Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Conversation # 4 - God

This week we come to the heart of the Christian Faith – God. You may be wondering why it has taken me three weeks to deal with the very core belief of the Christian Faith. What I wanted to do, however, was say something first about how we come into contact with the Christian Faith: the Christian life, Baptism and the Church. However, without God none of these things make sense, of course.

So now let me speak a little about God.
Many people throughout the world profess belief in God. There are many religions that profess a belief in something ‘other’ and beyond us, and many people, who would not say they are religious, still believe in a God in some form. Christianity shares with Judaism and Islam the belief in one God as revealed to us through the Old Testament of the Bible. Christianity, though, has a unique take on this. We proclaim that this God is Trinity, that is, God is one but also three. There is one God who is in three persons: the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit.

To the Father is attributed the ministry of creation. To the Son is attributed the ministry of salvation, and to the Holy Spirit is attributed the ministry of sanctification. This is reflected in the Nicene Creed, which we recite together at our Sunday morning services.

For many people the Trinity just doesn’t make sense. How can three be one? There is always a danger when trying to explain the Trinity that we will either make people more confused, or we will explain it in such a way that makes God into three Gods (tritheism) or one God who appears to us in three ways (modalism). It is best, I think, and inadequate as it is, to say that the Trinity is a mystery that we will never fully understand in a purely logical way. The New Testament Christians experienced God in this three-personed way, and quite wisely, I think, left it unexplained (Matt 2: 19; 1 John 4: 3-14).
Some things to think about until then:


Do we need to believe in the Trinity to be Christians?


Do I believe in a God that is one but three?


What questions do I need to ask about the Trinity?


Please feel free to post your thoughts about the Trinity on this ‘blog’


Chris

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Confirmation Conversation # 3

Hi all

This week I would like to move the conversation onto the church. It is word we use a lot, obviously, and has associations with many things. Sometimes we think of the church as the building, such as St. Jude’s. When we speak of St. Jude’s we often think of the building that occupies 444 Brighton Road. At other times, we think of the church as a place we go to on Sundays. We say we are going to church, meaning not only the building, but also attending the act of worship that takes place inside it. We also speak of belonging to a church, and by that we mean we belong to a group of people who assemble at St. Jude’s. We also speak of belonging to the local or global church, or the Anglican Church, or one of the other denominations. Church is word that covers a multitude of meanings.
However, the New Testament mainly understands the word church as a ‘people’ (see Matthew 16: 18; Romans 16: 1, 23; Ephesians 5: 25). Occasionally, at St. Jude’s we sing a song that says;
I am the church! You are the church!
We are the church together!
All who follow Jesus all around the world,
Yes, we’re the church together.

The truth of this song, as it goes on to say, is that;
The church is not a building,
The church is not a steeple,
The church is not a resting-place,
The church is a people![1]

When we are baptized we become members of this church of ‘people’, and all of us are full and equal members of it. St. Jude’s church building might one day close - we hope not!!! However, that doesn’t necessarily mean that the church itself will close. St. Jude’s Church could meet in a hall or school gym, because, ultimately, St. Jude’s Church is the people.
How do you understand the word church?
What does being a member of St. Jude’s mean to you?
Do you think the church could meet out of a church building and still be the church?


Chris



[1] Richard Avery & Donald March 1972, ‘I am the church’, Hymn # 467 in ,Together in Song, HarperCollinsReligious, Sydney, 1999.