Wednesday 6 October 2010

New Beginnings

I don’t know about you, but I have never been very good at handling new situations and directions in life. There are times when we choose or appear to have the choice to make a new start or head off on a different track to the one we have been on for quite a while and where we feel comfortable.

I am and have been at the stage for a while now where my life seems to be moving in a different direction. It has given me a sense of nervous and excited anticipation, discomfort, uncertainty and disorientation at different times and sometimes in various combinations of these factors.

One thing I am trying to remember, in all of this, is that there is a greater purpose, and that although the future is always uncertain for us all, “I know who holds the future and He’ll guide me with His hand. With God things don’t just happen, everything by Him is planned.” I remember singing that song at a New Year’s day service and it was followed by the most testing year I had experienced up till then! A friend of mine says, “Don’t fear the future, God has already been there.” I think it’s his motto in life, and he certainly hasn’t had an easy ride!

Looking at our lives from our perspective is a bit like looking at the back of a tapestry or piece of embroidery. All you see is tangled threads and what looks like disorganized chaos, but God looks at it from the front and sees, beauty, order and a pleasing result. If we make it our plan to please Him, He will guide us each step of our earthly pilgrimage. If we have put our trust in  the sacrifice of Jesus in giving His life to save us from our sins, and asked  for and accepted His forgiveness, we have already passed from death to eternal life.

Once we know God through His Son, our Lord Jesus, we get to realize that He is in the business of conforming us to the likeness of His Son, a work that goes on to the end of our earthly life and will only be completed when we go to live with Him for ever. Yes, this involves, sacrifice, trials, temptations and suffering, but there are also foretastes of Heaven, rejoicing, and enjoyment of His creation and the many gifts and benefits He showers on us every day.

God will supply all our needs, see us through the difficult times and ultimately bring us safely into His presence. He will also enable us to cope with changes in our lives and circumstances which to us seem so big at the time but are just a small part of His eternal plan.

Psalm 23

The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not be in want.

He makes me lie down in green pastures,

He leads me beside quiet waters.

He restores my soul.

He guides me in paths of righteousness for His name’s sake.

Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for You are with me; Your rod and Your staff, they comfort me.

You prepare a table before me in the presence of my enemies.

You anoint my head with oil; my cup overflows.

Surely goodness and love will follow me all the days of my life, and I will dwell in the house of the Lord for ever.

shepherd

Saturday 7 August 2010

Some thoughts about praying

Some thoughts about praying expand
Here are some interesting thoughts about the nature of prayer and being God and Heavenward directed in our praying. I have always found The Lord's Prayer a great help and comfort when I am 'stuck' in my prayer life, and it is interesting to see how it is central not only in Catholic and Anglican liturgies but also in Coptic and Jewish worship. In personal devotion it is also an invaluable aid.
The Kaddish is a prayer found in the Jewish prayer service. The central theme of the Kaddish is the magnification and sanctification of God ‘s holy name. It is the traditional prayer for the dead in the synagogue.

There are variations on the Kaddish, and I offer here the more general form for your consideration:

“May the great Name of God be exalted and sanctified, throughout the world, which he has created according to his will. May his Kingship be established in your lifetime and in your days, and in the lifetime of the entire household of Israel, swiftly and in the near future; and say, Amen.
May his great name be blessed, forever and ever.
Blessed, praised, glorified, exalted, extolled, honored, elevated, and lauded be the Name of the holy one, Blessed is he- above and beyond any blessings and hymns, Praises and consolations which are uttered in the world; and say,
May there be abundant peace from Heaven and life, upon us and upon all Israel; and say, Amen.”

The striking nature of this prayer for the dead is that it does not mention the dead! The prayer is about God. It reminds me of the time when a funeral services in a traditional liturgical church were about God. It used to be that one heard complaints that the Anglican (or Roman or Lutheran) liturgy for the burial of the dead did not even mention the name of the deceased. Nowadays matters have swung much too far in the other direction. Our funerals in the west are now ALL about the dead. God is mentioned only as a measure of respectability or a desperate attempt to redeem the one who has died.

We can learn a lot from the Jewish Kaddish as we think about the prayer that Jesus gave us to pray. We pray also in a similar manner to that of our Jewish brothers and sisters, asking that God’s name be made holy, that God’s kingdom come so that God’s will may be accomplished. We acknowledge God as the source of all earthly blessings. We seek redemption, and we pray that we not fail in our courage at the hour of death and that peace (shalom) will prevail at the end.

In the Jewish faith the Kaddish in its various forms is not recited only on special occasions such as funerals. The Kaddish closes every service. The Kaddish is said daily and even several times a day. As one Rabbi says, “Just do it!” One understands why this admonition is so critical to the life of faith, for God is often hidden behind the veil of this life with its suffering and injustice. Prayers like the Kaddish and the Lord’s Prayer not only evoke God’s presence but they also evoke from us a true sense of humanity as we stand before God who made heaven and earth.

One of the things that attracted me to the liturgical tradition was the constant use of the Lord’s prayer in the life of the faithful. This was a great contrast with my very non-liturgical (or anti-liturgical) upbringing, in which we were taught to use the Lord’s prayer simply as a model by which we were to pray strictly from the heart.

But Jesus did not instruct his disciples to fashion their prayers along the line of a model. He said to them, “When you pray, say: Father, hallowed be your name. Your kingdom come. Give us each day our daily bread. And forgive us our sins, for we ourselves forgive everyone indebted to us. And do not bring us to the time of trial.” (Luke 11:2-4)

I don’t think we have any liturgies that are without the Lord’s prayer. It’s almost Pavlovian. When I hear the prayer, I think it is time to leave. One parishioner once worried about our use of the small bell when we pray the Our Father during the Eucharistic prayer. They said, it almost made them salivate for the bread and wine and the future that is promised in the sacred meal. Now that is Pavlovian!

But the truth is, we are to pray the Lord’s prayer as often as possible in order that we remain conscious of the truth of the incomprehensible mystery of the presence of God around us mortal creatures who are incomplete without the knowledge that we are loved by this same God. That is who we really are.

The Didache, which is one of the oldest manuals on the Christian faith, dictates that we pray this way three times a day. (8:3)

In the Coptic liturgy the Lord’s prayer is said over and over again at an incredible speed. For the prayer in its totality evokes the sacred presence. The Lord’s Prayer is a linguistic symbol capable of placing us properly in the world and before God.

We should recite the Lord’s prayer as often as possible, as Jesus admonishes in the Gospel. Ignore the wrongheaded advice from simpleminded fundamentalists that would have you believe that any prayer that is written down can not be from the heart. Our Lord has bidden us to pray this prayer.

The repetition is nothing other than our persistent turning to God for help, renewal and peace. In this way the prayer delivers the blessing that Christ himself came to deliver—life now and forevermore.

When the faithful visit each other at times of illness or in times of grief, it is the Lord’s prayer that most often is the decisive moment among us. As I have visited with those who face surgery or the funeral of a beloved one, I sensed more than once that all the effort that we put into holding ourselves together, of running on our own steam, condenses into the tears of relief that God is here, and in the end it is all about God.

There are variations on the Kaddish, and I offer here the more general form for your consideration:

“May the great Name of God be exalted and sanctified, throughout the world, which he has created according to his will. May his Kingship be established in your lifetime and in your days, and in the lifetime of the entire household of Israel, swiftly and in the near future; and say, Amen.
May his great name be blessed, forever and ever.
Blessed, praised, glorified, exalted, extolled, honored, elevated, and lauded be the Name of the holy one, Blessed is he- above and beyond any blessings and hymns, Praises and consolations which are uttered in the world; and say,
May there be abundant peace from Heaven and life, upon us and upon all Israel; and say, Amen.”

The striking nature of this prayer for the dead is that it does not mention the dead! The prayer is about God. It reminds me of the time when a funeral services in a traditional liturgical church were about God. It used to be that one heard complaints that the Anglican (or Roman or Lutheran) liturgy for the burial of the dead did not even mention the name of the deceased. Nowadays matters have swung much too far in the other direction. Our funerals in the west are now ALL about the dead. God is mentioned only as a measure of respectability or a desperate attempt to redeem the one who has died.

We can learn a lot from the Jewish Kaddish as we think about the prayer that Jesus gave us to pray. We pray also in a similar manner to that of our Jewish brothers and sisters, asking that God’s name be made holy, that God’s kingdom come so that God’s will may be accomplished. We acknowledge God as the source of all earthly blessings. We seek redemption, and we pray that we not fail in our courage at the hour of death and that peace (shalom) will prevail at the end.

In the Jewish faith the Kaddish in its various forms is not recited only on special occasions such as funerals. The Kaddish closes every service. The Kaddish is said daily and even several times a day. As one Rabbi says, “Just do it!” One understands why this admonition is so critical to the life of faith, for God is often hidden behind the veil of this life with its suffering and injustice. Prayers like the Kaddish and the Lord’s Prayer not only evoke God’s presence but they also evoke from us a true sense of humanity as we stand before God who made heaven and earth.

One of the things that attracted me to the liturgical tradition was the constant use of the Lord’s prayer in the life of the faithful. This was a great contrast with my very non-liturgical (or anti-liturgical) upbringing, in which we were taught to use the Lord’s prayer simply as a model by which we were to pray strictly from the heart.

But Jesus did not instruct his disciples to fashion their prayers along the line of a model. He said to them, “When you pray, say: Father, hallowed be your name. Your kingdom come. Give us each day our daily bread. And forgive us our sins, for we ourselves forgive everyone indebted to us. And do not bring us to the time of trial.” (Luke 11:2-4)

I don’t think we have any liturgies that are without the Lord’s prayer. It’s almost Pavlovian. When I hear the prayer, I think it is time to leave. One parishioner once worried about our use of the small bell when we pray the Our Father during the Eucharistic prayer. They said, it almost made them salivate for the bread and wine and the future that is promised in the sacred meal. Now that is Pavlovian!

But the truth is, we are to pray the Lord’s prayer as often as possible in order that we remain conscious of the truth of the incomprehensible mystery of the presence of God around us mortal creatures who are incomplete without the knowledge that we are loved by this same God. That is who we really are.

The Didache, which is one of the oldest manuals on the Christian faith, dictates that we pray this way three times a day. (8:3)

In the Coptic liturgy the Lord’s prayer is said over and over again at an incredible speed. For the prayer in its totality evokes the sacred presence. The Lord’s Prayer is a linguistic symbol capable of placing us properly in the world and before God.

We should recite the Lord’s prayer as often as possible, as Jesus admonishes in the Gospel. Ignore the wrongheaded advice from simpleminded fundamentalists that would have you believe that any prayer that is written down can not be from the heart. Our Lord has bidden us to pray this prayer.

The repetition is nothing other than our persistent turning to God for help, renewal and peace. In this way the prayer delivers the blessing that Christ himself came to deliver—life now and forevermore.

When the faithful visit each other at times of illness or in times of grief, it is the Lord’s prayer that most often is the decisive moment among us. As I have visited with those who face surgery or the funeral of a beloved one, I sensed more than once that all the effort that we put into holding ourselves together, of running on our own steam, condenses into the tears of relief that God is here, and in the end it is all about God.

Read more at lifeondoverbeach.wordpress.com

Thursday 15 July 2010

Make Disciples of all Nations


I came across this article which investigates what it means to make disciples of all nations as commanded by Jesus in Matthew 28 verses 19-20 where He says:

"Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you. And behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age."

Editorial- Christian News- Christian Action

by Juanita Berguson

Make disciples of all nations
Who would ever think that you or I could fulfill the command of Jesus, make disciples of all nations.

Let’s examine 5 keys to making disciples of all nations. Success is closer than we might think. Five simple steps put us on a path of fruitfulness, including being serious about what Jesus says, how we live our lives, putting His purposes first in our hearts, and not being satisfied until we see a harvest!!!

Taking Jesus seriously.
We all have the tendency to spiritualize things. When we do that, we assume that there is some type of essence to what is being said, but it really doesn’t have anything to do with our lives here and now where all of us live. The enemy doesn’t have a lot of power over us; one thing he can do is deceive us. If we don’t believe that Jesus was serious, we won’t even begin to make disciples – culminating in making disciples of all nations.
Like reproduces like.
Is your or my life the type of life that SHOULD be reproduced? Jesus said to pass on to his followers all the things that are important to him. Is that how we live our lives – with Christ in the center and being careful to observe all the things that are important to him? Those we impact will share their faith as much as we do; they will pray like we do; their passion will mirror ours. Making disciples of all nations starts in our own hearts!
Mission and Purpose
Jesus ministered with his face ‘set like a flint.’ He knew what his purpose was and he fulfilled that purpose. We have two great Mandates, To love God and to love our neighbor and to go into all the world and make disciples – culminating in the making of disciples of all nations. It will take a lifetime to fulfill this mandate, actually, many lifetimes. The Mandates are given as our mission, but until you and I make them our purpose, the will remain unfilled. Life pushes us off course; constantly re-evaluating our purpose helps keep us on track!
Be Fruitful
Somehow a teaching has crept into the church: God doesn’t call you to be fruitful, just faithful. Hmmm… That is not what I read in John 15. We are to go and bear fruit. Making disciples is the most precious of fruit that we can bear. If a farmer plants a field and the harvest is small, he considers what needs to improve the harvest: water, fertilizer, quality of seed, etc. It is a learning process. The farmer expects to see a harvest if conditions are right. The Kingdom harvest is no different! If conditions are right, if we do our part – the Holy Spirit always draws people and always makes God’s truths real in their lives. Our role is to be responsible and continue to learn the ways of fruitfulness.
Learn from others
It takes a lifetime to master a skill. The skill of making disciples is not new – there are those who have mastered the skill. Scripture says that some produce a little harvest while the harvest of others is multiplied! Are we deliberate in finding those who are fruitful? Are we deliberate in learning from them?

Too many think that there are those special, ‘gifted’ people who are fruitful, and then there is the ‘rest of us.’ If we examine the approach of those who are fruitful, we always find these things: They take Jesus’ command seriously. They deliberately learn to be fruitful and spend time learning from others. They understand that making a skilled follower of Christ starts with me being a skilled follower. These are the things that, if we dedicate our live to them, will create a multiplied impact. Skilled Christ-followers making skilled Christ-followers will make disciples of NATIONS!


A Review of the IPED/APAD

I have just obtained the 7 inch screen version of the IPED/IPAD which is basically a copy of Apple's much hyped IPAD. Although the screen is smaller than the IPAD, and it runs on Google's Android O/S, it is a lot cheaper than the IPAD. I bought mine for about £155 and someone has informed me that it can now be obtained from some suppliers for as little as £130. I bought mine from SG International in Bradford, through ebay, but another place worth looking is Chinagrabber who import a lot of Chinese products.

The IPED/IPAD comes with its own leads and battery charger and is easy to operate once you reset your Google location from China to wherever you happen to be. I have only had to look at the instructions a few times as the device is so straightforward to use. I had it connected to my broadband Wi-Fi within seconds and was soon up and running. Considering how long it took me to get my head round my Blackberry Bold 9000 (about 8 weeks, I reckon, at least) I was very impressed with its simplicity and accessibility.

I read recently that Android provide 57% of their apps free, Blackberry (which I also use) provide 26% of theirs free and Apple provide a much lower amount of free apps.

On the IPED/APAD there is an icon labelled 'Market'. By clicking on this you can search applications for sale and for free download and they are installed within seconds. The device tends to prefer using mobile rather than desktop versions which is appropriate for the smaller size screen. There is also an 8 inch screen version of the IPED available, so I have heard.

Having seen an Apple IPAD and being rather underwhelmed by what it does for the high price involved, I was more than impressed with my new purchase. On the downside, the battery seems to need a lot of recharging, I think I need to check the contacts and maybe try a different battery to see whether this is just the way the machine works or whether it is a faulty battery.

I haven't tried out the ebook possibilities fully yet, but I find it clear for reading newspaper, magazine and news articles.

Another useful function is that I can stream music through my downstairs hi-fi from the hard drive of my upstairs computer, plugging in a lead from the 3.5mm jack headphone socket to the phono input on my hi-fi. The actual speaker in the IPED/APAD is rather weak and quiet for my liking. The sound comes out through a very narrow slot on the back of the device.

I would definitely recommend this product, especially as it also has a built-in camera which is also missing on the IPAD. There is a lot of talk about Android catching up and maybe even overtaking Apple in the future, and from what I have seen so far, I am inclined to believe this is a distinct possibility.


Do we still have 'Free' Speech?

There have been a number of developments recently which I feel are quite worrying in relation to what we once knew as a right to free speech.

The age of political correctness has hopefully come to an end following the demise of 13 years of socialist (nanny-state) government in the UK. I say this with a degree of hope that we are now living in a free society where it is acceptable to express one's opinions, beliefs and views knowing that they may be agreed with by some, assented to by others and denigrated or counteracted and argued against by another group of people.

Within this framework we know there must still be boundaries, as J.S. Mills argued, total freedom would lead to anarchy and one person's total freedom leads to the enslavement or imprisonment of other people.

We now live in a strange world where a large swathe of people have freedom to express themselves via the internet, press, radio and TV, but there are parts of the world where people are denied such freedom, for example, Cuba, North Korea, Iran and China. In North Korea only Government officials (very few) and Higher Education professionals are granted free access to the internet and it only gives them access to approved sources, probably little or nothing outside N. Korea. In China there is a firewall which we all know about, and within the last day or so their equivalent of Twitter is supposedly down for maintenance. I wonder how long that maintenance will last? I am unaware of the current situation in Iran, but I guess Twitter, Facebook and other Social media are scrutinised by the authorities and their 'misuse' can lead to political imprisonment if the regime is painted in a bad light by 'dissident' voices.

I believe we are truly privileged to be able to 'freely' express our thoughts and views in the ways we do, but I wonder sometimes how much longer we will have the opportunity to do so. I think we need to make the most of the freedom we have while it lasts and hope and pray that those parts of the world where they don't possess such a privilege will one day become free and able to stand up for their views and beliefs in the same way.


Sunday 11 July 2010

Calling Technical Support for Help

I came across this little article earlier today, which I thought might touch a chord with some of you. It consists of a dialogue between Technical Support and a customer.

Tech Support: Yes, Ma’am…. how can I help you?

Customer: Well, after much consideration, I’ve decided to install Love. Can you guide me though the process?

Tech Support: Yes. I can help you. Are you ready to proceed?

Customer: Well, I’m not very technical, but I think I’m ready. What do I do first?

Tech Support: The first step is to open your Heart. Have you located your Heart, ma’am?

Customer: Yes, but there are several other programs running now. Is it okay to install Love while they are running?

Tech Support: What programs are running, ma’am?

Customer: Let’s see, I have Past Hurt, Low Self-Esteem, Grudge and Resentment running right now.

Tech Support: No problem, Love will gradually erase Past Hurt from your current operating system. It may remain in your permanent memory, but it will no longer disrupt other programs. Love will eventually override Low Self-Esteem with a module of its own called High Self-Esteem. However, you have to completely turn off Grudge and Resentment. Those programs prevent Love from being properly installed. Can you turn those off, ma’am?

Customer: I don’t know how to turn them off. Can you tell me how?

Tech Support : With pleasure. Go to your start menu and invoke Forgiveness. Do this as many times as necessary until Grudge and Resentment have been completely erased.

Customer: Okay, done! Love has started installing itself. Is that normal?

Tech Support: Yes, but remember that you have only the base program. You need to begin connecting to other Hearts in order to get the upgrades.

Customer: Oops! I have an error message already. It says, “Error - Program not run on external components .” What should I do?

Tech Support: Don’t worry, ma’am. It means that the Love program is set up to run on Internal Hearts, but has not yet been run on your Heart. In non- technical terms, it simply means you have to Love yourself before you can Love others.

Customer: So, what should I do?

Tech Support: Pull down Self-Acceptance; then click on the following files: Forgive-Self; Realize Your Worth; and Acknowledge your Limitations.

Customer: Okay, done.

Tech Support: Now, copy them to the “My Heart” directory. The system will overwrite any conflicting files and begin patching faulty programming. Also, you need to delete Verbose Self-Criticism from all directories and empty your Recycle Bin to make sure it is completely gone and never comes back.

Customer: Got it. Hey! My heart is filling up with new files. Smile is playing on my monitor and Peace and Contentment are copying themselves all over My Heart. Is this normal?

Tech Support: Sometimes. For others it takes awhile, but eventually everything gets it at the proper time. So Love is installed and running. One more thing before we hang up. Love is Freeware. Be sure to give it and its various modules to everyone you meet. They will in turn share it with others and return some cool modules back to you.

Customer: Thank you, God.


Sunday 20 June 2010

A Note to Hebrews

This is an article I posted on a Jewish website earlier today, 20th. June, 2010.

I have been through a large number of challenging experiences recently, as many of us do, but believe that Hashem is speaking to us a family through the events which we would not have chosen ourselves.

In a letter written to Hebrews I have just come across the following words.

"It is for discipline you have to endure. Hashem is treating you as sons. For what father is there whom a father does not discipline? If you are left without discipline, in which all have participated, then you are illegitimate children and not sons. Besides this, we have had earthly fathers who discplined us for a short time as it seemed best to them, but He disciplines us for our good, that we may share His holiness. For the moment all discipline seems painful rather than pleasant, but later it the peaceful fruit of righteousness to those who have been trained by it."

I believe that Hashem allows these sometimes bitter experiences and sufferings for a purpose. Without going into gory details, we have been withheld payment on a large itemized invoice, defrauded of over £1,100, had our car broken into with phones cards and life sustaining essential medication stolen while we were away from home on a Bank holiday, we were only going on a 20 minute walk. Yesterday, my son Benjamin ended up in hospital on his birthday with what seems to be quite a serious illness, his immune system is destroying the platelets in his blood. He may have to live with it, he is only 27 and has just provided us with our first grandson. I am convinced that Hashem is looking after us through all of this and is allowing it all for our own good!

Therefore, my friends, I am holding on to my faith in the Infinite Wisdom of Hashem. I hope this will be of some help and comfort to others. Do let me know if you have any questions or comments or experiences you want to share. Every blessing to you all, my friends.