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ABM Reflections

 

ABM "Reflections"

This page by the kind permission of The Australian Board of Missions
You can visit their website on www.abmission.org.
(or use the link on our "Other Sites to Visit" page)



Reflections for Weekly Bulletins,
Second Quarter, 3 April 2005 to 26 June 2005.
This quarter the reflections are written by Brad Chapman.

(This year we use the Year 'A' readings)

Second Sunday of Easter  3 April 2005      

Acts 2.14a, 22-32; Psalm 16; 1 Peter 1.1-12; Jn 20.19-31

Twenty Centuries later it is sometimes hard to capture the immediacy and excitement that would have been

in Peter’s voice as he proclaimed “Men of Judea and all who live in Jerusalem...” Yet we stand alongside

those first disciples as witnesses to the resurrection of our Lord. And we are thrust forth as they were,

emboldened by the Holy Spirit to live a message of love, hope and peace.

(Anglican Board of Mission Weekly Pew Reflections 2005)

Pray for a renewal of the excitement we have experienced in our relationship with God.

Pray for the Church in the province of Myanmar.

 

Third Sunday of Easter  10 April 2005

Acts 2.14a, 36-41; Psalm 116.1-4, 11-18; 1 Peter 1.13-25;

Lk 24.13-35 or Mtt 28.8-15a

The world often teaches us to be wary of strangers. A baby who smiles and laughs at everybody will, too

often, grow up to inherit a fear of people with strange accents, strange smells or differing socio-economic

status. Yet there are moments when we stumble over these barriers; when we find ourselves enjoying

the company of people we don’t associate with; when conversations reveal new truths about the world,

about ourself, about our God. While breaking of bread with unfamiliar souls we may enquire whose

pleasurable company we’ve kept, only to find that we’ve broken bread with Jesus. 

(Anglican Board of Mission Weekly Pew Reflections 2005)

Pray for the willingness to see the living Lord in every person we encounter.

Pray for the Church in the province of Melanesia.

 

Fourth Sunday of Easter  17 April 2005      

Acts 2.42-47; Psalm 23; 1 Peter 2.1-10; Jn 10.1-10

Marketers tell us that the average Australian is exposed to over one thousand advertising messages

each day. The jumble of messages and influences that press against us can leave us feeling like a visitor

seeking directions in a bustling foreign city. Amongst this chaos we long to hear the shepherd’s voice:

kind, authoritative, patient, wise, loving, and reassuring. A voice that guides us through the challenges

and pitfalls of life; leading us to green pastures of rest and renewal; protecting us from falsehood and deceit.

How can we tune our ears to the voice that brings life?

(Anglican Board of Mission Weekly Pew Reflections 2005)

Give thanks for the constant, faithful call of Jesus.

Pray for the Diocese of Polynesia

 

Fifth Sunday of Easter  24 April 2005      

Acts 7.55-60; Psalm 31.1-5, 17-18; 1 Peter 2.11-25; Jn 14.1-14

Jesus makes the assertion that God is revealed in him; in his person and in his works. He goes on to notify

his followers that God, likewise, will be revealed through their lives. We are given the task of telling the

story, of showing God’s love, of spreading God’s kingdom. That we are entrusted with the task of revealing

God to the world seems almost preposterous to our ears. And indeed it would be, were it not for God

working in us and through us, as Jesus promised. How do people see God revealed in your life?

(Anglican Board of Mission Weekly Pew Reflections 2005)

Give thanks for the mystery of Jesus’ presence seen in us.

Pray for the Anglican Church in Africa, giving thanks for growth despite trials.

 

Sixth Sunday of Easter  1 May 2005      

Acts 17.22-31; Psalm 66.7-19; 1 Peter 3.8-22; Jn 14.15-21

Paul eloquently presents the true God to the Athenians using a language and a manner appropriate

to their own society and culture. In our fragmented world there are many languages, many people groups,

many cultures and subcultures. Encountering them may mean crossing the ocean, or it may mean crossing

the street. We in whom the Spirit of truth abides are entrusted with a message that must be lived and told

afresh each day. We who are witnesses to the living Christ are sent to manifest God’s love amongst

those now blind to its radiance. (Anglican Board of Mission Weekly Pew Reflections 2005)

Pray that we might find the right words at the right moment.

Pray for the Anglican Church in Korea.

 

Seventh Sunday of Easter (after Ascension)  8 May 2005             

Acts 1.6-14; Psalm 68.1-10, 32-35; 1 Peter 5; Jn 17.1-11

As Jesus’ followers come to terms with his resurrection, they prepare for the grand showdown. Surely

this will be the time when God will restore the kingdom to Israel. They are ready for a fearsome display of

the power and authority of God; earthquakes, lightning zaps and special effects. Instead, Jesus disappears

heavenward, leaving a small bunch of ordinary people standing around gawking at the sky and wondering

what this talk of the Holy Spirit is all about.

(Anglican Board of Mission Weekly Pew Reflections 2005)

Pray that we might never be so overcome with awe that we forget to take the next step.

Pray for the Church of the Province of South East Asia.

 

Day of Pentecost  15 May 2005

Acts 2.1-21 or Num 11.24-30; Psalm 104.26-36; 1 Cor 12.1-13 or Acts 2.1-21; Jn 20.19-23 or Jn 7.37-52

God’s people do not blend in. We are being transformed and we are about the business of transform-

ing the world around us. Our hearts are infected with a longing for God and we are given eyes to see the

world as Jesus sees the world. The same wind that blew on the day of Pentecost continues to blow today.

Dreaming powerful dreams, and envisaging God’s plan, with prophetic voice we declare unto the world “we

are not drunk as you suppose...” (Anglican Board of Mission Weekly Pew Reflections 2005)

Pray that the Spirit of Pentecost might enliven us each day.

Pray for the Anglican Church of Papua New Guinea

 

Trinity Sunday  22 May 2005

Exod 34.1-8; Song of 3YM 29-34 (APBA p.399); 2 Cor 13.11-13; Mtt 28.16-20

A ‘believer’ is someone who gives intellectual ascent to a theoretical idea or proposition. Jesus calls us

not just to believe, but to follow. A ‘disciple’ is someone who is yielded to the will of the master. Even a

cursory reading of the Gospels reveals that obeying all that Jesus has commanded is no easy task. Discipleship

is a narrow path, radical and counter-cultural. Left alone, we wouldn’t stand a chance. What does it mean

when Jesus says ‘I am with you always?’ (Anglican Board of Mission Weekly Pew Reflections 2005)

Pray for the courage to be discipled anew every day.

Pray for Indigenous Anglicans across Australia.

 

Second Sunday after Pentecost  29 May 2005

Gen 6.9-22, 7.24; Psalm 46;

Rom 1.16-17, 3.21-28 (29-31); Mtt 7.15-29; (Duet 11.18-21, 26-28; Psalm 31.1-5, 21-27)

Jesus does not promise an escape from the storms of life. The rains will fall, the floods will come and the

winds will beat against the just and the unjust. An active faith is requisite for those who will endure the

tempest; a faith that produces good fruits by acting on the words that Jesus has spoken. When we have

planted our foundations on the rock we will find reprieve even in the midst of the greatest storms, being able

to heed the words of the psalmist... “Be still and know that I am God.”

(Anglican Board of Mission Weekly Pew Reflections 2005)

Give thanks for the firm foundation we have with our lives fixed in the love of God.

Pray for all those who have served, and do serve, God’s mission through ABM

 

Third Sunday after Pentecost  5 June 2005

Gen 12.1-9; Psalm 33.1-12; Rom 4.13-25; Mtt 9.9-13, 18-26 (Hosea 5.15-6.6; Ps 50.7-15)

Follow the river and you will find the sea, says the French proverb. Jesus attracted a great number of followers.

Some were drawn because of immediate pressing concerns such as illness. Others were drawn because in

Jesus they recognised the light of hope for a fallen humanity. Like Matthew, striding away from his

abandoned tax booth, the call to follow comes to us in the midst of our daily pursuits. If we follow Jesus what

do we find? (Anglican Board of Mission Weekly Pew Reflections 2005)

Pray that we will know when to stay and when to go.

Give thanks for the Episcopal Church in the Philippines.

 

Fourth Sunday after Pentecost  12 June 2005      

Gen 18.1-15, (21.1-7); Psalm 116.1-2, 11-18; Rom 5.1-11, Mtt 9.35-10.8 (9-23)  (Exod 19.2-8a; Psalm 100)

Jesus ‘harvest’ analogy has been dated by the advent of mechanised farming and twenty ton combine harvesters.

It is sometimes tempting to think that the mechanised church, with its professional clergy and televangelists,

relieves us from the responsibility of labouring amongst God’s harvest. Perhaps we need the occasional

reminder that, in our street, amongst our friends and colleagues, in our marketplaces and workplaces

there are people waiting to hear that ‘the kingdom of heaven has come near’.

(Anglican Board of Mission Weekly Pew Reflections 2005)

Pray that we might have the pleasure of working in fields of living grain.

Pray for Archbishop James Ayong and the Anglican Province of Papua New Guinea.

 

Fifth Sunday after Pentecost  19 June 2005

Gen 21.8-21; Psalm 86.1-10, 16-17; Rom 6.1-11; Mtt 10.24-39  (Jer 20.7-13; Psalm 69.7-10 (11-15) 16-19)

The concept of giving up what we cannot keep, to gain what we cannot lose, sounds all very good in theory.

But we live in a world that seduces us with flimsy media contrived versions of the ‘good life’. As the pressures

of work, family and life tug us along we must find space to pause and reflect. Who are we living for anyway?

If we do not bear the cross of the Master, we will have to bear the cross of the world, with all its empty

promises. Which cross have you taken up? (Anglican Board of Mission Weekly Pew Reflections 2005)

Pray that our yoke may be easy and our burden, light.

Pray for the Episcopal Church in the Province of Jerusalem and the Middle East.

 

Sixth Sunday after Pentecost  26 June 2005

Gen 22.1-14; Psalm 13; Rom 6.12-23; Mtt 10.40-42  (Jer 28.5-9; Psalm 89.1-4, 15-18)

Never underestimate the value of a cup of cold water. To the lost soul, struggling through the rough

patches and dry places of life, the smallest gesture may come as a divine epiphany. By our warmth, by our

welcomes, through our smiles and our recognition of the alien and the outcast we may find ourselves

entertaining angels unaware. When we ourselves are parched from the journey and our reserves depleted,

do we still hold out the proverbial cup of water?

(Anglican Board of Mission Weekly Pew Reflections 2005)

Pray that we may always find the time to be hospitable and to welcome the stranger.

Pray for the ABM Auxiliary.

 

(The third quarter ‘Reflections’ should be displayed during the last week of June.)

How to Contact ABM

Mail:
Level 6, 51 Druitt Street, Sydney, NSW 2000

Phone:
1300 302 663 or in Sydney 9264 1021

Fax: (02) 9261 3560

Email: info@abm.asn.au

Website: www. abmission.org
5468

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