C3 Church - Crawley
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Building Blocks - Purpose

Written for Journey on Thursday, 22 July 2010 03:01

We often talk about ‘building of faith’… but what does this look like?


Reflecting on my only life I discover the question really goes straight to the core… simply because it revolves around that which is at the core – my purpose.


Now if I was to ask who had a clearly defined purpose in life who could confidently put there hand up and say yes….


I suppose a more general question would be who thinks it is important?


Well hopefully in what I briefly share I am able to stir some thought and challenge you as God as been challenging me... Because our purpose (the why) transpires to vision (the where) shaping the mission (the how to) which ultimately determines values (how I live out everyday).

 


A Picture of Worship

Written for Journey on Thursday, 08 July 2010 02:44

Hidden within the gospels is one of the greatest pictures of what it means to worship.


…Let me paint the scene…


Jesus has been invited out for a feed. He has His posse there and they have just kicked back at the table.


Now their host for the evening was one of those religious guys… a real political heavy weight at the time. An election around the corner… a sudden change in the leadership of the party… what better time to wine and dine a guy such as Jesus!

Radical in dress, behavior and philosophy… going from town to town with a rough group of guys… yet an amazing ability to draw crowds in the 1000’s… In the eyes of any political leader this guy was a wild card you probably wanted on your side.



Handling The Big Issues

Written for Influencing Culture on Wednesday, 07 April 2010 14:00

How Do We Handle the Big Issues Facing the Church?

Found this article from a great blogsite - TheResurgence... Worth a read!

Share your thoughts with others by commenting below. Hope you guys and girls are all encouraged and challenged.

Nate B

 


The Power of a Second

Written for Journey on Wednesday, 07 April 2010 11:00

It is an amazing concept isn’t it – time. Arguable the building bricks of life… It starts so innocently baby steps… school… it appears to speed up for a period of about 40 years until finally… wife by your side… caravan on the back… line in the water we drift of to sleep dreaming about the 300 yard drive we hit straight down the fair way this morning.

 You can just hear the words of “Maximus” echo in the forest; mounted on a horse, stirring the hearts of his troops… “WHAT YOU DO IN THIS LIFE ECHOS IN ETERNITY!

 Yet considering it’s importance – despite being the fabric which makes up a human life isn’t it amazing how seldom it takes centre stage…. But still the time ticks on: seconds… minutes… hours.

 It is going too fast! We need to slow it down… if only I had done this differently… I wonder what would have become of that choice… I wish I never made that mistake….

 Yet on it ticks…

 

 


Can Christians Drink?

Written for Lifestyle on Thursday, 24 September 2009 18:49

Written by Kong Hee on May 2, 2009

At its 36th Bi-Annual National Conference held on April 23-24, 2007, the Assemblies of God in Australia introduced a new code allowing AG pastors to consume alcohol. However it also urged extreme caution when drinking, and highlighted that drunkenness is prohibited.

According to the Evangelical Dictionary of Theology, throughout the first 1,800 years of church history, Christians consumed alcoholic beverages as a common part of everyday life and nearly always used wine (fermented grape juice) in the Eucharist or the Lord’s Supper. Many of the early church fathers allowed wine drinking in moderation. The Catholic Church requires properly fermented wine in their Eucharist. The Reformers from Luther and Calvin to Zwingli and Knox strongly supported the enjoyment of wine as a biblical blessing. It was said that Calvin’s annual salary in Geneva included seven barrels of wine. Even the conservative and strict English Puritans were temperate partakers of wine and ale, which they considered as “God’s good gifts.” It was in the mid-1800s when some Protestant Christians moved from this historic position of allowing moderate use of alcohol to the total prohibiting of all drinking.

Are Christians allowed to drink wine and beverages that contain alcohol? Let us look at some standard objections against drinking of alcoholic beverages: