A modern, traditional Anglican Church in Rangiora

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Things to help you grow in 2023

Resources for Bible reading, prayer and growing in the love and knowledge of God in the new year.

As we approach 2023, it is a good chance to think about how we set patterns that will help us grow as disciples of Jesus. It may be something new, re-starting in an area we have had trouble keeping up, refreshing where we are feeling a bit stale, or re-evaluating patterns that are going well but could be tweaked a little.

Growing as a Christian isn’t just about our own Bible reading and praying habits (church and fellowship patterns, and ways of putting our faith into action in love of others around us are two areas that immediately spring to mind, and there are more). And yet, it is hard to grow and thrive in Christ if these areas aren’t a regular part of our lives. And at the same time, they are hard areas to keep up! So I am going to give a bunch of resources that may be helpful for you and/or your family, in the hope that one or two may help you. There are quite a few, but as I say I am just hoping that one or two may be of use to you. So ask God’s help and have look to see if any catch your eye, and go for it!

May God bless you in 2023,

Chris

Bible reading

Ways to access the Bible:

  • YouVersion – while I prefer paper Bibles, this is great for having numerous Bible translations on your phone for free, as well as the possibility of different reading plans and prayer helps. Excellent for having audio versions of the Bible at your fingertips.
  • Bible Gateway Audio – another easy way to access a lot of audio Bibles that may be very helpful.
  • Biblia – another online Bible with various versions, and not many ads. Nice to look at, closer to a paper Bible, and has easy reference to resources and helps.

Bible reading plans:

  • Bible Reading Chart – a simple colour coded chart. You can mark off chapters you have read, and thereby keep track of what you have read over time, making sure to take in the ‘whole council of God’. The colours also allow you to keep track of getting a good diet of different genres of Bible books. Useful whether you read half a chapter a day or many chapters a day.
  • M’Cheyne Yearly Bible Reading Plan – a time tested way to read the whole Bible in a year, covering around 4 chapters per day, from different parts and genres of the Bible. This chart version from TGC is easy to print, read, and mark off, to keep track of what you have covered (print it and keep it with your Bible). If you’d rather do it on your phone, an app for keeping track of your reading with this plan is here on Android.
  • TGC Bible Reading and Devotional – following the M’Cheyne plan noted above, this plan provides these chapters along with a devotional by wise and learned scholar Don Carson. Both the Bible text and the devotional are provided in both written and audio formats, all in one place each day. If you just want the devotional as a podcast (eg to use with the chart above) you can get it here (includes links to various platforms, eg Apple, Spotify).
  • Bible 52 – due out from Bible Society in 2023, this covers 52 chapters of the Bible across the year, ideal especially for doing as a family with kids, with activities and simple prayers provided (a sample page is downloadable from the linked page).
  • The Bible at church this year – although not exactly a Bible reading plan, here are the main books we are planning (at this stage at least) to preach through at church through most of 2023, so you can read through them and familiarise yourself with them: Psalms 1, 2, 8, 13, 15, 121 (over summer); Luke 14-19; James; 1 Samuel 1-16. Also, our main focuses in Growth Groups will probably be Ephesians and John’s Gospel.

Prayer

A number of the Bible reading helps above include helps for prayer, but here are some more that are focussed on prayer in particular:

  • PrayerMate – prayer app for smartphones. Keep track of and plan for things to pray for, set reminders pray for things you need to pray for or have promised to pray for. You can also subscribe to prayer updates from many different organisations.
  • Paul’s prayers collected – a complete list of the Apostle Paul’s prayers in the Bible, collected together, which you can use as a basis to pray from.
  • Prayers from the Book of Common Prayer – a collection of collects (prayers for use at different times of the year, connected with different parts of the Bible’s story), and prayers for various occasions – collected from the traditional Anglican prayer book, time tested over a number of centuries.

Other helps

  • New City Catechism – mentioned in an email to the church a while ago, this mobile app resource is free. Catechisms have been in use in the church since the very beginning – ways of summarising the key doctrinal truths and implications from the Bible and helping people (including families together) to take them in more deeply. A good contemporary (but deeply rooted) catechism has been made available. could be good to, for instance, look at one topic with your family over dinner once per week. Also available as a free e-book through this link

Christmas Services Reminder

Hope you have a wonderful Christmas. Looking forward to meeting you if you are able to join us for any of our services:

  • 6pm Family Christmas Service-24th Dec
  • 11pm Midnight Service-24th Dec
  • 9:30am Christmas Day service-25th Dec

Christmas Carol Service

We would love to see you for our carol service tomorrow, 18th December (followed by morning tea).

Christmas Services Coming Up!

The festive season is here! For some of us this is exciting and wonderful, for some it is hard, lonely, exhausting.

But however you are feeling this Christmas, we would love to share the hope and joy of Christmas with you. There is celebration here for the excited: the true heart of the magic of Christmas time. And there is healing here for the wounded, the hope that Christmas gives us: things will not always be broken. For those feeling worn out, we remember the birth of the one who brings rest to the weary.

Our Christmas services include a carols service this weekend, and a number of different services on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. At all of them we will hear and sing of the real story of Christmas – the divine story of the God who did not leave us alone, but came to us.

All the service details are here – and please know, you are very, very welcome to join us.

Growth Groups for 2023

Do you want to grow in the new year?

As we approach the end of 2022, a new year lies before us. With everything going on at the end of the year it is hard to think of what lies before us. But I am confident of one thing – we want to grow next year. We don’t want to stagnate, we want to grow.

One of the most effective ways for Christians to grow is in close fellowship with others, and one of the most important ways in our church that this happens is our Growth Groups. If you are a part of our church, and you have not already, I hope you will consider joining one of our groups in 2023. They give us unique, consistent chances to build relationships, dig into Scripture in an interactive way, and pray for one another.

It is a big commitment though! We are busy! And yet, important things are worth making time for. It is so easy to take our Christian community for granted. Dietrich Bonhoeffer, who, living in Germany in the 1930s, knew how easily our freedom to gather could be taken away, reminds us of the value of it:

It is easily forgotten that the fellowship of Christian brethren is a gift of grace, a gift of the Kingdom of God that any day may be taken from us…[i]t is grace, nothing but grace, that we are allowed to live in community with Christian brethren.

Life Together

If you are keen to be involved in a Growth Groups, or you want to know more, please be in touch!

Ladies’ Christmas Social-Tomorrow (4/12/22)

All ladies are very welcome to SPOTR Ladies’ Christmas Social. We are heading over to 791, Loburn Whiterock Road, North Loburn, for shared lunch at 12:30, followed by craft, games and light afternoon tea. Contact Tessa on 021481796 for more details.

Return to Redemption

As of the Sunday just gone, we are back in the book of Exodus!

Last year we journeyed through Exodus chapters 1-14, seeing God as the Great Redeemer.

We saw the the Israelites in slavery in Egypt (chapter 1-2). They trusted God, but their situation seemed to just get worse. Then God introduced himself to Israel by his name YHWH – the Lord, the holy and faithful one who keeps his promises (chapter 3). God acted through the first 9 plagues, landing blow after blow was on Pharaoh their oppressor, but still Pharaoh refused to listen, refused to let God be God and let the people go. And so there came the final plague – the death of every first born of Egypt, leading to the Great Redemption of the Israelites out of slavery, opening the way for them to be saved and protected through the blood of a lamb, giving them a new identity as his people.

Pharaoh sent the Israelites away – only to change his mind and start pursuing them again, trapping them between his great army with its chariots, and a large body of water. Things seemed hopeless, but again God made a way – he sent a strong East wind to open a path through the sea, and the Israelites crossed over, but when Pharaoh and his army tried to cross, the sea closed in on them and wiped them out.

On Sunday we heard the song of redemption that celebrated God’s salvation of his people (chapter 15:1-21), and now we move with the Israelites into the beginning of their new lives – as a people redeemed. That is why we are calling our little series leading up to Christmas Life Redeemed.

We’d love to have you with us as we consider together some of what it means to live in light of a story of redemption.

Faith and Work

This week we began a short two week exploration of the issue of Work in the Life of Faith.

Most of us spend most of our time doing everyday work type stuff. For some of us it is paid, for some of us it is not (eg stay at home parents, who definitely work!). But whatever the case, most of us have at least one occupation that takes up many, if not most, of our waking hours.

One of the complaints that is sometimes made about churches, and especially the teaching at churches, is that it doesn’t have much to say about this important everyday activity. Fair enough!

So we are spending these two weeks considering this question – what does the Christian faith have to say to our everyday work activities? And what difference does being a Christian make to how we understand and live out our work?

If you want to hear the first sermon you can hear it here. And, if you are reading this before Sunday 30th October, you can engage with the second week of thinking this through by joining us on Sunday. You are most welcome!

Ladies’ Gathering

The ladies of SPOTR are having a social on Sunday, 4th December. Save the date, and follow link for full details.

Photo by Suzy Hazelwood on Pexels.com

The End of a Certain Journey – for now…

Over the last 12 weeks we have been journeying with Jesus – it has been quite a ride, and we have seen and heard some extraordinary things:

  • We have seen him as he resolutely set out for Jerusalem, heading towards rejection and a cross, with a promise of resurrection.
  • We have seen him send out those who were following him to be his ambassadors sharing a blessed message.
  • We have heard him challenge us to the depths of our heart with a story about a Samaritan which called us to love in action which reflected his sacrificial love for us.
  • We have seen him affirm the importance of sitting at his feet and listening, and speaking to his Father (who knows what we need) in prayer.
  • We have heard him warn of the danger of a house divided, and assure of the victory he has over evil.
  • We have heard him condemn religious hypocrisy and comfort those who will take comfort in him.
  • We have heard him challenge us deeply about what we are really rich toward, and comfort us when we are generous for his sake.
  • We have heard him call us to readiness because we don’t know when the master of the house will arrive, and tell us how to be ready through repentance.
  • We have heard him speak of the breadth of his kingdom (broad enough for all, yes all), and the narrowness of the door (the one way to enter).

We are pausing in the journey now – we plan to take to the road with him again next year. Feel free to catch up on, or revisit, any of those moments we have spent with him in the last couple of months.

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