Sunday, 7 March 2021

Sunday Service

 

Sunday Letter

 

7th March – 3rd Sunday of Lent

 

Dear Friends

 

‘For the foolishness of God is wiser than human wisdom, and the weakness of God is stronger than human strength.’

 

The passage from 1 Corinthians which is one of our readings today is one of immense power and also one that speaks to the unique quality of Christianity.

 

I was listening to a fascinating history programme this week, concerning the Egyptian Pharaoh, Akhenaten.  At some point during his reign as Pharaoh he declared that the god, Aten, was the only god, moving away from the centuries old practice of worshipping multiple gods.  He had temples and palaces built to Aten and took the name Akhenaten, meaning ‘the spirit of Aten’.

 

His vision of the only god was of one of great power who demanded worship and absolute obedience.  Aten was, for Akhenaten, a supreme leader and being.

 

All through history gods have been feared and worshipped and sacrifices made to them, but Christianity is unique among religions because we believe that God loved humanity so much that he himself became the ultimate sacrifice on the cross.

 

I personally believe that Christianity is good for our emotional and spiritual well-being because God, in Jesus, completely experienced our brokenness and entered into it so that he might mend us.  He became weak on behalf of all our weaknesses and took upon himself all of our wilful wrongdoing.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

This may well be looked upon as weak and foolish by many.  But, of course, the story doesn’t end there.  What looks like God’s folly and weakness in Jesus’ death on the cross, is transformed into something else completely through the resurrection.  Through the lens of the resurrection the crucifixion does not look like weakness at all, but the way to freedom and new life.

 

So, our own weakness and brokenness is no longer the end of the story because God himself has taken it all upon himself and offers back to us the chance of forgiveness and transformation. That does not sound like foolishness, but the ultimate wisdom, full of grace and mercy.

 

I enclose with this letter, a letter from June Foster which makes for a fascinating and moving read.  The young people she describes, joyfully worshipping God in places where they put themselves in danger, may be accused by some of foolishness.  But they have the experience and belief in God’s transforming power and strength and that, in my book, makes them very wise indeed.

 

I finish with this lovely poem by Kate McIlhagga:

 

Into the dark world

A snowdrop comes,

A blessing of hope and peace

Carrying within it a green heart:

Symbol of God’s renewing love.

Come to inhabit our darkness, Lord Christ,

For dark and light are alike to you.

May nature’s white candles of hope

Remind us of your birth

And lighten our journey

Through Lent and beyond.

 

 

Every blessing

 

Ann

Letter from June

 


7th March 2021

Dear Friends

“For several decades a spiritual awakening among Algeria’s Berber or Amazigh people has been producing the fastest-growing Christian community in the Arabic-speaking region.  Since the network’s first broadcasts in 1996, SAT-7 has resourced this vibrant Church, initially with our Arabic programmes and, since 2012, with broadcasts in the Berber Kabyle dialect.”

This is a quotation from Sat-7’s magazine published a year ago.  

SAT-7 is a UK based charity dedicated to growing Church in the Middle East and North Africa, serving the community, and contributing to the good of society and culture.

Their aim is to provide the churches and Christians of the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) an opportunity to witness to Jesus Christ through inspirational, informative, and educational television services.

Algeria was one of the places I visited on Wednesday 10th February 2021, via Zoom and courtesy of SAT-7.  The Protestant Church of Algeria was first registered in 1974 but had to wait till 2011 for legal recognition.  Then in 2017 the gradual closure of churches began – despite freedom of religion guaranteed by Algeria’s constitution.  This movement to close churches continues. On Wednesday, George Makeen, Programming Manager spoke of the church being strong and growing but much in need of support.

Leaving Algeria I moved on to Lebanon and to Beirut in particular.   Lebanon has been at peace for 30 years, but economic mismanagement and mass protests have put its creaking political system under greater pressure than at any time since the civil war. This is an area I have been interested in for a long time.  It is now just six months since the terrible explosion close to the port.  The SAT-7 office and broadcasting centre was situated near the site of the explosion. Fortunately none of the staff were injured, but they were out quickly, serving food to rescue workers.  The city has been badly hit by the Covid 19 pandemic.  Citizens are being taken to hospital by frantic relatives trying to save lives.  Many are dying in their cars before being admitted to hospital and hospitals have run out of oxygen, yet oxygen is available on the black market!

Next to Iran and the story of Dani a young man who loved and worshipped God through his Muslim faith.  He was a serious and honourable young man, but, like many young people, he began to question his faith.  He felt there was something missing. So he tried various other routes to worship but remained dissatisfied.  His Mother, concerned for her son, placed a book on the table for him to consider.  The book was a copy of the New Testament.  Through an interpreter, he talked about

 how his life was changed.   He has trained to take on leadership roles and is working towards assisting other young people to find their way through Christ.

This was quite a visit to the Middle East and left me with many troublesome thoughts. But the most important thing I remember is the amazing joyfulness evident in the lives of these young people, and I would emphasise YOUNG.   Despite all the hardships they suffer every day of their lives, their love for and worship of Jesus is so real.  They were indeed “lights of the world”.

It made me question why, in this country where worshipping God is so easy, requires no effort and certainly no risk to life, is there no joyfulness.   Yes, we are saddened by the closure of Churches, but even when they are open, I do not detect the sort of joyful, light giving pleasure and thankfulness seen among those for whom worship is a risk to life and limb.

We talk of “returning to normal” when we are again free from current restrictions.  But I am not sure I want to return to “normal” as before.  I want to be part of a Christian community which expresses, through daily activities, the light of Christ in a darkened world.  And to show the joyful character of those whose lives are changed.

 

June Foster