How to Return - to the Kingdom

We’re all made for purpose - none of us is just a human being, we’re also human doings. And our god-given individual purpose in life is as unique as we are. But all of us also share a universal purpose- it’s the most fulfilling life giving, transformative and meaningful work we can ever be involved in. It is to be part of and extend the kingdom of God. This talk is about that kingdom, what it looks like and how we play our role.

How to Return - to the Spirit

Pentecost is the moment God's promise to fill his people with the Spirit was fulfilled – this marked the birth of the Church. The Spirit is core to our faith but is often missed, forgotten, or even rejected. We can do all the Christian things and yet miss the Spirit. In this talk, we are challenged to return to the One who refills us, who renews us, and sustains us so we can be the people God has called us to be. This all happens as we experience the Spirit again and again.

How to Return - to Worship

Right from the start, coming together to sing songs of worship has been central to the practices of the people of God. Worship can take many forms, and it certainly doesn’t have to be done altogether. But being able to sing songs as a community is central to our ethos as a church.

It can be powerful and transformative, but to get there we need to be real about where we’re at, to bring our hopes and fears to God, and to acknowledge that he’s the only one who can satisfy. When we declare who He is, that’s when we can make sense of our lives and our world, and see him, and receive his love and power. We thought a bit of a recap on what it’s all about might be a good idea.

How to Return - to Community

This is a mini-series looking at Jesus’ various appearances to his disciples, after he was resurrected. This week is the account in Luke 24, to 2 unknown disciples, on the road to Emmaus. It shows us a lot about what can happen when we discover our preconceptions of who Jesus is, and what he looks like, don’t turn out to match up to the Jesus of the gospels. We may well have been on a painful road of learning all this ourselves during the pandemic, but Jesus is still here, still the same, and still wholly passionate about our togetherness.

The Antidote to Division

Concluding our series, we look at the final bad thing: division. Two divisions that have touched every part of our existence is the divide between God and humans and the divide between people. In Jesus, these divides come crashing down as one new humanity is created, a humanity that is one with God and others through the Spirit. So when we choose to follow where the Spirit flows, we live heavenly lives that are no longer marked by division. Let's choose the Spirit, division leaves us feeling afraid and alone.

The Antidote to Hate

In a time when there seems no end of vitriol being spouted from every angle, what we and the world need is the end of hate. The power of Jesus is uniquely able to heal our wounds, bridge divides, and recreate us into a family. Lets look to him, and ask him to destroy hate.

The Antidote to Self-Serving Power

What is the church for? An antidote to self serving power. As Christians we have access to the most powerful force in the universe. But the gospel is power unlike the world has ever seen. It is selfless power, power for the other, power to be given away. Let’s us be powerful people- empowered by the spirit - for the sake not of ourselves but everyone else.

Grace over Greed

Carrying on our series on what we can learn from the brand new church in Acts, we’re looking at the antidote to greed today. For many of us, greed is that icky thing we've picked up as means to survive. It tells us the more we possess, the safer we will be but ironically, it leaves us feeling more empty and it almost always hurts others. None of this is new, and if we want to be who Jesus has made us to be, we'll need to look inward ourselves and be oriented towards grace just like the church in Acts did . When we trust the Spirit and lunge into community, we rob greed of its power and become open handed people engaged in kingdom activity.

What's So Bad About Individualism?

Our own personal identity in Jesus. It’s what some of us spend our youth chasing after. And there’s nothing wrong with wanting to be clear on who he made you, what he’s calling you to, and we will NEVER stop talking about how much He loves you. But we’re pretty clear that there is a real imbalance in Western christianity right now. That our culturally indoctrinated lens of individuality has invaded our church spaces, to very damaging degrees, and that we need to talk about what we’re called to. When we receive what Jesus has for us, it changes how we think about self, and other, and power, and peace and ever needing to win again.

What Difference Does The Church Make?

Why is it that sometimes it’s difficult to point to the positive impact church has had - not just in our personal lives but on society in general? The church has unlimited potential. But the degree to which we see goody fruit and godly impact will always be dependent on the degree to which we become people of his spirit. The fruit of his spirit affects our personal ethical life, the gifts of his spirit affects our corporate societal life. Let us open ourselves to both as much as we possibly can; for our sake and for the sake of a world in need.

Good Grief!

As much as we want to be looking forward to what lies ahead this year, we believe God is speaking to us about grief. Life is, of cours, full of beauty and wonder, but it is also - start to finish - full of loss (It’s hard to imagine there are many among us who haven’t lost something meaningful in the last 12 months!) Jesus’ life shows us that there is only one holy and right response to loss, and it is grief. There is no way to bypass or shortcut this often painful process, but we must fight the cultural lie that sadness is shameful, and mourn, like Jesus mourned, for what has been lost. At the end of it all, it’s not just about our recovery or healing, it’s about what He can plant in the fertile soil that grieving tills.

Leave It At His Feet

It’s likely we’re all feeling the weight of life right now. Life feels constricted and burdensome and our tendency is to carry the weight of it all. However, Jesus invites us to leave it all at his feet and enter his rest. The One who rests our souls gently mends us back together for so much more.

2021 - What a Start!

This is a recording of the all-church zoom call, where we lay out our sense of what God is saying to us, and where he is taking us. If you see yourself as a part of Bread and you couldn’t make it, please do give it a listen. We’re shaking up our online life a bit, and want you to know what is what.

Advent - What We All Need Right Now

What does everyone need right now? A bunch of hope. Which is what the whole of Christmas is about. It’s hope despite our circumstances. It’s hope even when the rest of the world is hopeless. Because this is hope that comes from outside this world. When the world is mundane, it’s miraculous. When the world is lonely, it's intimate. When the world is constrained, it’s free. And when the world is banal, it’s divine. This is what Jesus has come to earth to bring us and it’s ours if we want it!

Gracious Giving, Gracious Vision

The gospel is very clear about how we are to think/feel/act on our relationship with money. We can try all we want to squirm out of it (believe us we’ve tried) but Jesus told us to be like himself: not giving out of surplus, not guilt, but being willing to give everything up. Where we (all!) fall short on that, let’s now come back to the grace thing. Grace is where every single thing in our christian lives must begin and end and never ever run dry. It is not a doctrine, grace is a person, our only answer, our only fuel, if we’re to be the kind of self-giving people we know we want to be. So - as we take this moment to remember the kind of church we know bread will be again - let’s make it about grace.

Philippians - Letter of Hope - Freedom from Worry

As we end our series on Philippians we consider how we can be joyful people, specifically how we can be free from anxiety when it comes to our finances. Generosity is a hallmark of God’s kingdom. It sets us free from the power of money and our anxiety over it.

Philippians - Letter of Hope - Kingdom People

Paul paints the vision of Christian community: God's children, citizens of heaven, turned outwards to face the brokenness of the world and revealing glimpses of heaven's glory, transformed through our relationship with Jesus. We remember that we don’t do this Kingdom-building in our own strength.. Empowered by his spirit, we do it together as a community (yes! even in these crazy, ongoing pandemic days)

Philippians - Letter of Hope - All Under Christ

When privileges and accolades are misused to challenge our sense of worth, Paul’s words remind us to count it all as it is in its rightful place: under Christ. The value of knowing the One who loves us surpasses it all and what we gain in Him makes this transaction a no-brainer.

Philippians - Letter of Hope - Citizens of Somewhere Else

As if by magic, the part of Paul’s letter to a persecuted and divided church in ancient Philippi felt more than a little bit relevant to our national experience this week (it was a scheduling fluke, but it’s kind of amazing how often that happens!) Paul’s major concern for any church and any situation is ALWAYS the gospel… How can we help people know the love of Christ, and for us today, every bit as much as the Philippians, that means knowing what citizenship really means, and what harmony is always going to require of us.

Philippians - Letter of Hope - To Live is Christ

The antidote to being dictated to by our circumstances: it is a definition of life that enables us not to have to escape the world and culture, nor be governed by it. It helps us embrace it and redeem it and live above it. It is the only thing big enough to do it. It is to be people of heaven - here and now - who can say, with Paul: to live is Christ!