Archive for the ‘Journey update’ Category

parenting children for a life of purpose

Tuesday, February 4th, 2014

We’d like to highly recommend Rachel Turner’s new book, Parenting children for a life of purpose. Rachel is a good friend to the Sanctuary and and we’re delighted to see this book as a wider and deeper exploration of issues we first worked on together in our Worship and justice at every age articles. There’s more about why we’re such fans of the book below from co-founder Liz Baddaley – who was so enthusiastic about its content that she wrote the foreword! Here it is…

Parenting children for a life of purpose - low res
This book fills me with hope.  Like its author, it believes that children are powerful individuals who can have a profound effect for God – now as well as in the future.

It champions the truth that we were created for something much bigger than merely living our own lives or achieving our own dreams. And that partnering with God to be a world-changer has no biblically recognised minimum age limit.

Similar to its prequel Parenting Children for a Life of Faith, it combines clear, visionary thinking with solid biblical grounding. It voices a passionate realism that recognises both the urgency and achievability of the transformation it longs for.

The book’s real life stories demonstrate the author’s deep awareness of the competing pressures facing young people. And its practical ideas model how change comes simply by allowing new thinking to enter existing discipleship approaches.

Our churches and our world desperately need the kind of children and adults Parenting Children for a Life of Purpose invites us to be.

We are called first and foremost respond to our Father’s love by living out Jesus’ words to love God and others with every fibre of our beings (Luke 10:27) and making him known to the ends of the earth (Matthew 28:16-20).

In an age of me-centred thinking and celebrity culture, I am deeply encouraged to find a book on calling that doesn’t start from a place of ascertaining individuals’ specific gifts or strengths.

Instead, it asks us to be inspired by Christ and his call to the whole church – and to make this our primary purpose. As we live this out with our resources, talents and time, we will discover everything we do is invested with new meaning.

For our purpose is really to ask the same question again and again in every situation we face – from personal relational issues through to globally powerful consumer choices, campaigns or career paths –  ‘Jesus, what could I do here to put you and your other children before myself?’

Imagine if this kind of thinking was to inspire a generation…

My prayer is that it will.

sharing our hearts for freedom

Thursday, January 30th, 2014

Last Tuesday we had our first 21 for freedom prayer focus for 2014. Trafficking and modern-day slavery are regular themes in our intercession but the 21st day of each month is set aside to specifically concentrate on this. As we looked back on last year and ahead to this one, this is what came to mind and heart. We are sharing it widely to encourage and challenge and also so people can contact us with any ideas in reference to points 4 and 5.

sanctuary photoshoot 1 246

1. As painful as it has been, we thanked God for opening our eyes to this issue more fully. For those of you still new to it – the numbers are vast:

An estimated 27 million people worldwide are in some form of slavery or bonded labour – more than at any point in human history.

But it’s the stories of the one in 27 million that have really broken our hearts. Knowing each one is unique and precious and then reading their own story of exploitation. The faces and voices of these people have entered our lives this year and disrupted our complacent comfort with the reality of cocoa plantations, brothels and quarries.

The links to poverty and vulnerability are unsurprising but devastating.

The pursuit of power and money at the expense of powerless people is expected but offensive.

Looking back and forward, we are asking God to keep giving us the strength to allow our hearts to be broken as his is, as we – like him – listen, love, intercede and act.

A prayer for opened eyes and increased outrage

Lord Jesus, I said open my eyes – and you did
And now I almost wish I could un-pray that prayer,
Or look away, or simply shut them and forget.
But I can’t. And I won’t.

Lord Jesus, I want to speak up – but I don’t know how to start
And I wish I had more platforms and influence.
I’m tempted to wait till I have better knowledge.
But I can’t. And I won’t.

Lord Jesus, I have seen and heard.
And now I ask you to use me to speak up and reveal the truth
Until others cannot look away or deafen their ears, and we can’t settle.
And we won’t stay silent.
Until no one can be bought or sold any more.

2. We took encouragement from who our God is, his priorities and what we know about how he brings about change. We committed to keep praying with hope and faith in the sure and certain knowledge that he reigns.

On 21 January our daily psalm was 68. There were a lot of things in it that spoke deeply into this issue and provided us with another window into how God sees this situation.

In particular we prayed for those who are like ‘bulls’ in a ‘herd of calves’ to be convicted as verse 30 prompted.

And we reflected on one of the many images in scripture of God using the small to lead massive change. We prayed for the ‘little tribe of Benjamin’ leading the fight against trafficking – whether as intercessors, artisits, campaigners, politicians or rescuing organisations.

It has been heartening to watch this tribe growing over the last year – in numbers and in strength of voice and we prayed for it’s encouragement and further strengthening.

3. We celebrated breakthroughs and answers to prayer we have seen over the last year – from general progress such as a sense of the church waking up in a new way and increased public awareness to significant specific shifts or transformations.

In particular we highlighted:

Rescue stories in the news as well as coming through from organisations such as A21 – in the UK between September and December there were a series of high profile raids and rescues – again adding to public awareness and outrage.

Theresa May’s championing of reform on the issue generally and in particular the breakthrough with creating a new specific trafficking offense.

– In the UK and elsewhere, and in many parts of the world’s media, there seems to be a growing sense of political and social will for change.

– A21’s breakthroughs in lobbying work in Greece (the capital of trafficking in and out of Europe).

French politicians debating changing their law on prostitution to make customers not prostitutes the criminals. (This same approach led to huge transformation in Sweden when it was introduced there.)

4. We reviewed our own contribution through prayer to the fight against trafficking and modern day slavery and committed to keep growing this as we feel led.

– We want to increase still further our time and emphasis on praying about this issue – seeing it as one of our most central foci as it is on so many of our pray-ers hearts and there seem to be massive shifts happening.

– We hope to apply everything we have learned about praying from confide-nce and standing on answered prayer to help us pray in a way that is targeted, faith-filled and following God’s leading. We hope to identify – from listening to God and learning more from the experts – where the pivot points are for this issue, and focus our prayers on them. (We would love to hear from you if you have further insights into this but we will certainly be concentrating on Greece as one example.)

– We want to proactively own our role of standing with those at the coal face of the fight – circumstantially and politically – by supporting them in prayer and by taking the time to thank and encourage them specifically.

5. We discussed our resourcing contribution – and how this could grow.

– Many people have already found the Sanctuary’s song, What price? and our written prayers responding to this issue helpful and challenging and we committed to do more to proactively circulate them to churches and organisations less familiar with the Sanctuary.

– We know that songs, poetry and images can speak powerfully to our hearts to inspire, encourage, equip and challenge. Sometimes even in a way nothing else can. And we want to freely pour out our own gifts as a core team in this area and open up our resourcing site to more contributions from elsewhere on this issue.

– We want to publish more creative responses and tools for worship this year that will help many more people wake up to the issue, pray for the change that is on God’s heart which so many are catching and take action to play their part in bringing freedom. If you’re a creative with this issue on your heart – or just someone with an idea of what would be useful for someone else to create –  we’d love to hear from you…

Please God may 2014 be a year of unprecedented breakthrough for freedom. For the sake of all who are in slavery and all who are enslaving – may amazing grace be seen again even here.

 

reaching out and breathing in this Christ-with-us

Friday, December 13th, 2013

The Sanctuary’s centre closes today, releasing its team and regular pray-ers to their churches’ fuller programme of services and outreach for Christmas. But we’ll continue to pray for all our lives and churches to more brightly display Christ-with-us this season – so many more might be drawn to his transforming light. 

reaching out

We’re also asking God that each of us wouldn’t lose sight of Jesus’ love, light and centrality in our own lives either – especially in the busyness of serving him.

On Tuesday we welcomed a number of clergy and readers from Anglican churches in the area. This was the sending prayer we finished the morning with, and which we will continue to pray alongside all who seek to reach out with Christ’s message this Christmas:

Leader:        Into our busyness this Advent,
All:               Come, Lord Jesus.
Leader:        Into our preparation to serve,
All:               Come, Lord Jesus.
Leader:        Into each sermon, choice of liturgy and song, and into each new expression of creativity,
All:               Come, Lord Jesus.
Leader:        Into each act of mercy and each gift we offer to those in our community,
All:               Come, Lord Jesus.
Leader:        Into our rest time and our quiet times and our time ‘off duty’,
All:               Come, Lord Jesus. 
Leader:        May we stay close to you this Advent, beckon others closer to you this Christmas and glorify your name in all
we pray, preach and do,
All:               For the sake of the one this season is for, and all our service is for – our precious Lord Jesus
Christ,
Amen.

If you’re struggling to find peace or make Jesus central this Christmas you might find it helpful to download our creative prayer ideas, written prayers and playlist helpful – Be near us Lord Jesus

softening our hearts for peace together

Monday, November 11th, 2013

Today is Rememberance Day, and in the couple of weeks leading up to it we have been focusing more centrally than ever on praying for peace to come to nations in conflict. As a result, we’ve been inspired and challenged by what God has newly laid on our hearts and by the different perspectives and creativity members of the community of regular pray-ers at our centre have shared.

softened hearts low res

On Friday, we used our new peace prayer stations together in morning worship.

We began by doing station one corporately together… as instructed, we all shaped soft hearts from playdough as we prepared our hearts – which can also be hardened to God and others – to pray for those living in conflict zones.

Most of us sculpted heart shaped, but one pray-er – who happens to have a medical background – sculpted an anatmoically shaped heart. She shared with us how it was a picture to her of how we could become softer – that the heart is a pump and it needs to draw in God’s love and then pump it out.

As we carried our soft, symbolic hearts round to the different stations, she began to create symbolic arteries too, praying for God’s love to spread out to the different nations in conflict.

We loved this new take on the initial idea for two reasons. The first was that it gave us all a new depth of perspective from which to pray.

The second was that it was another example of the incredible creativity and mutual discipleship that comes when we come together to listen to God, pray in response, and share with each other.

There was a similar experience again and again as people shared their thoughts at the end of the session. We admitted our struggles, shared our questions and pain and rejoiced over the fact that we are all on a journey towards receiving softer and softer hearts – and the added joy we feel about being on that together.

Just as there had been the day before, when another regular pray-er and contributor, Ailsa Cummins, emailed us this all-age prayer she had written during a prayer time for Syria several days before.

Please pray it with us today as we continue to lift Syria and other nations in conflict to God:

All-age prayer in response to war, inspired by Isaiah 61 (originally written for Syria)

Doubting your presence in the midst of such pain;
Doubting the broken can be whole again;
Doubting refugees will return to their homes;
Doubting children can laugh and play games;
Doubting that talks ever lead to results;
Doubting  my prayers will add up to much.

But yet I stand firm in the truth of your Word,
Knowing my prayers will be answered and heard.
Your Spirit is working through this oppression,
Constantly comforting and healing the broken.
Your Spirit speaks freedom, announces good news,
It can bridge any rift caused by differing views.

They are terribly insulted; horribly mistreated,
The Lord alone can see justice righted.
In him the wounded, lost, injured, bereaved
Can be blessed and joyful, and fully redeemed.

A joy buried deep in a land that seems dead,
Brings flowers to bloom from bitter tears shed;
Oil of joyous praise will flow from cracked hearts,
One day the grieving will build cities and parks.
The children will see their children play games –
And the treasure of their nation enjoying new fame.

praying with powerful simplicity

Tuesday, October 29th, 2013

It’s half term, and we’ve launched brand new children’s resources at the Sanctuary’s centre, thanks to brilliant help from Ailsa Cummins and Jemma and Lawrence Basham. This morning, a group of our regular adult pray-ers used them together in worship. It was powerful to use such simple visual and kinaesthetic tools to help us pray…

world with plasters low res

We wrote prayers on shapes, listened to children sing profound truths, and stuck plasters on nations we prayed for where we know many children are living in unsafe conditions…

And we also used a special symbolic tool we have made…

This box has come to the Sanctuary’s centre courteousy of Created… we’ve simply added some words and some precious contents to help young people pray for children all around the world…

lacquered box
Inside God’s world there are…

open box

7, 000, 000, 000 people!

Just like he loves you, God loves each one of them. He made each one to reflect a special and different part of him. Psalm 139 says he knows how many hairs are on each one of their heads. That’s a lot of hair!

How many people do you know?

God's children

Children are being invited to ‘make friends’ with one or more of the children in this box… taking them to their relevant country on our world map floor and praying for them, their families and their nation… here is Esta from Tanzania*…

Esta from Tanzania

We had a couple of grandfathers with us during this time of morning worship. One of them was particularly struck by the morning. He said:

‘With the birth of my grandchild last Sunday, who has a loving mother and father, a warm home, water and food available, my mind was focused on the fact that for two thirds of the baby’s born in the last twenty four hours – who are also beautiful and created in the image of God – the present and the future looks very different… and then the cycle begins away. But one day this cycle will end forever as our Father promises in Isaiah 11:8-9.”

This is the ultimate hope we cling to as we partner with God – in prayer and action – to bring more of his kingdom of hope and safety to children in desperate situations today and every day until that time.

* The children in our world box are taken from Unicef’s book Children like me and we have simply copied and laminated them, with their country outlines on the reverse…

praying from confide-nce

Friday, October 18th, 2013

Yesterday’s daily verse was from Psalm 25:14-15 and included the phrase, ‘The Lord confides in those who fear him’. Coupled with focusing on his ‘gentleness’ we found ourselves discussing how being ‘friends’ with God means we have his ear, and he has ours… and how this affects our prayers for the biggest issues in our world, as well as in our personal lives.

whisper

We know we should always pray with confidence.

Jesus has made a way for us to come, and we come to a Father who loves us and is able to do more than we can ask and imagine. He cares about what is on our hearts, and the closer we grow to him, the more what is on our hearts is a reflection of what is on his.

But some prayers are different to others.

We are learning that there are some prayers that we more often see answered, and that we find – even as we pray them – we have more faith and confidence in this happening ahead of time.

This is often because they are prayers that come from confide-nce…

They are often very specific and surprising and feel impressed upon one or more of our hearts when praying.

Just like when a friend is sharing something they care deeply about and are much closer to than us, we often feel we are being counselled to pray in a particular way with an insight we would not have had ourselves.

This morning we celebrated three answered prayers expressed in shifting headlines, situations and rhetoric – all of them in response to things we had felt very led to pray – almost as if a promise was being whispered to us.

We praised God most of all for the breakthroughs and positive steps forward these mean in people’s lives.

But we also praised him for his confide-nce and the privilege of partnering with him in some small way.

Because it is an incredible thing to experience his friendship – as well as his power – in this way.

grace graffiti

Friday, October 4th, 2013

Yesterday’s psalm of the day was 17… and using some of it to pray in morning worship we were struck by The Message’s take on verses 4-7, and particularly the phrase, “grace-graffiti”. Recently, we’ve been discussing as a core team how we can make even more impact with the large window space at our centre. Because lots of people stop to look in and read the messages we put up… we’re praying our grace-graffiti can speak hope. This week’s comes from a surprising source – in the levelling words of Oscar Wilde…

????????????

 

celebrating a year of testimonies

Tuesday, September 24th, 2013

Today the Sanctuary’s centre turns one and we’re celebrating by publishing a new full studio recording of You’re the God who answers prayer. It’s amazing to think that a whole year has gone past. But when we look back at all God has done in our centre, and continued to do through our website, over the last twelve months it’s perhaps less surprising.

birthday balloon

 

Please join us today in giving thanks for all God is doing through the work of the Sanctuary; for the many answered prayers and testimonies we have collected here; and for his continued provision, leading and presence with us in every step of the journey.

You can download the song – together with a chord sheet and the story behind why Liz wrote it on our new and topical resources page.

Happy 1st Birthday to the Sanctuary’s centre!

the joy of the rhythm

Wednesday, September 4th, 2013

In response to a number of requests, we are publishing the lists and cycles of stimuli that fuel our daily rhythm of outward-focused prayer and worship at the Sanctuary’s centre. You can download them, and an explanation of how we use them flexibly to build each day’s focus for praise and intercession here from our new and topical resources page.

drum

One of the Sanctuary’s friends once said to us, ‘prayer is the best kept secret in the church’.

We identify with that here… far from being restrictive, we have found the order that comes from dismantling life as it was and rebuilding it round a daily rhythm of prayer and worship has brought us huge freedom.

It fuels and charges the whole day with focus, learning and strength – leading to greater productivity as well as a greater sense that everything that happens in between (however mundane) is offered in worship too.

Far from being depressing or taking us into contemplation and away from action, we have also found that intentional outward-focused intercession leads us deeper into intimacy with God and increases our heart, capacity and effectiveness to reach out to others.

Far from being isolationist, we have found deep and authentic community being built amongst us.

This is the joy of the rhythm – of discovering an ancient discipline which pulses with life and relevance in the midst of – and often in contrast to – our culture.

Jeremiah 6:16 says, ‘Stand at the crossroads and look: ask for the ancient paths, ask where the good way is, and walk in it, and you will find rest for your souls.’

This is why re-opening the Sanctuary after our summer break has felt more like breathing out and coming home than a ‘return to work’.

Here is true rest for our souls – back in the anchoring rhythms of worship, prayer, community, creativity, service and sacrifice.

It was good and right to take a break, but it underlined what we suspected all along – that there is more rest in his rhythm than in our ‘holidays’.

We’d encourage you to think about forming your own rhythm – and if any of our lists and cycles help you, please use them as we all continue to pursue Christ and his kingdom – internally and externally.

rest and reflection

Friday, August 2nd, 2013

Today is the Sanctuary’s centre’s last day before taking a summer break. This year, after a wonderful but momentous few months, we’ll be taking a break from publishing online in order to fully rest and recharge.

But we’ll be back – physically and virtually – on Tuesday 26 August. We won’t be resting from prayer and worship of course, but we will be taking more time to focus more in and up than out as we retreat from the front line for the next few weeks.

rest and reflection

Thank you for sharing this incredibly special journey with us – see/read you soon! Meanwhile, we’ll leave you with this prayer for real and deep refreshment and restoration this summer:

Father, more than anything today, we thank you for the fact that your presence goes before us,
Behind us and around us – you surround us and hem us in.
Your sanctuary is a moveable love
Which shelters, shepherds and steers us.
Your outstretched, over-stretched wing is not static –
It covers us wherever we go.

And so, as we retreat into rest and refreshment, your presence goes before us,
Behind us and around us all – you surround us and hem us in
Keep us aware of your love beyond these walls,
Sheltered, shepherded and steered by your word.
And may we find restoration in the shadow of your wing –
As you cover us wherever we go.

The Lord bless you and keep you, make his face to shine upon you – and give you peace.

P.S. See our events page and our schedule to find out more about what’s on next term, and to check our opening times for our first week back, at the centre.