Faithlessness nurtured in one generation never remains in that generation alone; it is passed on to succeeding generations where it grows and those who receive it bear both the consequences of their own rebellion, along with the consequences of the rebellion of those who preceded them.

For those unable to join us at MGPC, the service will be live-streamed.
The video is available at our website and youtube channel.

Song: My Lighthouse
Welcome:
Call to Worship
Song: Love Come Down
Prayer Of Confession
Song: Man Of Sorrows
Affirming our Faith
Song: Unto God Be Praise And Honour
Bible Reading: Nehemiah 4:1-21
Bible Memorisation: Galatians 5:22-23
Song: O, The Deep, Deep Love Of Jesus
Bible Reading: 2 Kings 9:1-37
Sermon: Faithlessness’ Inheritance
The Lord’s Supper
Announcements:
Pastoral Prayer:
Closing Blessing
Song: This Is Amazing Grace

Some days (weeks, months, years) His Eye Is On The Sparrow is just the word of encouragement, consolation, and comfort that I need.
Here’s Maggie Amini’s rendition.

“Let not your heart be troubled,”
His tender word I hear,
And resting on his goodness,
I lose my doubts and fears;
Though by the path he leadeth,
But one step I may see;
His eye is on the sparrow,
And I know he watches me;
His eye is on the sparrow,
And I know he watches me.

Who knows who’ll be playing, when they’ll be playing, or where they’ll be playing this weekend.
Every one will have to watch on TV or listen on the radio, though

(Draws count as correct)
NRL (last round 4/8; season tally 106/152)
Newcastle
Canberra
Souths
Cronulla
Penrith
Melbourne
Wests
Gold Coast

AFL (last round 5/9; season tally 105/171)
Geelong
Carlton
Richmond
Port Adelaide
Sydney
Hawthorn
Western Bulldogs
Brisbane
Melbourne

In stories the hero arrives just in the nick of time. James Bond turns off the detonator with 007 seconds remaining. Han and Chewbacca arrive just as Darth Vader is about to fire on Luke. That sort of thing.
While the Bible tells us that Jesus’ incarnation took place at the right time, the narrative of the Gospels continues to point out that Jesus arrives after the nick of time. He arrives when it’s too late. When the situation is hopeless. He doesn’t come to stop the bad thing. He arrives to overcome the bad thing and redeem its effect. And he doesn’t use any other means to achieve that than himself.
That’s our proclamation.

From Diary Of A Pastor’s Soul:

I’ll never understand why Jesus so often prefers to show up after the nick of time has come and gone, after we’ve been let down by everything else we asked to use to save us. But I do know his nature is to bring light into the darkness of depair. This is at the core of the how I keep trying to preach.
What is important is not how inadequately I present the hope, but that for thousands of years hit shops is the most real thing the church has believed. In the resurrection of Christ, death is not longer the final chapter of any story. There is always the invitation to come out of the tomb.

Diary Of A Pastor’s Soul, M Craig Barnes, Brazos Press, 2020, pgs 197-198.

I’ve never heard it expressed this way, but this sums up why I call the spaces I work in ‘study’ and not ‘office’.