The "Not Forgotten" Father
/Preacher: Alan Cameron
Verses: Luke 2:41-52
Preacher: Alan Cameron
Verses: Luke 2:41-52
Preacher: Alan Cameron
Verses: Luke 2:1-20
Preacher: Alan Cameron
Verses: Luke 1:39-45
Preacher: Alan Cameron
Verses: Luke 3:7-20
Occasionally I find myself driving, my mind elsewhere, keeping an eye on the road but heading in the wrong direction. So, I turn around and head back the way I came. In this regard psychologists speak of two kinds of attention: primary and secondary attention. Primary attention is that which is at the forefront of our thoughts. Secondary attention enables us to do familiar things whilst our thoughts are elsewhere.
Both these things, changing direction and paying attention is what Advent is all about. John the Baptist interrupts our meandering thoughts with the call to repent, to turn around. His language is harsh and arresting. “You bunch of snakes!”. Hardly the greeting we place on Christmas cards! “Who told you to flee from the coming wrath?” What’s good news about that you may well ask. John’s stern proclamation is good not because it is nice but because it is true.
Preacher: Jones Liwewe
Verses: Luke 3:1-6
God is more concerned with our spirituality and our relationship with Him
Luke starts the passage by recording seven historical figures because; (i) He wants us to know that this is a historic event, (ii) He wants us to know the circumstance the Jewish nation suffered under the leadership of these seven figures. The Jewish nation was under the leadership of: The pagan Roman Empire (Tiberius Caesar and his governor Pirate), three ungodly local leaders (Herod, Philip and Lysanias), and 2 corrupt spiritual leaders (Annas and Caiaphas). Historically, at this time Palestine and the rest of the Roman Empire was filled with corruption, struggles for power, political unrest, economic crisis, social upheaval, religious apostasy. In addition to this situation, the nation experienced 400years of silence from God. However, this circumstance led to a profound Messianic expectation by the Jewish nation (Luke 3:15).
Preacher: Alan Cameron
Verses: Luke 21:25-36
Advent marks the start of the Christian calendar. It’s a time of preparation, not simply preparing for Christmas and trying to avoid the so-called ‘silly season’ of the year end functions, but preparing our hearts and lives in anticipation of the return of Christ. For return he will, not in the manner of his first coming, incognito born in humility, rather his return will be dramatic and majestic.
Highly descriptive words are used in Scripture to depict the return of Jesus. Pictorial language sets the scene, designed to capture our imagination and attention, rather than providing mere factual information by way of a chronological blue print of what we will see when it happens. Three words by way of theological shorthand are noteworthy in this regard:
i. parousia, the word means ‘presence’ or ‘arrival’ in connection with a royal visit. We live in expectation of a royal visit by our living and risen Saviour.
ii. apocalypse, literally an unveiling of Jesus. At the moment his majesty and dominion are veiled. On that Great Day the veil will be drawn aside and the whole world will see Jesus as he truly is.
iii. epiphany, an unmistakable appearance. “We wait for the blessed hope – the appearing of the glory of our God and Saviour, Jesus Christ” (Titus 2:13)
Preacher: Alan Cameron
Verses: 2 Corinthians 6:14-7:1
Jesus is both Saviour and Lord. Paul addresses this in the passage before us. The temptation faced by the Corinthians, and all subsequent believers is to evade what Dietrich Bonhoeffer rightly calls “the cost of discipleship”. True belief, is never mere passive acknowledgement of the truth, it involves active engagement: “Only the one who believes obeys, only the one who obeys, believes “.
Preacher: Lincon Hardouin
Verses: Acts 17:16-33
Paul, the mightiest of all the apostles. Patient, courageous, forgiving, humble, passionate, loving, kind, gentle, uncompromising, faithful, strong, amongst other things… All of these characteristics were used by different scholars over centuries to describe the Apostle Paul, and for many of us here today, it is easy for us to see why. He is certainly one of the most influential Biblical characters in the New Testament, and he is certainly one of the most quintessential examples of what true Christian living looks like. Throughout the scriptures we are told, and we read, about his encouragement to the early church, his firm but fairness towards sinners, his faithfulness in the gospel, his passion for serving ALL people, his courage in serving Jesus. But this is only one side of Paul’s incredible story, and it is the one side that most people choose only to remember.
I want you to understand though, the other side of this story. The side that many people have probably heard, the side that many have probably forgotten, the side that many people have probably chosen to forget. But this morning, I want you to hear these words as quoted from Paul, I want you to understand what his dedication cost him.
Preacher: Alan Cameron
Verses: Acts 16:11-34
How does God guide his church to the right place and time for mission? The passage before us provides important principles for our consideration. There will be sanctified common sense and planning (Acts 15:36). There will be “closed” as well as “open doors” (Acts 16:7,8). There will be guidance by way of circumstances, sometimes extraordinary (Acts 16:9,10), given to individuals as well as the whole team. Discernment and receptivity are the keys. Specific guidance comes to these already on the road as it were, living out the Great Command and Great Commission. Being able to say God sent us with the wind of the Spirit at our backs and his indwelling presence empowering us is a great incentive to mission.
Preacher: Alan Cameron
Verses:
The New Testament scholar Stephen Neill once quipped “If everything is mission, then nothing is mission”, to which the Old Testament scholar Christopher Wright responded “If everything is mission, then everything is mission”. Little wonder that the missiologist David Bosch retorted, “Ultimately mission remains undefinable”. Since the 1950’s there has been a remarkable broadening of the term. Caring for the environment is mission. Community renewal is mission. Blessing our neighbours is mission.
Preacher: Alan Cameron
Verses: 2 Corinthians 6:1-13
The Apostle Paul counters his Corinthian opponents’ love of power with the power of love. He contrasts their preoccupation with style and personality with gospel and character. Having pleaded for reconciliation he urges the Corinthians “not to receive God’s grace in vain” (v12). His plea is not to take God’s goodness for granted. As C.K. Barret put it, “The Corinthians had indeed been reconciled to God, but it was for them to receive the reconciliation more effectively”.
As a missionary Paul saw hardships and conflict as part of the territory. He took it squarely on the chin without flinching or complaint. He was no masochist. He did not see suffering itself as a mark of spirituality. However, linked to mission and the cause of Christ it is redemptive. He had no romantic notions about suffering. He had suffered too much for that!
Preacher: Alan Cameron
Verses: 2 Corinthians 5:10-6:2
Preaching has rightly been described as ‘letting texts talk’. The text in this instance is both surprising and challenging. It reminds us that not all fear is bad. There is healthy fear (v11a), a timely reminder that all of us will render an account to God on that great day (v10). Accordingly, Paul is motivated to “persuade others” by appealing “to [their] conscience” (v11). Unlike his opponents in Corinth he does not resort to manipulation or rhetorical excess. He simply states gospel facts: all face judgement (v10), equally, Christ died for all (v14). There is paradox and mystery here, responsive to ‘faith seeking understanding’ as opposed to philosophical speculation about God’s character and human merit.
Preacher: Alan Cameron
Verses: 2 Corinthians 5:16,17
Alistair Sparks depicted our transition to democracy and beyond in two books: ‘Tomorrow is Another Country’ and ‘Beyond the Miracle’. Hindsight has taught us that we did not miraculously change overnight and ‘another country’ has morphed into something very different than that envisaged by our founding fathers who drafted our constitution. So how do we address the creeping cynicism in our hearts fueled by factionalism and populist rhetoric? I would suggest that the answer lies in an ancient letter written by Paul to the church at Corinth.
Preacher: Gordon Hay
Verses: 2 Peter 1:1-11
2 Peter was the last book in the New Testament to be written, probably between 65 and 68 AD. It was also the last book to gain entry into the New Testament. And it gained entry with the greatest difficulty.[1] A scholar described 2 Peter as: “… far inferior in every respect to 1 Peter … it is the least valuable of the New Testament writings.”[2] Although referred to in the 1st and second centuries it was apparently not until the fourth century that 2 Peter came to be accepted in the New Testament.
Many have challenged whether it was written by Peter because of the different style in the original writings. But whatever the debate we turn to 2 Peter 1 this morning.
The letter was written to counter the beliefs and activities of a group of people who were a threat to the Church.[3][4] They were using God’s grace as a justification for sinning. The first 11 verses reminded believers that through God’s grace they had been forgiven their sins and instructed them how, grounded in faith, they were to journey onwards and upwards without falling. Listen to these verses.
[1] The Letters of Peter and James by William Barclay. My Kindle location 5628
[2] EF Scott quoted by William Barclay
[3] William Barclay location 5635
[4] Barclay (location 5645) says that “It is clear that Peter is describing antinomians, those who used God’s grace as a justification for sinning. In all probability they were Gnostics, who said that only spirit was good and that matter was essentially evil and that, therefore, what we did with the body was not important and that we could follow physical appetites to excess and it made no difference.
Preacher: Alan Cameron
Verses: 2 Corinthians 4:18-5:10
A contemporary writer has described death as a “conspiracy of silence... the universal repression of our day muffled up in illusion”. Part of the problem is confusion. People are not sure what happens when we die, so in the words of Shakespeare’s Hamlet “death doth make cowards of us all.”
In stark contrast to this, Paul moves life after death from the realm of conjecture and confusion to established fact. Jesus Christ has been raised from the dead, the first fruits of our resurrection to follow in time. For Paul this is no pious myth, escapist superstition, but historical fact attested to by hundreds of eye-witnesses including Paul himself. Granted the passage before us is a difficult one, its interpretation disputed: is Paul dealing with the ‘intermediate state’ of believers upon death or the “Parousia’, the great day when Christ returns? However, the difference is a matter of degree about which we can afford to be agnostic.
Preacher: Alan Cameron
Verses: 2 Corinthians 4:1-18
The novelist John Updike’s critique of organized religion being “like Coca-Cola billboards: they promote thirst without quenching it” is apposite with regards to Paul’s opponents at Corinth. They were strong on style, weak on substance. They dismissed Paul as wishy-washy and weak in comparison. Little wonder then that Paul twice in this chapter, once at the beginning, the other at the end, reiterates “Therefore we do not lose heart” (vv1,16).
Preacher:Lincon Hardouin
Verses: 1 Peter 1:13-21
I want you to imagine with me for just a second, what the last few hours of Christ’s life must have been like. Being beaten and flogged to within an inch of His own life, skin being torn away from His own body, being forced to walk the road towards Golgotha, with the weight of the world’s sin bearing down upon His own body. Imagine for a second standing in the crowd as Jesus walks by. Imagine listening to the people standing next to you as the shout at Christ, as they cheer for Him to be crucified. Imagine the shouts of pain as Christ is lying there on His back on the cross, nails being driven through hands and feet, the sound of steel crashing against steel, wails of grief rising up as His family stands there and watch as He’s about to be crucified. Imagine being on the cross, feeling absolutely helpless at that point in time, looking down and seeing your loved ones standing at your feet, being in such immense pain, hanging, unable to breathe, being separated from the Father. Can you imagine that, can you picture that? Can you picture in your minds how horrific that moment in history must have been?
Preacher: Alan Cameron
Verses: 2 Corinthians 2:12-3:18
Several years ago the comedy “Twins” starring Arnold Schwarzenegger and Danny De Vito depicted two polar opposites: the one super-sized marvel of humanity, the other short and dumpy, something of a misfit. In comparison to the ‘super-apostles’ of Corinth. Paul was similarly written off as a wimp and ineffective. Moreover, in their eyes he was unreliable. He changed his travel plans at the drop of a hat. Whilst his letters were bold and brash, his person was wishy-washy and non-descript.
Preacher: Alan Cameron
Verses: 2 Corithians 1:12-2:11
“This will hurt me more than it hurts you” said Mom reaching for the wooden spoon. Sounds familiar? Now that corporal punishment has been banished from schools, and increasingly questioned whether appropriate in the home, these words may well become a distant memory. Be that as it may, love by its very nature hurts. There are times when authentic love needs to inflict pain for love’s sake. The boomerang effect impacts both parties.
The unkindest cut of all is the accusation that one simply does not care, that one is indifferent to the plight of others. This was the accusation levelled against Paul. He didn’t really like the Corinthians. He isn’t bothered about them, if he were, he would have visited them as he promised. His nasty letter and cancelled visit simply underscored his disdain for them. They would be better off without him. After all he is wishy-washy, not a proper Apostle you know. He doesn’t have the right papers. His gifts don’t measure up. He’s just a charlatan, a fake. This was the accusation Paul faced from his opponents who had negatively influenced a substantial number of house churches in and around Corinth.
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