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

ALPHA - Week 5: The Bible

Alpha is a six week course exploring the big questions of life. It’s for anyone interested in discussing spirituality, god and the christian faith, in a non-judgmental open-minded context. Each week there’s a great meal, a short talk, and discussion in small groups. People who come to the course are from lots of different backgrounds - no faith, other faiths, brought up christian, and agnostic. Everyone is welcome. Catch up on each week’s talk here.

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

ALPHA - Week 4: Prayer

ALPHA - Week 4: Prayer

Alpha is a six week course exploring the big questions of life. It’s for anyone interested in discussing spirituality, god and the christian faith, in a non-judgmental open-minded context. Each week there’s a great meal, a short talk, and discussion in small groups. People who come to the course are from lots of different backgrounds - no faith, other faiths, brought up christian, and agnostic. Everyone is welcome. Catch up on each week’s talk here.

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

ALPHA - Week 3: Why Did Jesus Die?

ALPHA - Week 3: Why Did Jesus Die?

Alpha is a six week course exploring the big questions of life. It’s for anyone interested in discussing spirituality, god and the christian faith, in a non-judgmental open-minded context. Each week there’s a great meal, a short talk, and discussion in small groups. People who come to the course are from lots of different backgrounds - no faith, other faiths, brought up christian, and agnostic. Everyone is welcome. Catch up on each week’s talk here.

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

ALPHA - Week 2: Jesus and the Evidence for the Resurrection

ALPHA - Week 2: Jesus and the Evidence for the Resurrection

Alpha is a six week course exploring the big questions of life. It’s for anyone interested in discussing spirituality, god and the christian faith, in a non-judgmental open-minded context. Each week there’s a great meal, a short talk, and discussion in small groups. People who come to the course are from lots of different backgrounds - no faith, other faiths, brought up christian, and agnostic. Everyone is welcome. Catch up on each week’s talk here.

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

ALPHA - Week 1: Who are you? What are you for?

ALPHA - Week 1: Who are you? What are you for?

Alpha is a six week course exploring the big questions of life. It’s for anyone interested in discussing spirituality, god and the christian faith, in a non-judgmental open-minded context. Each week there’s a great meal, a short talk, and discussion in small groups. People who come to the course are from lots of different backgrounds - no faith, other faiths, brought up christian, and agnostic. Everyone is welcome. Catch up on each week’s talk here

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

Moses: believe God is in control and know that you matter.

Moses: believe God is in control and know that you matter.

One of the things the world is most in need of is great leadership. So, how can we know what godly leadership looks like, and how can we grow as leaders? Moses is one of the greatest leaders in the Bible. In his birth story we see the foundations on which great leaders stand. They know that, despite the turmoil of the world, God is good and God is in control. When you truly believe this you see that you’re no accident, there is a purpose and calling to your life; you won’t be surprised by what might happen, because nothing is a surprise to God; and you’ll know that in the end everything will work out well because Jesus has defeated all that might come against you. It’s these foundations that enable us to grow into godly leaders who impact and influence our environment for Jesus and his kingdom.

By Ed Flint

Advent: A Very Bread Christmas Service

Advent: A Very Bread Christmas Service

How are you coping? Culture tells us that life is what we make it. It’s down to us. And yet, Christianity says we’re not designed for self-realization, so the pressure to be someone or do something has lead to a crisis of identity. At Christmas, God says something different. Life is what He makes it. And in Jesus, God comes close to us - to tell us who we are, what we’re for, and to share himself with us. When we let the one true living God in, all our questions of identity and purpose find their resolution in him. We know who we are. And we know what we’re for.

Advent: Through the Eyes of Joseph

Advent: Through the Eyes of Joseph

In this talk, we look at the nativity story through the eyes of Joseph - the quiet, faithful carpenter, and adoptive parent of Jesus Christ. Even in the version that tells his side, Joseph functions like a “minor character”. He’s low on the call sheet. He sings in the ensemble. He’s an extra. He, very literally, has no lines. Yet Joseph never tries to take glory. He has all of the power, and still, everything he does shows kindness, humility, and obedience to God. Joseph goes to bed one night and meets with an angel in his dreams, telling him that the baby to be born is not only a supernatural work of the Spirit, but will be known as Immanuel, God with us. In revealing this to him, God shows that he is not only Immanuel, God with the world, but he is also Immanuel, God with Joseph. Immanuel is God seeing us, knowing us, and then meeting us exactly where we are. Not where we appear to be, not where we want to be, but where we are, with what we need. 

By Tavia Grubbs

Philippians: How to be Content with Money

Philippians: How to be Content with Money

In the final section of Paul’s letter to the Philippians, he thanks them for their generosity in supporting him financially. However he is at pains to show he’s more appreciative of the friendship and partnership in the gospel that their generosity reveals than he is with the money they have given. This is because, in God’s kingdom, people are more important than things. The gospel is more important than money. To have our priorities correctly aligned like this requires learning to be content in all circumstances. In particular it requires contentment in relation to money. We live free from the enslaving power of money when learn to treat it as Jesus taught - something not to be worshipped, nor fled from, but to be mastered and held lightly. Generosity, discipline and learning to give money away is one of the best ways to set ourselves free. At the end of this talk we consider why and how all of us, as integral parts of the church, can financially support the work of bread.

By Ed Flint