New Book  now Available

        Here is an anthology of over 1100 brief prayers and thought-starters, for each day of the year, with almost 400 original prayers by Bruce Prewer.
        Included is both a subject index and an index of authors-- an ecumenical collection of about 300 different sources.
Prayers for Busy People
        Title:  Brief Prayers for Busy People.
          Author: Bruce D Prewer
        ISBN 978-1-62880-090-6
        Available from Australian Church Resources,
web site www.acresources.com.au
email 
service@acresources.com.au
        or by order from your local book shop
        or online on amazon.

LENT 2

 

John 3:1-17                                                      (Sermon 2: “Salvage: the Business of Lent”

Genesis 12: 1-4                                     (Sermon 1: “Faith is a wonderful trip”)

Romans 4: 1-5 & 13-17

Psalm 121

 

 

PREPARATION

 

The rescuing, healing grace of the Lord Jesus Christ be with you all.

            And also with you

 

We have come here, not because we have all the answers

            but because Christ Jesus has made us scholars in his school.

We have come, not because we are better than others

            but because we know that God does not reject fools or sinners.

We have come, not because our lives always run smoothly

            but because by faith we journey together

through highlands and lowlands

towards a promised land.

 

            We are here to worship a God who never wearies

            and to praise a Saviour who is always optimistic.

 

OR

 

Whether we have arrived here today

            eagerly or languidly,

            joyfully or disconsolately

our trust is in God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.

 

Our help comes from the God

who made heaven and earth.

 

God will save you from all evil;

God will sustain your life.

 

The Lord will be with us

in our going out and our coming in,

from this day forward and for evermore.


PRAYER

 

Mind-boggling God, our best Friend,  we thank you that for all who walk by faith there is always light for those who truly want to see, and enough bread for those who hunger for goodness. In this wayside chapel, please stabilise our faith, and enlarge our love. May we who pause to worship you here in this quiet sanctuary, be happy in serving you out in the rough and rowdy world, as we encourage our fellow pilgrims on the long road ahead. Through Jesus Christ our Lord.

Amen!!

 

CONFESSION AND FORGIVENESS

 

With quiet confidence in the silent grace and quiet power of God, let us confess our sins and accept renewal.

 

Let us pray.

 

God our Holy Friend, we admit to each other and to you, that we are creatures in whom goodness and evil are untidily entwined.

 

Sometimes we set out to do what seems good, only to later discover that we have been manipulated by evil from within us.

 

At other times we have been afraid of our weaknesses, yet have achieved far better than we expected.

 

Sometimes we have relied on our education and worldly wisdom, only to find out how foolish we really are.

 

At other times we have trembled at our own ignorance, yet have acted in far wiser            ways             than we thought possible.

 

Some times we have pretended to be thoughtful and altruistic, yet in fact we have been pushed by nothing but self interest.

 

At other times we have been appalled at our chronic selfishness, yet have managed           to rise above it and have altruistically served  others wisely and lovingly.

 

God our Awesome Friend, we place in your hands the tangled web that is our human lives. By your lovingly ruthless, and ever patient, mercy in Christ, forgive and remove all that is sinful, untwist that which is tangled, free that which is knotted, mend that which is broken, and bring balance and harmony into our daily existence. In the name of Christ Jesus our Saviour,

Amen!

 

FORGIVENESS

 

Jesus said: you must be new-born by the Spirit of God.

 

My sisters and brothers, we have not been new-born to condemnation but to salvation.  In Christ there is forgiveness and healing for all who are ready to seek, and knock, and ask for grace. In his name I declare to you: Your sins are forgiven!

            Thanks be to God!

 

PRAYER FOR CHILDREN

 

Dear God,

help us to trust you every day,

so that worry may not get its claws into us,

nor fears rule our prayers or our actions.

Just let us trust you, trust you, trust you,

and then trust you yet again.

In Jesus’ name we make this prayer.

Amen!

 

PSALM 121

 

When I look up at the ancient mountains

            their huge strength steadies my trembling.

Their strength is from God who spun the galaxies

            and shaped this planet our home.

 

We can never stumble out of God’s care,

            for this Lover never falls asleep.

The One who looks after us is awake,

            always alert to the children’s cries.

 

Our God utterly cares for us,

            closer than our right hand.

Even the fiery sun will not harm us,

            nor the face of the moon beguile us.

 

God will keep us going in the hard times,

            treasuring our inmost being.

Whenever you leave for work in the morning,

            or return home weary at evening,

your God will be always there for you,

            this very day and forever.

 

                                                Slightly amended from “Australian Psalms” page 81

                                                Ó   B D Prewer & Open Book Publishers

 

NEW BIRTH

 

Birth is never easy,

not for the baby,

certainly not for mother.

Birth is a travail

of blood and tears,

a pain-joy like no other.

 

Birth is an ending

of speechless darkness

and unrealised limitation.

Birth is a beginning

of the new world

and the songs of liberation

 

Birth is not possible

without the gift

of profound maternal pain

Yet it’s not our doing

but the Spirit’s blessing

as free as springtime rain.

                                                ©  B.D. Prewer 2001

 

COLLECT

 

God of Jesus, wonder-full Friend, open the shutters of our lives that the Wind may flow through. Resuscitate us. Regenerate our precious likeness to God which is becomes deformed by the glittering trivia of this egotistical age. Lure us out of both arrogance and apathy. Let us be willing to bear the pangs of rebirth, not counting the cost. Bring us out of the dark night into the light and joy of your kingdom. For your love’s sake. Amen!

 

 

SERMON 1: FAITH IS A WONDERFUL TRIP

 

Genesis 12: 1-4

Romans 4: 1-5 & 13-17

 

Faith is a puzzle to many.

 

One way of understanding faith is to use the example of Abraham, a patriarch honoured by Judaism, Christianity and Islam.  [One might hope that with such a common hero shared by three great religions, we might be friendly with one another. Tragically it is not so.  However, that tragedy is not the theme of this sermon. Rather my theme is that of faith.]

 

The apostle Paul is fond of using Abraham as an archetype of faith. So is the writer of the letter to the Hebrews. Today I will, like a small child trying to tread in the footsteps of a parent, attempt to follow their example.

 

SOME DISTORTIONS

 

There is much misunderstanding and distortion surrounding the idea of faith. You will have encountered them, and so have I.  For many people faith is a kind of magic by which we can bend the world to our wants. Here are a few such distortions. I repeat: what follows are gross distortions!

 

            Faith is the secret force that will compel your children to become Christians? If the children of Christian parents spurn the church, it is considered to be because those parents did not have sufficient faith.

 

            Faith is all you need to save a shaky marriage. Forget self analysis. Forget looking elsewhere for help. No person who has faith need resort to marriage counselling.

 

            Faith is the antidote to all kinds of illness. Throw away your pills or crutches and live by faith and all will be well with you and those you love.  If a family member suffers from asthma, cancer, depression or schizophrenia, it is because there is lack of faith.

 

            Faith will enable you to be prosperous and successful. This is openly preached and privately practised. You will hear it boldly from the lips of some of the television evangelists (so called). I have also heard it less openly when attempting to counsel certain parishioners.

 

            Faith will enable you to avoid accidents and natural disasters. You will be safe from cyclone and flood, fire and road trauma. I recall one lay preacher who regularly drove a long way on a most dangerous road to lead worship. He covered the distance in less time than any other driver. As he put it: “I have faith that I’m on the Lord’s business, and so I put my foot to the floor and drive like Yehu! Nothing can harm me.”

 

            Faith means being able to go on mission for the Lord without any stipend. Much is sometimes made of those who take no salary but exist on the gifts of “those whose hearts are moved to give.”  Let it be frankly said that most of these “faith missioners” make sure that a widest possible range of Christian friends know about their situation. Let it be sadly said that while a few without ‘good connections’ struggle to exist, some end up with a real income from twice to ten times that of any ordinary priest or pastor.

 

One of the sad results of the propagation of distorted notions of faith, are the casualties that are caused by it. There are numerous ordinary people, caught up in disaster and deprivation, who added to their already heavy load, bear a burden of guilt and despondency. They blame themselves for “lack of faith”. If I sound somewhat impatient when talking about the false ideas of faith, it is because I have spent much of my life trying to encourage and rehabilitate people who have suffered much from the cruelty of those who boast of their superior “faith.”

 

There are more distortions than these few I have mentioned today. I have discharged a little of my frustration, and I hope lifted a some of the burden from a few hearts. Let us now move on to think positively about faith.

 

FAITH IS A TRIP

 

If we take Abraham as an example, then faith is a lomng trip, a journey. And when we talk about Abraham, don’t forget Sarah. Sarah is the heroine of the story. Abraham would have achieved nothing without her, yet sometimes he treated her shamefully. Together with their flocks and tents they set off into the unknown.

 

To their neighbours they were complete fools. To their wider families, deluded fanatics. To the scholars of that highly cultured centre of Ur, Abraham and Sarah were country hicks with neither the brains nor the education to separate truth from fantasy.

 

But  Abraham and Sarah went on the trip of faith.

 

And what did they have to go by? Nothing but this conviction that God was saying to them:

            “Go from your country, and your kindred and your father’s house to the land that I          will show you. And I will make you a great nation........ and by you all the families of the world shall be blessed.”

 

Faith was putting themselves into the hands of God, willing to go on a journey into the unknown, wherever God would lead them.

 

Faith was trusting God against the anxiety of uncertainty. There would be many difficulties. The troubles would not magically fade away, mistakes would be made, there would be moments when faith would seem extremely fragile in a rough existence. The promise that they would be the forebears of a great nation must at times have seemed like a ridiculous dream.  At times they would doubt and misread the signs of God’s will. But they kept on the journey and reached the promised land.

 

They went by faith and in time, a very long time (for Abraham and Sarah would not live to see it) they did become a vigorous and gifted nation and through them all was world received the wonderful blessing Christ Jesus.

 

It’s very similar in the Gospels. Faith is leaving lesser things behind and going on a wonderful, though at times dangerous, trip with Jesus of Nazareth.  The faith of the disciples was brittle and flawed, but they journeyed with Jesus. The future was not clear, but they believed it would one day become clear.  

 

For the disciples faith started with a journey, faith ebbed and flowed on the journey, and it was shaped and enlarged on the journey. Their faith trip would take them into the dark chasm of the valley of the shadow of death and even through its darkness and tears, that same valley would become a highway of hope.

 

None of them were saved from misunderstanding, abuse and suffering. They did not become popular and prosperous. In time they had to face situations worse than their imagining, and confront powerful people and forces that once would have filled them with dread. But as they journeyed on in faith they found the strength and wisdom necessary for each challenge and each trial.

 

As they travelled they discovered that although good times came, like going downhill on a smooth path in calm, sunny weather, faith actually grew more on the uphill climbs, and when storms roared into their faces.

 

THAT’S HOW IT IS TODAY

 

I do not believe things have altered. Faith is going on a wonderful trip with Christ Jesus, not certain where it will lead us, but sure that in Christ’s company things will work together for good.

 

If we stay put until we have all the answers, we will never have faith. If we refuse to move until we have constructed for ourselves a neat understanding of Jesus, or an adequate definition of God, then we will allow life to slip through our fingers without ever finding faith.  It is by stepping out on the road with that little, scrappy yet precious faith that we do possess, that we will find the greater faith for which we all long.

 

Sometimes in Sunday School the children sing a quirky little song “Faith is like a muscle.” Its theme is that if you use it, it grows. If you don’t use it, you lose it.  When I first heard that song, my pompous, adult mind snorted: “Humph! What a banal, trivial little piece of religious nonsense.” But the more I thought about it the more I realised the writer had caught something profound in a most simple image. Repentant, I now salute the writer.

 

THINGS ARE NOT ALWAYS CLEAR

 

I want to emphasise that the route of this trip is not always clear. We come to hard country and have nasty falls. Often we wonder whether we are even still on the right road. Well I certainly do wonder, don’t you? But we keep on stretching ahead believing that there is a purpose and value in every step we take.

 

From time to time my wife and I have done some modest bush walking. There are times, especially in the more barren highland country, out on button-grass plains, when we wonder whether we are our right track, or maybe lost on a kangaroo trail. Have we made the right decisions?  Are we heading towards success or disappointment? But when we ascend the next rise and stop for a rest, we look back and see how definite was the path, winding its way across the plains, on which we tramped in faith.

 

For me the life of faith has been like that. By the grace of Christ I have kept going even when I wonder whether I have lost the faith (some would say ‘lost the plot’) I once had. And as I look back, and see how wonderfully Christ has led me by faith. I confess to you that my faith is still fragile, but still travelling with Christ on the road; I believe things will work themselves through to a bright conclusion beyond my achieving.

 

John Henry Newman, that remarkable, sensitive, convert to the Catholic Church in the 19th century, in a time of grave questioning and difficult decisions, wrote the hymn we know as “Lead kindly Light” A few generations on, my soul still resonates with his words:

            So long your power has blest me

            Sure it still with lead me on.

            O’er moor and crag and torrent

            Till the night is done.

 

Like Abraham and Sarah, our faith is a trip into a new future that God has in store for us. Like the disciples, we share the journey with the Spirit of Christ Jesus, who opens the Scriptures to us as we walk along the road.

 

 

 

 

Shorter Version - SERMON 1: FAITH IS A WONDERFUL TRIP

 

Genesis 12: 1-4

Romans 4: 1-5 & 13-17

 

Faith is a puzzle to many.

 

One way of understanding faith is to use the example of Abraham, a patriarch honoured by Judaism, Christianity and Islam. The apostle Paul is fond of using Abraham as an archetype of faith. So is the writer of the letter to the Hebrews.

 

Today I will, like a small child trying to tread in the footsteps of a parent, attempt to follow their example.

 

SOME DISTORTIONS

 

There is much misunderstanding and distortion surrounding the idea of faith. From the gloomy to the crazy! 

 

Just have faith, many contend, and   miracles will happen everywhere.

 

For some faith is a kind of magic by which we can bend the God to our wants.

 

Faith is seen as the cunning force that will maniplutate your kids to become Christians. 

 

Or faith is all you need to save a shaky marriage.

 

Faith is the antidote to all kinds of illness. Throw away your pills or crutches!

 

Faith will enable you to be prosperous and successful.

 

Faith will enable you to avoid accidents and natural disasters. You will be safe from cyclone and flood, fire and road trauma.

 

Faith for a few means being a superior missionary who goes out with no stipend.

 

CASUALTIES

 

One of the sad results of the propagation of distorted notions of faith, are the casualties that are caused by it. There are numerous ordinary people, caught up in disaster and deprivation, who added to their already heavy load, bear a burden of guilt and despondency. They blame themselves for “lack of faith”. If I sound somewhat impatient when talking about the false ideas of faith, it is because I have spent much of my life trying to encourage and rehabilitate people who have suffered much from the cruelty of those who boast of their superior “faith.”

 

There are more distortions than these few I have mentioned today. I have discharged a little of my frustration, and I hope lifted a some of the burden from a few hearts. Let us now move on to think positively about faith.

 

FAITH IS A TRIP, LIKE SARAH AND ABRAHAM

 

If we take Abraham as an example, then faith is a long trip, a journey.

 

 And when we talk about Abraham, don’t forget Sarah. Sarah is the heroine of the story. Abraham would have achieved nothing without her, yet sometimes he treated her shamefully. Together with their flocks and tents they set off into the unknown.

 

To their neighbours they were complete fools. To their wider families, deluded fanatics. To the scholars of that highly cultured centre of Ur, Abraham and Sarah were country bumpkins with neither the brains nor the education to separate truth from fantasy.

 

But  Abraham and Sarah went on the trip of faith.

 

And what did they have to go by? Nothing but this conviction that God was saying to them:

 

 “Go from your country, and your kindred and your father’s house to the land that I will show you. And I will make you a great nation........ and by you all the families of the world shall be blessed.”

 

Faith was putting themselves into the hands of God, willing to go on a journey into the unknown, wherever God would lead them.

 

Faith was trusting God against the anxiety of uncertainty. There would be many difficulties. These troubles would not magically fade away, mistakes would be made, there would be moments when faith would seem extremely fragile in a rough existence. The promise that they would be the forebears of a great nation must at times have seemed like a ridiculous dream.  At times they would doubt and misread the signs of God’s will. But they kept on the journey and reached the promised land.

 

They went by faith and in time, a very long time (for Abraham and Sarah would not live to see it) they did become a wonderful nation and through their children’s, children’s children, all was world did receive the magnificent blessing Christ Jesus.

 

FAITH IS A TRIP—IN THE COMPANY OF CHRIST JESUS

 

It’s very similar in the Gospels. Faith is leaving lesser things behind and going on a wonderful, though at times dangerous, trip with Jesus of Nazareth.  The faith of the disciples was brittle and flawed, but they journeyed with Jesus. The future was not clear, but they believed it would one day become clear.  

 

For the disciples faith started with a journey, faith ebbed and flowed on the journey, and it was shaped and enlarged on the journey.

 

None of them were saved from misunderstanding, abuse and suffering. They did not become popular and prosperous. In time they had to face situations worse than their imagining, and confront powerful people and forces that once would have filled them with dread. But as they journeyed on in faith they found the strength and wisdom necessary for each challenge and each trial.

 

As they travelled they discovered that although good times came, like going downhill on a smooth path in calm, sunny weather, faith actually grew more on the rugged, uphill climbs, and when storms roared into their faces.

 

THAT’S HOW IT IS TODAY

 

I do not believe things have altered. Faith is going on a wonderful trip with Christ Jesus, not certain where it will lead us, but sure that in Christ’s company things will work together for good.

 

If we stay put until we have all the answers, we will never have faith. If we refuse to move until we have constructed for ourselves a neat understanding of Jesus, or an adequate definition of God, then we will allow life to slip through our fingers without ever finding faith.

 

 It is by stepping out on the road with that little, scrappy yet precious faith that we do possess, that we will find the greater faith for which we all long.

 

Sometimes in Sunday School the children sing a quirky little song “Faith is like a muscle.” Its theme is that if you use it, it grows. If you don’t use it, you lose it.  When I first heard that song, my pompous, adult mind snorted: “Humph! What a banal, trivial, little, religious cliche.” But the more I thought about it the more I realised the writer had caught something profound in a most simple image. Repentant, I now salute the writer.

 

THINGS ARE NOT ALWAYS CLEAR

 

I want to emphasise that the route of this trip is not always clear. Often we wonder whether we are even still on the right road. Well I certainly do wonder, don’t you?

 

From time to time my wife and I have done some bush walking. There are times, especially in the more barren highland country, out on button-grass plains, when the path becomes unclear. We  wonder whether we are our right track, or maybe lost on a kangaroo trail.  But when we ascend the next rise and stop for a rest, we look back and see how definite was the path, winding its way across the plains, on which we tramped in faith.

 

For me the life of faith has been like that. By the grace of Christ I have kept going even when I wonder whether I have lost my way. Yet as I look back, and see how wonderfully Christ has led me by faith, I marvel!

 

 I confess to you that my faith is still fragile, but still travelling with Christ on the road; I believe things will work themselves through to a bright conclusion beyond my achieving.

 

John Henry Newman, that remarkable, sensitive, convert to the Catholic Church in the 19th century, in a time of grave questioning and difficult decisions, wrote the hymn we know as “Lead kindly Light” A few generations on, my soul still resonates with his words:

            So long your power has blest me

            Sure it still with lead me on.

            O’er moor and crag and torrent

            Till the night is done.

 

Like Abraham and Sarah, our faith is a trip into a new future that God has in store for us.

Like the disciples, we share the journey with the Spirit of Christ Jesus, who opens the Scriptures to us as we walk along the road.

 

 

 

SERMON 2: SALVAGE: THE BUSINESS OF LENT

 

John 3:17

 

God is not interested in condemnation and destruction. God is intent on salvage and reconstruction.

 

“For God did not send his Son into the world in order to condemn the world, but that the world through him might be saved.”      John 3: 17

 

I see it, the Christian church started out very much aware of this wonderful good news. However, often on the journey through the centuries it has often lost the Gospel under the detritus of legalism and judgment.

 

Wearisome laws and duties and penances (penances both priest imposed or self imposed!) have often supplanted liberty. Anxiety and fear have ousted joy and confidence in the abundant grace of God to cover all our sins and bring us into the life which is abundant.

 

Legalistic and judgmental religion is a disaster. It is not being true to Christ but is in fact a denial of his mission on earth.

            “For God did not send his Son into the world in order to condemn the world, but that       the world through him might be saved.”      John 3: 17

 

REPENTANCE AND DISCIPLINE

 

There are indeed disciplines to learn as one follows Christ through the uneven landscape of this twenty first century. There are time s for rebuke and radical self assessment. There are situations where to be faithful and true involves suffering.

 

I would be both a fool to myself and a false shepherd to you of I gave the impression that evil did not matter, or that our sins are irrelevant peccadillos in the sight of God. Evil is a vast contamination of humanity, our sins alienate us from happiness and perpetuate much human misery.

 

Traditionally Lent has been used as a time for repentance and renewal.

 

It is reasonable and faithful to God when Lent has been so observed as a time for putting our bridle on our desires, a time for a radical spiritual check up. It is fruitful when Lent is grasped as an opportunity for aligning ourselves with the determined faith of Christ Jesus as he steadfastly made his way towards Jerusalem and the horrible cost he was to pay for his trust in God.

 

Repentance is a painful but wonderfully healing process, self discipline with Christ holds joys which rampant self indulgence can never equal. A flabby Christianity can be much more of a daily burden than the freely-welcomed disciplines of a well honed faith.

 

ON THE POSITIVE SIDE

 

However, when disciplines and penitence are prescribed, and become religious duties. When condemnation and punishment take an upper hand. When anxiety and fear are allowed to either sneak into our souls, or stomp like storm troopers into our religion and dispossess us of peace and joy, then things have gone horribly wrong.

 

The Gospel is much better than that. Underwriting all else is the salvaging love of God, whose passion it is that not even one the children of earth should perish.

            “For God did not send his Son into the world in order to condemn the world, but that       the world through him might be saved.”      John 3: 17

 

Our trust is not in whether we have repented enough, or fulfilled our Christian obligations enough, but on the pure, unadulterated love of God. Gods grace is always the foundation of faith. And when that foundation is in place, anxiety and fear of failure, lose their power over us. God is our secure place.

 

As the Psalm for today says:

“My help comes from the Lord

who made heaven and earth.

God will not let you foot be moved.

He who keeps you will not slumber.

 

RESCUE AND HEALING

 

 

“For God did not send his Son into the world in order to condemn the world, but that the world through him might be saved.”      John 3: 17

 

Saved? The word salvation is widely used in our expression of Christian faith. 

 

I like to remember that originally its meaning included both rescue and healing. The rescue bit is most important. Jesus came on a rescue mission for the whole human race.  He comes to rescue us from evil and its grim consequences. The word salvage is spot on But the healing side is just as important. The word salve, an unguent or healing ointment, comes from the same root.

 

Jesus is the greatest salvage and salve expert of all time.

 

He did not come to some people saying: “You a lot are a useless heap of trash. You are not worth saving.”  Nor did he say to others, “Maybe there is hope for you if you if pull your socks up, and do this list of moral and religious duties each day.” Jesus came with a free, liberating love for all.

 

That free graciousness is basic. As John tells us -

 

“For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life.”

 

The whole world is the focus of God’s unlimited, inclusive love.

 

Salvage and healing are primary. Salvage and healing are Jesus’ thing! Not condemnation.

 

Face up to Lenten disciplines by all means. But even more, let it be a season when we allow God in Christ Jesus continue his salvage and healing work in us.

 

I need much more salvage to done. What about you guys, eh?

 

THANKSGIVING

 

We thank you, living God, for the gift of faith.

For the faith of simple people who in the midst of uncertainties walk with a quiet           dignity.

 

For people of high IQ and authority, yet who by childlike faith walk humbly with their God.

For some with many doubts who nevertheless commit themselves to the small faith they do hold.

 

For those tentative souls who in a crisis discover their faith is larger than they thought.

For kindly folk who never seem to waver or question, yet who do not deride those of      shaky faith.

 

For those special members of the church who have been your agents in increasing our faith.

We thank you most of all for your holy Son, Jesus;

for the courage of his faith which always worked in harmony with his love

and who through his faithfulness has won for us a place in your eternal glory

 

Blessed are you, Giver of every good and perfect gift.

            Amen!

 

FOR OTHERS

 

It is a blessing to have others praying for us. It is also a blessing to when we pray for others.

Let us bring our prayers to God.

 

God of infinite wisdom and intimate friendship, we ask that we may not squander opportunities either for increased faith or larger service of our fellows. Please send the regenerating breath of the Spirit to those for whom we now pray.

 

To the very old and infirm, who fear that they are no longer of any use to friend, neighbour,

or even to their God, send your Holy Spirit:

            and regenerate your people, loving God.

 

To the young, especially any who are already setting there feet on a road that leads to self destruction, send your Holy Spirit:

            and regenerate your people, loving God.

 

To the timid, who are afraid to launch out in faith and dare the slings and arrows of a selfish, sceptical community, send your Holy Spirit:

            and regenerate your people, loving God.

 

To the scarred, who in the name of Christ have long fought against prejudice and injustice and now are on the point of giving up, send your Holy Spirit:

            and regenerate your people, loving God.

 

To the deeply sad, who after the death of one most dear to them cannot see much point in going on with life’s duties, send your Holy Spirit:

            and regenerate your people, loving God.

 

To parish-weary ministers and priests, whose enthusiasm for the Gospel appears to be ebbing away, send your Holy Spirit:

            and regenerate your people, loving God.

 

To any in this congregation, whose faith and love seems to be very small and fragile at this time, send your Holy Spirit:

            and regenerate your people, loving God.

 

To these and all your people, O God, send the Wind of your refreshing Spirit and bring us into that robust and resilient faith which you alone can give us.

            Through Jesus Christ our Lord.

Amen.

 

SENDING OUT

 

Being here together has been a re-birthing place on the long journey of faith.

Move on from here with your spirits renewed and your heads held high.

Exactly where this week will take us, each of us is uncertain.

The one thing certain that we shall never travel alone.

            Amen!

The grace of our Saviour,

the love of our Creator,

and the fellowship of our Counsellor,

                        will

be with you now and always.

            Amen!

 

THREE BOOKS BY BRUCE PREWER
    THAT ARE CURRENTLY AVAILABLE
              BY ORDERING ONLINE
    OR FROM YOUR LOCAL CHRISTIAN BOOKSHOP

My Best Mate,  (first edition 2013)

ISBN 978-1-937763-78-7: AUSTRALIA:

ISBN :  978-1-937763-79- 4: USA

Australian Prayers

Third edition May 2014

ISBN   978-1-62880-033-3 Australia

Jesus Our Future

Prayers for the Twenty First Century

 Second Edition May 2014

ISBN 978-1-62880-032-6

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Although this book was written with young people in mind, it has proved to be popular with Christians or seekers of all ages. Through the eyes and ears of a youth named Chip, big questions are raised and wrestled with; faith and doubt,  unanswered  prayers, refugees,  death and grief, racism and bullying, are just a few of the varied topics confronted in these pages. Suitable as a gift to the young, and proven to be helpful when it has been used as a study book for adults.

Australian Prayers has been a valuable prayer resource for over thirty years.  These prayers are suitable for both private and public use and continue to be as fresh and relevant today as ever.  Also, the author encourages users to adapt geographical or historical images to suit local, current situations.

This collection of original, contemporary prayers is anchored firmly in the belief that no matter what the immediate future may hold for us, ultimately Jesus is himself both the goal and the shape of our future.  He is the key certainty towards which the Spirit of God is inexorably leading us in this scientific and high-tech era. Although the first pages of this book were created for the turn of the millennium, the resources in this volume reflect the interests, concerns and needs of our post-modern world.