Sunday, March 16, 2014

Hand in Hand with God

Back in January last year we began to look anew at our vision for the church at Highbury.  In our service this morning we marked an end to a process of renewal and restucturing that we have been working on over the last two years.  As we came to an end we found ourselves at the start of an exciting new journey in the life of the church as we set out with a new way of organising things at Highbury.  This service marks not so much the end of a process as the beginning of an adventure.

Commissioning Service for Ministry Leaders and our new Diaconate
Sunday, 16th March 2014

Welcome and News of the Church Family – Sue

Call to Worship

Hymn 494 Glorious things of you are spoken

Prayer and the Lord’s Prayer

Hands Together

Reading:  Galatians 2: 9-10 and 2 Timothy 1:6-7

and when James and Cephas and John,
who were acknowledged pillars,
recognized the grace that had been given to me,
they gave to Barnabas and me the right hand of fellowship,
agreeing that we should go to the Gentiles and they to the circumcised.

They asked only one thing,
that we remember the poor,
which was actually what I was eager to do.


Very much later, Paul wrote to Timothy …


For this reason I remind you
to rekindle the gift of God that is within you
through the laying on of my hands;

for God did not give us a spirit of cowardice,
but rather a spirit of power
and of love
and of self-discipline.


A Hy-Spirit Song

At our Annual Church Meeting we put in place the final pieces of the jigsaw for our new structure at Highbury.  Today marks the start of our new way of organising things as we welcome and commission our team of Ministry Leaders, and our new Diaconate and Church Officers.

At its heart is a vision for us all to share at Highbury … and so I ask everyone to stand …

The vision we share is that
Highbury should be a place to
Share Christian friendship,
Explore Christian faith and
Enter into Christian Mission
With Christ at the centre
And open to all.

It is good for us to remember that all who belong to the Church of Jesus Christ are called to serve one another in his name.

Jesus calls us all to share in a life of discipleship: it is for us all to respond to that call in faithful obedience.

Jesus said, “If one of you wants to be great, he must be the servant of the rest.

Lord Jesus, we hear your call: help us to follow

Jesus said, “If I, your Lord and Teacher, have washed your feet, you also ought to wash one another’s feet.  For I have set you an example.

Lord Jesus, we hear your call: help us to follow

Jesus said, “I give you a new commandment, that you love one another.  Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another.  By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”

Lord Jesus, we hear your call: help us to follow

Jesus said: “Go to all peoples everywhere and make them my disciples and I will be with you always, to the end of the world.”

Lord Jesus, we hear your call: help us to follow.

You have redeemed us and called us to your service:
Give us grace to hear your word and to obey your commandment
For your mercy’s sake.   Amen.

Please be seated

As people feel at home in our church family and share a faith in God and in Jesus Christ as Lord and Saviour we very much hope they will become fully part of our church as church members and be involved in one or more areas of church life in what they do and in prayer … everyone has a part to play including those not able to get out and be active through prayer. 

I invite all those who are Church Members to stand and say together …

In all we do as Church members our aim is to Love the Lord our God with all our soul, with all our mind and with all our strength and to love our neighbour as ourselves.  In all we seek to do we rejoice in the forgiving love of God, the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and in the fellowship of the Holy Spirit, knowing that when we fail we do not give up but go on in the strength of God.

Church Members, meeting together at our regular Church meeting shape Church life and set the future direction of Church life here at Highbury.

Please be seated

As we belong to the fellowship of the Church, we all have a part to play in the life of the Church.

Together with all who proclaim that Jesus Christ is Lord we are a royal priesthood, God’s own people.  We are all called by God to proclaim the mighty acts of him who called us out of darkness into h is marvellous light and to live out in our lives the love of him who first loved us.

We have gifts that differ according to the grace given to us: prophecy, in proportion to faith; ministry, in ministering; the teacher, in teaching; the exhorter, in exhortation; the giver in generosity; the leader, in diligence; the compassionate, in cheerfulness.

In our new way of doing things the Deacons serve the whole Church as Managing Trustees and ensure all the Church does is in keeping with its aims as a Congregational Church and its responsibilities as a Charity with reference to finances, safeguarding, health and safety, disability, employment and other legislation.  The Deacons interview and recommend to Church Meeting a name for Minister and Ministry Team Leader and then review and support the Ministry team.  They ensure good employment practice for paid employees and volunteers.

At our Annual Church Meeting the following were elected to serve as Deacons.

Peter Harrison, Ted Horsfield, Iain MacLeod, Darryl Mills and Ian White

I invite them to come to the front … [stand on the platform]  Our thoughts and prayers are with Iain whose father in law has just died and so he is with Laura and the family sharing with the family in Glasgow following the funeral yesterday.  Ted is away with family too.

Will you together reaffirm your profession of faith:

Do you believe in God and in Jesus Christ as your Lord and Saviour?

I do

Do you promise, as you are able, to fulfil the responsibilities of Deacon here at Highbury

With God’s help, I do so promise.

The Church Secretary serves the whole church, is on the diaconate and oversees a full range of Support Services – our Annual Meeting appointed Helen  Roberts as Church Secretary.

Helen, I ask you to reaffirm your profession of faith:

Do you believe in God and in Jesus Christ as your Lord and Saviour?

I do

Do you promise, as you are able, to fulfil the responsibilities of Church Secretary here at Highbury?

With God’s help, I do so promise.

The Church Treasurer serves the whole Church, is on the diaconate and stewards the church finances.   Our Annual Meeting re-elected Roger Gregory to the post of Church Treasurer.

Roger, I ask you to reaffirm your profession of faith:

Do you believe in God and in Jesus Christ as your Lord and Saviour?

I do

Do you promise, as you are able, to fulfil the responsibilities of Church Treasurer here at Highbury?

With God’s help, I do so promise.

In the name of Jesus Christ, and on behalf of the Church Meeting I extend to you the right hand of fellowship and welcome you to our new Diaconate.

[Richard and Sue share the Right hand of fellowship with the Deacons – the Deacons, and Church Officers remain on the platform]

Prayer

In our new way of doing things we have put in place a team of Ministry Leaders who are Church Members and who are called and gifted to serve the whole Church and to lead a particular area of Church Life.  They co-ordinate and lead others in their area of church life.

Shirley Fiddimore will focus on worship
Carolyn Tennant on children [our prayers are with Carolyn who is unwell and unable to be with us today]
Mary Buchanan on young people
Karen Haden on discipleship
Lorraine Gasside and Diana Adams on Pastoral Care
Jean Gregory on Mission and Outreach

Today we welcome them and commission them to that work.

Helen asked the following questions of Shirley

Shirley, I ask you to reaffirm your profession of faith:

Do you believe in God and in Jesus Christ as your Lord and Saviour?

I do

Do you promise, as you are able, to fulfil the responsibilities of Worship Ministry Leader here at Highbury

With God’s help, I promise to develop the worship life of the Church to the glory of God, enabling the whole Church family to come together as one, with Christ at the centre and open to all.

In the name of Jesus Christ and on the authority of the Church Meeting I extend to you the right hand of fellowship recognising that God has called you to serve the fellowship of the Church here at Highbury as Worship Ministry Leader.

Ian White asked the following questions of Mary:

Mary, I ask you to reaffirm your profession of faith:

Do you believe in God and in Jesus Christ as your Lord and Saviour?

I do

Do you promise, as you are able, to fulfil the responsibilities of Youth Ministry Leader here at Highbury?

With God’s help I promise to help young people share Christian friendship, explore Christian Faith and enter into Christian mission as a full part of the Church family.  I promise to help the Church to be fully supportive of young people as a youth friendly Church with Christ at the centre and open to all.

In the name of Jesus Christ and on the authority of the Church Meeting I extend to you the right hand of fellowship recognising that God has called you to serve the fellowship of the Church here at Highbury as Youth Ministry Leader.

Roger asked the following questions of Karen:

Karen, I ask you to reaffirm your profession of faith:

Do you believe in God and in Jesus Christ as your Lord and Saviour?

I do

Do you promise, as you are able, to fulfil the responsibilities of Discipleship Ministry Leader here at Highbury?

With God’s help I promise to help everyone in the Church to grow and develop their Christian faith, their prayer life and their discipleship as they explore the Christian faith and seek to put Christ at the centre of their lives.

In the name of Jesus Christ and on the authority of the Church Meeting I extend to you the right hand of fellowship recognising that God has called you to serve the fellowship of the Church here at Highbury as Discipleship Ministry Leader.

Peter asked the following questions of Diana and Lorraine

Diana and Lorraine, I ask you to reaffirm your profession of faith:

Do you believe in God and in Jesus Christ as your Lord and Saviour?

I do

Do you promise, as you are able, to fulfil the responsibilities of Pastoral Care Ministry Leaders here at Highbury?

With God’s help we promise to build up Christian friendship through pastoral care that is open to all and seeks to meet the needs of each.

In the name of Jesus Christ and on the authority of the Church Meeting I extend to you the right hand of fellowship recognising that God has called you to serve the fellowship of the Church here at Highbury as Pastoral Ministry Leaders.

Darryl asked the following questions of Jean:

Jean, I ask you to reaffirm your profession of faith:

Do you believe in God and in Jesus Christ as your Lord and Saviour?

I do

Do you promise, as you are able, to fulfil the responsibilities of Worship Ministry Leader here at Highbury?

With God’s help I promise to help everyone in the Church to enter into Christian mission and share their Christian faith more effectively developing the mission and outreach of the Church with Christ at the centre and open to all.

In the name of Jesus Christ and on the authority of the Church Meeting I extend to you the right hand of fellowship recognising that God has called you to serve the fellowship of the Church here at Highbury as Mission and Outreach Ministry Leader.

[Richard invites the Congregation to stand]

[The Deacons stand around the Ministry Leaders and lay hands on them as Richard says a prayer of blessing]

May God richly bless you in the ministry which you now share with us all:  may you sense the strengthening of God’s Spirit in all that you do, the love of God the Father deep in your hearts and the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ in the service you share with everyone.  Amen.



In all you do take to heart the words of Paul in Ephesians 4:1-7 and  11-13

I urge you, then—I who am a prisoner because I serve the Lord: live a life that measures up to the standard God set when he called you.   Be always humble, gentle, and patient. Show your love by being tolerant with one another. 3 Do your best to preserve the unity which the Spirit gives by means of the peace that binds you together. 4 There is one body and one Spirit, just as there is one hope to which God has called you. 5 There is one Lord, one faith, one baptism; 6 there is one God and Father of all people, who is Lord of all, works through all, and is in all.
7 Each one of us has received a special gift in proportion to what Christ has given.

It was he who “gave gifts to people”; he appointed some to be apostles, others to be prophets, others to be evangelists, others to be pastors and teachers. 12 He did this to prepare all God's people for the work of Christian service, in order to build up the body of Christ. 13 And so we shall all come together to that oneness in our faith and in our knowledge of the Son of God; we shall become mature people, reaching to the very height of Christ's full stature.

Hymn:  In Christ Alone

Some of the youngest children then made a presentation to Sue Cole, thanking her for the six years she has served the church as Church Secretary.  We later thanked John, June and Sharon for their service as Deacons too.

Offering and Dedication

Activities for all over 3

Hand in Hand with God and with Each Other

Reading:  1 Chronicles 29:10-19

There is something very powerful in this passage as it speaks to us all and to those who are embarking on new forms of service and ministry within the life of the church here at Highbury.

Then David blessed the Lord in the presence of all the assembly;
David said:
‘Blessed are you, O Lord, the God of our ancestor Israel,
for ever and ever. 
Yours, O Lord, are the greatness,
the power, the glory,
the victory, and the majesty;
for all that is in the heavens and on the earth is yours;
yours is the kingdom, O Lord, and you are exalted as head above all. 

Riches and honour come from you, and you rule over all.
In your hand are power and might;
and it is in your hand to make great and to give strength to all. 

And now, our God, we give thanks to you and praise your glorious name.

‘But who am I, and what is my people,
that we should be able to make this freewill-offering?
For all things come from you, and of your own have we given you.

For we are aliens and transients before you, as were all our ancestors;
our days on the earth are like a shadow, and there is no hope.

O Lord our God,
all this abundance that we have provided
for building you a house for your holy name
comes from your hand and is all your own. 

I know, my God, that you search the heart,
and take pleasure in uprightness;
in the uprightness of my heart I have freely offered all these things,
and now I have seen your people, who are present here,
offering freely and joyously to you. 1

O Lord, the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Israel, our ancestors,
keep for ever such purposes and thoughts in the hearts of your people,
and direct their hearts towards you. 


Hand in Hand With God – the Sermon

“The Bible is not some dry and dusty set of rules.  It is the story of how we are created good in God’s eyes, how that goodness was damaged, and how wholeness is ours with God.”

I like what Archbishop Desmond Tutu has to say about the Bible in his foreword to “Fresh from the Word” – the Bible for a change.

“Depravity,” he goes on to say, “came into the world through individual choices, drip by drip.  The Bible is an invitation to wholeness instead of brokenness.  We can choose wholeness and a life of beauty.  We can choose to work for peace in the small choices that face us each day.  Each ofus has the dignity of these choices, whether we are rich or poor, from the global Norht or South, in prison or not.  The Bible shows us how.  It is about peace and reconciliation.  It is about social justice in your neighbourhood.  It is about joy and laughter.”
I have been part of the International Bible Reading Association for almost as long as I can remember.  Some years I haven’t subscribed.  I have been a couple of years recently when I have followed different plans for reading the Bible.  But, perhaps, it’s because I was introduced to it when I was at Junior Church, I have been drawn back to it.

This year they have produced a new set of notes, but they keep the old traditions going strong.  There’s a sense of reading the Bible in copany with others … and the passages and the thoughts that accompany them prompt thought.  While written a long time before publication, they have a wonderful way of speaking into the situation you find yourself in at a particular time.

That’s been very much the case for me over the last couple of weeks.

The day before our Annual Meeting was Ash Wednesday.  It marked the start of a new series of Bible readings that came to an end yesterday, Saturday, 15th March.  ‘Simon Goodard, their author, is a Baptist Minister in the village of Bottisham, near Cambridge.  He leads RE:NEW which is an ecumenical expression of church, pioneering new ways of gathering and growing together.’  Straightaway my attention was caught.

At our Annual Meeting the final pieces of the jigsaw for our new way of doing things at Highbury fell into place.  And today with the commissioining of Church Secretary and Church Treasurer, our new Diaconate and our new team of Ministry Leaders we are launching our new way of doing things at Highbury.

As we compared what we felt about Highbury today, with what the first churches of the New Testament were like we identified three things to focus on.  The first was the need for Renewal and Gifts and that is what we have been concentrating on over the last couple of years and that need for renewal in the life of the church is something we continue to seek.   Then we felt we needed to focus on personal faith and prayer … and next week Karen Haden, our Discipleship Ministry Leader,  is going to introduce us to a focus on personal faith and prayer in our services and in the Prodigal God course she will be introducing us to in April.  And the third element we will then go on to focus on is Mission and Outreach.

And here’s a series of Bible readings by someone involved with RE:NEW – something special there.

I smiled, the, as I saw the theme – God’s Hands and Ours – a set of readings from the Old Testament.

What made me smile was the way not a few people have observed I have of coming back to that image of ‘the hands of God’.   I often come back to that sense we need to have of putting things into God’s hands.  We can do what we can but there comes a point at which we need to put things into God’s hands.

His readings have intrigued me … they speak very much to us as we embark on this new stage in our journey together as a church.   And so, what I have done, is to take the headings he has used and turn them into a prayer we can all share.

Hand in hand with God
we walk into the future with our hands in
the strong hand of God.

That image produces in me that thought that we are not alone, we are not doing things in our own strength …  but it is in the strength of God, the God, whose right hand is majestic in power that we are able to go forward.

The words of Minnie Louise Haskins come very much to my mind with an image of a small hand in a large hand …

“Go out into the darkness and put your hand into the Hand of God. That shall be to you better than light and safer than a known way.”

So I went forth, and finding the Hand of God, trod gladly into the night.

But what do we do with our hands?

Moving on through our readings, Simon Goddard takes us to Leviticus (9:22-24) and a moment when “Aaron lifts his hands towards the people and blessed them..  In that story Moses and Aaron then go into the tent of meeting, that place where  God’s presence is specially felt … and then when they came out, they blessed the people; and the glory of the Lord appeared to all the people.”

As we gather together in a place which for us is a place where we seek to come to meet God let’s look to receive a blessing … but then let’s go out from this place and be a blessing to other people.  “Each one of us,” suggests Simon Goddard “can be used by God to bless others. … Our words are powerful especially when they are spoken in God’s name.”

We give thanks for
hands that bring a blessing and
for hands handing on the baton.


Whatever part we play in the life of our church, Deacons, Church Officers, Minsitry Leaders … all of us – our prayer is that we can receive the hand of  God’s blessing and then be a blessing to other people.

And then we have something to pass on.

It was good this week to have an email from Angela Robinson – we started out in the ministry together, though she’s a bit older than me.  In Witney when I was a student, here at Highbury helping to organise meetings back in the early 70’s,  in Yorkshire, and then Angela went through very difficult times as her husband had Motor Neurone disease and died very young.  And then she spent 14 years teaching in mission work in Bangladesh.  This week she was prompted to write remembering Tony Benn and that spirit of dissent he got from his mother, Margaret Stansgate who at that time was our first President in the Congregational Federation – passionate about the need for us as followers of Jesus to make our voice heard.

I well remember that sense Angela had in preaching at my induction to the pastorate of the churches in Shropshire of passing on the baton.

We move on to Numbers 27:15-23 and the point when the Lord said to Moses, “Take Joshua … lay your hand on him … and commission him”  in the presence of all the people.

There is a real sense of receiving something that we pass on – as we share a ministry in this place.  It is not something we invent – but something we pass on.  There is a very powerful symbolism in the  laying on of hands.

The imagery of hands has, however a dark side to it.

As our readings this last ten days moved on we reached 1 Samuel and Job where we encountered ‘the heavy hand of God’ and dark times – and then it was that we arrived at 1  Chronicles and a very real sense that everything comes from God and all we give, we give only what comes from God’s hand, the big hands of God  (1 Chronicles 129:12-14)

In the dark times when we sense
the heavy hand of God
we put ourselves and all we love into
the big hands of God.

We touched on Nehemiah and the rebuilding of Jerusalem and the way the gracious hand of  God is on us prompting us to serve other people, on that conviction Job had in the middle of the darkness when he said, I know that my redeemer lives’. We touched on the words of Isaiah that speak of the way our names are engraved on the hands of God and the assurance that comes from sensing that; we touched on the image of ourselves as clay in the hands of God to be moulded and renewed and remoulded in his hands.

May our hands be
hands used in the service of God always
holding on to the hands of hope.

May we know God’s hands always to be
guiding hands, engraved hands
transforming hands.

When you google pictures of hands in the way I have done you can just copy the images – but one sculpture caught my eye and I explored further.  I can see myself getting enthusiastic about the work of Lorenzo Quinn – son of the mid 20th Century actor, Anthony Quinn.



His work ‘hand of God’ has been exhibited in many places, most recently at the Royal Exchange in London – in 2011 it was exhibited in a major exhibition at the Hermitage in St Petersburg.



It is one of those sculptures that invites you to see yourself in the hand of God.  A wonderful thought that is powerful for us to remember as we celebrate different forms of service and ministry within the life of our church today.



But what struck me was the way two of his sculptures were put side by side in that exhibition.  The other one was called ‘Leap of Faith’.



He says of his inspiration behind Leap of Faith, “The past is set in stone, the present is carving itself in wood, and the future is an empty goblet to fill with dreams.  This is a sculpture that prompts reflection on the need to be positive, even in the darkest moments, because there is always hope.”

“Life is a wonderful journey … if you know how to live it.”





For me that sculpture was all the more powerful for being put together with the Hand of God.   We can take such a leap of faith into the future and sense that we are on the most wonderful of journeys  and find that even in the darkest moments there is hope BECAUSE we start by realising that we are in the Hand of God.

And as Desdond Tutu says in that foreword to Fresh from the Word we are created by God to be a blessing … and we need one another to become such a blessing.

Hand in Hand

Hand in hand with God
we walk into the future with our hands in
the strong hand of God.
We give thanks for
hands that bring a blessing and
for hands handing on the baton.
In the dark times when we sense
the heavy hand of God
we put ourselves and all we love into
the big hands of God.
May our hands be
hands used in the service of God always
holding on to the hands of hope.
May we know God’s hands always to be
guiding hands, engraved hands
transforming hands.                Amen






Hymn:  504    Church of God elect and glorious

Prayers of Concern

Songs of Prayer and Worship with Hy-Spirit

The Lord’s Supper

Communion Collection for Maggie’s Centre

Hymn 505 Go forth and tell!

Words of Blessing

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