A Fresh Word: God is big enough.

A Fresh Word: God is big enough.

As worship expands our understanding of God, we will discover God is “big enough” for all that happens in our lives – and for us. In fact, worship – having put God in God’s rightful place – puts us in our place, as well – where we discover forgiveness enabling repentance. That leads us to an intimacy with God, enabling us to hear the invitation to mission – and to respond.

By Bill Dogterom

Seven Years: The value of the experience of the holy spirit.

Seven Years: The value of the experience of the holy spirit.

We were made for experience and the Bible is a book of countless peoples' experience of the one true God. And yet for many, their Christian faith has become more about belief and behavior than experience. Pentecost is the day we celebrate the Holy Spirit being poured out on all believers. He meets us as a felt experience and a powerful experience. He renews and empowers. There is always more of him. And the more full of him we are, the more we will live the lives we were created for. So, be filled with the Holy Spirit.

By Ed Flint

Seven Years: The value of other.

Seven Years: The value of other.

The new church of Jewish believers in Acts saw tremendous things, but before it even spread from Jerusalem, there were problems. The reunification of disparate tribes was proving predictably tough. But in just a few verses we see how, being full of the spirit and wisdom, the pain of the past, and the problems of the present are transformed. Our brains are wired for division and hierarchy. But the gospel changes that forever.

Seven Years: The value of generosity.

Seven Years: The value of generosity.

Before bread was even a church, people connected with the idea of bread have been incredibly generous towards it. We want to continue that marker of generosity in everything we do.

This should be no surprise. To be a Christian is to be generous: it is who we are. The more we experience God’s grace - his unmerited generosity - the more generous we become. The key is having him as our bottomline, as opposed to money, or success, or anything else.

When we operate from grace, our giving becomes active and regular, rather than passive and irregular. And the benefits are invaluable- God's glory and His kingdom extended in our lives and all the lives of those connected to us.

By Ed Flint

Seven Years: The value of worship.

Seven Years: The value of worship.

Worship is innate to all of God’s creation including all of us as human beings. We reflect God’s glory by simply existing. But it’s also a choice. When we choose to enter into God’s presence in worship we in faith acknowledge who God is and what he is like. We can’t necessarily make God more visible to us but we can make ourselves more visible to him.

So, by being honest about where we’re at in worship; surrendering our anger, our fear, our worries, our joy and sadness to him, he meets us as he is- our all-loving, all-powerful, all-knowing God, and as we are, his dearly loved creation made to be with him.

By Tavia Grubbs

Seven Years: The value of identity.

Seven Years: The value of identity.

In this talk, we explore the profound truth of our worthiness as beings created in God's image. Just as Eve succumbed to the lie of inadequacy, many of us believe we're not enough, striving to earn love and belonging. This struggle is compounded by societal influences like racism and misogyny, as well as clever marketing campaigns convincing us we aren't quite enough.

However, God's unconditional love assures us of our inherent worth. From this foundation, we're empowered to navigate life's challenges, free from the need to prove our worthiness. Join us as we discover the liberating truth: worthiness is our birthright.

By Anthony McLean

Seven Years: The value of rest.

Seven Years: The value of rest.

The importance of rest is instituted in the very first verses of the Bible. After six days of creation, God rests. We, as people made in his image, are called to rest like him. Sabbath is more than just a day off each week. Sabbath means to stop, rest - but also to delight in creation, worship God and receive from him. A regular weekly rhythm of rest is essential for us to live as the images of God we were created to be.

By Ed Flint

Seven Years: The value of team.

Seven Years: The value of team.

The goal of any church is to build the kingdom of God. And that can best be done when we work together as a team. What it means to be part of a team is demonstrated brilliantly by Barnabas in the book of Acts. Barnabas was a wonderful encourager. And we can be too. Encouragement dispels fear, promotes grace, releases potential and restores the fallen. Bread has had some excellent encouragers down the years. Let’s continue! The more we receive the encouragement of God, whose spirit is the Great Encourager, the more we will be empowered to encourage one another.

By Ed Flint

Easter is about hope.

Easter is about hope.

Easter is about hope: the sure, concrete, touchable hope that is found in the bodily resurrection of Jesus. It’s a hope based in his power (he swallows up death forever) and based in his kindness (he wipes every tear from all faces). Easter declares Jesus as Lord of all, which sets us free from having to bear the burden of being our own lord. His lordship sets us free to worship and surrender and be made alive by his power and in his kindness.

By Ed Flint

Galatians: freedom for inclusion.

Galatians: freedom for inclusion.

Humans have always divided themselves into “us and them”, for the sake of belonging and safety. The goal of the Kingdom, however, is not to strengthen your group at the expense of another. It’s the difficult work of expanding “us”.

In this passage, Paul radically defends against the type of faith that includes a small print. He says there are no disclaimers to the Gospel. It is a free gift received by faith alone. We are in a new era, a new Kingdom, and it’s good news for everyone, period.

In this talk, we discuss the things that cause division, and the challenge to be the type of community that is infused with grace. 

By Tavia Grubbs

Galatians: freedom for the spirit.

Galatians: freedom for the spirit.

It’s some of the densest, Pauliest, grittiest stuff we find in the New Testament, but chapter 3 of his letter to the church in Galatia is where Paul gets right to it: the entire story, the whole point, every bit of the law and the covenant show that it was always faith that He asked for.

From the beginning, He was a God who wanted to dwell among His people, and His plans for their rescue never changed.

By Hannah Flint

Galatians: freedom for faith.

Galatians: freedom for faith.

Our beliefs govern our behavior. Paul confronts Peter who has stopped believing in the fullness of the grace of Jesus. As a result, his behavior has become divisive and hypocritical. Paul reminds him and us of the truths of the gospel. When we believe the correct thing about God, ourselves, and the world, godly behavior will follow. We become people not bound by the law, but free to live lives of faith and of the Spirit.

By Ed Flint

Galatians: freedom from prejudice.

Galatians: freedom from prejudice.

With the noise and pressure mounting from others for the Galatians to take upon themselves more than just the grace of Jesus, Paul knows a secret: the grace of God is enough. It is enough to lead all of us on a journey into freedom - freedom from the prejudices of others, and ultimately freedom from the judgments we place upon ourselves.  Simply stated, the gift of God’s grace is freedom.

By Matt Yeoman

Galatians: freedom for a calling.

Galatians: freedom for a calling.

Do you know that you’re called? Do you know what you’re called to? It’s usually a subject that often raises some difficult feelings for many, for different reasons...

Paul understood his call in very simple terms: he was chosen by God to fulfill an ancient promise that the gospel of Jesus grace would go out to the gentiles. Not by them being brought into the Jewish way of life, but by Jesus spreading out and permeating there’s (which was causing quite the rift.) His willingness to accept the cost of his call brings us to a very important truth: we have different gifts, talents and work to do, but our call in Jesus is never really about us. It’s about being His witnesses, and loving Him enough to follow wherever He will lead. 

By Hannah Flint

Galatians: freedom from gracelessness.

Galatians: freedom from gracelessness.

There is no more important word for a Christian than the word ‘grace’. It is the beginning, middle and end of the Christian life. Its vital importance is seen in how passionately Paul responds to the Galatians who have had the gospel of grace polluted with gracelessness. We are all susceptible to doing something similar. So let us have the same no-holds-barred response of Paul. We should take no prisoners in our battle to hold the shocking grace of Jesus, in all his unconditional love, unconditional forgiveness, and unconditional rescue of us, at the very heart of our lives.

By Ed Flint

Moses: pass it on.

Moses: pass it on.

In this final talk on Moses, we look at how Moses passes leadership on to his successor Joshua. We, like Moses, are called to do all we can to help the next generation of leaders emerge, and to do all we can to help them succeed. And, like Joshua, we’re called to develop both our gifts and character so that we can best step up into leadership when the opportunity and God’s call come. The challenge for all of us is like Moses - to find younger leaders we can invest in; and like Joshua - be the sort of person more mature leaders want to develop. The kingdom of God is, fundamentally a kingdom of people. So when our attitude is, ‘How can I best develop my gifts to serve others, whilst working to help others thrive so they can best serve too?’ God’s kingdom grows.

By Ed Flint

Moses: believe in more.

Moses: believe in more.

Moses risks everything to pursue God’s presence. Even though God promises to deliver his people, to protect them from their enemies, and to bring blessing, that God’s presence won’t go with them is not enough for Moses. This never-ending desire for more of God is at the heart of what it is to be a leader. We follow Moses in this by admitting where we’ve lost God’s presence and doing everything we can to regain it. The reward is nothing less than the felt experience of God’s goodness.

By Ed Flint

Moses: how to survive the journey.

Moses: how to survive the journey.

In the 22 Days - by best guesses - that the Israelites took to travel from the Red Sea to Mount Sinai, a number of memorable events took place. Moses led the people through hunger, thirst and military attack - and God met their needs every time - before finally reaching the mountain. These are vignettes we may be very familiar with but it’s so good to remember God’s patience with us on the journey, his protection, his ongoing call to his people, and what these stories always pointed to!

By Hannah Flint

Moses: knowing when to be still and when to act.

Moses: knowing when to be still and when to act.

We were delighted to welcome guest speaker Bill Dogetrom to speak and continue our series on Moses and the marks of a great leader. Bill brings all his years of experience to help unpack the famous episode of God delivering the Israelites across the Red Sea. Moses learns there are times when we need to be still in prayer, and others when when we need to move forward prayerfully. When we are grounded in God through prayer we can be a non-anxious presence when all around is chaos. And we’ll know when it’s time to stay still, and when it’s time to go.

By Bill Dogetrom

Moses: learn from our failures.

Moses: learn from our failures.

Great leaders learn from failure. Moses fails both by the world’s standards - he gives up all the riches of Egyptian royalty to be with his downtrodden people; and, he fails by God’s standards - he takes God’s justice into his own hands and operates from his flesh, murdering an Egyptian. Both failures lead him to the desert. But it’s in the desert that God does his redemption. It’s in Moses’ isolation that God works wonderful things for good. The same is true for us. Our desert experiences are often the time God teaches us and develops us in ways we could never experience normally. And his promise is never to leave us there.

By Ed Flint