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Showing posts with label christian ministry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label christian ministry. Show all posts

Thursday, June 18, 2020

From the Wayside Chapel by Jon Owen



Dear Inner Circle,
Imagine the hottest day you’ve known in Sydney. Now add 10 degrees and you’ll begin to understand summer in Mount Druitt where I used to live prior to starting at Wayside Chapel. On a 38 degree day, 90% humidity, a mate and I engaged in an important social ritual; the famous “slurpee run”. The much-needed icy drink from the local 7-Eleven was the only thing that could bring relief on those sweltering days. We hopped into the car and cruised off, but we weren’t even 200m down the road when the flash of sirens stopped us. We looked at each other nervously as we both weren’t wearing shirts. I had only ever had positive experiences with police, so I was calm, polite and engaging, turning on my charm, wondering if wearing no shirt was illegal. When asked for my licence, my heart sank, I’d left it at home. I apologised and offered to go back to grab it, as we were close. “No problems,” said the young policeman, “just make sure it’s on you next time”. As he drove off, I looked over and realised that my mate had a look of frozen terror. I tried to bring some calm into the car, “He didn’t even worry about our shirts mate.” “The shirts were the least of my worries,” said my young friend, “if that was just me, I’d probably have spent the night in lock-up”.
Growing up dark-skinned in Australia through the 70s and 80s was no bed of roses for us. As a child, I was taunted for being black. I was occasionally beaten up for nothing other than the colour of my skin. There were very few roles in school plays available for us dark-skinned kids – none of my sisters were ever cast as Snow White that’s for sure! We landed the roles of villains with surprising ease though. Mum and Dad copped a fair bit of verbal abuse too. Once I recall walking with a white girl in a shopping centre and someone told her that she was, “doing wrong”. Admittedly the “Battered Sav” we were sharing had its drawbacks, but I suspect it was her friendship with a black guy that had caused the offence, not the food. 
I’m not prepared to call this racism. It was fear and misguided assumptions about my racial group. For me, racism is not so much a biological construct as it is a socio-political one. Once much of the apprehension around me slowly dissipated, apart from a few minor hiccups along the way, my life has been a privileged one, and in some ways, my skin colour even worked for my advantage. However, I know that I have also been afforded a lot more opportunities than many others along the way. Racism contains an element of prejudice, but it is also about power. We all too often confuse prejudice for racism. Racism is a system that allows a racial group already in power to retain that power. The same system that I trust, filled my mate with terror. He has lost cousins in custody. We will not address racism through mere sentiment alone, by claiming to be “colour-blind” or believing in equality. It only comes as we examine the systems and structures that advantage some over others and re-assemble a far more equitable and just system. As Cornel West, an American philosopher, political activist, and social critic says, “justice is what love looks like in public”.
On a slightly lighter note, our teams that visit people in their homes have started to deliver pot plants with cuttings from our gardens for ‘adoption’; it's a small gift with instructions on how to care and nurture the plant. It's providing fertile ground for conversations. There is nothing more human than a conversation and it’s exactly what we need in these times. Last week a man who we visited named his plant “Barry”. It’s more fun for him, when we ask about how Barry is going than to ask him about his own feelings. One of the ways we create ‘the other’ is by caring for something else. Watch little kids with dolls or pets. For us to ask, “How is Barry going?” is truly a move toward conversation and improved mental health, you can see it in his face as he lights up when he is asked about his "mate".
Thanks for being part of our Inner Circle,
Jon

Jon Owen
Pastor & CEO
Wayside Chapel

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Friday, February 15, 2019

"Polished stones and sharpened arrows"-Another book in my library.

"Polished Stones and Sharpened Arrows" is a book written in 1888  by a man called CW Bibb.
 The idea of this book was to help Christians share their faith with others and also help them grow in their Christian life.
I have the book in my collection.
 It's full of illustrations which when  I read the book I saw how many familiar illustrations there are that I was taught to use myself when doing personal evangelism .
 I still think there's a value with of this type of illustration even though of course a lot of the illustrations that are used in personal evangelism and stories might be anecdotal
 some maybe true some maybe just to give an illustration.
But they can be helpful so I'm going to share some of these in my  my blog

 This next story which has a historical authenticity comes in a chapter titled "Trust in Christ".

"Romans 8:18  KJV

18 For I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us.

Margaret Wilson a young lady of 18, living in Wigtown, Scotland, was cruelly condemned  by James the 2nd to be drowned for her faith in Christ .
She was taken to the seashore and tied to a stake so the rising tide would slowly overflow her and give her an opportunity to recant her faith.
Calmly she awaited to the approaching tide.
 Someone asked "do you have any fears of the future."
 She calmly replied "Christ is my stay"

 As the waves came up to her mouth she repeated these lines.

 "For I am persuaded that neither death nor life nor angels nor principalities nor powers,
 nor things present, nor things to come, nor height nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord"



 Both illustrations by John Everett Millais

Read about Margaret here.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margaret_Wilson_(Scottish_martyr) 

Tuesday, March 13, 2018

The Power of Presence


This is the message I shared with the Parkrose Nursing Home Church on 11/3/18

Intro
I want to talk today about the Power of Presence.
1. On our presence with others (ministering by our presence)
2.The experience of our coming into God’s presence,
3. on our presence with God and resting in His presence.
Ministering by our Presence
Some few years ago now, I was going through a real dark period in my life.
I was in the grip of a serious depression.
I was a Christian and in fact this is only going back about 8 years.
I was having trouble functioning as there was this so called “black cloud” hanging over my head.
At the peak of this a friend of ours had to move out of her quite small flat into care in a nursing home.
It took several months for the decision to be made that she was not well enough ever to be able to go back into her flat and live independently.
To get me out of the house and trying to function, rather than wallow in my thoughts, we decided, Lesley suggested, that I would go and feed Bronte’s little cat daily in her flat.
This was until the decision was finally made that she wouldn’t be coming home and her flat would be sold.
The little black and white cat was very timid and frightened of me to start with but because I was feeding her, she came to trust me and accept me.
I would spend about an hour there each time daily, in mainly darkness, just me and the cat.
I tried praying in this time about the things that were troubling me but God seemed miles away.
The depression was not lifting.
The walls seemed to be closing in on me.
I was praying like mad all this time but the problem was my praying was really only reminding me of my despair.
That caused a worsening depression.
I was focusing on the problem not Jesus.
For people in this situation it is sometimes wise to tell people that you will pray for them.
And actually do so in their presence on occasions.
Eventually the decision was made to sell the flat so I stopped going.
I don’t remember who took the cat over.
In that time we didn’t speak much,
 the cat and I.
Many of us talk to Pets and Animals as if they are human , don’t we?
In fact any conversation was only one way.
I am sure though the little cat took some comfort in my presence and in a strange way I looked forward to my daily visit.
I felt I at least was doing something useful.
I was ministering to the cat and in doing so to myself.
I am sure many of you believe in ministering to your pets.

This is one of our cats who we minister to daily


I longed for God to heal me and the situation at that time but God seemed remote.
Any visits I had from friends or relatives during that time of depression did not seem to help me.
I could not communicate very well.
I was very stand offish.
Their presence didn’t seem to help although I knew they meant well.
Sometimes people even seemed to be talking about me as if I wasn’t present.
Thinking because I was not responding to them they probably thought I could not hear them.
How often we are so insensitive and guilty of that sort of thing.
During this time we went on a 2 week holiday to Central Australia.
Our 2 best friends, husband and wife came with us.
I was barely on the same wavelength as Lesley and our friends.
I loved the trip but at the same time was a lot of the time overwhelmed with depression.

On the 2009 trip to Central Australia

I was really quite a kill joy most of the time.
They were incredibly gracious and understanding.
Our friends did not try and fix me, they just were there for me.
When  we minister to others sometimes its better just to listen and be there rather than try and come up with our own recipe for how God can fix it.
I was being ministered to by their presence and love and their prayers.
I don’t know if any of you have heard of Merril Womach.
He died in 2014.
This is from his obituary,
“Merrill is as well known for his amazing vocal artistry and four-octave tenor voice as he is for his creative entrepreneurship that built a national music service for funeral homes designed to minister to families during their time of loss. Years ago, while his fledgling business was growing, a private plane he was flying crashed in the woods upon take off. Merrill not only beat the odds of surviving the fiery plane crash, he also continued to sing and inspire others with his strong faith in God.”

A documentary was made about his recovery called “He Restoreth my Soul”.

Merrill received severe burns over his whole face in that crash.

His whole face was terribly scarred.
When in recovery he become very depressed.

In the documentary he said the thing that helped the depression lift was when a friend came to his house one night and they just sat and talked and reminisced about good times in the past.

There had been much prayer and medical help before that but the simple presence of his friend was the catalyst to finding the joy of living again.

This is the reality of the ministry of our presence.

Now;

COMING INTO GOD’s PRESENCE
It’s never too late to come into His presence.
We come into His presence because of His Grace and outstretched hands.
“As many as received Him to them He gives the right to become Children of God.”
We can come within the veil, into His presence, because of what Jesus has done for us on the cross.
At the time of the crucifixion the veil in the Temple in Jerusalem was ripped from top to bottom signifying we can now enter the Holy of Holies.
I got the idea for today’s sermon from the title of the latest book by Neil Anderson.
It’s called “the power of presence”.


Neil has had a very active ministry as a seminary professor, pastor and author and founder of Freedom in Christ Ministries.

He has written this book and shares some wonderful insights as he daily spends time with his wife who suffers from dementia.
Our reading today from Psalm 95 he speaks about in his book.

Psalm 95:1-7 King James Version (KJV)


95 O come, let us sing unto the Lord: let us make a joyful noise to the rock of our salvation.
Let us come before his presence with thanksgiving, and make a joyful noise unto him with psalms.
For the Lord is a great God, and a great King above all gods.
In his hand are the deep places of the earth: the strength of the hills is his also.
The sea is his, and he made it: and his hands formed the dry land.
O come, let us worship and bow down: let us kneel before the Lord our maker.
For he is our God; and we are the people of his pasture, and the sheep of his hand. To day if ye will hear his voice,

It emphasizes coming into the presence of God with thanksgiving.
It also finishes “Today if you hear His voice”
We have been giving praise to God with a thankful heart.
What will happen in our lives if today we hear His voice as we come into His presence?
Will it affect our own behavior?
Will it be encouraging us to minister by our presence to others?
Coming into His presence is responding to the call of Jesus.
When we became Christians we invited and accepted Jesus to be our savior.
Coming into His presence we can grow into our full salvation.
Our Maturity as Christians.
Now we come to
RESTING  IN HIS PRESENCE
The other day we were doing some babysitting at our place.
Indy who is 5 asked me to help him put together a lego thing he was making.
I said I have trouble getting down on the floor Indy so I might not be much help.
So I sat there for about 20mins.
He did not really need my help.
But he was very pleased I was in his presence.
Little kids often like to check you are still there and on their team.
We go about our lives quite independently from God but we are comforted by knowing He is always with us.
He is always present.
In the good times and the tough times.
We practice the presence of God when we walk in the light.
“ If we say we have fellowship with Him while we walk in darkness, we lie and do not practice the truth; but if we walk in the light, as He is in the light, then we have fellowship with one another,and the blood of Jesus cleanses us from all sin.” 1 John 1:6-7.
God has promised to never leave of forsake us.
His Holy Spirit has come to indwell us as the Comforter..
He will ensure we can rest in His presence.
He is here with us both personally and as a congregation today.
Let’s make sure we continue to rest in His presence
 And
 if we are able to,
minister to others by our presence.


AMEN