Monday, February 06, 2006

Message From Not the Manse

I would like to take this opportunity to share with you the great news that there has been an addition to our family. Once again the patter of tiny feet can be heard around the Radcliffe household, no don’t worry we have not been concealing a baby we are now the proud owners of a German Shepherd dog. It is crossed with another breed (something stupid we think), 1 year old and came from the dogs home.

As you can imagine taking on a dog has brought new responsibility for us all. Learning to care for a family member who is dependant upon you be that a dog or another human being is not something to be taken lightly. This new burden of care started me thinking about how we take care of one another within the church and the wider community in which God calls us to live and serve.

Being church is not about us looking within our own walls, nor is being a Christian about worrying over our own welfare at the expense of others. No, God calls us to love and care for those around us.

The U.R.C’s ‘Catch the Vision’ project is about the church rethinking how we should be church. So how are we church? Do we exist as an exclusive member’s club concerned primarily with our own membership rights or does God call us to more? When Jesus was asked:

‘Teacher, which commandment in the law is the greatest?’
He said to him, “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind.”
This is the greatest and first commandment. And a second is like it:
“You shall love your neighbour as yourself.”
On these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets.’

We have a responsibility to care for one another, not to be looking within the entire time but to share what we have with others. It doesn’t need to be through large actions or grand gestures. We need not undertake programs of large scale evangelistic mission, we do however, need to make sure our churches are welcoming, caring and looking for and finding ways to reach out to those in need.

Pastoral care of one another is often the small things we do, the favour for our neighbour, checking on a friend, being available to listen, offering a hand. God is to be found in these gestures, in the small things, the intimate things of life, in the day to day business of being human. Here in the midst of our humanity God is found.

Being Church in today’s society means being prepared to take God out into the world, no longer being content for the world to come to us (perhaps this was always so). May God bless us as we struggle and learn together how to be the church that God calls us to be.

Stuart.

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home