In times of trouble – God will help

Wherever we go nowadays we frequently hear one expression above all others. It is heard on the streets, in shops, in the school playground, on radio and on TV; I refer to “O My God” or “OMG”.

It is an expression that is often passed on through families and may be used as a spoken badge of identity among peers. It is sometimes used as an expression of shock or surprise or just part of normal speech and with the explosion of electronic communication, this acronym is frequently used in text speak and by room chatters.

The present widespread use is of course far removed from the original context that is found in the Old Testament of the Bible, when it was used as a personal address to God. These or similar words are widely used by millions of Christians around the world today who have a relationship with God and are
expressed in personal prayer or praise.

The words are often used by anyone who needs to call on God for help, whatever their situation. There is a verse in the bible that says “God is our refuge and strength, a very present and reliable help in times of trouble”. Many people have found that God will always hear a simple prayer from those who
genuinely ask for His help.

If you need to know more about how God can help you, then pop along to a local Christian church, where you will find someone willing to listen and show you how God can give you the love and help that you may need.
Geoff Duncombe
The Gateway Church, King’s Lynn

Exam season

We are now in the exam season when many of our young people – including my daughters – are taking GCSEs, A levels or other exams. Like many others, my girls need to achieve certain grades in order to progress with their career choices. But what about life? What if there is a grade we need to achieve to get into Heaven? The Bible tells us that we have all missed the mark, none of us have achieved the required grade. So what is the pass mark? Perfection – 100%! Now that doesn’t seem fair – I’m a good person, surely 80% would be enough? God isn’t a stern examiner who deliberately sets a standard we can’t reach. He is a loving God who wants to have a relationship with us forever – now and in Heaven when we die. So he has provided a way that we can have that relationship with him – Jesus. Romans chapter 3 verses 23-24 says, “For everyone has sinned; we all fall short of God’s glorious standard. Yet God, with undeserved kindness, declares that we are righteous. He did this through Christ Jesus when he freed us from the penalty for our sins.” Jesus has given his life so that we can be given the pass mark we need. Verse 22 says, “We are made right with God by placing our faith in Jesus Christ. And this is true for everyone who believes, no matter who we are.”
Wendy Hill
King’s Lynn Christian Fellowship

Jesus is not politically correct

A recent newspaper article recorded the resignation of Sir Paul Coleridge, an eminent high court judge for daring to publicly support traditional marriage as the ideal environment for raising children, an opinion supported by statistics. He had spent years in the high court, presiding over many divorce cases and had seen the effects of the breakups on the children, but because he expressed his opinions, he was reprimanded by the Lord Chief Justice and on protesting, was reprimanded again, prompting his resignation. I thought, how sad, in a country famed for its freedom of speech and expression!
But then I was reminded of Jesus Christ. If ever there was a man who spoke his mind, it was he! He was utterly un-PC. He was only interested in truth and he spoke it fearlessly. He was totally opposed to hypocrisy and falsehood, to the proud and the arrogant, while reaching out to the poor, the sick, the needy and the broken-hearted with compassion and healing.
But he was hated for it, beaten, lashed and crucified. The worst atrocities man could devise were executed against him and yet, as he died, he could say “Father, forgive them!” That’s why the Bible says “He bore our sins in his own body on the cross” so that as we trust and believe in him, we can know God’s forgiveness and peace.
He has changed countless millions of lives and is still doing so today – what a man!
Tim P, KLCF

Why Pentecost

Why Pentecost?
BY TONY KENDALL
The Church in the Woottons

Like London buses, our bank holidays come in clusters – several close together followed by none for ages. The Christmas cluster was followed by the Easter and May bunch, and with the exception of one in late August there are no more on the national calendar until Christmas Day.
Many of England’s bank holidays have a religious origin. The word ‘holiday’ is a derivation of the original title ‘holy day’, which explains why banks closed for the day – and still do in spite of most stores opening in response to public demand. The recent Spring bank holiday, which until 1971 was a movable feast on the Monday following Whitsun seven weeks after Easter, typifies how the rhythm of the year based on the Christian story has gradually diminished since World War 2.
However, we can still celebrate! The name Whitsun has been replaced by the much more meaningful Pentecost, which this year falls on Sunday 8th June. Stemming from a Jewish festival 50 days after the Passover, it’s the most significant Christian occasion after Christmas and Easter.
Why? Because it marks the birthday of the Church. Soon after Jesus Christ the Son of God had returned to heaven, having lived for 33 years as a man before enduring a cruel death and rising again, God sent his Holy Spirit at Pentecost to inspire Jesus’s disciples to continue his work on earth. That same Spirit lives today in the hearts of all who are prepared to serve and love him. Contact your local church to learn more!

A song I can learn

piano playing
“But I’ll never be able to play that!” Trayson wails, pointing emphatically to his music. “I don’t even know what that sideways “V” means!”

“That sideways ‘V’ is an accent mark,” I tell my young piano student. “It says to play with extra force. Listen.” I perform the measure, giving the accented note more muscle. “You’re so strong, I know you can do that.”

Trayson sits up straighter. “I am pretty strong,” he admits. He now attacks the accented notes, and before long has it mastered.

That night, I mentally replay the conversation and laugh. Don’t my piano students realize I know their exact capabilities and weaknesses? I taught them everything they know about piano. Why do they think they know better than me? Why do they assume they will fail? As their teacher, I would never give him any song too hard to learn.

Like a sforzando, an unexpected note that sings out of nowhere, God speaks to my heart. And how are you any different? He whispers. I know you intimately. I created you. I see the big picture, yet you insist you know better. Trust me, my precious one, I would never give you a song you couldn’t learn.

In the music of my life, I pray I never look at a problem and tell God it’s too much. As the master conductor, all beautiful melodies come from Him, perfectly orchestrated to my abilities and spiritual heartbeat. After all, He only gives me songs I can learn.

–Crystal Kupper, The Gateway Church

DIY?

Torpedo_spirit_level
We’re in bank holiday season, which traditionally is the time for us to get down to our local DIY store and then, heroically, pretend to be carpenters, plumbers, painters and decorators. For me, DIY is a pastime associated with trauma and minor injuries, made worse by living in a house that is nearly 200 years old and makes the Leaning Tower of Pisa look structurally sound.

However, even in these moments of frustration, it’s possible to reflect on one’s relationship with God. And three things spring to mind. The first is that it’s good to persevere. The Bible says “I press on towards the goal for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus”. It’s easy to lose heart, to get distracted, to take the easy way out or to settle for a bodged job, but we’re encouraged to keep going on regardless of the toughness of the task. And whilst I’ll get frustrated with myself when my DIY skills fail me, God is patient, loving and forgives when we ask.

The second is that sometimes we need help. I have strong memories of trying to build boats out of balsa wood in my dad’s garage, but in particular I remember getting stroppy when my Dad tried to help. I wanted to do it myself, even if the boat sank. The Bible says “trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding”. We love and crave independence, and sometimes that’s a good thing (my Dad was proud to see me leave home for university), but an independence that excludes God is an independence that may never build things in the way He intended.

And the third lesson? Every time I use a spirit level on my house and compare that with the wonky angles on each wall, floor and ceiling, I’m reminded that the foolish man builds his house upon the sand.

Stop Being Against

I’ve come to the conclusion that I am against being against and for being for!
Being ‘against’ as a way of life is poisonous. It poisons the people around us and it is corrosive to our well-being. It makes enemies, not friends. It makes excuses for avoidance – not reasons to reach out. It condemns others as the cause of our misfortune – instead of facing up to our realities and doing something positive about them. It leads to jealousy – instead of gratitude for what we have.
Being ‘for’ means looking for the good in someone else – regardless. Being ‘for’ means not being afraid to say sorry – to say ‘help’ – to say, ‘come in’. It looks at differences in other people and wants to find out more about them. It means tolerance and forgiveness. But above all it means looking forward with excitement and back with thanks.
The older I get the more rewarding I am finding life. The older I get, the fewer are the things that annoy me and the greater is my joy at the wonders around me – the wonder of family, friends, work. The wonder of the song of a bird (cockerels at 5 in the morning excluded!), of blue skies and sunshine, of gentle rain on a spring garden, advances in science that free us and heal us, of finding the time to settle to read or watch something that we like. The list is endless if we are ‘for’ – limited and grey and angry if we are ‘against’
So take a look in the mirror and look at the face that the world sees. Is it a face that welcomes or a scowl that rejects?
Are YOU an against – or a for?

John Belfield
RC

Easter

Christians have just celebrated the greatest religious days of the year, culminating in Easter Day. The three days of intensive prayer and religious ceremonies – Maundy Thursday, Good Friday and Holy Saturday recall the Passion and death of our Lord Jesus Christ. Easter Day marks Christ’s rising from the dead.
At Easter the followers of Jesus were amazed that their Master had risen and had appeared to various followers. All the while they gathered for prayer. It would be no surprise if they prayed the Our Father, the prayer Jesus taught them.
Through the ages Christians have said together this most comprehensive of prayers. With a reverence for God and a desire that his rule on earth may be complete, believers ask for their ‘daily bread’, asking too that they may have their offences forgiven, as they forgive others. This is a difficult task. We can say we pardon others, but even easier recall old grievances.
In these troubled times with fighting in Syria, tension and differences in Ukraine, armed bands and lawlessness in other parts of the world, people seek peace.
In the Catholic Mass, the priest says before the sign of peace: ‘Lord Jesus Christ, you said to your apostles: I leave you peace, my peace I give you. Look not on our sins, but on the faith of your Church, and grant us the peace and unity of your kingdom where you live for ever and ever’.
John Cairns, King’s Lynn Catholic Church

Sons of Encouragement

encourage-synonyms
My teacher wife is still smiling and quoting an encouraging email she got 24 hours ago from the chair of governors at her school. Encouragement is powerful – we use the word to talk about pointing out the positive in someone else. Its root meaning implies putting “courage in”.

Just before Joshua became leader of Israel to take them across the Jordan into the Promised Land, Moses was commanded by God to encourage and strengthen him. Centuries later, after a setback that meant all their wives and children had been captured, David’s men wanted to kill him they were so upset, but David “encouraged himself in the Lord” and then recaptured them back. The early church leader Barnabus was such an encourager, he was nicknamed “Son of encouragement”. A nickname more encouraging itself than “Son of Thunder”!

Encouragement is classed as a spiritual gift – a supernatural ability that God gives to many of us. When we prophecy (speak a spontaneous thought that is in part coming from the Lord), we are to make sure it encourages and builds up those it is spoken too. By the way, the ability to prophecy is available for all believers (Acts 2:17-18).

Don’t tell yourself that encouragement is only for those that are gifted at it, or who prophecy regularly. It is also a command that we all need to obey “Therefore encourage one another and build one another up, just as you are doing”. Having observed the effects on my lovely wife, we’d be foolish not to obey.

Who will you encourage today?

Andy Moyle
The Gateway Church

Join the Queue

Join the Queue
I suppose that most of us need to stand in a queue sometimes, whether it be at a bus stop, an airport check in or a supermarket checkout, but we would never do that if we did not have a clear idea of what was available to us at the front, and a willingness to pay the price to obtain it.
The Bible makes some amazing offers to anyone who is willing to claim them but, as you may have noticed, there are not may queues outside churches! The offers include, a life free of anxiety and fear, regardless of the circumstances around us; a sense of belonging through a close personal relationship with the Creator of the universe; and a reserved place in a state of uninterrupted peace and joy for ever when we leave this life, “acceptance guaranteed, no examination required!”
Worth queuing for? That depends on the price. The price is that we put our trust in Jesus and what He did for us, rather than in our own merits, and the Bible reveals why there are so few “claimants”. It says that “people who aren’t Christians can’t understand these truths…..it all sounds foolishness to them2 (New Living Translation). In other words, to anyone looking at it from the outside, the benefits are invisible. But it also states “to all who received him (Jesus), to those who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God.”
Care to join the queue?

Jeff Trimingham