Sunday 29 April 2012

Sunday 29th April 2012 Sermon

Romans 9:1-33

Paul is addressing the Jews at the Church of Rome in this chapter. This chapter speaks of what becomes of the Jews if they don’t embrace Jesus and the gospel, it tells of the Father’s promise and talks of the consequence of Israel’s rejection of Christ.

This chapter contains harsh words and a stern warning.
It seems like it has nothing to do with us Christians; it is about Jews rejecting Jesus, ‘this concerns Jews, not us’.

This chapter shows great concerns for the nation and people of Israel. Paul wasn’t speaking of wrath or condemnation but was heartily troubled for the many enemies of the gospel, the Jews. He was trying to bring them to a place of understanding and belief.

For this, Paul had great heaviness (Romans 9:2); he doesn’t rejoice over the rejected Jews but wants them to be saved. He backs this with a serious implication (Romans 9:3) showing a very high pang of affection for his countrymen.

What do we think of people of our same ethnic background who are lost?
It might begin with our own family; our spouse, our children, our uncle, our aunty…
Do we have the same sorrow for the people of Israel Paul had for our own people?

This is something we can pull out of this chapter; when we see our people rejecting the gospel of Jesus Christ, do we judge them, do we condemn them or do we love them?

Here Paul is so forgiving towards the Jews.

For some of us it is easier to speak to those outside than our own family. Do we shy away from it?

Here Paul has shown sorrow for his own blood, his own people. That should speak to us, to you, to me.

We are all connected to some part of the world as Paul is connected to Israel.
We are all connected to some people something we ought to thank God for. But do we have a heart for our own people? That was Paul’s heart.

We need to speak with boldness but in love. The words of Paul sound harsh to the unbelieving Jews but love is apt to sound bold.

Do we speak highly of our own people or do we speak down? When are we going to bless our own people? When?

One day, we may be called to a mission field and it may just be where we came from.

Paul will be content to forbear his own happiness to purchase the happiness of his people (Romans 9:4)
But we have to remember, he was rejected by his own people and they wanted his head. Yet Paul loved them and that’s very hard to do.
Paul was standing in a place where he was rejected yet didn’t call them enemies but ‘my own race’.

Let’s bring it home; we may have been rejected by friends, family. We won’t call them enemies but our people. And that’s the love of Christ.
Even if we are mocked or persecuted we need to be concerned for the spiritual good of our relations.

The Word of God is taking us to a place of forgiveness, of love and of embrace (not of rejection).
We will still call these people our people and call on God to help us love our people.

Paul is talking of the Israelites, speaking out of love, pain and compassion.
They received (Romans 9:4-5) 1st: adoption, 2nd: glory, 3rd: covenants, 4th: the receiving of the law, 5th: the temple worship (service of God), 6th: the promises, 7th: patriarchs (fathers) and the 8th: Christ! He was of kin to them.
We have some place we come from and love that part. We need to love our own people to extend it to others and overflow to others.

Romans 9:15 is very harsh and here is Charles Spurgeon Devotional on this verse:
In these words the Lord in the plainest manner claims the right to give or to withhold His mercy according to His own sovereign will. As the prerogative of life and death is vested in the monarch, so the Judge of all the earth has a right to spare or condemn the guilty, as may seem best in His sight. Men by their sins have forfeited all claim upon God; they deserve to perish for their sins--and if they all do so, they have no ground for complaint. If the Lord steps in to save any, He may do so if the ends of justice are not thwarted; but if He judges it best to leave the condemned to suffer the righteous sentence, none may arraign Him at their bar. Foolish and impudent are all those discourses about the rights of men to be all placed on the same footing; ignorant, if not worse, are those contentions against discriminating grace, which are but the rebellions of proud human nature against the crown and sceptre of Jehovah. When we are brought to see our own utter ruin and ill desert, and the justice of the divine verdict against sin, we no longer cavil at the truth that the Lord is not bound to save us; we do not murmur if He chooses to save others, as though He were doing us an injury, but feel that if He deigns to look upon us, it will be His own free act of undeserved goodness, for which we shall for ever bless His name.
How shall those who are the subjects of divine election sufficiently adore the grace of God? They have no room for boasting, for sovereignty most effectually excludes it. The Lord's will alone is glorified, and the very notion of human merit is cast out to everlasting contempt. There is no more humbling doctrine in Scripture than that of election, none more promotive of gratitude, and, consequently, none more sanctifying. Believers should not be afraid of it, but adoringly rejoice in it.




Don't forget to check the church website:
Chalk Farm Baptist Church website (chalkfarmbaptistchurch.org)!

God Bless,
Chalk Farm Baptist Church Youth

Saturday 21 April 2012

Man Rebelling Against God’s Authority (from ymiblogging)


Man Rebelling Against God’s Authority



By Ernest Teh

Have you ever stayed up late at night wondering about what you’re doing with your life, and feeling entirely lost? I have, and I’m sure I’m not alone either. F. Scott Fitzgerald described it this way, “In a real dark night of the soul it is always three o’clock in the morning, day after day.”
The truth is that most of us lead pretty empty lives. The other truth is that most of us often don’t realize it because we’re just too busy doing whatever it is we’re doing. Strip our life bare, and leave us with our thoughts (at say maybe 3 a.m.?) however, and it may finally dawn upon us that we don’t really have a clue what our life is all about. We keep filling it up with this activity and that pursuit and that goal that we have no time to stop and think about where we’re actually headed. This is the emptiness that comes as a result of sin. We have rejected God’s RULES and RULE in our lives.
alone
Now we’re left to run our life on our own, and with our direction, nowhere is the only destination I can imagine us reaching. It’s sad how so many of us are oblivious to the fact that our soul is wandering around in the dark. But fortunately, that isn’t the end, for, thanks be to God, we have the Son who has called us out of darkness into His wonderful light.
Are we still wandering in the dark? Or are we basking in the wonder of His glorious light?

Tuesday 17 April 2012

Discerning God’s Plan (from ymiblogging)


Discerning God’s Plan



By Julian Abraham, 19, Singapore
Does God have a plan for me? Do I know what His plans might be? These are questions that many of us think little about. There’s always good excuse for not thinking about such matters for our lives are crowded with so many activities. We’re loaded with work, studies, and social activities—all of which consumes much of our time and energy.
praise
However, one reality remains: whatever we do that is outside of God’s plans will never fully satisfy; worst still, the end-result might be disaster and failure. In addition, God is and should always be top priority in our lives. No work, personal goals, achievements should disrupt our relationship with Him. If anything proves to be an obstacle, then it’s time to reconsider our focus and commitments. It could be that it isn’t God’s plan for us to pursue something or that God’s path for us is different from what we are currently taking. Thus it is important to take moments to ponder if the direction we are heading is the path that God wants us to take.
A friend of mine thought God was mean and nasty to him when he was fired from his job. He felt that it was due to his involvement in church. A week later, he found a job that was far better than his last—bigger paycheck, better benefits, and a more pleasant environment! Having said that, it’s not the tangible and visible gains that matter, what’s more important is the chance to grow spiritually and closer to God.

Sunday 15 April 2012

Why faith? (from ymiblogging)


Why Faith?


 

If someone asks about your Christian hope, always be ready to explain it (v.15).  
READ: 1 Peter 3:13-18 
In an interview pop music star Katy Perry stated that 
 she wasn’t thrilled with her strict religious upbringing.
 “I didn’t have a childhood,” she explained. “I’ve always been the kid who’s asked ‘Why?’ In my faith, you’re just supposed to have faith. But I was always like . . . why? At this point, I’m just kind of a drifter . . . open to possibility.”

Not having been there, I can’t comment on Katy’s upbringing and what she didn’t like about it. But her words are telling: In my faith you’re just supposed to have faith. To that, I pose a Katy-like question: Why? For faith simply in faith is an empty pursuit. However faith in Jesus is something real and life changing.

Here’s why: To have faith in faith leads to trusting in something that lacks substance. It’s like clinging to a climbing rope for safety, but then discovering that it’s simply falling to the ground—not tied above or anchored below. True Christian faith, however, is confidently believing in Someone—Jesus.

The apostle Peter told his readers, who were suffering for their faith, to “always be ready to explain” their “Christian hope” (1 Peter 3:15). He had walked with Jesus, watched Him perform miracles, witnessed His death on a cross for his sins, and spent time with Him after He rose again from the grave. Peter possessed a rational, reasoned belief.

That belief—that faith—is what we can possess. Not grasping for an unsecured rope, we firmly hold on to the One who has shown Himself to be trustworthy and true. We believe, as Peter wrote, that “Christ suffered for our sins once for all time. He never sinned, but He died for sinners to bring [us] safely home to God” (v.18). Now that’s Someone to have faith in! —Tom Felten


ymiblogging http://ymiblogging.org/

BE (from ymiblogging)


BE



Written by Chia Poh Fang when she was fresh out of University. Ten years have since elapsed.


Finding the right work is like discovering your own soul in the world. —Thomas Moore
What should I be? Should I be a writer, a civil servant, or …? Somehow as I seek the Lord’s will concerning my future, all my queries seem to hover around the word “be”. So I search the thesaurus for the synonyms of the word “be” and this is what I found:
Entry: be
Function: verb
Definition: exist
Synonyms: abide, act, be alive, breathe, continue, do, endure, go on, have being, have place, hold, inhabit, last, live, move, obtain, persist, prevail, remain, rest, stand, stay, subsist, survive
Antonyms: die, pass away, perish
Concept: aliveness
The discovery caused me to examine the soundness of my questions. Why am I defining my aliveness by the job that I hold? This idea seems to purport a life where its centrifugal life-defining force is in one’s profession. Much as many of us reject this idea because it sounds heretical to our religious ears, yet in our seeking of the Lord’s will concerning our profession, the question that bothers us the most is: What should I be—a teacher, a writer, an engineer, or …?
What should we do then? Perhaps, a replacement of the word “be” with its synonyms may yield some answers. Instead of asking “What should I be?” or “Who should I be?”, we could ask:
What should I abide by?
What should I hold on to?
What should last?
What should stay?
Who should prevail?
The answers to these questions could clear the cloud of apprehension in our job search and point us in specific directions as to what should ultimately define our life and thereby our career choice. Similarly, by asking questions using the antonyms, we could draw out certain perimeters in our job search. For example:
What should I die to?
What should pass away?
What should perish?
These questions help us discover the things that we ought to steer clear from in our job seeking, so that we are not led astray from the things that truly matter in life.
What do I want to be? I’m still unclear if I will ever find a job that I will stay long in, or a job that I will enjoy doing. However I do know that the job in itself must not define my life. In whatever post that I may eventually hold, I’m a pilgrim pursuing His kingdom first. I will abide by His kingdom values; I will hold on to my relationship with Jesus; I will last as a sanctified disciple. Jesus must prevail in my life.

Footnote: Has Poh Fang found a job she would stay long in? Yes. She is currently working in RBC Ministries and has been in this organization since October 2006. Does she enjoy her work? The answer: A resounding “YES”! :)
ymiblogging http://ymiblogging.org/

Spelling Mistake (from ymiblogging)


Spelling Mistake



By Tracy Phua, Singapore
type
Sometimes when we type too fast, it is not uncommon for us to miss out a letter by mistake. It dawned on me recently how important that missing letter might be, and how it might totally spell (pun intended) disaster for missing that tiny detail!
For example, you may have wanted to say: China was closed to Tibet.
But a typo error could lead you to mean: China was close to Tibet.

Get my drift? A missing letter could spell total disaster. Another example closer to home is
“Let Go” instead of “Let God.”

How many times in our life have we thought that we’re letting God handle our situation when we’re merely letting go? It is of utmost importance that we practice trusting and obeying the Lord. Sometimes we might not understand why God is letting us go through a particular situation, but even so, we must always remember that we need to surrender all. Lamentations 3:21-23 says,
“Yet this I call to mind
and therefore I have hope:
Because of the LORD’s great love we are not consumed,
for His compassions never fail.
They are new every morning;
great is your faithfulness.”
Our human logic cannot fathom our almighty God’s plans for our lives. So in whatever conundrum you are facing, instead of merely letting go, let God be God—trust and obey Him.
“For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the LORD, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future. Then you will call upon me and come and pray to me, and I will listen to you” (Jeremiah 29:11-12).

Friday 13 April 2012

Palm Sunday Procession Sunday 1st April 2012

On Sunday 1st April, many churches in Camden - including Chalk Farm Baptist Church - went on a Palm Sunday Procession in Camden to mark the day Jesus triumphantly entered Jerusalem and to mark the start of Holy Week.

We had a live donkey (Larry from Hackney City Farm) lead the group!

Many hymns were sung with joy and celebration including "Oh when the Saints", "Hosanna", "Ride on, ride on" and many more.

It was great to march on Camden High Street (where many took pictures and videos) to show the crowds Christians celebrate Palm Sunday in style!

Here are some pictures:


At Oakley Sqaure






On Camden High Street












At St. Michael's Church







Don't forget to check the church website:
Chalk Farm Baptist Church website (chalkfarmbaptistchurch.org)!

God Bless,
Chalk Farm Baptist Church Youth

Hello!




Hello all from the youth @ Chalk Farm Baptist Church and welcome to our blog!




  • We are an ethnically diverse and racially integrated church with a cross-section of ages and cultural backgrounds.
  • We are a community of Christians from different ends of the earth who come together to worship God in fellowship as one body.
  • We are one in Christ. Romans 12, 5: “So we, being many, are one body in Christ, and individually members of one another”.
Don't forget to check the church website:
Chalk Farm Baptist Church website (chalkfarmbaptistchurch.org)!

God Bless,
Chalk Farm Baptist Church Youth