Monday 27 August 2018

News and events wk beg. 27 August

A round up of news and events coming up:

Sun 2 Sept, 10.30am: Communion service.
All are welcome to share in the bread and wine at the table of the Lord. It is Jesus who invites us to gather as his friends and remember, so come, whether it’s been a while, or more recently. All who are baptised, young or old or somewhere in between, are welcome to the feast. Please let friends and neighbours know.

Also, from this Sunday - Food Bank Donations Box:
For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was 
thirsty and you gave me something to drink’  Matt. 25:35 
Beginning from 2 September, we will have a box in which to leave dry/ tinned goods of food, or toiletries, for the Clydesdale Food Bank. If you have items to donate, that would be excellent: we shall make sure they get to their destination!

Sat 8 Sept, 10.30-12pm: ANNUAL CHURCH COFFEE MORNING.
Our coffee morning returns to Roberton Village Hall, featuring morning tea, tombola, home baking stall, and more. Come along, bring your friends, to this annual fun and fundraiser for the church. If you’re willing and able to make donations of home baking or prizes for the tombola, please see Mary Hamilton or other members of the Social Committee. And thanks in advance for your support.

Sun 9 Sept 10.30AM: SONGS OF PRAISE SERVICE & GUILD DEDICATION SERVICE
It’s coming up to that time of year once more: time to think about some of your favourite hymns, and nominate them for inclusion for this year’s Songs of Praise Service. Last nominations to be in by the end of morning tea on Sun 2 Sept.  During our service, we’ll also be rededicating our Guild, as they begin their programme for another year.

100th Anniversary of end of World War I: Remembrance Day project – 

Calling all knitters and crocheters: Would you be willing to help make some poppies to create a Remembrance Sunday Banner, as we mark the Centenary of the end of the Great War? If you can help, see Nikki or Heather. After Remembrance Sunday, we’d like to sell them for a suggested minimum donation of £1 or more, to raise money for Poppy Scotland and Help for Heroes

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Food for the journey: spiritual nourishment for the week ahead
One of our readings for Sunday was Ephesians 6:10-20 - Paul encouraging the Ephesian Christians to put on God's armour to enable them to help follow in faith.
Feel free to read over the passage, and then, should you wish, make use of the following questions for reflection over the course of the week:

What armour do Christians need in today’s world?
Do we – as a community – use all the armour God gives?
How can we be more effective in ‘standing firm together’?

A prayer for strength: 
Lord God, Paul didn’t let the fact that he was physically in chains stop him from serving you. We may have chains of a different kind. We pray that whatever we see as our chains, our limitations, our obstacles, our weaknesses, we will know your leading through the trials of our lives; and that, equipped with your armour, we will work together for you. Amen.

Sunday 26 August 2018

Sermon, Sun 26 Aug: 'You've gotta serve somebody'

READINGS: Joshua 24: 1-4, 11-18; Psalm 34:15-22;
Ephesians 6:10-20

SERMON
Let’s pray: may the words of my mouth, and the thoughts of all our hearts, be acceptable in your sight, O Lord, our strength and our Redeemer, Amen.

This last week was the second week of the new school year, and,
for some of our schools, the first time for school assemblies.
I’d been asked to pick up on the theme of thinking about ‘new things’ with the students:
new experiences,
new skills to pick up,
new school work to learn.
For some, a new teacher,
for others, new friends;
and, in the case of a couple, a whole new school to get used to.
I kicked off my time with the students by asking a very carefully phrased question –
‘How did you get into school today?’
Quick as a flash, up went several hands.
A small person replied: ‘The bus’
Others nodded in agreement.
I smiled at them and asked them to listen to the question very carefully once again:
‘How did you get into school today?
There was a pause, and then a lightbulb moment,
followed by some grins, a few giggles, and a wee chorus of:
‘Ohhh! The door!’
‘Absolutely!’ said I, ‘think of the mess the bus would make! 
And that’d be a shame, given it’s a nice new school!’
Cue laughter.
Pushing my luck, I grinned at them and asked:
‘Okay, and how will you get out of school today?’
And, with a laugh, a small boy cried out:
‘Reverse the bus!’
It was beautifully done,
and there was much hilarity and it was great fun -
said boy is the grandson of one of the congregation, and that's all I'll give away.

We then spent time thinking and looking at a whole variety of doors –
wondering who, or what, might be found behind them, and, thinking about
how we’d feel if we had to go through the door.
All of it, was, of course, to talk about new things –
and what it felt like to be on one side and move to the other –
from being used to the familiar, to doing something unfamiliar –
the challenge of the new.

Doors ... take us places.
It might just be to the broom cupboard,
or, as in the case of the book, ‘The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe,’
it might just be to an entirely different world.
Doors:
sometimes made of wood, or glass, or metal.
But other times, doors are less physical:
think of Hogmanay and standing at the gate of the year –
time as a door.
Or, think of doors of opportunity –
having the possibility to do something,
a new thing,
a new experience.
Something that may completely change your life.
And, there, standing on the threshold,
you may be experiencing a whole range of emotions and thoughts:
Do you go through?
Do you haver about the edge for a very long time, not sure what to do?
Or do you walk away?

Doors...take us places,
and sometimes, places can be a little like doors.
Shechem, the place where Joshua called the Israelites to gather,
was, in many ways, like a door.
And we have to take a trip further back in time to get a sense of why gathering
at Shechem came with the echoes of all sorts of possibilities:
the opportunity to do something new,
the chance to see life shaped and changed forever.
Why Shechem?
Because, it’s where the story of promise,
the story of being chosen
and making a choice
begins.
We go right back to Abraham, in the Book of Genesis, chapter 12.
God calls Abram:
‘Leave your country, your people, 
and your father’s household 
and go to the land I will show you.
I will make you into a great nation
and I will bless you;
I will make your name great,
and you will be a blessing.
I will bless those who bless you,
and whoever curses you, 
I will curse;
and all peoples on earth 
will be blessed through you.’

Abram, later renamed Abraham, is given a choice by God,
a door of opportunity, if you like, and steps through it to accept, in faith, God’s promise.
He leaves everything that is familiar,
strikes out into the unknown with this as yet unknown God,
and, having travelled through the land,
arrives by the great tree of Moreh,
at Shechem.
It is there that God appears to Abram.
It is at Shechem that God says:
‘to your offspring, I will give this land.’
It is there that Abram makes an altar ...and worships God.
As for Abraham and his household, they will serve the Lord.

Generations pass.
The story of God’s relationship with Abraham
expands from a promise to one person and his household,
to what eventually becomes a numerous people –
the descendants of Abraham,
and the children of the Promise:
God’s people.
God’s chosen, who stand, here again,
at Shechem.
Gathered together, Joshua, who has led them into the land of Promise,
reminds them of their story.
‘Long ago, your forefathers beyond the River 
worshipped other gods...
but I took your father Abraham from the 
land beyond the River and led him,
and gave him many descendants.’

Chapter, by chapter, the stories making up
the story of the people of God are recounted by Joshua –
they’re reminded of their time in Egypt;
of their liberation from slavery there –
of the God who promised to rescue them
and who did.
Of the pursuit of the Egyptians,
and of the crossing of the Red Sea –
the Sea that became for the Israelites
the door to freedom.
They’re reminded of God guiding them
and taking them to the land long-promised.
A long tale, with so many twists and turns,
but always, always, with God at the centre:
God offering choices,
creating opportunities,
the promise of new things.
As he finishes recalling all that God has done for them,
Joshua calls upon them to make a choice:
A bit like the old Bob Dylan song, he notes ‘You’ve gotta serve somebody.
To the people God has chosen, Joshua says ‘choose.’
Joshua asks them, ‘who are you going to serve?’
And, showing them the door being offered,
echoing the choice made by Abraham so many generations before him, Joshua states:
‘As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.’
Will the people follow in the ways of the gods,
or, will they follow in God’s way?

They walk through the door, choosing God.
They will make a mess of it time and time again,
but God, who had already chosen them,
will walk with them,
will be faithful,
will continue to be the God of the promise –
as the Psalmist will later claim:
‘no one who takes refuge in him will be condemned.’

Generations, kingdoms, and empires pass.
The choice is always there:
‘Who are you going to serve?’
In the good, and in the bad, God continues to walk with his people...
until, at a particular time,
God walks within human time and history,
in flesh and bone as one of us –
showing what love looks like in and through the life of Jesus.
The question is asked again:
‘Who are you going to serve?’
The response is made –
by fishermen, tax collectors, farmers,
radicals, the poor, the dispossessed,
the ill, and everyday people.
They hear the invitation afresh.
They choose to walk, through Jesus,
into new life,
a new way of being, and understanding,
a new found freedom –
even if that freedom is, for some like Paul,
found through service in prison chains,
or persecution.
They will serve the Lord.
But, in challenging times, how will they do it?

Paul, writing from prison, says to the new Christians in Ephesus:
‘put on God –
put on the armour of God.’
But it’s a strange kind of armour –
let’s look at the six items of the kit that Paul lays out before them:
the belt of... TRUTH
the breastplate of...RIGHTEOUSNESS
the shoes that are THE GOSPEL OF PEACE
the shield of...FAITH
the helmet of...SALVATION
the sword of...THE SPIRIT – THE WORD OF GOD
I’ve read this passage a number of times over the years, and gone ‘okay.’ 
But this week, as I looked and prepared,
something new fell into place for me
that had been sitting there in plain sight ever since
I’d come across this passage in my late teens –
and it’s to do with the shoes –
and given I was the Imelda Marcos of shoes at one point in my life,
I'm surprised I'd never really picked up on this before!
Here it is:
‘your feet fitted with the readiness that comes from the gospel of peace’ 
If it’s your shoes that give you balance,
that keep you stable,
that ground you –
what grounds us as Christians?
Here within a very military metaphor...
it’s the ‘gospel of peace.’
The armour of God, then, is very different:
it’s about reconciliation –
peace with God,
peace with neighbour –
God’s ‘shalom’ –
life that’s full and rich and rounded and based on relationship:
‘you gotta serve somebody’
found in serving God and serving neighbour.
That’s the way to effect the promise of the harmonious kin-dom of God.
To do that requires integrity –
the belt of truth.
To do that requires walking in God’s way –
the breastplate of righteousness.
To bring in God’s kin-dom requires faith,
living into your salvation –
the knowledge that God has chosen you,
God has rescued you –
and in Paul’s letter ‘you’ is not an individual ‘you’ – it’s plural:
‘you’ as the Body of Christ
‘you’ as God’s people.
We don’t stand alone, we stand together,
with God and with each other.
We are God’s...
and he is ours,
and we, together are his community.
Like Abraham,
like Joshua and the people of the promise,
together we are part of the story of God’s people –  as God’s word reminds us.

Putting on the armour of God is essentially about clothing ourselves in Christ –
who is the Prince of Peace,
the one in whom we find righteousness and our rescue – our salvation and new life.
Who showed us in his own life
how we’re to live.

Like God’s people before us,
we too stand at Shechem –
and perhaps,
to follow in God’s way is to, each day, make that choice
when it comes to who we’re going to serve.
Like God’s people before us,
we too, will make messes,
but, we too, whether we feel it or not,
have God walking alongside us in the rough and the smooth
of all of the things that make up the very stuff of life.

This day, who are we going to serve?
We... will serve God.
How will we do it?
Look at how Jesus lived,
clothe ourselves in him as if it were armour:
live with integrity,
be people of reconciliation,
follow in God’s ways,
walk in the ways of peace.
Put on Jesus –
not the might of armies,
but the world-reconciling power of God,
embodied in the Cross
and the Resurrection of Christ.
Put     on    Jesus...
There’s a very old Sunday School song from the 80’s and the words, tho’ simple,
kind of sum up the question of
who we serve
and
how we serve:
‘Put on love every day,
never hide your love away,
don’t save love for a special day,
put on love every day.’
To put on Jesus is to put on love –
So, this day, and every day:
let us serve the Lord in love,
for that is the most powerful weapon in heaven and on earth. Amen.

Sunday 12 August 2018

News, contacts, information 12 - 16 August


The Minister will be unavailable from 
Mon 30 July to Wed 15 August.


Urgent pastoral cover will be provided by the Rev. George Shand of the Tinto Parishes. His number is 01899 309400.
For general parish queries, please contact Heather Watt, our Session Clerk on 01899 850211

What's On?
Sun 19 August, Morning Worship at 10.30am: 'As wise as the owl'
We'll be thinking about wisdom this morning.
Our readings are:
Proverbs 9.1-6; Psalm 34.9-14; Ephesians 5.15-20

Food Bank Box: 
Matt. 25:35 ‘For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, 
I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink’ 
Beginning from 2 September, we will have a box in which to leave dry/ tinned goods for the Clydesdale Food Bank. If you have items to donate, that would be excellent: we shall make sure they get to their destination! Slightly longer ‘use-by’ dates would be helpful

LOOKING AHEAD:
Sun 2 Sept, 10.30am: Communion

Sun 9 Sept SONGS OF PRAISE SERVICE & GUILD DEDICATION
It’s leading up to that time of year once more: time to think about some of your favourite hymns, and nominate them for inclusion for this year’s Songs of Praise Service. Last nominations to be in by the end of morning tea on Sun 2 Sept.  During our service, we’ll also be rededicating our Guild, as they begin their programme for another year.

Poppy Project: Calling all those who can knit or crochet! 
Would you be willing to help make poppies for a large banner, to be used in the parish church on Remembrance Sunday, marking the Centenary of the end of the Great War? If you can help, Nikki and Heather would be delighted to hear from you. Patterns are available.
After the Sunday, we are hoping to dismantle the banner, and sell the poppies for a minimum £1 donation. All money raised to go to Poppy Scotland and Help for Heroes.

Sunday 5 August 2018

News, contacts, information 5 - 16 August


The Minister will be unavailable from 
Mon 30 July to Wed 15 August.


Worship will be led by the Rev. Sandy Strachan on Sun 12 August.
Urgent pastoral cover will be provided by the Rev. George Shand of the Tinto Parishes. His number is 01899 309400.
For general parish queries, please contact Heather Watt, our Session Clerk on 01899 850211

What's On?


Sun 12 Aug. 9am: the Prayer Group meets before worship this week. All are welcome to come along and join in prayer. Should you have any prayer requests, you’ll find pen and paper in the vestibule – note your prayer request and then pop it into the box, also in the vestibule.

Sun 12 August, Morning worship at 10.30am:
We welcome the Rev. Sandy Strachan once more, as he leads us in worship.



Food Bank Box: 
Matt. 25:35 ‘For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, 
I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink’ 
Beginning from 2 September, we will have a box in which to leave dry/ tinned goods for the Clydesdale Food Bank. If you have items to donate, that would be excellent: we shall make sure they get to their destination! Slightly longer ‘use-by’ dates would be helpful

LOOKING AHEAD:
Sun 2 Sept, 10.30am: Communion

Sun 9 Sept SONGS OF PRAISE SERVICE & GUILD DEDICATION
It’s leading up to that time of year once more: time to think about some of your favourite hymns, and nominate them for inclusion for this year’s Songs of Praise Service. Last nominations to be in by the end of morning tea on Sun 2 Sept.  During our service, we’ll also be rededicating our Guild, as they begin their programme for another year.

Poppy Project: Calling all those who can knit or crochet! 
Would you be willing to help make poppies for a large banner, to be used in the parish church on Remembrance Sunday, marking the Centenary of the end of the Great War? If you can help, Nikki and Heather would be delighted to hear from you. Patterns are available.
After the Sunday, we are hoping to dismantle the banner, and sell the poppies for a minimum £1 donation. All money raised to go to Poppy Scotland and Help for Heroes.