external force, greater than ourselves - the very powers of darkness.  

Who do you think causes all the wars around us and has done so throughout all of human history?  
Who causes starvation in the world, where the majority don’t have sufficient food and water, yet all the while there’s plenty of food and water available?  
It’s the powers of evil.

It certainly isn’t God who causes all these enormous devastations around the globe.  
The power of evil is insidious, it’s global, and there’s no place to escape it.
So, Paul gives us another, alternative, better, battle plan.  
Paul talks about Christians living in a real world, one filled with evil and injustice.
But we’d be wise to put on the whole armour of God when engaging in battle with the evil one.  

Paul then lists seven qualities, seven pieces of armour that we can benefit from.
In biblical times, the number seven was seen as a symbol of wholeness, the whole armour, the full suit of armour.

Paul tells us to first put on the belt of truth - truth in all relationships, truth about God and God’s love, truth in our relationships with our spouse, our children, our parents, our grandparents, our neighbours.  
Finally grasping the truth about ourselves - that we need to live truthfully and not to live a lie.  

​
Then, he says to put on the breastplate of righteousness.  
Right relationships, healthy relationships, good relationships with all those around you and even with yourself.  
Be in right relationships and not incorrect and demeaning relationships.


Paul then says to put on the foot protectors of peace.  
In other words, don’t go looking for a fight with yourself, your family, or others.  
Try to work through the legitimate conflicts that are always found between people and nations and ethnic divisions.  
Try to be a peacemaker, working hard for peace and aiming towards peace in all relationships.  


Next, put on the shield of faith, trusting that God is with you, strengthening you for every situation you’re facing.  
You can’t prove it to anyone else, you can’t prove God’s inner strength, you can’t prove eternal life.  
But you’ve been given the gift of trust and you must trust in your inner spiritual self.  


Then, put on the helmet of salvation.  
What a gift it is, to know that you can be saved, it’s a gift from God.


Next, put on the sword of the Spirit - that is, the Word of God, because there’s power in the Bible.  
The words of Jesus, Paul and the Old Testament are not merely words printed on pages of a dusty book that we pull out when we have the occasional Bible study, no, God’s words are living words, intended to live in us.  
We learn them, memorize them, recite them spiritually in our brains, so that God’s words are constantly inside us.

And finally, Paul encourages us to put on praying in the Spirit.  
There isn’t a piece of armour mentioned with this seventh quality, but the quality is just as important.  
Do you sometimes have a problem with focussing on your prayers and curse your wandering mind?
Like all good habits, we need to persevere in our conversations with God. 
Praying in the Spirit is another great resource, another piece of armour.

But no suit of armour is worth anything without a good heart beating inside.  

So where do you get such armour?  
At the armoury, of course!!!  
No, not the one at Newington, near Silverwater, but at church, with the people of God. 
From the people of God, we learn much about life, and we take from these people the qualities we need for life.  
From the church, we learn about faith…and right and good relationships…and peace…and trust…and salvation…and the Bible…and praying in the Spirit.  
These qualities actually can be found in God’s armoury.


And so, Paul clearly and wisely says to us today:
Put on the whole armour of God, so that you’re able to stand tall in the day of Jesus Christ.
In order for you to be strong, in order for you to fight the good fight of the faith, you must put on faith, righteousness, and salvation and you must use the gospel, which is the Word of God, and lastly, you must pray.

So, I challenge you to pray, be faithful, trust in the Lord and rest in his provision for victory in Christ. 
It’s your decision and it’s up to you to act - to live that courageous life.

I encourage you to put on God’s armour and prepare yourself for the fight that is the rest of your life.

Pastor Rick
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Sunday 18 August, 2024

16/8/2024

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Reflection:   "Living a Thankful Life"


Psalm 111


1 Kings 2:10-12, 3:3-14


John 6:51-58


Ephesians 5:15-20

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​If I asked you “How’s your walk going today?” you may look at me strangely and remind me that, in fact, you don’t actually go for a health-inducing walk every day - maybe only once, twice or, at most, 3 times a week.

We normally think of walks as a means of perambulation – a way to move ourselves from one place to another.
Our walking is something that develops quite early on in our lives, somewhere around the age of 1.

However, there’s another sense in which this word is used.
it can also refer to a person's journey through life.
That is, your walk can be described as what you do with your life and how you live it.

In fact, Paul uses the word "walk" 7 times in his letter to the new Christian church in Ephesus.
Each time he does, he uses it in the sense of one's conduct or manner of living their life.
He’s writing to these Ephesian believers to show them how they should live their lives as they pass through this world as pilgrims and strangers.
Each of these “walks” leads them from their original roots as non-Christians to the point where they are walking together as brothers and sisters in Christ.
Perhaps not surprisingly, what Paul told these believers over 2,000 years ago, is still valid for us, in our world, today.

Let's take a few minutes to look into these verses and learn how to “Walk Like an Ephesian”.
(my vague comical reference to a 1986 hit song by the Bangles: “Walk Like an Egyptian”).
But seriously, what would it have been like to walk in the footsteps of an Ephesian Christian?

In the first century, Ephesus was a major trading port in Asia Minor (that we now know as western Turkey) and it was a mixture of peoples from all major trading nations, who each brought with them their own religious ideas.
The largest temple in Ephesus was dedicated to the Greek goddess Artemis (also known by the Romans as Diana).
In the time of Paul’s visits, the temple generated huge revenues from the sales of idols of the goddess.

The building was so large that it was, in its time, one of the seven wonders of the ancient world.
The fact that Paul even managed to get a foothold in such a city and establish a Christian church there, was a testament to his ability as an orator, made possible because of the power of the Holy Spirit that moved within him.

The local worshippers of Artemis (or, more probably, those who made money in the temple) were totally against the message that Paul preached regarding this new Messiah, Jesus of Nazareth, and how there could be only
ONE God, (the Jews called him YHWH), not the plethora of gods that the pagans were worshipping.

So, Paul’s small (but growing) band of Christians were not popular with the non-Christians, and Paul saw it necessary to write to them and remind them how they needed to live their lives differently, now that they had decided to follow Christ.

Earlier in the 5th chapter of Ephesians, Paul tells them that, that to be worthy of their “walk”, they must exhibit three characteristics:
      
1)     They must walk in love
     
2)     They must walk as light   and
     
3)     They must walk as wise ones

By exhibiting these 3 traits, the people would be emulating how Jesus behaved when he had been here on earth.

Paul emphasises that should they fail to do these things, they’ll be living their lives as the evil ones, drunkards, etc.
He reminds them that the world has perverted the meaning of the word “love”, and seems to take pleasure in living in darkness, stumbling around aimlessly like drunken, debauched fools.

Sounds a bit like the description of the disciples on that Pentecost morning, when the people thought that the disciples were a bit tipsy on wine, whereas they were, in fact, filled with the Holy Spirit.
Paul had already needed to have very stern words with the new Christians in Corinth, because they were regularly getting drunk at the communion table.
Therefore, he was quite touchy regarding this topic, when talking to the church in Ephesus.

Instead of filling themselves with wine, Paul suggests to the people of Ephesus that they fill their lives with the spirit of Christ - singing psalms and making melodies to the Lord in their hearts - and always giving thanks to God the Father through his son, Jesus.

In other words, being thankful to God for everything that happens in their lives.

Just because we decide to follow Christ doesn’t mean that our lives will always be a bed of roses, or that we won’t be troubled from time to time.
But that doesn’t mean that we shouldn’t always be giving thanks to God.

Remember, everything we have is a free gift from our God, who is always looking out for us.

So, getting back to my theme for this message, how do you think your life’s walk is going?Have you noticed ways that you could make it better?
Are there things that need to be fixed, so that you won’t be ashamed of the way you’re acting?
Maybe even ones needing attention this very day?

If so, you’re in luck, because Jesus is in the business of giving spiritual tune-ups to his flock.

In our reading from John’s Gospel, Jesus reminds us that he is the bread of eternal life and that any other type of sustenance will only be of a transitory nature.

To get the sort of nourishment we need for our life’s walk, we need to remember the passage from John, feed on Jesus, and be thankful that he loves us so much.

So, by putting our trust in him and living our lives in the manner he has shown us, he’ll work with us to ensure that our life’s walk is a beautiful, spiritual walk with God.

And there can’t be a better way to live than that, can there?

Vaya con Dios (which in Spanish means, walk, or go, with God)
Pastor Rick

“God is with us, so go out into the world with certainty.
Live with gratitude,
Love God’s people,
Listen to Wisdom and
Act with kindness.
Make good use of every opportunity you have and delight in it the moment,
For God is there before us.
And the peace of God be with us all, this day and forever more.   
Amen”
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Sunday 11 August, 1024

9/8/2024

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Reflection:  "The Bread of Life"


Psalm 130


2 Samuel 18:5-9,15,31-33


John 6:51-58


Ephesians 4:25-5:2

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As we read a few weeks ago, it must have been an amazing sight, thousands of people gathered, listening to Jesus, learning from him, and then, hungry.
When the disciples were asked to "care for those gathered", all they could come up with was 5 loaves and 2 fish.
But Jesus took this food, gave thanks to God, blessed it, and fed those who were gathered there.
Even more amazing was that when they ate their fill, there were leftovers, and they wanted to make Jesus their king.


​But as it often happens in the Gospel of John, not everything is what it seems.
What were these people “really” hungry for and what were they really looking for?
It turns out that Jesus, “the word made flesh", is more than just a great teacher, or just the son of Mary & Joseph.
He is the one who shows us God the Father, the one who connects us and makes us participants in the divine life.

It’s easy for us to confuse the thing with the person, the symptom with the problem, or the want with the need.
Those who were fed on the hillside that day, came looking for more than just food, and Jesus presented them with the reality of his identity, as well as the opportunity for a different life, if they choose to participate in it.


Those of us who claim Jesus Christ as our Lord, find ourselves being fed by Christ's own presence, and it’s in the feeding that we are participants in the divine life – of God reaching out to us, providing a way for grace, opening the doors for the holy to live among us - again and again and again.

Imagine the rich earth that produced fruit, as described in those early chapters of Genesis.
The taste, smell, and sight remind us - tell us - about who God is, teaching us something about Abba, our Father and it’s been like this from the beginning.
Hear the stories of people gathering around that food and the promise of a land full of milk and honey.
You can't get much closer to something than when you eat it.

In our eating and our drinking, we also participate in this long story of a God who feeds, and a people who serve.
Of a God who gives of himself, and a people who follow in the way.
Those of us who eat this holy bread, do so at our own peril: for we can’t just eat this bread and then forget.
In fact, when we eat and when we drink during the sacrament of communion, the central reason for our gathering together, we’re saying that God's will for all of us, and all the world, is to be restored, saved, healed, made whole!

No simple "devotional" practices, or pious "memorials" of some far, distant, reality.      

NO WAY!!

Instead, we come to the "bread of life",  over and over again, with the promise that God WILL come, that the spirit we’re calling, WILL actually show up, that the claim we make WILL be made present, that you and I WILL find ourselves part of a new reality, transformed into God's own people.

Maybe if churches spent more time and attention in becoming a "feeding people", if they put their attention into becoming a community of the "bread of life", if they took more seriously the reality of God's own presence in the meal, then they might spend less time and attention on the things that divide and separate them, that exclude others, that close their doors, and that questions God's image for others.

Eating assumes that people are hungry, that they’re in need of sustenance.
Part of the challenge of the Christian life is the recognition of our dependence and our interdependence.
Because in eating the bread of life, we’re recognizing our own dependence on God, no longer relying on signs and wonders. 
Instead, we’re recognizing our own need.
We recognize that, in this eating, in this drinking and in this gathering, we’re able to experience God's self.
We have a need of sustenance, a need of something more - and we need to truly see God.

Because that same God has called us to care for one another, having left his glory, in order to reach us.
We, too, can leave the comforts of our lives and leave our pews - those comfortable places of worship.
We, too, can walk out of the doors of our church services, ready to align ourselves with the life that is life eternal.

So, do we gather in churches like those who on that day came looking for another sign, but missed it entirely?
Do we gather around the Lord's Table looking for the "magic", for that spiritual "fix", ignoring the life transforming power of Jesus' own presence in the bread and the cup?
Or do we think of it as something personal and forget to share it with those around us?

Part of the challenge is for us to recognise that there are many around us that go each day, every day, without the sustenance they need, while we gather for feasting day after day, week after week, month after month.
There are many who don’t have such sustenance.
As we go about our internal Christian posturing and ideologies, there are many who go without.

As we discuss who has worked enough, who has had enough initiative, as we argue with one another about what it takes to be "successful," as we battle with church congregations across Australia, wanting to draw the line as to who's in and who is out - we miss the point, we miss the invitation.
We, like those who came back on that day thousands of years ago, are still unsure of whom it is that we have encountered in this Jesus of Nazareth.

"I am the living bread!" says Jesus.
Open your eyes!       
See the light!

Maybe now we can recognize that we, too - you and I - have been the beneficiaries of an amazing life.
We’ve found our sustenance, and instead of using it to propel us into the neediness and hunger of the world;
instead of finding that sustenance and having it energize us into speaking on behalf of those that have no voice; instead of having that sustenance call us to task again and again into the ways that our own life is part of the problem, we’ve continued eating our fill, as if we've earned it, ignoring the plight of those who need this sustenance the most.

Our community, called the church, is at its core a community of people who hunger.
A community of people called together around the table, whose own identity is rooted in what it means to be sustained by the presence of Christ's self, each and every time we gather together.

From the very beginning of the story of faith, God has been giving himself to us and inviting us to take this sustenance and use it as a source of being the light of the world on behalf of God's kingdom.
So, part of our sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving is our recognition, that when we leave our gatherings of prayer and praise, we’re to walk out of the doors and work tirelessly for the sustenance and feeding of a hungry, hungry world.

May our congregations, may our gatherings, may our conversations, become the centre - the active centre - of creating this future, of creating a reality – which is the time when Jesus comes again.
May we, together, begin to make a way to the Father, in our eating.
May we become a people that begin to extend life eternal, a people who live out the meaning of sharing in the life of Jesus to a hungry world.

There are many who are looking, many who are hungry; there are many who are searching.
May we become the body that feeds them.
May we become the body that proclaims the identity of the bread of life to this broken and hungry world.

Then, as we participate together in the sacrament of communion, we’ll be sharing in the life of Jesus in the world.
As we mediate whilst being served, we can pray for those in need, who haven’t yet come to know the love of God.

Let us pray that as we’re refreshed in the spirit, we’ll find someone who is in need of refreshing and encourage them to join us in God’s kingdom.

Blessings
​Pastor Rick
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Sunday 4 August, 2024

2/8/2024

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Reflection:  "The Body of Christ"


Psalm 51:1-12


2 Samuel 11:16-12:13a


John 6:24-35


Ephesians 4:1-16

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Have you ever taught a young child how to ride a bicycle?
They usually start with training wheels, or as our grand-daughters called them, “stabilisers”.

After a while, when they seem to be confident – usually OVER-confident, you take the training wheels off, but still grasp the handlebar and the seat as you walk around the driveway, or the park, with them.
When they seem to be comfortable with that, you say "I'll just let go for a second." 
"No!" they scream!

But, in what seems like no time at all, you notice that they’ve gained more confidence and are ready to fly solo.
"Let go! I can do it" they say.
Then they take off, wobble, shake, laugh and pedal off as if they’ve been doing it all their lives. 

Our instinct is to run after them, hold the seat, or the handlebars, or both, to keep them safe. 
Instead, we shout, "Keep pedalling!  Keep pedalling!"

We're often like these novices, trainees, or beginners. 
Maybe we're learning a new skill, taking-up a new practice, starting a new job, enrolling in a new school, moving to a new community, or connecting to a new church. 
We feel the awkwardness of growth and the anticipation of change. 


​Perhaps we're not so much beginning, as beginning again:  starting over after failure or disappointment, re-engaging with ordinary life after illness or grief sidelined us for a season, or exploring fresh possibilities after being mired in that swampy sameness of life. 
We feel the surprise of grace and the joy of renewal. 


Beginning, or beginning again, we're like that child learning to ride; needing someone to believe in us, to hold on to us until we're ready to go it alone, and to cheer for us even after we're on the way. 
We need, in other words, someone who’ll guide, help us and be our mentor. 

Another way to say it is that all of us need leaders - people who realise our possibilities and encourage us to claim them, who nurture our potential and help us to realize it, and people who teach and model the joy which comes from being authentically oneself and fully alive. 

Who has been that kind of leader for you? 
Your Mum or Dad, a Grandparent, perhaps?  
Your sports coach, tennis instructor, choir, or band leader?  
Maybe your 7th grade social studies teacher, English professor at university, or church Bible study leader?  
Was it a boss who took an interest in you, or a church minister who was there for you at a pivotal time in your life?


A real leader can somehow get us to do certain things that, deep down, we think are good and want to be able to do, but usually don't have the courage to do on our own. 

It's a mysterious quality, hard to define, but we always know it when we see it, even as kids.

A real leader is somebody who can help us overcome the limitations of our own individual laziness and selfishness and weakness and fear and get us to reach higher.

Ephesians 4 is, in part, about the real leaders which the church needs – people who can encourage followers of Jesus "to do better, harder things" than we are likely to do on our own. 
Verses 11-13 tell us about some of the people whom God has given to lead the church.

“Some would be apostles, some prophets, some evangelists, some pastors and teachers"The text also describes the work God calls those leaders to do:  equip the saints for the work of ministry, build up the body of Christ, help people to become like Jesus.
But equipping also involves training. 

Leaders offer people experiences which help them turn their gifts into skills, their talents into practices, their passions into actions, and their concerns into disciplines. 
Equipping and training are indispensable parts of a church's ministry of Christian education and spiritual formation. 

But equipping is more than training. 

More deeply, equipping is about restoration and healing. 
The word 
equip in our text comes from an interesting family of Greek words which describe, among other things, the setting of broken bones during surgery, fostering healing, and working for rehabilitation. 
This same family of words makes an appearance in the Gospel of Matthew, where Jesus calls some Galilean fishermen to be his followers. 

When Jesus invited James and John to the adventure of discipleship, they were "in the boat with their father mending their nets." (Matthew 4:21)
Mending is from this same family of words, so mending and equipping are related, which means that to equip is to weave back together the frayed edges of life, to repair brokenness rather than to write-off the broken, and to restore rather than discard the shattered.  It is to help people trust that in spite of what life has done to them and with them they can be useful again. 
This understanding of equipping means that leadership involves a crucial dimension of healing and restoration. 

All of us have experiences which tear at us; we all have times when fatigue or failure tempts us to give up on ourselves. 

Leaders recognize that, sometimes, what people most need is not to refine their skills or to avail themselves of more training. 
Instead, what they need are grace and mercy, renewal and confidence. 
They need to know that it's always possible to begin, or to begin again.

The disciples looked to Jesus for their training and leadership and asked him how they could possibly perform the same sort of miracles as he performed.
He related it to eating bread, but not the sort of bread that just filled your tummy for a short time.

Jesus told them that he, that is, his body, was the bread of life and that they must believe in him to be spiritually filled enough to be capable of the miracles he required of them.

The body of Christ, in both physical and spiritual terms, was what they required to be able to go it alone.

They had been taught on their training wheels and now it was time for Jesus to let go of the bike seat and for them to launch off under their own power.

None of us is completely together, unflawed and whole. 
But by the gifts God has given us, his restoring grace and with one another's encouragement, we're on our way. 

Let’s have the courage to pedal off in search of the tasks that God has in mind for us during the rest of our lives.

Let's have the confidence that he has equipped us adequately and that he will be there with us, so that we’re not going to fall off our bikes.

I encourage you to spend some time in prayer with God and ask him what it is that he has in mind for you.
We're all made differently and have different skills and talents.

We all need leaders and maybe that’s one of your gifts which you can provide for others.

Use what God’s given to you and work to build up his kingdom here on earth.
The blessings that you provide for others will be nothing, when compared to the blessings you’ll receive.

So don’t be afraid to take off your training wheels are off and launch out into the world.
God will be with you and bless you in everything that you endeavour in his name.

​Blessings.....................Pastor Rick
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    Pastor Rick Johnson

    Pastor
    Rick Johnson

    I've been privileged to minister to the people here at Lane Cove Uniting for the last 13 years.

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LANE COVE UNITING CHURCH

Cnr. Figtree St. & Centennial Ave.
LANE COVE   NSW   2066
​Get directions


PO Box 225       
LANE COVE   NSW   1595



Worship Service:

9:30am Sunday

(02) 9428 2240
[email protected]
© Lane Cove Uniting Church  |  2020

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