We feel fragile, but Christ’s church is not

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On Sunday morning, Stephen quoted Tabletalk’s recent ‘Update on the Church in London’ by Paul Levy. It’s an encouraging update in which he writes:

“London is a city that never stops and never sleeps. Yet, God has brought it to a standstill. People have more time to read, to study, to listen. Households have assumed a greater priority. For Christians, family worship has taken on an even greater importance, and fathers are needing to step up and take on the role that God has given them…There have been indications in the past year that people are becoming more open to the gospel. We have had more people interested in the gospel and coming to church over the last six months than at any time I can remember in my ministry. The numbers haven’t been huge, but some have even continued to watch the sermons online.

…What the long-term spiritual effects of this period will be are uncertain. Death, which has previously been hidden in our culture, is now confronting us as a nation, and we pray it is driving people to Christ.

In the midst of all this confusion and chaos, individuals and families are losing loved ones and there is tangible fear. The government thinks that it will have done well if the United Kingdom has a death toll of twenty thousand at the end of this virus. In the congregation where I serve, a father of nine has been taken home to glory in the last couple of days. We have felt the bitterness of death, the pain of separation, broken hearts, the feeling of deep and overwhelming sadness, and the uncertainty of the future. Of course, these things are true in normal times, but COVID-19 has brought these truths home to us so that the pain of this broken world and the preciousness of Christ are more real to us. 

We feel fragile, but Christ’s church is not.”

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Hearing of how God is working around the world today is important given the temptation we often face to idolise the past. As the following excerpt from David GIbson’s book Destiny reminds us:

‘When you start asking, “Why was the past better?” you’re denying the reality of God’s presence in the present. If you think things are worse, do you think God is no longer in control? Do you think he hasn’t brought you to the point where you are now and that he no longer loves you or has plans or purposes for you? To ask the question in Ecclesiastes 7:10—“Say not, ‘Why were the former days better than these?’ For it is not from wisdom that you ask this”—is unwise, because it forgets God”.
Often when we ask this question, it’s because we’re blind to the good things of the present and ignorant of past evil’.

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On the subject of rejoicing in what God is doing now, one of our friends from Casper RPC in Wyoming (where Stephen & Carla spent some time in 2013) wrote this recently:

“We often feel that even if this church plant closes and never takes off, serving in our church has been one of the most growing, stretching, challenging, humbling, rewarding experiences in our lives”.

May we be able to say the same!

The Promise-Driven Family: how our covenant theology shapes our daily lives

“Fear for the next generation is not profound or enlightened, it’s disbelieving and a lack of faith”

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Last month, two families from Stranraer attended the RPCI’s Family Day Conference, held in Cullybackey RPC. The talk, by Rev. Mark Loughridge, addressed the question of how our covenant theology should affect our parenting. It was a really helpful talk and you can listen to it below:

2020 Family Day Conference
Mark Loughridge

You can view the accompanying powerpoint here.

Journalling plagues and self-isolation: inspiration for today

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If you’re looking for a book to read during lockdown, one that I enjoyed recently is Shaun Bythell’s Confessions of a Bookseller. Bythell owns The Bookshop in Wigtown and Confessions is a follow-up to his 2017 book, Diary of a Bookseller. Both volumes give an insight into a year in the life of a bookseller at a time when Amazon (both through its website and its kindle ebooks) has brought profound changes to the book trade. While there’s plenty of local interest for those of us who live nearby, the books have also been international hits, with the first one having been translated into more than twenty languages. There probably aren’t a huge amount of books in Russian or Korean which mention Free Press journalists and food ‘rescued’ from the skip behind Morrisons in Stranraer – but now there’s at least one!

If Bythell ever publishes a diary for 2020, there may not be a huge amount to report on for the time we’re living through right now, with his shop, like many others, closed indefinitely due to the current lockdown. It might be worth keeping writing though – at the present time there has been a surge in interest in diaries written by those who have lived through such times before. Two well-known accounts of the Great Plague of London in 1665 are found in Daniel Defoe’s Journal of the Plague Year and Samuel Pepys’ Diary. Defoe was only five when the plague struck, and the accuracy of his account, probably based on his uncle’s journals, has been debated down through the years. For Pepys, the plague came halfway through his famous diary, which ran for almost ten years, and consists of over a million words. It doesn’t however include the fake quote you may have seen circulating online about ‘a gaggle of striplings making merry and no doubt spreading the plague without a care for the health of their elders’.

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Another diary which people are turning to in lockdown is that of Anne Frank. The account of her family’s 761 days in hiding before being discovered, without many of the things we take for granted, is a reminder of how much we still have. Just in time for self-isolating schoolchildren is a new Anne Frank Video Diary, with a couple of 5-10 minute episodes being released each week until May. Produced by the Anne Frank House, the series aims to bring the story to a new generation by asking ‘What if Anne had a camera instead of a diary?’.

 Although not a diary, a similar account to Anne Frank’s is Corrie ten Boom’s The Hiding Place. The ten Booms were a Dutch Christian family who hid Jews in a concealed room, around 15 miles away from where the Franks lived. Like the Franks, the ten Booms were discovered and arrested in 1944. Corrie and her sister Betsy were sent to a concentration camp. Betsy died, but Corrie survived to write many books. The film version of The Hiding Place is on Youtube and a recent documentary about her life is available to anyone with an Amazon Prime subscription.

What can we learn from these accounts of others who have faced similar times? Claire Tomalin, in her excellent biography of Pepys describes his ‘elated response to the plague year when with death all around, he grabbed at whatever there was to enjoy’. One Spectator article from last month praises Pepys’ ability to carry on regardless, saying ‘it will be far better for our morale to read Pepys than it will today’s newspapers, which seem hell-bent on panicking people with their alarmist and speculative headlines’.

Defoe took a different approach. At one point, when trying to decide whether to stay in London or flee to the country, he opened his Bible, and found help in a passage that many others have turned to in recent weeks – Psalm 91. It encouraged him to stay where he was, and he wrote that ‘as my times were in His hands, He was as able to keep me in a time of the infection as in a time of health; and if He did not think fit to deliver me, still I was in His hands’.

As we take all recommended precautions, may we do so in that same confidence, knowing that ‘in your book were written the days that were formed for me, when as yet there was none of them’ (Psalm 139:16).

The above article due to be published in this week’s Stranraer and Wigtownshire Free Press, however the publication of the newspaper has been paused for the foreseeable future due to the COVID-19 pandemic

More video resources for children in lockdown

(Following on from last month’s list of resources)

This week only you can stream The Biggest Story: The Animated Short Film, based on the book by Kevin DeYoung. It has been described as ‘an exciting journey through the Bible in 26 minutes, connecting the dots from the garden of Eden to Christ's death on the cross to the new heaven and new earth’.

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Another resource that’s been made available is the new animated Pilgrim’s Progress, released last year.

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