Beer and Bible: Luke 5

Category : Beer and Bible, Bible, Luke

Last night seven of us gathered in the main bar of The Northcote Hotel (the lounge was full, shocking) for a beer and a discussion around Luke 5. The discussion took us around the chapter in question with minor detours into the other Gospels, Exodus, Genesis, and quite a long discussion on foreskinâ??s (erm). Just another quality Beer and Bible evening.

Questions

The main questions that came up were;

  1. What on earth are the last three verses all about. Wine skin’s and patches?  etc
  2. Why are we supposed to fast? Whatâ??s it all about anyway?
  3. Why are the accounts of calling of the first disciples different in the different Gospels

Discussion

The discussion took some twists and turns and led us into what it meant to be a disciple of a Rabbi and how the Jewish system of education worked (it was a better conversation that it sounds *smile*),

We also spent a fair amount of time trying to decide what indeed was harder for Jesus to say; â??Your sins are forgivenâ? or â??Get up and walkâ?. The gathered seemed split on that one so if you fancy adding to the debate then do chip in.

Talking about fasting; do we do it, why, etc etc was very interesting. It was useful, i believe, for all to get each others take on something which remains a bit of a mystery. It was useful to hear of experiences of fasting from real people, rather than just the â??super peopleâ?? in the Bible.

Drinks consumed were: Guinness, 6x, and water.

Next week

Reading: Luke 6

Venue: The Northcote Hotel (lounge bar if its not full again)

Time: 20:00 

The next few months

Category : Beer and Bible, Bible, Bible Study, Church, Exodus, Habitat for Humanity, Information, Youth

There are a number of exciting new things going on in my world that I intend on documenting here on threedays. I thought this a good opportunity to get this old girl going again. These things are;

  1. Beer and Bible
  2. The Exodus Study
  3. Habitat for Humanity: Durban 2009

Beer and Bible

Every Wednesday night a growing group of us gather in a local pub to have a pint or two and discuss a portion of scripture. The idea is that we read the passage before hand and come armed with questions, thoughts, things we donâ??t understand, as well as the things have inspired us and together we move through the scripture.

There is no real agenda and the whole evening is allowed to drift organically and itâ??s led to some really good discussion. The idea is for this evening to be a real entry level option. Itâ??s for people who do not feel like the standard home / cell group is for them. And people right on the fringe of Church life can find a place to come and get to know people.

Itâ??s a bit experimental; some weeks we have spent more time talking about the football than about the passage. We are certainly getting to know each other a little better and we are discussing subjects and delving into things that otherwise would go untouched.

Currently we are working through Luke and I intend on having some for of documentation of events available on this site.

The Exodus Study

We will come up with a better name for this. *smile*

For some time now there has been an obvious undercurrent of desire at St Simonâ??s to have the opportunity to do some more in-depth Bible study. A recent course was run to test the water as it were. â??Godâ??s Bookâ? was run in March â?? April as a six overview of the whole bible. Around fifty people attended (just over one third of the Church) which for a mid week group is quite staggering.

With the obvious hunger establish and a call for more from the attendees of â??Godâ??s Bookâ? we are going to be running a regular six week Bible study course. I will be writing and leading a course (with one or two others) that will take us through the Book of Exodus from late May into June.

The plan is for course notes and other materials to be posted here.

Habitat for Humanity: Durban 2009

For some time now we have been wondering how to engage the older teenagers / young adults of our church with their young faith. With traditional middle class church increasingly alien and irrelevant to younger people they tend to disappear off the edge of the map when the youth programme stops meeting their needs.

Habitat for Humanity is a charity who build suitable accommodation for those in parts of the world where slum or street dwelling is the norm. They aim to lift people out of poverty and into an existence fit for a human being. Their is work that is ongoing and uses local people and resources to develop the projects.

When the opportunity arises they facilitate groups from around the world to go and join in the work. This raises much needed funds and equipment as well as the profile for such projects which does make a real impact on the long term goals of the charity.

However,  I am under no illusions here about saving the world. The primary reason for us going to help try and provide a context of faith for these young people struggling find their place in Christianity. If we happen to do some good along the way then that is a great bonus. So in late August I am taking a team of twelve to Durban, South Africa to build a house.

Lotâ??s of planning and a fair amount of fundraising to do. I plan to document it all on this site.

Busy, busy, busy

So there is plenty to keep me busy in the next few months and plenty to write about here.

Should be fun.

Down2Earth: 11. Having Everything.. and Yet Nothing

Category : Bible Study, Down2Earth

I denied myself nothing my eyes desired; I refused my heart no pleasure. My heart took delight in all my work, and this was the reward for all my labour. Yet when I surveyed all that my hands had done and what I had toiled to achieve, everything was meaningless, a chasing after the wind; nothing was gained under the sun.
Ecclesiastes 2:10-11 (NIV)

I usually make a point of watching/listening/reading the latest news. However, during the last few weeks, I haven’t worried too much about missing the occasional news report since so much of it has been extremely depressing and pessimistic. The dominating theme has been the state of the economy as we’ve seen it go from ‘credit crunch’ to ‘down-turn’ and now into full blown recession. That’s now all resulting in the tragic situation of people losing their jobs and homes.

Unlike arguments about climate change (where some people argue that the changes are, in part, as much a result of natural phenomenon as much as man-made activities), there are no similar arguments as to the causes of the current economic crisis. This is 100% man-made ââ?¬â?? bankers, eager to earn maximum commission, lending money to people who were in no position to pay it back; consumers, eager to take ownership of homes, cars and numerous other material possessions, borrowing amounts of money that was way beyond their means. Get now, pay later has been the dominant philosophy for many years with credit cards being so readily available. At the same time, while not a direct cause of the problems, the level of government borrowing in countries around the world has been eye-watering even before the bank bail-outs and this has set the tone for the rest of society. It was a mathematical certainty that, sooner or later, this bubble was going to burst.

A sad aspect of all this is that even when a person has everything in terms of material wealth, it can still leave a sense of unfulfilment. You only have to consider Solomon, a man known for his extreme wealth as well as his astounding wisdom. He had everything (read the verses that precede the above passage (Ecclesiastes 2:1-9)) he owned houses, vineyards, gardens, water pools, silver, gold, servants etc. Yet, though he could take some satisfaction from a sense of accomplishment, when he reflects on the real value of what he’d achieved, he concluded that it was meaningless and chasing after the wind. There was no real gain and it will ultimately count for nothing before God. I wonder how many of us relate to that feeling;  perhaps in the context of working really hard to keep up a certain standard of living but realising that the real cost comes in terms of stress, ill-health, having no quality time, poor relationships and subsequently not really being able to enjoy the fruit of all that hard work. Many people talk about the feeling of anti-climax at Christmas time once all the presents have been unwrapped and all the food has been eaten. Those material things seem to promise so much but, in reality, deliver so little.

Perhaps a silver lining to the economic clouds will be that people will reflect more on their lifestyles and set some new priorities. Already, many are restricting their spending to things needed rather than things wanted. But when the economy eventually recovers and the feel-good factor returns, will it be back to the cycle of spend and borrow again? My hope would be that during these difficult times, people will rediscover the simple but important things, for example, their health, their family, their friends, their local community etc. And above all, that there’s a spiritual dimension to life which doesn’t depend on owning material possessions. Solomon came to realise that, unlike everything man does that will ultimately come to an end, “..everything God does will endure for ever; nothing can be added to it and nothing taken from it” (Ecclesiastes 3:14).