Inspiration

Welcome to the Inspiration section of the Activate website. Here we hope to provide you with useful stories, articles, videos, etc., to inspire you and share with you ideas from other Activate readers.

Invite someone to church with a Real Easter Egg

There is some quiet research that says there are people in Britain today who would go to church’if only someone asked them’. We often think of Christmas as a good time to reach out, but Easter is, arguably, a better celebration to share with friends and neighbours. The message of hope, sacrifice and new life with Jesus that should come shining through an Easter service might be more of an eyeopener than the Christmas story that they already know.
So how do you open that conversation? Perhaps pop round with a surprise gift. For the last two years a Fairtrade company have been producing The Real Easter Egg, with a message on the packaging about the first Easter. The chocolate is delicious, you can buy it in most supermarkets and it is an excellent conversation starter.
The Real Easter Egg company has an excellent website with links that tell the Easter story in a conversational way. Be ready when someone asks you the question – What is Easter all about.
www.realeasteregg.co.uk

Christians have always believed that because Jesus lived, died and rose from the dead, the relationship between God and humans has changed for all time. God and human beings can be peacefully at one. But why?

To try to explain this, Christians have developed metaphors – ways of describing what is ultimately undescribable. None of them has been adopted as the sole view of the church. It is something too complex to understand, but they all give glimpses of what Jesus has done for humans:

God is victorious

When Jesus died on the cross, evil (personified as the devil) made its strongest bid to defeat God. But when Jesus rose from the dead, God showed himself victorious over evil. Nothing can now keep humans from his love.

God provides a substitute

Because God has justice at the heart of his nature, all wrongdoing must be punished. This alienates humans from God. When he died on the cross, Jesus willingly received our punishment instead of us. God’s need to see justice has been satisfied, and now nothing can separate humans from him.

God identifies with humans in their greatest need

Out of his great love, God does what seemed to be impossible. The death of Jesus shows God suffering in the most wretched way imaginable. God and humans are now totally united. They were united in the worst humans can suffer, so they will also be united in the best heaven can offer.

Jesus was a ransom

Jesus was the price paid to the devil in order to liberate human beings from the slavery they were under – slavery to sin.

Jesus was our supreme example

The love of Jesus, freely giving himself on behalf of this needy world, overcame everything negative. It inspires men and women to the kind of transformation that would be impossible without him.

Each attempt to understand how the life of Jesus has changed the relationship between God and humans leads back to a historical fact – a man being put to death in a hideous fashion. This is why the cross has become the central symbol of Christianity.

Buy an egg today and pray about who you could invite to church this Sunday.

Invite someone to church with a Real Easter Egg Read More »

The Sun says “God is in Control”

When I was speaking about building relationships at the training day recently, we talked about how to bring great questions into conversations with our friends in a natural way. What an opportunity the last few days have afforded us to ask, “Do you think prayer makes a difference?”
The sight of the footballer, Muamba collapsing has reminded us of the unpredictability of life. And suddenly in this time of crisis, the world begins to look to God as they yearn for some kind of meaning and hope.
The front page of yesterday’s Sun led with the headline, “God is in Control” and the Daily Star said “In God’s Hands.” The BBC has an article on its website basically devoted to analysing whether prayer works. You can read it here:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-17429779

The nation is talking about it. Are we?

The Sun says “God is in Control” Read More »

“I’m playing all the right notes—but not necessarily in the right order.”

When you’ve been brought up with the family sense of humour that I have been ‘blessed’ (?!) with, “I’m playing all the right notes—but not necessarily in the right order,” is a classic Eric Morecambe line that comes to mind quite readily.

Then recently I read this on my friend’s Facebook wall:

“Aoccdrnig to a rscheearch at Cmabrigde Uinervtisy, it dseno’t mtaetr in waht oerdr the ltteres in a wrod are, the olny iproamtnt tihng is taht the frsit and lsat ltteer be in the rghit pclae. Tihs is bcuseae the huamn mnid deos not raed ervey lteter by istlef, but the wrod as a wlohe.”

I don’t know how true that is, but it’s an interesting thought and behind the slightly trivial nature of this quote there is probably a whole realm of fascinating human biological and linguistical scientific facts (says the Human Communication Sciences graduate desperately trying to think of the technical terms – they’re probably the right words, but they may not necessarily be in the right order!)

Unlike Eric’s piano playing where the result was altered by the order of the notes, in the above paragraph we interpret the same message of the words even though the letters aren’t in the right order. This kind of spelling would score lowly in any classroom but you start to wonder if spelling really matters being as the message is still successfully delivered into our brains. Even when we spot a spelling mistake, we rarely misinterpret the writer’s meaning.

Recently, I’ve been reading, “Evangelism without Additives” by Jim Henderson. It’s subtitled, “What if sharing your faith meant just being yourself?” and contains lots of what I believe to be wise and Biblical advice about how we share the fantastic message of God that’s been given to us. Jim considers why some Christians find it hard to talk about what they believe and why “witnessing” is often a negative experience for all concerned. Sometimes we can feel we’ve messed our evangelism up because we’ve not been able to authentically communicate in the way we’ve been told is the “correct” way to do it. Some of us have begun to believe that the ordinary is not good enough and that what we need is to be some kind of spiritual salesperson with some sort of rehearsed ‘pitch’.

I share Jim Henderson’s opinion that communicating God’s love is not really about some formulaic evangelism programme. Eric Morecambe played a perfectly acceptable and effective musical tune; it just wasn’t the conventional one that Andre Previn was expecting to hear. I believe we don’t necessarily have to always get all the words in the right order or carry our message in a traditional or conventional way. Actually I think it’s often more effective if we don’t use that many words at all. Getting the message across that there is a God who loves us and cares deeply about every aspect of our lives is the most important bit. God can make our everyday ordinary encounters utterly extraordinary through us asking great questions and paying attention to the people Jesus misses most.

So if you sometimes feel discouraged about how you talk to people about your faith, be encouraged that you don’t have to be perfect; you just have to be yourself. God is bigger than our greatest efforts. The message can speak for itself through what we sometimes see as our mistakes.

“I’m playing all the right notes—but not necessarily in the right order.” Read More »

A New Christmas song – Emmanuel is born tonight

My friend Rebecca Walker-Jones has written and posted a fabulous Christmas song –
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/3999256/07%20Emmanuel.mp3
She is delighted to have it shared and used by the Christian community. You can catch some of her other work on Youtube.
I loved meeting and getting to know her. She had a really interesting faith journey, with a strong belief and love of God and a very strong moral Christian code. Her interest and love in the person of Jesus came later.Whilst she lived in Dorset, I enjoyed meeting her for a chat over coffee, or walk in the meadows as we talked about who Jesus is and what He means to us. She now lives in Alabama.
‘As I sit beside this tree exchanging gifts
All I want this year
Is simply this
to love my Lord and Saviour
better than I do
to know him with all my heart.’

A New Christmas song – Emmanuel is born tonight Read More »

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