God is Building

Being part of the solution

At a time when people in the UK are becoming increasingly concerned
with our financial woes, Slumdog Millionaire helps get things into
perspective.  I watched with gobsmacked astonishment.  For me, it
wasn't actually a first time introduction to a deprived shanty town -
I've walked through them in the Philippines, in South Africa and
Brazil, but what was new was the overhead photography giving a sense of
scale.  These places are vast beyond comprehension.  In the event of
recession persisting to depression in this country, we are likely never
to come close to slumdog's place of origin...


Yet such is life in much of India: clothes are washed in brown
water; children play in open sewers; millions upon millions have no
hope of a better life.  What does God think of the unfairness - the
squalor, the incomparable lifestyles in different parts of the globe? 
We know that Jesus was attracted to the poor and it can be reasonably
argued that he was born into deplorable conditions.  It is said
that  the real person can only be found when their wealth and status is
not an issue - the real person underneath the baggage typical of the
west.  It happens to be the part in which God sees value.  So in his
eyes we are all beautiful - whether "slumdog" or even billionaire.  But
who is up for shedding the obscuring baggage to which many have become
so attached?


I believe that that we have opportunities, like never before, to
foster relationships with people in dreadful need.  You are reading a
website that can be found anywhere in the world - and may at this
moment be picked up by friends of St Simon's in a difficult part of
South Asia.  In Orissa we have developed a friendship with a Christian
community who serve as a helping point to make life better for many. 
Hundreds of children attend the school they have named St Simon's; it
is thrilling to hear current reports of how they are getting on through
one of our number who is out there for three months.  She is taking
time out of her accountancy career to teach children who are so
materially underprivileged when thought of in the context of our "Wii"
boys and girls back in London.


If you go to see Slumdog Millionaire, you don't get a medal just for
discovering a momentary feeling of challenge.  But if you do something
about it - get involved, get networked, get changing your own
attitude or lifestyle in ever such a small way - then you'll be a part
of the solution, and you'll probably discover something of the real you
- the beautiful you, as God sees it.

New Year 2009

What doom is predicted for 2009! We all know about the credit crunch, global warming and we’re watching casualties mounting in yet another middle-eastern conflict. Is there any point in making any personal resolutions this year, when our world at large is by some accounts becoming a worse place?


Yes. Yes there is a point. Some of the most impressive changes in lifestyle require nothing in the way of personal finance, good weather or even world peace. When did you last thank the bus driver, converse with the checkout assistant or, dare I mention it, say hello to an unknown fellow pedestrian? Start small with realistic resolutions; attempting the radical chocolate reduction plan first isn’t famed for boosting belief in a beleaguered willpower after a sweet &sticky, caffeinated Christmas.


Aiming high, however, is not necessarily off the menu. What do you most want to change for the better? If the project goes beyond the selfish superficial, God is an interested investor. Ask him. The Bible, and contemporary experience, show that God cares about the prayers of anyone, from the first-timer to the freestyler. God’s business is ‘making better’ – whether character or commitment. Jesus Christ made better a world where people didn’t know God personally until he lived among us and identified with us. If your New Year’s resolution is just to get to know him, and what he’s about, it could be the most significant year of your life.

Christmas 2008

What contrasting crowd experiences can be had in Shepherds Bush this December! Westfield is in full bloom – with tens of thousands of shoppers every day, taking the walk under the undulating umbrellas of glass. Across the road, BBC staff scuttle in and out of Television Centre, putting finishing touches on production and admin for holiday season broadcasts. More densely packed still, will be Loftus Road when QPR kick-off their two remaining home games of the year. Churches with their Christmas events are into their most attended month in the calendar. Every 20 seconds, cars in narrow streets menacingly approach each other, vying for any vacated parking bay. Have you given God a space?

In our Christmas services at St Simon’s, we are looking at the word ‘Offering.’ The world is celebrating a season which recognises God’s offering of himself: Jesus Christ, the greatest present ever given. God becomes man. We can relate to him, as he relates to us.

Are you going to offer anything back to him?

Change

Change is exciting because it brings opportunities for new starts and potentials. Change is also hard work. I'm very excited about St Simon's moving from one main Sunday service to three. Morning, afternoon and evening. God can be worshipped during each part of the day - and so he certainly will be.

September saw the end of a much-cherished morning-only system which has been on the go for many years. October ushers in Holy Communion at 10.30 am, Cafe Church at 4 for 4.30 pm (including the youth and children's groups) and Evening Celebration at 6.30 pm. Something new in the way of spiritual choice for our area of London, where Sunday morning is when most people pencil in a hangover, a lie-in, some shopping, a bit of sport, or a trip to Granny's.

St Simon's has a reputation for its welcome. Multiplying this by three is playing to our strengths. A range of options will provide for more people to discover that God is building in our community and that Jesus Christ can bring hope to individual lives.