Sunday service for 3 September, final sunday in the Season of Prayer
Sunday 3 September 2023 — Season of Prayer 5
Gourock St. John’s Church of Scotland
Service prepared by Rev. Teri Peterson
Manse: 632143
Email Teri: TPeterson (at) churchofscotland.org.uk
Email Charlene, Parish Assistant: CMitchell (at) churchofscotland.org.uk
Prelude Music
Welcome & Announcements
Opening Responses (St John’s Mission Statement)
One: Who are we, and what are we called to do?
All: We are a family gathered in love,
where all ages and experiences sing and study together,
laugh and cry together, grow in faith and life together.
One: We are not perfect, we are a work in progress
All: and there’s always room at Christ’s table for more,
so all are welcome!
One: As a family, we are striving for justice and joy,
All: by standing up for what’s fair and right,
challenging systems that harm,
working toward a world that sustains us all,
joining our creativity with creation’s joy.
The Holy Spirit has work for us to do.
One: As a family, we offer blessing to the broken-hearted,
All: by walking alongside each other,
holding one another’s stories with grace,
sharing comfort and practical support,
with compassion and prayer.
One: As a family, we are always sharing the hope of God’s kingdom.
All: standing on God’s promises,
trusting the Spirit’s leading,
we will be the hands and feet of Jesus,
serving with love, joy, and generosity.
Sanctuary Hymn 519: Love Divine, All Loves Excelling
Prayer (adapted from the Iona Abbey Worship Book)
Take O Take Me As I Am
Eternal God, in this place, for generation after generation,
your people have encountered your living word.
In this place, in this community,
Jesus has surprised, called, challenged, embraced, inspired, and encouraged people.
We come to join the great cloud of witnesses
who have hallowed this place with their prayer and service,
not to worship them as heroes nor to see ourselves only in the best light,
but to nurture our relationship with you
and be strengthened to participate in your future.
Take O Take Me As I Am
You call us, God.
You call us to walk in your way.
You show us in Jesus how we should live,
and by your Holy Spirit you graft us onto the vine of your love and truth.
And we are grateful.
You have shown us what you require:
to do justice, and love kindness, and walk humbly with you.
We try, sometimes.
Sometimes we get it right, and sometimes we fail.
Take O Take Me As I Am
We confess that we get mixed up,
we commit ourselves only imperfectly and sometimes
we commit ourselves to other ways…
Forgive us when we have dedicated our energy to the wrong things.
Forgive us when we have offered ourselves in service of false gods that seduce us.
Forgive us when we have given our hearts and our gifts elsewhere than to you.
Forgive us, and set us right.
Take from us all that does not glorify you,
and fill us instead with your grace,
and use us for the purposes of your kingdom of hope.
Take O Take Me As I Am
We ask in Jesus’ name. Amen.
Online Hymn 501: Take This Moment
Sanctuary Children’s Time
Scripture Reading: John 15.1-16 (The Living Bible)
“I am the true Vine, and my Father is the Gardener. He lops off every branch that doesn’t produce. And he prunes those branches that bear fruit for even larger crops. He has already tended you by pruning you back for greater strength and usefulness by means of the commands I gave you. Take care to live in me, and let me live in you. For a branch can’t produce fruit when severed from the vine. Nor can you be fruitful apart from me.
“Yes, I am the Vine; you are the branches. Whoever lives in me and I in him shall produce a large crop of fruit. For apart from me you can’t do a thing. If anyone separates from me, he is thrown away like a useless branch, withers, and is gathered into a pile with all the others and burned. But if you stay in me and obey my commands, you may ask any request you like, and it will be granted! My true disciples produce bountiful harvests. This brings great glory to my Father.
“I have loved you even as the Father has loved me. Live within my love. When you obey me you are living in my love, just as I obey my Father and live in his love. I have told you this so that you will be filled with my joy. Yes, your cup of joy will overflow! I demand that you love each other as much as I love you. And here is how to measure it—the greatest love is shown when a person lays down his life for his friends; and you are my friends if you obey me. I no longer call you slaves, for a master doesn’t confide in his slaves; now you are my friends, proved by the fact that I have told you everything the Father told me.
“You didn’t choose me! I chose you! I appointed you to go and produce lovely fruit always, so that no matter what you ask for from the Father, using my name, he will give it to you.
For the word of God in scripture
for the word of God among us
for the word of God within us
thanks be to God.
Sermon: So That
Late last autumn, I heard footsteps outside the manse, and when I looked out the study window, there were men with chainsaws looking at the cherry tree. It’s a beautiful tree that blankets the garden with flowers every spring, and provides a place for birds my cats like to watch, and an endless supply of twigs I can use for lessons and projects, and obscures the view into the windows down the street. I spoke to the tree surgeons and said I was glad they were there, the tree needed some TLC as it had grown out over the pavement and had some dead branches and twigs, and I hoped they could clean it up. And I said to them I hoped I wouldn’t come home to a topped-off tree…and then I left for a day of meetings and school and other events.
You likely know what happened when I got home. Walking up Barrhill Road, I got to the corner of Binnie Street, stopped dead, my mouth open, and literally burst into tears on the pavement. I could not believe they had cut off every single branch, all the way back to the trunk. It was basically a 15 foot tall barren dead trunk. No more birds — my cats were inconsolable. No more interesting patterns of light through branches. No anticipation of pink flowers. A perfect clear view into the windows of every flat down Binnie street! And, according to everything I had read about care of these trees, it was likely to be damaged because of how late in the year it had been done.
I have mourned that tree every day since the 4th of November.
Earlier this summer I happened to run into Harry the gardener, who hired the tree butchers, as I call them, and he said it was more severe than he’d anticipated but that there would be new growth, something like this had been done before, and if it didn’t have enough new growth to flower next year then he would personally cut it down and plant me a new one for free. It’s a miracle I didn’t cry while talking to him, but let’s just say I was very skeptical. I think my eyebrows raised about an inch and I just thought “ok well I’d better be thinking about what to do with all that wood.”
This past week, Harry pulled up outside as I walked up the street and he asked about the tree. From where we were standing we could both see it has leaves…so I said “it has some leaves” and he said “It has a lot of new growth, look at it!” And I had to grudgingly admit he might have been right. Maybe. Hopefully. It isn’t entirely obvious yet but I suppose the leaves do look pretty good and full given what they had to work with…so maybe, possibly, there might be flowers next spring.
I have grieved what it feels like I’ve lost of that tree, and doubted Harry’s word while trying to trust his promise, and grudgingly admitted he might have been right, and now I’m in the phase of realising that my grief over the tree that was could be obscuring my vision of the tree as it is or will be in future, and I’m trying to see what Harry sees. Honestly even just thinking about how beautiful it was brings tears to my eyes, even though I know it was struggling with the deadwood and tangles crowding its canopy and making it hard for new branches to grow or for leaves and flowers to get enough nutrients to thrive. I know the tree wasn’t healthy but it was so pretty!
It turns out that sometimes pruning — which Jesus says will bring greater strength and usefulness and a bigger harvest — is more dramatic and painful in practice than it sounds in theory. And sometimes even things that seem to only need a little tweaking actually need a bigger cut back than we would prefer, if they are going to flourish the way God wants them to. And possibly, just possibly, our own understanding of what’s needed isn’t exactly the same as God the master gardener’s understanding and vision. It can be very difficult to come to terms with God’s pruning, and with the fruit God wants us to bear as individuals and as a community, and sometimes our commitment to the vision can waver when we see the pain of the process unfolding.
But Jesus says: “you didn’t choose me, I chose you! And I appointed you to go and produce lovely fruit always.” God chose us before we could ever choose, and Jesus’ call is not in any way dependent on our putting ourselves forward. That does not mean we have no part to play in the bearing of lovely fruit. Because God chose us, because Christ called us, because the Spirit has gifted us, we offer ourselves, we commit to doing what needs to be done for God’s kingdom, to growing and becoming what we are meant to be.
That commitment comes with risks, of course. Sometimes, God might call and gift us for something we don’t particularly want to do…something difficult or out of our comfort zone. Sometimes, God might ask us to let go of things we’d really like to hold onto. Sometimes, we might be sent somewhere that we won’t be well received, or that could be dangerous in some way. Maya Angelou once summed this up by saying that “courage is the most important of all the virtues, because without courage you can’t practice any of the other virtues consistently.” To be committed to Christ’s way will require courage.
What I think we don’t remember often enough is that courage comes in waves. It needs to be renewed, time and again. It isn’t as if we are able to be constantly courageous and committed, without a single rest or lapse. We are human, after all! Jesus says we are to “take care” to live in him…he did the choosing, and part of our response to his call is to put in the effort to follow, which will include both accepting his pruning, and also regularly re-dedicating ourselves in prayer and action.
Sometimes a prayer of dedication might include a symbolic action — like attaching our branches to the cross as we did several weeks ago when we heard some of these verses, or lighting a candle, or putting a stone in a cairn. Sometimes it might be responsive where we offer our “I do and I will” or make other promises and ask God to help us keep them. Sometimes it might be as simple as a line at the end of another prayer, where after praising God, confessing our failures, or asking for help, we say something like “so that I might ____.” Be more faithful, witness to your goodness, have courage to stand up for what’s right, know the right words to say, or even just get through this and live to praise you another day! Jesus uses this same language when he says he has told us all these things so that we may be filled with joy…and he appointed us to bear fruit so that whatever we ask might be given. Even the hard things, like God pruning us back or lopping off things that aren’t bearing fruit, are so that we might have greater strength and usefulness and bear a bigger harvest in God’s garden. Everything God does has a purpose.
I don’t want to give the impression that our prayers of dedication are in some way like a payment or a bargain for God to answer our other prayers. There is no way to bargain with God, and even if there was the reality is that we couldn’t afford it. I’m sure some of us have tried it — I know I have — but that isn’t how God works, and that fact is grace itself, as I’m sure I’m not the only one who has been desperate enough to promise things I could never have delivered!
Instead, a prayer of dedication is an offering of ourselves in response to God’s call and God’s goodness. In the same way that our monetary offerings are a recognition that everything we have is a gift from God and a response to what God has done for us, dedicating our whole selves — mind, body, and spirit, resources and energy and gifts — to serving God’s purpose is a response, not a bribe.
Our response to being grafted into the vine is to grow and bear fruit. Not to stay the same forever, but to grow. Not to just be pretty to look at, but to bear fruit that nourishes. And when a vine doesn’t grow, or when the fruit isn’t right, or things start to get crowded with old or dead wood that’s blocking the light or taking nutrients without producing, the pruning shears come out and cut branches back. If we are dedicated to bearing fruit for God’s kingdom, it means trusting God’s pruning and not allowing our grief over it to obscure our vision of what God is doing next — God has even larger crops in mind, and joy overflowing, and love made complete.
So in offering ourselves to God’s purpose, committing ourselves to obeying Christ’s commands, deciding to use the gifts the Spirit gives, it’s best to pray prayers of dedication and commitment with eyes wide open, because God will take them seriously and we may find ourselves in deeper than we expected, in need of more courage than we thought we had available…working toward God’s vision of beauty, justice, joy, and fruit that will last, even when we can’t see it yet.
May it be so. Amen.
Sanctuary Hymn 501: Take This Moment
Online Hymn: Take My Life (Resound Worship)
Introducing our new Parish Assistant, Charlene Mitchell
Charlene, the grace bestowed on you in baptism
is sufficient for your calling
because it is God’s grace.
By God’s grace we are saved,
and the Holy Spirit enables us to grow in the faith
and to commit our lives in ways that serve Christ.
God has called you to particular service.
Show your purpose by answering these questions.
Do you believe that God has called you to serve as St. John’s Parish Assistant?
I do.
I invite all of us here today to affirm our faith and commitment with Charlene:
Who is your Lord and Saviour?
Jesus Christ is my Lord and Saviour.
Will you be Christ’s faithful disciple, obeying his word and showing his love? Will you?
I will, with God’s help.
Will you seek to live in such a way that others there will want to know what Christ means to you? Will you?
I will, with God’s help.
Will you, as far as you are able, make Christ central in your life, letting his peace rule in your heart and his Word dwell in you richly? Will you?
I will, with God’s help.
Charlene:
Will you clothe yourself with Christ’s compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness and patience as you minister in his name to others? Will you?
I will, with God’s help.
Do you commit to showing the love of God by accompanying people in times of sorrow and of joy? Do you?
I do, with God’s help.
You do not fulfil this ministry on your own. Will you endeavour to work faithfully as a part of the team of elders, pastoral visitors, and minister? Will you?
I will, with God’s help.
Do you, members of Christ’s Body here at St. John’s Church, confirm the call of God
to Charlene as our Parish Assistant in the service of Jesus Christ, Do you?
We do.
Do you promise to pray for each other and for Charlene;
and do you promise to share with her in seeking and doing the will of God,
to give her encouragement, consideration, and financial support as you are able,
so that you grow together in faith, hope and love
and participate together in this ministry of caring for others? Do you?
We do.
Let us pray.
Faithful God, in baptism you claimed us;
and by your Holy Spirit you are working in our lives,
empowering us to live a life worthy of our calling.
We pray this day for Charlene as she takes up this role serving you by serving your people,
that she may meet people where they are,
understand their situations, cares, and concerns,
and find new ways to touch their hearts with your love.
Give to her the gifts of faith, hope and love,
that she may fulfil this calling to your glory.
May her hands be ready to do your work.
May her eyes be open to recognise those in need.
May her ears hear words of pain, sorrow, or joy with compassion and empathy.
May her voice speak of healing and peace.
As we welcome her ministry among us,
may we be a good support to her and love her as you love us all.
Bless Charlene with your presence and protection in all that she does;
through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
Sanctuary: Offering
Sanctuary Offering Response Hymn 497 v. 1 & 5
Almighty Father of all things that be,
our life, our work, we consecrate to thee,
whose heavens declare thy glory from above,
whose earth below is witness to thy love.
Then grant us, Lord, in all things thee to own,
to dwell within the shadow of thy throne,
to speak and work, to think, and live, and move,
reflecting thine own nature, which is love.
Prayer and Lord’s Prayer (adapted from Iona Abbey Worship Book)
Prayer booklet…at the end of this prayer I’ll conclude with today’s prayers from the booklet
Into your hands, we commit ourselves, O Christ,
for your holding, your directing, your inspiring, your perfecting.
Bless us with your power
to heal, help, liberate, and challenge.
Bless us with your yearning for a better world and a fuller faith.
Bless us with your Holy Spirit within us, and among us.
Enable us to be fully open to you,
to all you have to offer,
and to all that you ask of us.
Take O Take Me As I Am
In this world in need, we pray for your healing grace to be tangible,
for peace to be real,
for hope to lead us on.
May all those who suffer in body, mind, or spirit experience your goodness,
may they know your presence
and may they be surrounded, too,
by the Body of Christ offering comfort, compassion, and help.
May all those who live with violence, fear, or hatred experience your justice,
may they know your love and peace not only in their hearts but in the world around them,
and may they be surrounded by the Body of Christ
working for a better world for all.
May all those who hold positions of power or privilege in this world experience your courage,
may they hear your calling to the common good,
and may they be surrounded by the Body of Christ
offering your vision and holding them accountable to it.
May your Church, your Body,
abide in your love, reveal your kingdom on earth,
and bear fruit of love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, faithfulness,
generosity, gentleness, and self-control.
Take the time and gifts you have entrusted to us,
and teach us how to use them to give others the abundant life
which Jesus Christ came to bestow on all,
so that your people may rejoice in the new life you give,
for you are the Vine and we are the Branches,
You are the life giver, and we are your servants.
Take O Take Me As I Am
And on the 3rd day of the month we join our hearts together as your church family to pray:
*For your other Churches in Gourock: for St Ninian’s RC Church, Old Gourock & Ashton Parish Church, Gourock Community Baptist Church, Struthers Church, Bethany Hall, the Vineyard Church, and other independent churches.
*For the leaders of St John’s congregation: for the elders, the Kirk Session, the Session Clerk, the Treasurer, the pastoral care team, the flower team, and the many other volunteers.
*For the land, people, and governments of the nations of the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, France, Andorra, Spain, and Portugal.
May peace and justice abound and grace prevail,
and may all people together share in the hope of your kingdom.
Lord Jesus, teach us once again that you have no body now on earth but ours;
No hands but ours;
No feet but ours;
Ours are the eyes through which your compassion
Must look out upon the world;
Ours are the feet with which you
Must go about doing good;
Ours are the hands through which your blessing flows
to all people and all creation.
Set us to your purpose,
and make us the agents of your grace, peace, and love in the world.
We pray these and all things in the name of Jesus the Christ,
who taught us to pray together:
Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name.
Your kingdom come,
your will be done on earth as in heaven.
Give us today our daily bread.
Forgive us our sins,
as we forgive those who sin against us.
Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil.
For the kingdom, the power, and the glory are yours, now and forever. Amen.
Sanctuary Hymn 500: Lord of Creation
Benediction
Author Anne Lamott once said “I do not understand the mystery of grace — only that it meets us where we are and does not leave us where it found us.”
God’s grace has met us here, and will take us onward to where God needs us most. Go to follow that journey, wherever God may lead.
And as you go, may the Spirit of God go above you to watch over you. May the Spirit of God go beside you to be your companion. May the Spirit of God go before you to show you the way, and behind you to push you into places you might not go alone. And may the Spirit of God go within you, to remind you that you are loved more deeply than you can possibly imagine. May the fire of God’s love burn brightly in you, and through you into the world. Amen.
Sung Benediction Response (John L Bell, tune Gourock St John’s)
Now may the Lord of all be blessed,
Now may Christ’s gospel be confessed,
Now may the Spirit when we meet
Bless sanctuary and street.
Postlude Music
Announcements
* We worship in the sanctuary on Sundays at 11am, and all Sunday worship is also online. If you are able, please enter by the front door in Bath street, and only those who need step-free access should use the back door. If you feel unwell, please worship online, to protect both yourself and others in our community.
* Starter Packs are short of Shaving Foam, Shampoo, Soap, Toothpaste, Bathroom/Kitchen Cleaner, Kitchen Roll and Teabags. The FoodBank are short of biscuits, UHT milk, soup, tinned fish, and tinned meats. You can bring donations to the church and place them into the boxes in the vestibule. Thank you!
* Did you know that the ministry we do at St John’s costs about £2700 per week? Everything we do is funded by your generous giving — all our support for young people, older people, bereavement care, community outreach, worship, study, spiritual growth, and community work is because of your offering. If you would like to set up a standing order in order to facilitate your spiritual discipline of giving, or if you would like to make an extra gift to support the ministry St. John’s does in our parish, you can give online by clicking here. If you would like to set up a standing order, please contact Teri and she can give you the treasurer’s details. You can also send your envelopes to the church or the manse by post and we will ensure they are received. It is also possible to donate to the work of the new parish assistant, speak to Anne Love about how to go about directing new donations to that new item in the budget.
*Don’t forget to follow us on Facebook and Youtube, and to sign up for our email devotions! Midweek you can watch Wine and the Word on Youtube, pray with video devotions on Facebook, and consider a new angle on something with a devotional email. Feel free to share with your friends, too!
* Wednesday Evening Bible Study meets at 7:30pm in the Manse. If you’d like a copy of the study book, or more information, or if you’d like to participate but the stairs of the manse are a problem, please contact Teri!
* The next Bowl & Blether in St John’s TOMORROW Monday 4 September, and the next one in St Margaret’s is this Saturday 9 September. Doors open at 11:30 and soup and toasties are served between 12-1:30. It’s a great opportunity to get out and meet some friends, invite a neighbour, and have a meal and some social time!
* The Kirk Session will meet this Thursday 7 September at 7:30pm.
* The 2nd Gourock Boys’ Brigade 125th anniversary Grand Charity Ball is this coming Saturday 9th September 6.30 for 7pm in Greenock Town Hall. Speak to Alan Aitken ASAP if you don’t have a ticket yet.
* Philip is playing an organ recital at Kelvingrove Museum on Saturday 16 September at 1pm. Music will include items written by Henry Purcell, William Mathias, Malcolm Arnold and Philp himself.
* St John’s Contact Group will start the new session on Tuesday 19th September at 2pm in the church hall. Entertainment will be provided by The Skelpies Ukulele Band, followed by tea, cakes and time to chat. All are welcome to this opening meeting and the fortnightly meetings thereafter. The syllabus of events will be available soon.
* Free period products are available in the church toilets for anyone who might need them, thanks to Hey Girls and Inverclyde Council.
* Youth organisations are starting up for the new session! Young people are invited to come along to the Junior Section of the BB on Monday evenings at 7, Anchor Boys on Tuesdays at 5:30, Brownies and Guides on Wednesday evenings at 6pm and 7:30pm respectively, Smurfs on Thursdays at 6pm, and Company Section of the BB on Fridays at 7. For more information on the Boys’ Brigade, email: 2ndgourock@inverclydebb.org.uk , for more information on the Smurfs (pre-Brownies), email Lyn at lyn41185@hotmail.com, and for more information on the Brownies/Guides, visit https://www.girlguidingscotland.org.uk/for-parents/register-your-daughter .
* Flower Fund: If you would like to donate to the Flower Fund in memory of a loved one or loved ones, then please contact Elsie Arthur or place your donation in the box inside the front vestibule. This can be done anonymously if you wish.
* The Church of Scotland has a new online learning platform called Church of Scotland Learning (more info here). The first set of modules is now available, and are designed with members of local congregations in mind and will help to grow faith, stretch minds and explore possibilities. They are set at an introductory level and accessible for all. We hope this will ignite people’s interest in learning more. Currently available topics include Vows for Elders; Vows for Ministers; Conversations in Discipleship, Exploring Discipleship, Talking About Your Faith; New Ways of Being Church; Knowing You Knowing Me (Learning to understand more fully where God is and what God is calling us to do); Theological Reflection for Everyone; Equality Diversity and Inclusion; and Unconscious Bias and Me. More modules will be added periodically, so sign up today by clicking here!
* Trinity College Glasgow and New College Edinburgh also both offer “short courses” for lay people — there are a variety of interesting modules available for online or in-person participation, including courses on Listening In Mission, worship, New Testament, Mission and our response to Presbytery planning, Creative Writing as a Spiritual Practice, and more. Please become a lifelong learner and dig into some of these opportunities that God is putting in front of us to grow in our faith and life together!
Sunday service for 16 July 2023: introducing our new mission statement
Sunday 16 July 2023
Gourock St. John’s Church of Scotland
Service prepared by Rev. Teri Peterson
Manse: 632143
Email: tpeterson (at) churchofscotland.org.uk
Prelude Music
Welcome and Announcements
Hymn 189: Be Still, for the presence of the Lord
Proverbs 29.18
Where there is no vision, the people perish. Happy is the one who keeps God’s instruction!
Sometimes it can be a challenge to see God’s vision — to recognise what God has in mind. We are used to cliches about God’s plan, but a plan is a way toward a purpose — and what is that purpose? In the big picture we know God’s kingdom will come on earth, and we pray for that. We assume God’s vision is beautiful, big picture, and so amazing we can’t even really imagine it. But what about God’s vision for the smaller parts of the picture? How is God working toward his purposes on our human scale, and here in our human community, in this time and place? Without that vision, without looking closely at what God is looking at, and moving toward it, the people perish. When all we see is our own desire and comfort, or our own sense of what’s possible within the constraints of our imagination and perceived lack of resources, we miss out on what God is doing, and end up left behind while God works around us instead of through us.
We have for a long time assumed that simply getting together once a week, and being available when people have life events, was what we were supposed to do. But is that the whole of God’s vision for us, or is there more to it? How are we playing a part in God’s story, and what story is God still writing using us as to move the world closer and closer to the kingdom? When we look at what God is looking at, and put ourselves in motion in the places God has work for us to do, we will be able to step out of the scarcity and fear and decline, to turn away from perishing and experience life to the full, abundantly.
Remembering the Feeding of the Multitudes
Who Are We, and What Are We Called To Do?
Gourock St. John’s is:
A family gathered in love, striving for justice and joy, blessing the broken-hearted, and sharing the hope of God’s kingdom.
Quiet Reflection
Prayer
You gather us in your love, O God.
Whether we are physically in the same place,
or connected only through prayer and grace,
it is love that binds us together as your family.
We thank you for making space for each and every one,
for your table that grows and extends and somehow fits us all.
We thank you, too, for your Spirit giving us
not just a place in your family, but a purpose too.
You have given yourself to us, feeding and nurturing,
guiding and caring,
and called us to be like you, to give ourselves,
to love as we have been loved, in action as well as word.
We confess that we don’t do all the work your Spirit gives us to do.
We sometimes choose to turn away from your purpose for us,
preferring our own purposes instead.
We walk by on the other side
when presented with opportunities to stand up for what’s fair and right.
We sit comfortably while our neighbours on this planet
struggle with no help in sight.
We stand silent while your children suffer.
Forgive us for undermining your joy by our refusal to work for justice.
Forgive us when we have not held each other’s stories with grace,
offering blame or dismissal rather than comfort and prayer.
Forgive us for seeking our own glory rather than yours.
Help us to live as your family,
reflecting your priorities, acting like your people,
sharing your love and making space at your table.
In our imperfection, reveal your goodness once again.
We ask in Jesus’ name. amen.
Reading: Matthew 5.13-16 (Common English Bible)
You are the salt of the earth. But if salt loses its saltiness, how will it become salty again? It’s good for nothing except to be thrown away and trampled under people’s feet. You are the light of the world. A city on top of a hill can’t be hidden. Neither do people light a lamp and put it under a basket. Instead, they put it on top of a lampstand, and it shines on all who are in the house. In the same way, let your light shine before people, so they can see the good things you do and praise your Father who is in heaven.
Online hymn: Salt and Light (Jami Smith)
Sanctuary Hymn 252: As a Fire Is Meant for Burning
A Family Gathered in Love (Sanctuary Children’s Time)
—all ages and experiences
sing and study together,
laugh and cry together,
grow in faith and life together.
We are not perfect, we are a work in progress
and there’s always room at Christ’s table for more,
so all are welcome!
Sanctuary Hymn 204, vv. 1-3: I am the Church
Striving for Justice and Joy
—by standing up for what’s fair and right,
challenging systems that harm,
working toward a world that sustains us all,
joining our creativity with creation’s joy.
The Holy Spirit has work for us to do.
John 15.11-14
Sanctuary: Offering
Sanctuary Offering Response Hymn 237: Look Forward in Faith
Online hymn: God of Justice
Blessing the Broken-hearted
—by walking alongside each other,
holding one another’s stories with grace,
sharing comfort and practical support,
with compassion and prayer.
Prayer and Lord’s Prayer
Loving God, we know you as creator and redeemer and sustainer…
the One who sustains us when things are hard as when they’re good.
We are grateful for your creation
and we marvel at its beauty and interconnectedness and wonders…
we are grateful for your redeeming grace
that saves us from ourselves and from the powers of this world,
setting us free to live abundant life now and forever….
And we are grateful for the way you hold us and keep us going,
filling us up when we feel dry and empty,
keeping us close when we feel alone,
and sometimes pulling us onward when all we want to do is sit down in despair.
We give you thanks for your sustaining grace,
the breath that makes all our days possible.
We pray today for those who do not have a community to surround them,
those who are isolated or alone,
longing for a friend or a conversation or someone to share a cup of tea with.
May they experience the companionship of your Spirit, and of your Church.
We pray today for those who feel they cannot share
their stories or their lives with anyone,
those who find it hard to trust others,
and those whose trust has been betrayed.
May they know themselves held and cared for by your loving hand, and by your Church.
We pray today for those who have heard another’s story and shared it when they shouldn’t,
for those who fear they won’t have a place if they don’t use their knowledge for power,
for those who speak for others rather than themselves.
May they know themselves loved for who they are,
and may they rest in grace without gossip.
We pray today for those who are struggling in body, mind, or spirit,
for those who grieve, those who can no longer do what they once loved,
and those who are nearing the end of this life’s journey.
May they be comforted by your loving Spirit,
and by the compassion and help of your Church.
We lift all our prayers to you, O God,
standing on your promises and trusting in your guidance and care,
in the name of Jesus the Christ who taught us to pray together:
Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name.
Your kingdom come,
your will be done on earth as in heaven.
Give us today our daily bread.
Forgive us our sins,
as we forgive those who sin against us.
Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil.
For the kingdom, the power, and the glory are yours, now and forever. Amen.
Sharing the Hope of God’s Kingdom
—standing on God’s promises,
trusting the Spirit’s leading,
we will be the hands and feet of Jesus,
serving with love, joy, and generosity.
Hymn 683: Go To The World! (Tune: Sine Nomine)
Benediction
George MacLeod once said “The church is a movement, not a meeting house.” And a movement…moves. Go from this place to strive for justice and joy, to offer Christ’s blessing to the broken-hearted, and to share the hope of God’s kingdom with all whom you meet.
And as you go, may the Spirit of God go above you to watch over you. May the Spirit of God go beside you to be your companion. May the Spirit of God go before you to show you the way, and behind you to push you into places you might not go alone. And may the Spirit of God go within you, to remind you that you are loved more deeply than you can possibly imagine. May the fire of God’s love burn brightly in you, and through you into the world. Amen.
Sung Benediction Response (John L Bell, tune Gourock St John’s)
Now may the Lord of all be blessed,
Now may Christ’s gospel be confessed,
Now may the Spirit when we meet
Bless sanctuary and street.
Postlude Music
Announcements
* Registration is open for St John’s Summer Exploratorium, our new summer holiday club for P1- P7 children, will be from 24-28 July, 9am – 1pm. We are looking for people to donate some of the food for snacks and lunches, so if you’re interested contact Teri to see what’s needed! We’re also making decorations on Tuesday afternoon from 1pm, come and join the fun!
* Starter Packs are short of Bathroom/Kitchen cleaner, Toothpaste & toothbrushes, and tea bags. The FoodBank are short of biscuits, UHT milk, tinned fruit, and tinned meats. You can bring donations to the church and place them into the boxes in the vestibule. Thank you!
* on 13 August we will have a summer songs of praise service featuring your favourite hymns! If you have a favourite you’d like to nominate, please send your suggestion to Teri by the 30th of July.
* We worship in the sanctuary on Sundays at 11am, and all Sunday worship is also online (or on the phone at 01475 270037, or in print). If you are able, please enter by the front door in Bath street, and only those who need step-free access should use the back door. If you feel unwell, please worship online, to protect both yourself and others in our community.
* Did you know that the ministry we do at St John’s costs about £2700 per week? Everything we do is funded by your generous giving — all our support for young people, older people, bereavement care, community outreach, worship, study, spiritual growth, and community work is because of your offering. If you would like to set up a standing order in order to facilitate your spiritual discipline of giving, or if you would like to make an extra gift to support the ministry St. John’s does in our parish, you can give online by clicking here. If you would like to set up a standing order, please contact Teri and she can give you the treasurer’s details. You can also send your envelopes to the church or the manse by post and we will ensure they are received. It is also possible to donate to the work of the new parish assistant, speak to Anne Love about how to go about directing new donations to that new item in the budget.
*Don’t forget to follow us on Facebook and Youtube, and to sign up for our email devotions! Midweek you can watch Wine and the Word on Youtube, pray with video devotions on Facebook, and consider a new angle on something with a devotional email. Feel free to share with your friends, too!
* Wednesday Evening Bible Study is on a summer break!
* Young Adult Bible Study is on a summer break!
* 2023 marks the 125th anniversary of the 2nd Gourock Boys’ Brigade. Our anniversary Grand Charity Ball will be Saturday 9th September 6.00 for 6.30pm in Greenock Town Hall. Tickets priced £50 or £500 for a table of 10 are available now from BB leaders. Every penny raised from ticket sales and our charity auction on the evening will go directly to our chosen charities. This event is open to all so please spread the word, book your table, put the date in your diary and look forward to what we are sure will be a Second To None evening of enjoyment and celebration.
* Free period products are available in the church toilets for anyone who might need them, thanks to Hey Girls and Inverclyde Council.
Sunday Service for 9 May 2021, sixth Sunday of Easter
Sunday Service for 9 May 2021, Sixth Sunday of Easter
Prepared by Rt. Rev. Dr. Martin Fair, Moderator of the General Assembly
St. John’s Manse phone: 632143
Email: tpeterson (at) churchofscotland.org.uk
To hear an audio recording of this service, including music, please phone 01475 270037.
Taking part in today’s service is
The Right Reverend Dr Martin Fair, Moderator of the General Assembly
Rev Heather Stewart, OLM & Presbytery Clerk, Caithness
Ellie, Temple Anniesland, Glasgow
Philipe Teixeira, Youth Worker, Sandyford Henderson, Glasgow
Rev Fiona Gardner, Temple Anniesland, Glasgow
Rev Andrew Barrie, Pultneytown & Thrumster, Wick
With music Ellon Parish Church, Fischy Music and Dunblane Cathedral Choir
~~~~
Introduction – The Right Reverend Dr Martin Fair, Moderator of the General Assembly
Hi everybody and welcome to worship.
As I’m recording this, last Sunday, I was in a church in person and it was wonderful to be back physically with others as we worshipped. But the church in question that was the first Sunday they had been open since the middle of March last year throughout all of that pandemic period. And I spoke to a woman that I met after the service and she said to me how much she had appreciated these digital services, that had been her lifeline to worship. And she spoke so appreciatively of the different folks that have taken part in the service, folks from all across the church and from all across Scotland.
So let me say today, as we begin a big thank you to those who are contributing to today service and to those who throughout all this period have given of themselves to make these services possible. And as I’ve said, week in and week out a real thank you to the tech team behind the scenes. Their job is a very important one though you never get to see them, without them, we would be nowhere at all.
So this is the day the Lord has made let us rejoice and be glad in it as we worship God together.
Song 1 – I will offer up my life – Ellon Parish Church
I will offer up my life In spirit and truth
Pouring out the oil of love
As my worship to You
In surrender I must give my every part
Lord receive the sacrifice
Of a broken heart
Jesus what can I give what can I bring
To so faithful a friend to so loving a King
Saviour what can be said what can be sung
As a praise of Your name
For the things You have done
Oh my words could not tell not even in part
Of the debt of love that is owed
By this thankful heart
You deserve my every breath
For You’ve paid the great cost
Giving up Your life to death
Even death on a cross
You took all my shame away
There defeated my sin
Opened up the gates of heaven
And have beckoned me in
Prayer of Approach – Rev Heather Stewart, OLM & Presbytery Clerk, Caithness
Lord of all being, throned a far, your glory flames from sun and star centre and soul of every sphere yet to each loving heart how near, let us pray.
Lord, we come today from all walks of life and different backgrounds and ages to worship our God who is Lord of creation. And we are amazed at your handiwork, the majesty of towering mountains and lowly valleys, of raging seas and trickling burns, of the delicate flowers and the mighty trees. We are amazed at the teaming life that occupies our planet earth, a place for every creature of land, air, and sea and yet out of all creation you chose human beings to have an intimate relationship with you.
Lord God, through your son, Jesus Christ and his death on the cross, you made known to us the greatness of your love, a love that is utterly reliable and encompasses everyone. That love understands that while some of us are full of joy this morning and eager to worship, that some are burdened down with the stresses of daily living. Some are wearied from tasks of serving and caring for others. Some of us are worried about what the future holds.
Thank you that you understand this Lord and you long for us to know that Jesus wants to take our burdens and set us free so we may experience the fullness of life that he promises. Such love frees us from the mistakes of the past, strengthens us in the present and enables us to look forward in hope.
So God in this time of worship today help us to respond to your call, to be followers of Jesus and to demonstrate that selfless love within the church and in our communities so that others will come to know the love of God for themselves.
And now we join together in saying the words that Jesus taught his disciples to say.
Our father in heaven, hollowed be your name, your kingdom come, your will be done on earth as in heaven. Give us today our daily bread, forgive us our sins as we forgive those who sin against us save us from the time of trial and deliver us from evil, for the kingdom, the power, and the glory are yours now and forever, amen.
Scripture Reading – Ellie, Temple Anniesland, Glasgow John 15:9-17
“As the father has loved me so have I loved you. Now remain in my love. If you keep my commands, you will remain in my love just as I kept my father’s commands and remain in his love. I have told you this so that my joy may be in you and your joy may be complete.
My command is this, love each other as I have loved you. Greater love has no one than this: to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.
You are my friends if you do what I command. I no longer call you servants because a servant does not know his master’s business. Instead I have called you friends for everything I’ve learned from my father, I’ve made known to you. Y ou did not choose me but I have chose you and appointed you so that you may go and bear fruit, fruit that will last. And so, whatever you ask in my name my father will give you.
This is my command, love each other.”
All Age Talk – Philipe Teixeira, Youth Worker, Sandyford Henderson, Glasgow
Hello, hello, boys and girls. I hope you’re all well.
Today, we’re going to do something really exciting. We’re going to learn something really important, a commandment from Jesus himself.
The word of God, the Bible in the book of John 15:12-13 say this. “This is my commandment that you love one another as I have loved you. Greater love has no one than this, that someone lay down his life for his friends.” When Jesus revealed his commandment to us to love one another, Jesus also gave us the solution to fulfil this commandment which is to give our lives for our friends.
But to give our lives for our friends does not mean only to die for our friends but to experience the love of God at all times, in all circumstances in spite of regrets in health, in illness, in joy or in sadness. Giving life is also not being mean with your school friends, not bullying your friends, giving attention, affection, comfort, good advice, assistance, and protection. It’s giving and not asking for it back. It’s helping and not looking for a reward for what we do. It’s truly loving one another as Jesus commanded.
You know, God’s love is an eternal love and the model of eternal love is Jesus who gave his life for us on the cross. This gospel, the gospel of John, Jesus tells us that his friends are those who keep his commandment. So to make sure that we are friends of Jesus, we need to love one another, we need to love our friends. The commandment of Jesus is love. And if we are living this love, the book of John say that we are no longer servants of Jesus, but friends. How amazing is that?
If we are obedient to Jesus we become his friend, wow. And a friend of Jesus is one who is very close to him in prayer, in intimacy, but above all, the one who act according to his word, the Bible. So boys and girls do you want to be called a friend of Jesus?
If you want to be called a friend of Jesus you need to be obedient to his commandment and love one another as he loved us.
Song 2 – Love, love, love – Fischy Music
Even when you fail the test
Even when you make a mess
Even when you’re tried your best
It’s always gonna be here
Every time you’re feeling strong
Every time you sing a song
Every time you play along
It’s always gonna be here
Love, love, love
It’s always gonna be here
Love, love, love
It’s always gonna be here
Love, love, love
It’s always gonna be here
Love, love, love
It’s always gonna be here
Even when it’s such a pain
Even when it’s down the drain.
Even when you feel the strain
It’s always gonna be here
Every time you feel the beat
Every time you move your feet
Every time you’re on the streets
It’s always gonna be here
Love, love, love
It’s always gonna be here
Love, love, love
It’s always gonna be here
Love, love, love
It’s always gonna be here
Love, love, love
It’s always gonna be here
Nothing in the world, hey
Nothing in the world, hey
Nothing in the world’s quite like it
Nothing in the world, hey
Nothing in the world, hey
Nothing in the world’s quite like it
Always gonna be, always gonna be
Always gonna be, always gonna be
Always gonna be, always gonna be
Always gonna be here Love, love, love
It’s always gonna be here
Sermon – Rev Fiona Gardner, Temple Anniesland, Glasgow
John chapter 15:9-17, the inspiration and joy of loving one another. Poets and philosophers have long since tried to define the nature of love. But I think words can seem so small when trying to define such a big concept.
Sometimes the words of hymns and praise songs can help like the words of hymn 622. We sing a love that sets all people free. Such a powerful hymn, talking of the love that is a living love that serves without counting the costs, that is unafraid to be itself, that is radiant and brings to our wounds healing grace and the prayer here is for that living love of Christ to live in our hearts today and it is just so beautiful.
Perhaps the most amazing description of love of course, is from 1 Corinthians 13 and this is from the message paraphrase. Love never gives up, love cares more for others than for self, love doesn’t want what it doesn’t have, love doesn’t strut, doesn’t have a swelled head, doesn’t force itself on others. Isn’t not always me first. Doesn’t fly off the handle. Doesn’t keep score of the sins of others. Doesn’t revel when others grovel, but takes pleasure in the flowering of truth, puts up with anything. Trust God always, always looks for the best, never looks back, but keeps going to the end. Love never dies. Another gorgeous description that gives us just an inkling into the power of love. And we’re thinking of these things because we’re thinking of verse nine of our passage where we are confronted with the words of Jesus. I have loved you even as my father has loved you, remain in my love. Jesus loved his disciples as the father has loved him. An extraordinary statement about the nature of love.
When we think of the father’s love for Jesus, so powerful and tender, profound and far-reaching. Even though the father knew that Jesus was going to suffer on the cross to take away the sins of the world, he was willing to allow this so that his love may cascade out through time and space and that same love flows out to us today and touches each of us through his Holy Spirit.
As a parent, it can be so tough watching our children suffer when they have lost their job or when they’re hurting. We want to make everything better for them. But often all we can do is watch and pray to support them as they try and find their own way through to healing. Love is such a strange thing because it’s often not extravagant gestures, but often just small acts of grace or sometimes even refraining from doing something. God had this kind of perfect parental love for his son. And it’s the same quality of love that Jesus had for his disciples. So he calls his disciples his friends to remain in his love and obey his commandments. Commandments summed up in loving God with all your heart and your soul and your mind and your strength and loving your neighbour as yourself. And we’re told that if we do this we can even be filled with joy.
These can be difficult words to hear because many people are not feeling very joyful just now. Even though the virus numbers are down in this country and the restrictions are lessening, there are so many choices and changes, so many worries and pressures, so much suffering and bereavement where people have not had the time and the space to be able to process their grief. So many people are talking of feeling isolated, worrying that they’ve been forgotten by the world and even forgotten by God. And you know, whether we are in a peaceful place today or a more precarious place, we need to be reminded of God’s love and to be able to receive it. We are all wired differently. Many people connect with God through his words, through reading it and finding challenge and comfort in different passages.
Maybe through the struggles of the Psalmist or the promises of our Lord. Sometimes we also receive God’s love by going for a walk, the beauty of creation or listening to a beautiful piece of praise music, or just having space to be still, or we might reflect on how Jesus showed love. Whether it was stopping to speak to a small man up a tree or showing acceptance to the marginalised, or bringing healing to the people with leprosy or the women who were unwell. Maybe we might engage with some Lectio Divina to relish a word that really speaks to us in our specific situation. Or maybe to imagine what it would have been like if we’d been in an encounter with Jesus, what would he have said to us?
You know, God is so generous in his love. There are abundant ways that he has of attracting our attention and reminding us of his incredible and transformational love for each one of us. Being loved by God in Christ is the best thing ever. It brings forgiveness and peace and comfort and identity. And Jesus wants us to know this love and to remain in it, what a wonderful privilege. And if we remain in the father’s love then we can find joy for even when things go wrong we know we are still loved by the father and so we are strengthened and encouraged. We receive that love. And then Jesus tells us to love one another for we are now his friends if we do what he has commanded. So having received God’s love, found ways to remain in that love how do we show it to others? How do we bear lasting fruits?
Loving others with the radical love of Jesus is so beautiful and all encompassing, often costly but it’s so essential to our core, to love in such a way as to be willing to lay down your love for your friends. Think what that might look like. It could be the person caring for a loved one where they give of themselves to make sure that other person is okay. It is a person imprisoned for their faith in China or Cuba, the person working in the care home long hours to seek to show love to others, or someone working for racial justice in America.
I’m sure like many of you I have met amazing people showing love for others. People caring for their foster kids, trying to give them the best start in life. Those looking after people with disabilities or difficult mental illnesses. I am so humbled by people who care deeply for others to spend their lives looking after them. So many Christian people doing amazing things. And wouldn’t it be so wonderful if churches were known for their radical love, rather than at times for their small mindedness and judgmentalism. Jesus is such a wonderful saviour. We need to approach him with reverence. But I also have a wonderful drawing of Jesus in my study and he’s lifting up a child in his arms and both of them are laughing with mutual enjoyment. That picture reminds us that love heals us when we are burned out and exhausted but it also inspires us and gives us joy when we abide in the extraordinary love of Christ we find acceptance and freedom and it brings the rest of our lives into perspective.
At times, I forget, I get bogged down in churchiosity in meetings and minutes. And I know that they’re necessary but at times they sap my energy. And so I continually need to go back to spending time with Jesus abiding in his love, knowing that he calls me to freedom and to loving others. That’s not telling them what to do, but trying to model it, trying to love with abundance, to care for others wellbeing so that God can restore their souls.
I love being a spiritual accompanier. And the idea here is that you don’t get in other’s way but you just facilitate God working and watching a soul rediscovering how much they are loved by God, seeing his love shining in their faces is so incredible even on Zoom. Mother Teresa talks of how so many people feel unloved, uncared for, unwanted. She talks of a poverty of loneliness and spirituality, a hunger for love and a hunger for God. That’s what we see around us just now in the midst of this pandemic. And we have this amazing opportunity of sharing the restorative and joyful love of Jesus Christ with others. So even in the midst of the restrictions and frustration of these days, even in the midst of the turmoil in our lives and the changes in the church, Jesus calls us to remain in his love, to enjoy his love and then go out and share it with others. Maybe not be distracted by everyday frustrations but find new ways of creatively sharing his beautiful and transformative love with all.
May we pray. Gracious God we were lost, but now we’re found. And we seek to remain in your love, to love others with that same life-giving and transformative love that you have shown us. Holy Spirit inspire us we pray to do justice, to offer our lives for your anointing for we ask this for your glory sake and in Jesus name, amen.
Prayer of Intercession – Rev Andrew Barrie, Pultneytown & Thrumster, Wick
Let’s turn to God together and pray again once more in our prayers of intercession.
Lord God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit, God who is love, we turn to you together now to seek your strengthening and empowering that we would be built in love together as your people. Not only are you love but it is you who has shown us what love is that while we were still sinners Christ died for us, that costly sacrificial determined love which is for the other, that love which we know and it’s the very joy of our hearts and the foundation of all of our life in him. That love which has changed us and welcomed us in the gospel and is always bearing fruit.
Help us by the Holy Spirit we ask to grow in that fruit of love as we continue to abide in Christ. Prune us, that we may grow in obedience to Christ, bearing fruit that will last, the fruit of righteousness and holiness putting off the old self and old loves to grow and mature in Christ. Renew us that we would show love to our brothers and sisters in Christ, that we might fulfil the command we’ve heard today, love one another.
We ask this obedient growing love would be seen more throughout our denomination that we would be patient and kind not envying or proud. Oh God we pray for this within our congregations, we pray for this between our congregations and in our presbyteries.
As the next general assembly approaches, we pray that our love for you and for one another would lead us to dishonour others or seek ourselves but to honour you. We ask that during the general assembly we would not delight in evil, but rejoice with the truth in full obedience of Christ.
Our father, we also ask that you would help each of us in the week to come. We ask that the love that you have given us and that your working in us would shine out in word, in deed, in attitude, in action that your love might shine through us. Whatever you place before us in this week to come help us to show the same love as Jesus to the least, the lowest and the lost.
In this week after the elections, we ask that as Christians we would be known most of all for this and we would model your love in a counter cultural way especially in a world where there’s such division, frustration and pain. We pray for all those who have been elected to the new Scottish Parliament session, thanking you for them. We ask that you would help them to rule in a way which is wise, just, and good for the whole of the country.
We pray these things in Jesus name, amen.
Song 3 – We sing a love – Dunblane Cathedral Choir
We sing a love that sets all people free
That blows like wind that burns like scorching flame
Enfolds like earth springs up like water clear
Come living love live in our hearts today
We sing a love that seeks another’s good
That longs to serve and not to count the cost
A love that yielding finds itself made new
Come caring love live in our hearts today
We sing a love unflinching unafraid
To be itself despite another’s wrath
A love that stands alone and undismayed
Come strength’ning love live in our hearts today
We sing a love that wand’ring will not rest
Until it finds its way its home its source
Through joy and sadness pressing on refreshed
Come pilgrim love live in our hearts today
We sing a burning fiery Holy Ghost
That seeks out shades of ancient bitterness
Transfiguring these as Christ in ev’ry heart
Come joyful love live in our hearts today
Blessing – The Right Reverend Dr Martin Fair, Moderator of the General Assembly
Now go in peace and may the blessing of God almighty Father, Son, and Holy Spirit be with you all and remain with you today and forever more, amen.
Announcements
* All worship is online (or on the phone at 01475 270037, or in print) and we also meet in person, subject to the usual protocols for distancing, hand hygiene, mask wearing, and no singing yet. We can welcome approximately 33 people for worship, so if you would like to come in person, please phone Cameron (630879) on a MONDAY afternoon between 1-3pm or Anne Love (07904 617283) on a Saturday morning between 10-12 to book a place.
* Young Adult Bible Study is on Zoom at 1pm, we are reading through the Gospel According to Mark. Contact Teri for login details.
* Tonight we will gather with Christians across the nation for evening prayer on the Connect Facebook Page. Karen is leading tonight’s service, log on at 6:58pm to join in.
* The Kirk now has online giving! If you have not already set up a standing order in order to facilitate your spiritual discipline of giving, or if you would like to make an extra gift to support the ministry St. John’s does in our parish, you can give online by clicking here. If you would like to set up a standing order, please contact Peter Bennett, our treasurer, or Teri and she can give you his details. You can also send your envelopes to the church or the manse by post and we will ensure they are received. Remember: no one is coming to your door to collect your envelopes, so please stay safe!
* The theme for worship during the season of Easter is “Re-membering” — being put back together as a community, perhaps in new ways! Easter is a season that lasts 50 days, from Easter Day until Pentecost.
* Don’t forget to follow us on Facebook and Youtube, and to sign up for our email devotions! Midweek you can watch Wine and the Word on Youtube, pray with video devotions on Facebook, and consider a new angle on something with a devotional email. Feel free to share with your friends, too!
* May includes Christian Aid week! While door to door collections, book sales, and coffee mornings are not possible, Christian Aid is encouraging us to undertake a month-long sponsored walk. Can you, or a group/family, commit to walking 300,000 steps during the month of May? It’s around 10,000 steps per day. Get some sponsors and get walking — together we can become more fit and also help people most in need. You can collect your sponsorships in an envelope and send them to the church for forwarding to christian aid, or you can collect donations online. If you need help with that, contact Teri.