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Posts Tagged ‘drummoyne’

Current Series: Wisdom from the Book of James

Sunday, 21 April 2013 06:18 Written by jamesmacbeth 0 Comments

james series pic

 

 

 

 

 

 

7th April – James 1:1-18 – Perseverance

14th April – James 1:19-27 – Act on the Word

21st April – James 2:1-14 – No Favourites

28th April – James 2:14-26 – Works: Under Construction

5th May – James 3:1-12 - One Chance to Speak

19th May – James 3:13-4:12 - Called to Wisdom

26th May – James 4:13-5:6 – Boasting about Tomorrow

2nd June – James 5:7-19 – Patience and Prayer

Christianity Explored Course

Friday, 28 September 2012 08:02 Written by andypearce 0 Comments

One life. What’s it all about?

Join us for a free course over 6 weeks exploring Christianity.

This is a great opportunity to discuss matters of faith, ask questions or simply listen as we consider what Jesus said and did. Evenings are deliberately low-key and light refreshments are provided.

If you are interested in attending our next Christianity Explored Course please call James Macbeth on 9181 1653 or email 

 Our next course starts on May 2nd and runs over 6 Thursday evenings.

The womb, the weaver and a jewellery store

Saturday, 23 July 2011 00:48 Written by jamesmacbeth 0 Comments

There is something unique about watching a creator working with his or her native materials, be it a builder, a cook or a musician. There’s an ease and engagement with the tools of their trade. Buildings and food and music flow from their hands.

A number of years ago in one of Sydney’s most exclusive jewellery stores, a customer approached the counter with a very expensive item. The attendant went to open up the sale on the computer, but the system froze. As she visibly started to panic, the  customer asked if he could help. He leant over and solved the problem with a few brief taps on the keyboard. It was not until he left the store that someone pointed out that that was Bill Gates – the man behind Microsoft and the probable inventor of most of that computer system. Without knowing it, she had briefly witnessed the creator dealing first hand with his creation.

Every Christmas, we stop and celebrate that very thing on a far greater scale. We mark that moment in history when the Creator entered into his creation, not in a fleeting way, but over a nine month stretch which gave birth to a life like no other: the life of Jesus Christ, the son of God.

We know that God makes everything, but surely his most extraordinary workshop is the womb. It is there that his most intimate, detailed work is done. Psalm 139:13-16 is an ancient celebration of this fact:

For you created my inmost being;

   you knit me together in my mother’s womb.

I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made;

   your works are wonderful, I know that full well.

My frame was not hidden from you when I was made in the secret place.

When I was woven together in the depths of the earth,

   your eyes saw my unformed body.

All the days ordained for me were written in your book

   before one of them came to be.

Of all that God makes, human beings are his masterpieces. We are the only parts of his creation made in his image. (Genesis 1:26,27)  For most of history, the place where we are formed has been hidden from our sight. Even though we now glimpse ‘the secret place’ in 3-D ultrasound, it remains a place of wonder and mystery. This is where we are woven together- inner and outer. We are hand made, knitted together in a process that is fearful  (ie awesome) and wonderful. Even the most detailed technical account of what happens from conception onwards does not really ‘explain’ what’s going on in the womb.

ultrasound

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We celebrate this wonder at any time in the year, but at Christmas we see God enter that intimate workspace in a new way. In Jesus we see the Weaver become one with what is woven. This interwoven state is captured in one of his names – Immanuelle or ‘God with us’ (Matthew 1:22,23) 

 For God to be truly ‘with us’ – not simply present as he was to Moses on Sinai, for example, he must come a certain way. He doesn’t arrive like a terminator from another time, or a glowing figure from another dimension. He comes as a fertislised egg that grows into a fully formed baby in a virgin’s womb. This ensures that the timing and method of Jesus’ arrival remains God’s call, not that of a husband or wife, or even a prospective mum.  It also presents us with the mind-bending truth that the living, eternal God has become flesh and made his dwelling here. (John 1:14). Why?

 This conception and birth is about the one who has no beginning going to where you and I begin – so that he can determine our end.

We literally start as a sperm fertilisers an egg. Jesus has no such start. He has always existed. In Philippians 2:6,7 and 2 Corinthians 8:9 we’re told that Jesus, who is God, has humbly, lovingly, obediently put aside his glory and become poor for our sakes. He does this partly to show us what a human being should be – from the ground up, from the womb onwards. We are made to live and walk with the one who has made us – in open trust, delight and obedience. He shows us godliness in action.

Yet Jesus has also come to confront that which stands between us and him – that which stops us from being godly and makes us the opposite. We are his masterpieces, yet we have trampled his image in us and treated his Lordship with contempt. We are riddled with sin and crippled in our rebellion. The one who could so readily and rightly have come to judge has come instead to save.

So great is Jesus’ love for us -  so profound is his identification with us – that he’s willing to be condemned in our place and die on the cross for our sins. As the perfect man, he is the perfect sacrifice for us before his heavenly Father. This is the poverty he was willing to experience so that we can be rich beyond measure. He dies, so that we might live as forgiven men and women - people who walk with him by faith and are ready for the day he does come to judge. (John 5:24-30)

Here is the wonderful yet stark truth of Christmas.

He who entered the womb – was also carried into the tomb. He who knew that most intimate cradle of life – also experienced the very dark room of death – then rose again with an indestructible, resurrected life.

Draw near to Jesus in repentance and faith this Christmas, knowing that he has drawn near to you. He who has no beginning has gone to where you and I begin – so that he can determine our end. He has came to our broken home for awhile – so that we can enter his perfect, heavenly home forever. He has entered our most intimate space for a season - so that we can live with him in his most intimate space for eternity.

That’s worth celebrating.

Boat-People, a taxi and ‘the shoreless conscience of our world’

Thursday, 21 July 2011 11:32 Written by jamesmacbeth 0 Comments

At a recent Men’s Long Table someone raised the vexed issue of ’boat-people’ and how we are to respond as Christians. The passionate discussion that followed revealed a real struggle within each of us to respect the laws of the land and show compassion – the tension between being generous and just. It also revealed how hard it is to understand where others come from and why they take such risks.

 A number of years ago I knew a student minister who drove a taxi part-time in order to pay the bills. He used to end his shift and hand over at 3am to a tiny Cambodian fellow. One night he asked him what he did when he’d get a taxi full of big, drunk Aussies giving him a hard time. The Cambodian man just laughed: “You guys have no idea what ‘a hard time’ is.” It turned out this man had had his entire family shot by the Khmer-Rouge before his eyes. He had fled and, somehow, made his way to Australia. He found this country to be a ‘strange oasis’ of peace and order, but also (and perhaps mercifully) ignorant of what was going on in neighbouring parts of the world.

I often think of that man when I see the footage of the boats towed in to Christmas Island and the faces of those sitting cross-legged on the deck. Where are you from? What has driven you away from home and out onto the water?

386428-refugees

 

 

 

 

 

I know there are thousands who have waited in line, waded through the interminable beauracracy, and arrived according to the law. I know two Iraqi Christians in particular who came this way, then laboured long to help their family flee the warzone and come out by the right channels. I know it is a godly thing to respect the laws of the land (1 Peter2:13-17) and that illegal immigration draws precious resources away from an already stretched department. I know there will inevitably be those whose refusal to wait for official channels will also be reflected in dishonest dealings with the govenment once here (a long Australian tradition, I might add!). Letting others in before those who’ve applied and waited is not fair. 

And yet, I look at those faces and wonder. What if ‘official channels’ in their country have meant terror, violence and loss? What if they have never known a day when they could trust the authorities or have a voice in politics? If I found myself, Michelle and the kids in the rubble of Afghanistan or Cairo’s ‘city of the dead’, wouldn’t I do all I could to get us out?

I look at those faces and wonder about Jesus’ command to be merciful (Luke 6:36) and that vital fruit of his Spirit within us: compassion (Galatians 5:22,23). This is a readiness to look on the brokenness of another and not walk away or slam the door. It means loving and serving, as Jesus has loved and served us, well beyond any worldy guage of ‘fairness’. Grace isnt fair or even. It’s costly and utterly of God. In Jesus, crucified and risen for us, we see that tension between being generous and just played out in full. 

How this works through a secular government or any of the agencies working in this area, I do not know. There are so many tensions in this matter and I suspect last Tuesday’s Long table will not be the last word spoken on the matter. Yet I know this. I would rather live in a country that shows costly compassion to that Cambodian man, than a nation that slams the door on all because some abuse that grace.

I want to live amongst people who keep asking: Where are you from? What has driven you from your home and out onto the water?

 I’ll leave the last word to Bruce Smith

BOAT PEOPLE

Torn from

their moorings

by tempestuous events,

cast upon open seas

hoping for

distant kindness.

Crowded undernourished

ill-equipped

they float

under God’s eye

menaced by fears.

 

They drift

in the

shoreless conscience

of our world.

 

Their frail light

flickers

in ocean’s night.

Community playgroup

Thursday, 24 March 2011 05:54 Written by andypearce 0 Comments

Our playgroup meets on TUESDAYS 10am-12pm during the school term.

We meet in the beautiful grounds of St Bede’s Hall at 21 College St, Drummoyne. 

Our playgroup is a place where children and parents play and relax in a happy, safe environment. It is co-ordinated by a member of St Bede’s Anglican Church.

You do not need to have an affiliation with this or any other church to belong. In order for our playgroup to run effectively we rely on the support of every member.

We are an independent playgroup and we do not belong to the Playgroup Association. There are a number of Christian-related activities during the year and we advertise a number of church events from time to time.

Playgroup Routine

9.30am Rostered set-up duties
10 – 11.30am Free play, including craft and special activities.
Morning tea for both adults and children at 10.30am
11.30am Pack up toys
11.40am Story and music time
12.00 pm Finish

Vacancies

 There is a limit of 30 families per playgroup. In the case of a playgroup being full, a completed registration form and a $15 fee are required if families wish to go on the waiting list. That registration fee becomes your toy levy for the year a space becomes available. There is also a refundable $20 toy maintenance fee per year.

Fees

The following fees are per family:

Annual toy levy $15
Term fees $30  ($120 per year)

More information

Please contact Michelle

Michelle: (02) 9181 1653 
Email: m3macbeth@gmail.com

 Check out our FACEBOOK PAGE   

 

 

 

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14 College St,
(Corner of College & Church Streets)
Drummoyne, NSW 2047, Australia
Tel: (02) 9181 1653
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