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Categories: MiscellaneousAndrew Haslam | 18-Dec-09


Times of feasting are mandated in the Bible.  So as you approach Christmas, remember that there is a good way to feast and a bad way.  A right way of enjoying festivals is defined by a couple of principles.

First, take all of God’s gifts with thanksgiving.  There are plenty of people who feel guilty enjoying rest and food.  That’s sad, because God has given them to us.  It’s worse than sad when they try and put their guilt on other people – in fact, it’s downright wrong.  Paul knew this, and that’s why he described such people as devoted to the doctrines of demons (1 Timothy 4:1-2).  In contrast he tells you, Christian, to enjoy everything God has given with thanksgiving.  ”For everything created by God is good, and nothing is to be rejected if it is received with thanksgiving, for it is made holy by the word of God and prayer” (1 Timothy 4:4-5).

Second, maintain discipline even in your feasting and your resting.  It’s very obvious as you look at the festivals for the Israelites in Leviticus 23 that they involve much enforced rest, but their feasting also contained rhythms and rituals designed to draw the worshipper’s attention to God their Redeemer.  So also at Christmas, I encourage you to rest well and eat well, but also to take up the opportunity to worship well, and to approach God daily in prayer and listening to his Word.

There are bad ways of feasting which involve the extremes of either pious legalism (and its accompanying false guilt and self-righteous pride), or flabby licentiousness (leading to the New Year blahs and a long recovery process).  As you seek to feast well this Christmas, take God’s gifts with thanksgiving, and return to him daily for the true rest that he alone can bring to your soul.


Categories: MiscellaneousGreg Haslam | 11-Dec-09


It’s that time of year again! Advent – the wait for Christmas. Yet, every year more British people drift away from the most substantial reasons to bother with it. We now call it the ‘holiday season’, forgetting that holiday means Holy Day. So what’s ‘holy’ or ‘dazzlingly different’ about it? What makes December 25th so special? After all, every two seconds three babies are conceived somewhere in the world but what’s different about Jesus? Jesus really was born, beginning life at conception as all human beings do. He did not suddenly appear as a full-grown male around 30 years of age. Nothing unusual about that then.

But wait. God took only some of the human components and genetic make-up from the ovaries of Mary his mother, a virgin Jewish maiden of royal lineage. From them he then cloned the embryo of Jesus, bypassing the normal intervention of male sperm and its chromosome complement, presumably through a creative miracle which subsidised the lack in Mary’s ovum. Matthew says ‘She was found to be with child through the Holy Spirit’ (1:18), and notes that Joseph’s suspicions were quelled by the explanation, ‘What is conceived in her is from the Holy Spirit’ (1:20). Many struggle with the apparent naivety of believing this.

Mary did too. In answer to Mary’s query of the angel as to how she could be pregnant when she was still a virgin and had never ‘played around’, she was told ‘The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you. So the holy one to be born will be called the Son of God’ (Luke 1:35).  The actual physical processes involved in this are not explained medically, but the activity of the Holy Spirit is clearly credited as the source of the resulting miracle child. The most obvious reason for this is that the child should be holy, and that Adamic sin and corruption should not be inherited by Jesus. Male paternity was bypassed to ensure this.

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Categories: MiscellaneousHoward Satterthwaite | 01-Dec-09


In the past 12 weeks that I’ve been working at Westminster Chapel (WC), I’ve learned a valuable lesson about perspective: things look quite different from the inside-out vantage point than they do outside-in.

I’ve been at WC for more than 6 years serving in a number of different ministries, hosting, 20:20 Vision, and the Change Team. I thought I knew WC fairly well…and in some ways I did…but in some ways I didn’t.

For example, I didn’t know that one member of staff frequently burps at his/her desk and that two male members of staff are closet Celine Dion fans (in the interests of safety, that is my safety, all shall remain anonymous).

In 24 Redemption, in response to a critic, President Noah Daniels says: “Let’s talk after you’ve been sitting in my chair for a while.” He has a point. It’s easy to be an armchair critic. I become one every time England plays a football match. Armed with only half the facts (and despite appreciating the difficult task that various England managers have had) I sometimes think that I could do a better job, when in reality, I would be terrible!

In the same way that we can be football manager armchair critics, we can be church leader armchair critics too. Let’s be honest, we’ve all done it.

But as the chess player Robert Byrnes said: “Until you walk a mile in another man’s moccasins you can’t imagine the smell.”

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