Friday, 16 March 2012
Are we living in the Past, the Present or the Future? Part 1: Living in the Past.
Are we living in the Past,
the Present or the Future?
Part 1: Living in the Past.
I
often wonder what is the attraction of TV Programmes like ITV’s Downton Abbey and the BBC’s Upstairs, Downstairs. ? Is it Nostalgia for an earlier, seemingly more innocent age ?,
perhaps with all the upheaval that we both see around us and read about that
directly or indirectly affects our day to day lives, is living in or thinking about the past some sort of safety net?
I
live in Southport, Merseyside, and our local radio station Dune FM on Friday
night from 7pm to 10pm plays 1980’s Music and I enjoy listening to some great
and not so great songs from my younger days ! but I wouldn’t choose to travel
back in time, like some Welsh version of Dr Who and try to live in those
days. I grew up in a small village in the South Wales Valleys called Melin Court , and spend time not only
there but in other villages like Resolven and Clyne. Overall when I wear my rose
tinted glasses I enjoyed my time growing up there, but if I could ask my
teenage self the same question what would the answer be?
I
enjoy music, and did Cse Music in School, (I also played on one of the School
Chess Teams) I had the opportunity to visit the world famous Cavern Club in
Liverpool with a friend several weeks ago, it’s one of the places the Beatles
played, it was packed and overall I enjoyed my time there, there was a live
band playing cover versions of songs by The Beatles and The Who. The atmosphere
was electric, but one thing struck me,
here’s a young band not playing their own songs but playing the songs of a
previous generation!
My
time at The Cavern Club lead me to think about why we sometimes try to live in
the past, we let the circumstances of
our past, the influence of others,
past hurts, past disappointments,
feelings of hurt and sometimes bitterness govern our lives. We let the things that happened 5, 10, 15 or
even 20 plus years influence how we live today, perhaps the hurt of a breakdown
of a relationship that has happened in the past we don’t allow ourselves due to
the fear of rejection or the fear of a failure to move on to a better relationship.
Sometimes we try to eat the fruit of past blessings, happiness, success which like
all fruit that was picked and not eaten, has become rotten, instead of picking and
eating the new fruit for today.
The
Prophet Isaiah wrote in Isaiah 43:18-19b, NivUk
“18 Forget the former things; do not dwell on the past. 19 See, I am doing a new thing! Now it
springs up; do you not perceive it?”
It’s easy to try to live in the past, but God calls us to move on and
move forward to both bigger and better things.
The Apostle Paul wrote in Philippians 2:13-14NivUk
“ 13 Brothers, I do not consider myself yet
to have taken hold of it. But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and
straining towards what is ahead, 14 I press on towards the goal to win the
prize for which God has called me heavenwards in Christ Jesus.”
So let us turn away from our past, because it’s a new beginning, a
new start and a new season for us all.
Yours in His Grace
Blair Humphreys
*”I have no regrets about what happened in my younger days”
Thursday, 15 March 2012
Times, they're a Changing
Times, they’re a Changing:
The
Poet & Philosopher, Bob Dylan wrote one of the
most memorable and often quoted protest songs of the 1960’s, “Times they’re a changing”.
When
we examine our lifestyles today in the early 21st Century we are
governed by time, the writer of the Book of Ecclesiastes wrote in Ecclesiastes
3:17b. “For there is a time for
every matter and for every work” please read Ecclesiastes
Chapter 3 for the context. Yet today
we never seem to have enough time. We
often feel like Lewis Carroll’s Character; “The White Rabbit” running ahead of
ourselves to make up or catch up on time.
One of the growth areas in the Business World is the concept
of Time Management; there is even a Dummies Guide on Time Management. My late Grandfather was brilliant in many,
many ways, one of which was his time keeping, Has a boy I would walk to and
from Church with Him, (which was an honour, privilege and a blessing, because
it was our time together), people would often say to Him, because they knew
that at 9.30am on a Sunday Morning, he would walk past, that they could set
their clocks by him, because he would walk past at that exact time on a Sunday.
Time is one of our precious resources and indeed one of our
most precious gifts, we all have 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 4 weeks to a month, and 12
months to a year, the question is how do we use or spend our time, we all have access to watches and clocks and
even our mobile phones have a way to tell us the time, In the New
Testament, there are two Greek Words
that are translated into the English Word Time, these are Chronos
and Kairos, quite simply Chronos
means normal time and Kairos means an appointed time for
the purpose of God.
We all have friends and family, people who we love, care for,
support, bless and encourage, perhaps,
today we can all think of those people around us that we can give one of our
greatest gifts, the gift of time, which can be emailing, texting. Phoning,
sending a message on Facebook or even going to see or meeting up for a Coffee.
Yours in His Grace
Blair Humphreys
Tuesday, 13 March 2012
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 Ifracombe in the Summer months, and while there go for boat trips which would sail from Ifracombe harbour, I have more many happy memories of going there as child and early teenager, because of these memories I enjoy spending time by the Coast, 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 the 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 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 Leader of the Conservative Party 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
And I said, "Here am I. Send me!" 9 He said, "Go and tell this people
Matt 28:19-20 TNIv
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."
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
Equal Marriage : Just Plain Wrong A Christian Perspective on the Gay Marriage Debate in the UK
Equal Marriage; Just Plain Wrong.
Today,
both in the United Kingdom and other Countries, we face the challenge in the
name of Equality and Tolerance to allow same sex marriage (the marriage of a
man to another man or the marriage of a woman to another woman) the equal
standing in society that marriage between a man and a woman or a woman and a
man has in the 21st Century.
Yet
those calling for Equality and Tolerance, only believe that their view and
understanding of Equality and Tolerance is the only valid view and supersedes
the understanding of both Equality and Tolerance of those Groups such as
Christians that disagree with their view and understanding, rather than an open
and honest debate and discussion, they have decided to demonize those who’s
views and understanding of Equality and Tolerance differ from theirs, and
criticize and condemn them for not showing or agreeing to both Equality and
Tolerance, this is indeed a lack of Equality and Tolerance, for by calling
those groups who differ from them In-tolerant etc, they themselves have done exactly what they accuse other groups of!
In
recent days, I have followed the
on-going debate in today’s media both in favour and against same sex marriage
and have examined the evidence and have researched the different perspectives
and I believe that our standard and indeed our bench mark for all practices
that we the Church hold, is God’s
Word The Bible. It is quite easy to be
influenced by the opinions and perspectives of others.
Romans
12:1-2 the Message
1-2 So here's what I want you to do, God helping you: Take your everyday,
ordinary life—you’re sleeping, eating, going-to-work, and walking-around
life—and place it before God as an offering. Embracing what God does for you is
the best thing you can do for him.
Don't become so well-adjusted to your culture that you fit into it without even
thinking. Instead, fix your attention on God. You'll be changed from the inside
out. Readily recognize what he wants from you, and quickly respond to it.
Unlike the culture around you, always dragging you down to its level of
immaturity, God brings the best out of you, develops well-formed
maturity in you.
I’m on Facebook, which I think is one of the best sources of both news and information available on-line and I subscribe to various news feeds . I read with interest and a high level of disappointment and article on Lib Dem Voice by Steve Gilbert is Liberal Democrat MP for St Austell and Newquay. “Church Opposition to Gay Marriage is intolerant, out of touch and wrong.”
Mr. Gilbert has quoted that societies in the past such as Ancient China and Ancient Rome allowed Gay Marriage; if we followed the example of these societies today we would still have Slavery and The Death Penalty for various Crimes. So if we follow the Example of Ancient Rome and all that is involved in that in allowing Gay Marriage shouldn’t we also allow Slavery and turn Wembley Arena into a 21st Century version of the Coliseum at
-
To understand why Mr. Gilbert mentioned that practices of Ancient Rome and Ancient China, I decided to examine the evidence and have discovered the following on Wikipedia. (Although Wikipedia is not infallible)
“Various
types of same-sex marriages have existed, [52] ranging
from informal, unsanctioned relationships to highly ritualized unions.[53]
In
the southern Chinese province of Fijian , through the Ming dynasty period,
females would bind themselves in contracts to younger females in elaborate
ceremonies.[54] Males
also entered similar arrangements. This type of arrangement was also similar in
ancient European history.[55]
An
example of egalitarian male domestic partnership from the early Zhou Dynasty period
of China is recorded in the story of Pan Zhang
& Wang Zhongxian. While the relationship was clearly approved by
the wider community, and was compared to heterosexual marriage, it did not
involve a religious ceremony binding the couple.[56]
The
first historical mention of the performance of same-sex marriages occurred
during the early Roman Empire.[57] For
instance, Emperor is reported to
have engaged in a marriage ceremony with one of his male slaves. Emperor Elagabalus "married" a Carian slave named Hierocles.[58] It
should be noted, however, that conubium existed only between a civis
Romanus and a civis
Romana (that is, between a
male Roman citizen and a female Roman citizen), so that a so-called marriage
between two Roman males (or with a slave) would have no legal standing in Roman
law (apart, presumably, from the arbitrary will of the emperor in the two
aforementioned cases).[59] Furthermore,
"matrimonium is an institution involving a mother, mater.
The idea implicit in the word is that a man takes a woman in marriage, in
matrimonium ducere, so that he may have children by her."[60] Still,
the lack of legal validity notwithstanding, there is a consensus among modern
historians that same-sex relationships existed in ancient Rome , but the exact frequency and nature of
"same-sex unions" during that period is obscure.[61] In
342 AD Christian emperors Constantius II and Constans issued
a law in the Theodosian Code (C. Th. 9.7.3)
prohibiting same-sex
marriage in Rome and
ordering execution for those so married.[62]
So
using the example that same sex marriage was common both in Ancient China and
Ancient Rome and had the same legal standing that marriage between a Man and a
Woman is not valid and indeed erroneous.
I
said earlier that our understanding of issues and our bench mark for all
practices should God’s Word the Bible, for example if The Bible supported the idea
that the Marriage Union between a Man and a Man and a Woman and Woman was equal
to the Marriage Union between a Man and a Woman it would say so, in the Bible
there is only one definition of Marriage and that is between a Man and a Woman
or a Woman and a Man. So if we believe
that the Bible is God’s Inspired Word we Christians shouldn’t support or agree
to a Marriage Ceremony or Union that doesn’t involve a Man marrying a
Woman or a Vice a Versa, lets us examine some scriptures on Marriage.
All Scripture Verses are from the English
Stand Version unless otherwise stated.
Genesis
2:20b-24
But for Adam[g] there was not found a
helper fit for him.21 so the Lord God caused a deep sleep to fall upon the
man, and while he slept took one of his ribs and closed up its place with
flesh. 22 And the rib that the Lord God had taken from the man
he made[h] into a woman and brought
her to the man. 23 Then the man said,
“This at last is bone of my bones
and flesh of my flesh;
she shall be called Woman,
because she was taken out ofMan. ”[i]
and flesh of my flesh;
she shall be called Woman,
because she was taken out of
24 Therefore a man
shall leave his father and his mother and hold fast to his wife, and they shall
become one flesh.
Jeremiah 29:6
6 Take wives and have sons and daughters; take wives for your sons, and give your
daughters in marriage, that they may bear sons and daughters; multiply there,
and do not decrease.
1 Corinthians 7:2B
, each man should have his own wife and each
woman her own husband.
Ephesians 5:31-33
31 “Therefore
a man shall leave his father and mother and hold fast to his wife, and the two shall become
one flesh.” 32 This mystery is
profound, and I am saying that it refers to Christ and the church. 33 However, let
each one of you love his wife as himself, and let the wife see that she respects
her husband.
There
are of course many scriptures referring to the marriage between a Man and a
Woman, which space wouldn’t allow me to add, I’m sure that the above scriptures
will serve as a start to your own personal study.
Further
Reading :
Tuesday, 26 January 2010
Blogging leads to Libel Investigation (from BBC Website, dot.rory blog by Rory Cellan Jones)
Seismic Shock: When blogging meets policing
Rory Cellan-Jones
08:22 UK time, Tuesday, 26 January 2010
Anyone who writes - or reads - blogs will know that they are not necessarily the place for reasoned and good-natured debate. All too often, they descend into vulgar abuse and name-calling - and on occasion, these disputes end up in the libel courts. But would you expect a blogger involved in one of these so-called "flame wars" to get a visit from the police?
That is what happened to the author of Seismic Shock, a blog which, in its own words, is "a voice for those dedicated to exposing and opposing modern anti-Jewish religious attitudes". The blog launched repeated attacks on an Anglican vicar, Stephen Sizer, accusing him of anti-Semitism.
The priest has campaigned against Zionism, has accused the Israeli government of war crimes and has called for the Church of England to sell its investments in companies associated with the occupation of Palesetinian territories. Mr Sizer has strenuously denied accusations on the Seismic Shock blog that he is anti-Semitic or that his pronouncements have given comfort to Holocaust deniers.
So far, so typical in the rough-and-tumble world of the blogosphere. But then, on 29 November, Seismic Shock's author received a visit from two West Yorkshire police officers. The blogger has been anonymous until now, but when I spoke to him, he agreed to reveal his name. He is Joseph Wiseman, a Leeds University graduate student, and it appears the university was unhappy with his blogging activities.
He told me that the police officers who came to his home told him they had received a complaint from Stephen Sizer and from another person - and both had objected to being associated with terrorists and Holocaust deniers. So how had they found him?
"Someone had traced my IP address to Leeds University and the police had spoken to the university and retrieved some files of mine, none of which contained anything which I hadn't made public. The police then relayed a message from the head of ICT department that I shouldn't be using university property in such ways."
The officers asked him to take down his blog, which was at that time being written partly on a university computer, and he agreed to do so. "Why?" I asked him. "I did it because I felt intimidated," he said. "I felt had to co-operate with the police."
So why did the police or Leeds University get involved in this argument? The university offered no comment, except to say that the person who knew about this issue was away on holiday. But West Yorkshire police sent me this statement:
"As a result of a report of harassment, which was referred to us by Surrey Police, two officers from West Yorkshire Police visited the author of the blog concerned. The feelings of the complainant were relayed to the author who voluntarily removed the blog. No formal action was taken."
I was unable to speak to Stephen Sizer, who is out of the country at the moment, but a parish worker told me the vicar had felt threatened by the contents of the blog.
But the whole incident raises interesting questions about the limits of free expression on the web, and the role of the police in pursuing complaints about the contents of a website.
Rory Cellan-Jones
08:22 UK time, Tuesday, 26 January 2010
Anyone who writes - or reads - blogs will know that they are not necessarily the place for reasoned and good-natured debate. All too often, they descend into vulgar abuse and name-calling - and on occasion, these disputes end up in the libel courts. But would you expect a blogger involved in one of these so-called "flame wars" to get a visit from the police?
That is what happened to the author of Seismic Shock, a blog which, in its own words, is "a voice for those dedicated to exposing and opposing modern anti-Jewish religious attitudes". The blog launched repeated attacks on an Anglican vicar, Stephen Sizer, accusing him of anti-Semitism.
The priest has campaigned against Zionism, has accused the Israeli government of war crimes and has called for the Church of England to sell its investments in companies associated with the occupation of Palesetinian territories. Mr Sizer has strenuously denied accusations on the Seismic Shock blog that he is anti-Semitic or that his pronouncements have given comfort to Holocaust deniers.
So far, so typical in the rough-and-tumble world of the blogosphere. But then, on 29 November, Seismic Shock's author received a visit from two West Yorkshire police officers. The blogger has been anonymous until now, but when I spoke to him, he agreed to reveal his name. He is Joseph Wiseman, a Leeds University graduate student, and it appears the university was unhappy with his blogging activities.
He told me that the police officers who came to his home told him they had received a complaint from Stephen Sizer and from another person - and both had objected to being associated with terrorists and Holocaust deniers. So how had they found him?
"Someone had traced my IP address to Leeds University and the police had spoken to the university and retrieved some files of mine, none of which contained anything which I hadn't made public. The police then relayed a message from the head of ICT department that I shouldn't be using university property in such ways."
The officers asked him to take down his blog, which was at that time being written partly on a university computer, and he agreed to do so. "Why?" I asked him. "I did it because I felt intimidated," he said. "I felt had to co-operate with the police."
So why did the police or Leeds University get involved in this argument? The university offered no comment, except to say that the person who knew about this issue was away on holiday. But West Yorkshire police sent me this statement:
"As a result of a report of harassment, which was referred to us by Surrey Police, two officers from West Yorkshire Police visited the author of the blog concerned. The feelings of the complainant were relayed to the author who voluntarily removed the blog. No formal action was taken."
I was unable to speak to Stephen Sizer, who is out of the country at the moment, but a parish worker told me the vicar had felt threatened by the contents of the blog.
But the whole incident raises interesting questions about the limits of free expression on the web, and the role of the police in pursuing complaints about the contents of a website.
Friday, 22 January 2010
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 Ifracombe in the Summer months, and while there go for boat trips which would sail from Ifracombe harbour, I have more many happy memories of going there as child and early teenager, because of these memories I enjoy spending time by the Coast, 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 the 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 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 Leader of the Conservative Party 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
And I said, "Here am I. Send me!" 9 He said, "Go and tell this people
Matt 28:19-20 TNIv
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."
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
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