Monday, 27 May 2013
To boldly go, where no-one has gone before !
To boldly go, where no-one has gone before !
When I was growing up, my parents and grandparents would take me and my two sisters on holidays to Ifracombe on the North Devon Coast, and more often or not we would go by the MV Balmoral, which would sail between Swansea and Ilfracombe in the Summer months, and while there go for boat trips that would sail from Ilfracombe harbour, I have many happy memories of going there as child and early teenager, because of these memories I enjoy spending time by the Coast and now live in a Seaside Resort, although I have not been on a boat trip for a while, I'm fascinated both by boats and the Sea.
I remember a few years ago, while on holidays in Porthleven, Cornwall, spending time in the National Maritime Museum in Falmouth and had an interesting and enjoyable time there, although one thing I noticed more than others that the boats on display, none of them were in their original context , it was fascinating looking at these boats and reading all about them, but all them weren't doing the job they were designed and build for, yes, being on the water. Porthleven is a lovely, fishing village situated near Helston, and has a very picturesque harbour and I noticed that all the boats were doing the purpose they were designed and build for. Like other seaside holiday destinations, Porthleven has several shops selling goods to tourists, some of these shops sell model ships, they look exactly like the originals, but they could never do, the same job as the original ! they were just for display
For centuries Great Britain has been a maritime nation, and many of our national heroes have been sailors, from the historic figures like Sir Francis Drake, Horatio Nelson, Captain James Cook, to the fictional heroes such as Horatio Hornblower, many of our wars and the battles that we fought have involved fighting on Sea, from fighting the Spanish Armada, The Battle from Trafalgar, The Battle Of Jutland, The Battle of the River Plate. Most of our imports and exports travel by sea, the sea has important part to play into our history, present and future as Great Britain. The sea routes used today both for business and pleasure had to be discovered, and the ships that travel those routes use sea-charts to show them where they are going and how to get there, from the smallest cabin cruiser to the mighty container ship. Yet someone had to go out and navigate the sea in order for these sea-charts to be produced. Many of these men, such as Sir Francis Drake and Captain James Cook, stand tall throughout our history.
We see in our Bibles, countless references to sailing and to sea, from Noah's Voyage, to Jonah and we know that the Lord's Disciples Peter, Andrew, James and John were fisherman on the Sea of Galilee, and many of the early missionaries such as Paul, Barnabas, Silas, Mark, Timothy and Luke often travelled by sea to spread the Good News of the Gospel of Salvation to the people of the known world. In Ephesians 4:12, one of the meanings of the Greek Word we translate as equip is prepare a ship for voyage (one of the other meanings, is to set a broken bone).
In the 19th and 20th centuries many people left these shores and other shores to travel the world, to spread the Good News of the Gospel of Salvation, following the example of men like William Carey, John Wesley and George Whitfield, I remember growing up in small Pentecostal Church in the South Wales Valley's, and hearing about many men and women who went forth as missionaries, and being inspired by the reports that came back from our missionaries in places like Nigeria and India, I had the privilege not only of having a retired missionary as one of my Sunday School Teachers, and having two former missionary couples as my Pastor and his wife , but also being related to one of the earliest Pentecostal Pioneers from the United Kingdom to Nigeria, who in his later years inspired me to seek and serve God. While a student in Bible School, several of my lecturers had been missionaries, and I know how much they inspired me and my fellow students.
In the early part of the 21st Century, many of us may not have the same opportunities to travel to other lands following in the footsteps of our brothers and sisters who went before us, there are still opportunities we can take, perhaps in short-term mission trips, we have advancements in technology they didn't have anything like the Internet, I remember being in School in the 1980's and never thought then I could not talk to people in places like America and Australia via a computer and a phone-line but to count them as friends as well. On the other hand we don't have to travel to other lands to be a missionary, we can be missionaries in our villages, towns, suburbs, cities but most importantly in our communities. I know that in the coming days, the Lord will inspire many of us to become missionaries on other towns, cities and regions throughout our own lands but other lands as well.
In the last 12-18 months, I have been greatly inspired by the writings of people like Alan J Roxburgh, Alan Hirsch, Neil Cole, Martin Robinson and Floyd McClung, especially when it comes to being Missional and being challenged by the concept of mission dei or God's Mission. I may not have the opportunities to travel to other lands to spread the Good News of the Gospel of Salvation, but it doesn't mean that there are no opportunities here in the United Kingdom. I've just read something that David Cameron, the Prime Minister here in the UK, said about Broken Britain and Social Recession. (If you would like to read more about Missional, I strongly recommend (Introducing the Missional Church by Alan J Roxburgh). Both my prayer and desire is to see God raise up His People here in the UK and other lands to see the spiritual needs in our own lands, and be willing to follow His direction either to pray, support or go, hopefully to do all, some of us He will send to our neighbours, some of us He will send to our streets, some to our towns and cities, but all He asks are we willing to go to those He will send us ?
Some of us in coming days, He will ask to be Pioneers, and to go where no-one has gone before or for some time, to break into new territory or to go and re-claim territory. I'm now going to share some Scriptures with you, and my Prayer is that God will use these Scriptures to challenge you for the first time or to challenge for you for the thousandth time, and follow his direction, which will not only impact your own live, but impact the lives of others, those who is sending you to.
If you're wondering if my title sounds familiar, it's from Star Trek, the days ahead will be days of challenge, courage and grace but most importantly of opportunity, and I pray that we take the courage and the grace, to take the opportunities those challenges will present to us.
Isa 6:8-9a TNIv
8 Then I heard the voice of the Lord saying, "Whom shall I send? And who will go for us?"
And I said, "Here am I. Send me!" 9 He said, "Go and tell this people
Matt 28:19-20 NIv
19 Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in [a] the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit,
20 and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age."
Romans 10:14015a NCV
14 But before people can ask the Lord for help, they must believe in him; and before they can believe in him, they must hear about him; and for them to hear about the Lord, someone must tell them;15 and before someone can go and tell them, that person must be sent.
Yours by His Grace
Blair Humphreys
Sunday, 26 May 2013
I was wondering about being ready by Vicky Walker
Are you there yet? Completed the non-negotiable,
God-breathed decree of all that must be achieved before you are Ready For
Marriage™? Contents vary by individual but these spiritually-infallible
checklists often include… Reaching a particular age, and a certain point in
your education or career, probably earning a certain amount; undertaking travel
/ obscure mission trips while still responsibility-free; being ready to ‘settle
down’ and become a parent at a designated future point (or NOW depending on
biological clock); drawing up a list of stringent requirements for your future
partner (because, y’know, desires of your heart and all that) and submitting
said list to God while reminding him of it on a weekly / daily / hourly basis
(no comment). All done? You, my friend, are the finished article, materially, spiritually
and emotionally. You’re READY. Bring on Mr / Miss Godly Spouse. It’s time to
crack open Song of Songs.
Small note of caution though. If you’re not RFM
yet don’t really get to know someone. Date, maybe, but don’t get serious. Why
bother? Hold back emotions and commitment until the readiness process is
complete and can be verified by angels (yes, I've checked – that’s what
happens). Except… what if that’s not how it unfolds? What if you don’t get the
dream career or it pays buttons or takes up every waking minute? What if the
idea of being – or needing – ‘the provider’ is unrealistic? What if the pieces
don’t fit together? Or what if you get to that mystical point in the future
when everything you’d planned is in place and you don’t feel ‘ready’ after all?
I mean, what does ready even feel like?
We might start telling ourselves (and prospective
partners) we’re terrible at relationships. We might say we don’t know how to be
with someone or we just haven’t met the one yet and that’s why we can’t commit.
We wait for a magical encounter when we’ll cross paths and just know. Years can
roll by while we hold back, repeatedly exiting promising scenarios because the
time isn't right and we’re not there yet, or avoid relationships altogether.
There is, of course, genuinely ‘not ready’. A difficult past, hurt from broken
relationships, emotional issues that can keep us from being good for anyone.
That’s the kind of ‘not ready’ to spend time putting right so we don’t sabotage
our futures, but it’s not a place to stay. God heals so we don’t have to live
hurt and hurt others. What we need to watch out for is the not ready that keeps
us making excuses, suppressing feelings, avoiding intimacy. That’s the ‘not
ready’ with no time limit.
I suspect love’s great adventure doesn't start
with conditions. I’m intrigued by couples who set out without the pieces in
place. Who don’t rush in without thinking, but also don’t allow hypothetical
standards to determine the future. Who allow themselves to feel and risk and be
open to possibility and to seeing it through together. I wonder if they are the
ones who are actually ready because they commit, mature as they go, grow into
love, and become the husbands and wives God intended them to be, through
vulnerability, trial and error, prayer and perseverance, falling down and
getting up again.
When you ask yourself if you’re ready, don’t aim
for some distant spot in the future when everything will be perfect. Instead
ask yourself if you’re ready to make time and space while you’re still a work
in progress. Because that’s as ready as we get to be.
Saturday, 18 May 2013
Marriage – What Would Jesus Do?
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