Wednesday 26 August 2009

So I left the topic of requirements for life a bit unfinished to say the least in the last post, so will pick up with the ‘Justice’ thought; We live in a world that is crying out for justice and even has many organizations that are set up to promote justice. But what is it really? Well a simple dictionary definition comes down to the idea of impartial... But at the end of the day it is something that when it is right we know it and when we are treated un-justly we know that as well.

There are days that justice would give me things I really don’t want, that I would receive the penalty of the deeds I messed up in. and there are other days I just want a fair go in life. So really what I desire in the area of justice is just getting what is fair and balanced and impartial. But we all tend to want our idea of justice for ‘me’ and let the other guy get what he gets.

But God requires us to ‘do justice’, this is about more than what we want, it is about how we live our lives. It is about how we treat our fellow man. I was reminded again of one of the great documents in history as I listened to a group of actors read the US Declaration of Independence. It has been a while since I read that document for myself, but to actually hear it read was well worth the effort and a reminder of the sense of what we are to be about. That famous line; “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.” It gives to me a sense of what justice is, it outlines things that are essential to human life and dignity.

But too often I fear we want it for me at the cost of others, forgetting that God wants us to live this principle for ourselves but also for our community, country and the world at large. While I understand that I will never change the world as such, I hope that I can at least influence a few others around me to be better, to live justly as we try to be impartial in our treatment of each other. It will often come back to the two great commandments that say; you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, soul and strength and the second is like it, love your neighbour as yourself, on these two hang all the law and prophets.

But as we add living justly, treating people around as they deserve to be treated in an impartial and fair manner, to our standard of life, we must grow into the second requirement of loving kindness or as the old Authorized Version puts it, love mercy...

To be continued...

Monday 24 August 2009

Hard to believe how fast this summer has flown by. When I originally wrote this it was just a week and the children were to be back in school, and now they are a week into the new term. Several o of the children let me know they didn't want to be reminded of that tremendous fact. Yet some are so very ready for this event to take place... the mothers.

I have on my Facebook page an album of pictures I took around the Brechin and Glen Esk area in the early spring. I vowed that I would get back to these places several times over the spring and take up-date pictures. I wanted to do so each week to show the progress of spring, suddenly I find that even the thistles are well bloomed and my Elderflower champagne is ready to drink. Where did the time fly to? I think how busy I get some days and I am sure there are too many days you feel the same way. Busy. Busy. Busy...

Even as I am trying to think of something creative to say, to make us think as we go our way day to day I have a dozen things rattling about in my head that I need to do before my day is done. And yet again I ask myself if these are the important things or just good things. If all that list are the best things or just things that need doing.

And the reminder comes flying out of Micah chapter 6 that cries out with a similar question of what does it take to please God? All my good things I do day to day, bowing before the Lord on high, maybe it is offerings given, maybe a calf...? No surely it is not that easy, maybe it is a thousand rams given or ten thousand rivers of oil offered...? Maybe it is even that proverbial first born child?

But actually it is something simpler, yet harder in that it goes against our nature some days. It is the requirement of “do Justice, and love Mercy and to walk Humbly with your God...” Just three simple things; Justice, mercy/kindness and humility in our day to day walk, with God to help us in this our life journey. Can it really be so simple? Can it really be done? Well we have to try and God wouldn’t require it if it was impossible...

To be continued...

Saturday 4 July 2009

So picking up kind of where I left off last time;

How can living Bible principles as they are make a difference? Well, even as a minister, sometimes things in the Bible don’t always make me happy, some things kind of get under my skin and I have the same reaction as you do... I don’t like what it shows me about myself.

So just as the doctor who has the patient that has a major problem in their body, they have to speak up, they have to prescribe a solution to that problem. Some times that involves surgery or chemo that has some nasty side effects. It hurts and there can be scars, yet hopefully at the end of the day the patient gets well. But, what happens if the doctor says to the patient; “If you do what I tell you there is a 95% chance you will be fine but with no treatment you will die” and the patient refuses to take the treatment? Well the patient will die.

And so it is in our society with moral values. I read the papers most days and try to watch the news and too often it is pretty bad news, as I have mentioned, crime is up; theft, drugs, gun and knife crime, murder (even in our City which is by most standards safe), fighting in the streets, drunk and disorderly conduct... and the list goes on and on. Diseases of all types seem to be on the rise; STD’s, alcoholism and the effects of excess drinking, drug addiction, heart disease and things folk get living a lives of excess. How does greed affect the world we live in? We look at poverty and need. Pollution is another problem caused by careless living and greed.

All that bad news, what can we do? Well I happen to believe in God and the Bible as the word of God. I don’t always manage to live it perfectly, but I am growing in that direction and maybe by the time I am a hundred and five I might make it—almost. But the neat thing is the same Bible that shows where we are in error is the same Bible that teaches us love, forgiveness, grace and mercy. A cure for the things we run afoul of. It is the prescription for ‘sin’ (there is a word we don’t use much anymore), grace is effective 100% of the time when we apply it and it lets our society down when we ignore it.

Yet I know there are those of you that will say; “Well Jon, I don’t believe in your God or your Bible so what do you think of that?” My response is ‘that is your choice.’ I still submit that at the very least, if our society and culture would live by the principles one finds in the Bible we could still have a better society than we have now. We would do more good, less harm and have a better time getting through this life. While I don’t think we can really live life without God, I also still believe a biblical standard helps us all. We could get rid of a lot of guilt, illness and crime. We would show love and not prejudice, we would give to those in need, and we would use good stewardship to keep our planet clean and use the resources instead of abusing our world.


Jon

Wednesday 24 June 2009

Telling Biblical Truth--Love? or Hate? I say loving.

Thought for the Week

If you have been following my ‘to be continued’ series, they have been wrapped up in the idea of the Bible being a good source for a world view and a guide to how to live life. The amazing thing in the context of several statements in the last few weeks has been an almost denial of the Bible as a source for Christian living, a dismissal of all but the four Gospels. In light of the General Assembly a few weeks ago even some ministers gave the idea of; ‘While ministers may read some of the Old Testament, they no longer read the Bible as literal or as the word of God.’ The way it was asked of me was; “You don’t take the Bible literally, do you?” To which my reply was “How else can one take it if it is the source of what you believe?” Of course that raises many issues on the topics to which the Bible speaks.

So, I have been asking about the Bible knowledge of some in our fair City, and though many have great opinions about the Bible, even of some that actually attend church, very few actually read it or know what it says. For while the Bible speaks to great values of love and compassion, it also speaks to great topics like the holiness and righteousness of God, the sinful condition of man and it really does explain why our society is in the shape it is in. It explains that lack of morals on the part of people leads to a price to pay. Look at the challenges in the area of honesty in the Parliament that has lead the news stories lately. Read the papers on crime stats and drug and alcohol abuse. Look at the rise of STD’s in our country and you will see that they are rising despite a ‘safe sex’ secular message. I have seen the late night commercials for avoiding these, as have you. The Bible tells us that we need to be honest, that we need to stay sober, that chastity is a virtue. Violent crime would disappear if the biblical mandate of ‘love God and your neighbour’ was followed. The Bible teaches us to limit sexual relations to a husband and wife married to each other. Teen pregnancy? Tayside has some of the highest rates in the UK, but it can be solved. HIV/Aids? Well, you wipe that out in short order if monogamy in marriage and/or abstinence is taught and practiced.

Are these messages popular in our world today? Not a chance! I have talked to too many even here in our City to think that. I am surprised though at the number of folk who don’t even really understand that this is basic Christian principle. But at the same time I find odd the concept that to take a stance for traditional Christian morality makes me “un-loving”? I have friends who live different than my sense of Christian values suggests they should, but we are still friends. As I was reminded, the doctor who tells the person with cancer that they need surgery or chemo is not unloving. But a doctor who tells a patient they are fine when the patient is sick is unloving.

And thus it should be with a literal Bible message, it must be shared for the truth it is, yet in love with a view to changing the world...

To be continued...

Rev. Jon Bergen, Brechin Baptist Fellowship

Saturday 20 June 2009

Father's Day Thought for the Week...

This was what I put together for the Brechin Advertiser this week. Hope you enjoy.

With Father’s Day this up-coming Sunday, 21 June, I will take a wee break from my ‘to be continued’ series and give a few thoughts on fathers. There are days dads get a rather bad deal and days we only get what we deserve, and then there are times we get better than we deserve. I try to take all three types of days in stride.

The challenge with being a father is that it is easy to get the job of dad, sometimes before one thinks he is really ready, truth is we are never really ready, but as I said it is can be an easy job to get, after all it is just a matter of biology. But really being a DAD and FATHER on the other hand is not so easy and part of the problem with being a dad is that sometimes our dads didn't do such a great job of showing us how to do this big job. Sometimes it is a matter of us not being in the right places at the right times to really be part of our children’s lives. Sometimes we are just lazy and there are a bunch of other factors of course.

As a minister I try to spend a bit of time reading my Bible and in it sadly there are not very many ‘great dads’ to model what it takes to get the job done. Our first father Adam really started the whole mess, couldn’t even obey God to not eat one little piece of fruit for goodness sake, then he blamed Eve... Then over and over we find dads that let their kids down, did the wrong thing for the wrong reason and we wonder why we can’t get it sorted our own selves.

There is a wee story, that I have no idea of the origins, of a dad that is watching his son trying to move a really heavy stone. The lad is grunting and groaning and making hard graft of it and still no joy. The dad asks, “Son, are you sure you are using all your strength to get that stone moved?” The exasperated son says “Of course I am...” To which the father replies, “No you are not, you haven’t asked me to help you.”

Thing is we, as dads, really are that wee lad trying desperately to move the rock of raising our children all by ourselves, when we could so easily ask a heavenly father to help us. God does want to be our heavenly father so that we can call out to him as Jesus did and as Paul encourages us to do; to call out Abba Father, or Daddy Daddy. There is all the help we need if we just ask.

I don’t know how you feel but it warms my heart when my wee lassies come running up to me and tell me they love me or what a good dad I am. I’d tell you it works as well when my big braw lads tell me they love me as well, but goodness knows I’d never want to embarrass them by saying that in public, so we shall leave it to the wee lassies to make a Daddy feel good inside. But God, ‘Our Father which is in Heaven’ also likes to hear from us once in a while as well. And he sets a pretty good example for us to follow. The best line I think starts out; “For God so loved...”

Rev. Jon Bergen

Wednesday 10 June 2009

Going well...

Well today I am in St. Andrews with a bunch of ministers. Alister Begg is the speaker and he has so far nailed it exactly with a call to us a pastors to PREACH the GOSPEL! Look out when I get back, you only thought I wanted to preach... Anyway keep me and the others in your prayers as we face the future of Church in the 21st Century... More to come...

Jon

Tuesday 28 April 2009

Idolatry

Just finished listening to Tim Keller's lecture on Idolatry given at last weeks Gospel Coalition.

He raised some really interesting points which I'll try and summarise below:

He makes a case for discerning, exposing and destroying idols.

Firstly we need to understand, to see our own idols and the idols of our community (our city).
  • An idol isn't just a little statue that people bow down to it is a thing or person or idea that we place above God.
  • An idol is any object, relationship or pursuit that is so central that we can’t have meaning to life without it.
  • "Hang on a minute" you maybe saying, "but I worship God above anything else, I have no idols".
  • Well before you go on, analyse what else is important in your life - your lifestyle, your status in the community or at your job, your husband, your wife, your girlfriend, your opinion, your boyfriend, your children.
  • If you lost whatever it is that is important to you, how would you react, you may feel gutted, devastated, but would your life feel meaningless as a result? If it would that is your idol.
  • When you make a good thing an absolute thing you have an idol.
How do we do something about it?
  • When idols are opposed it is dangerous
  • Idols are worthless things, they are created things, things we made ourselves which doesn't have the power to give us what we want
  • But on the other hand they are extremely powerful because through them the forces of darkness control us.
  • BUT Jesus defeated the powers of darkness
  • We know Jesus died for our sins and took the punishment for our idolatry
  • But we need to see what he's done for us, know what he's done for us, when this hits home we can free ourselves from the stranglehold of idolatry
  • Remember your career, marriage or children can't die for your sins
Read Acts 19 Link

Sunday 26 April 2009

Moving from Perfect Church to a Real Church

One of the challenges is that there is a 'Perfect' Church out there... but not at the moment really so while we don't want to settle for a second rate ministry or church, we also must accept that there are challenges to being a 'perfect church' that are most likely beyond our ability in this life to achieve. So with that in mind we are working through a series of messages addressing the idea of an ideal church and trying to lay out principles that will help us to be the best church we can be where we are. Though I don't intend or have the ability to put a complete series of notes and whatnot up for all. I am going to try to at least give a seed thought as time goes by.

Some time back the questions were posed of 'What is Church and what isn't church?' The next question was wrapped around the idea then of what it takes to be a 'perfect church.'

Last week and this week were intros to the topic of perfect verses ideal verses where we are... so hopefully later I will get some notes up. But to get started read Titus 1 and 2 as the scriptural introduction.

So stay tuned and we will get there.

In Christ,

Jon

Monday 23 March 2009

Things to come...

Here it is Monday morning... a busy Sunday of a morning service for Mothering Sunday, had a really great evening with Michael Harcus. If you missed the concert you missed a blessing. It was pretty casual and informal, but it gave a chance for just wonderful reflection and as pastor I don’t often get that ‘sitting in the pew’ experience very often. Also I love Michael’s music anyway so to hear some of the background stories of some of the songs he and his fellow musicians have written was really fun and helped to add understanding to them as I listen in the future. Even had a good laugh at a cell phone incident... worth the price of admission just for that... But if you missed the concert you can still at least get some of the music as I have a few of the CD’s available. The new one is worth it for, well actually, all twelve songs on the album... The one ‘Unchanging God’ is special and one that speaks much deeper than my first listening led me to understand is ‘Your Word, Love and Grace.’

But I was in bed early for me and then woke up at 3:30 AM and just couldn’t get back to sleep... so got up and spent some quiet time... I don’t always do well with the quiet times in that too often after a day like yesterday the thoughts roll and God talks in the still small voice. Problem is I don’t always like what he has to say. It too often points out the things I need to change in my life. My message for yesterday was an eclectic mix of three stories of sons and a nation. It was the contrast of Isaac and Ishmael. One son of a wife and one of a slave. One of promise and one of the flesh as Galatians points out. Then there was the bit on Hannah and Samuel... Hannah’s co-wife was blessed and Hannah felt rejected but in the end God granted her a son that she then surrendered to God for life. Then in contrast there is the story in Numbers about the serpent being lifted up in the wilderness... The thing that draws these stories together is the whole picture of grace... Sarah didn’t ‘deserve’ the promise of Isaac, Hannah didn’t have a right to Samuel, the nation of Israel didn’t earn the salvation from the serpents but grace prevailed and gave a way to have promise fulfilled. So I ended in Galatians 5:1 with standing in the liberty that God gives us.

So though the message may not have gotten across as well as I wanted in the end it started working in my heart, then the music and testimony of Michael pushed me to the next level as I woke hearing one of the songs ringing in my mind, dwelling on the coming of Christ... and asking myself; what am I doing to live my best before God and the society in which I live. What makes me be church not just go to church.
Which finally leads up to some upcoming things; So we have a few weeks leading up to Easter, and I really want to focus on Jesus and what Easter means. This coming few weeks I anticipate staying with the Lectionary Scriptures as a starting point through Easter. After Easter I intend to do a series based on the work we did with the whole idea of ‘What is and what isn’t Church’ and then unpack several items with the whole ‘Ideal Church’ thoughts we had. This will lead inevitably to many thoughts and blogs so watch this space.

Jon

Friday 20 March 2009

The passing of a friend

It is a hard thing to hear of a friend passing away. This past two weeks I have had two pass away and despite my knowing the truth of the gospel message it still is a hurt that goes very deep. This morning I received word that my friend Pastor Boersma passed away. (click here for a link to the Blog notice) I am saddened by this news, yet know that my friend is in the presence of our best friend--Jesus. So sorrow with me a wee while and then rejoice that his pain is over and his soul is in the presence of our Saviour.

Tuesday 17 March 2009

Michael Harcus

Link (click on title) to the dude whose coming to perform this Sunday (22nd) at 6:30 (pm in case you were wondering).

Saint Patrick - from Resurgence blog

“I am a servant of Christ to a foreign nation for the unspeakable glory of life everlasting which is in Jesus Christ our Lord.” – Patrick

My family name was originally O’Driscoll until it was changed a few generations ago by relatives hoping to more fully assimilate into American culture after immigrating from Ireland. Though I was raised Irish Catholic, I knew virtually nothing about Saint Patrick other than the green beer, parades, shamrocks, leprechauns, and drunken Red Sox fans that celebrated in his honor every March 17th.

Technically, Saint Patrick is not even a saint, as he was never canonized by the Roman Catholic Church. Additionally, Patrick was not even Irish. Rather, he was an Englishman who was a Roman citizen that spoke Latin and a bit of Welsh.

Patrick was born around 390 A.D. When he was roughly 16 years of age he was captured by pirates and taken to Ireland on a ship where he was sold into slavery. He spent the next six years alone in the wilderness as a shepherd for his masters’ cattle and sheep.

Isolation

Patrick was a rebellious non-Christian teenager who had come from a Christian family. His grandfather was a pastor, and his father was a deacon. However, during his extended periods of isolation without any human contact, Patrick began praying and was eventually born again into a vibrant relationship with Jesus Christ. Patrick endured the years of isolation in rain and snow by praying up to 100 prayers each day and another 100 each night.

In his early twenties God spoke to Patrick in a dream, telling him to flee from his master for a ship that was waiting for him. Amazingly, Patrick made the 200-mile walk without being caught or harmed to find a ship setting sail for his home, just as God had promised. The sailors were out of food for the journey, and after Patrick prayed a herd of pigs miraculously ran toward the ship, providing a bountiful feast for the long voyage home.

God Speaks to Patrick

Upon returning home, Patrick enrolled in seminary and was eventually commissioned as a pastor. Some years later God spoke to Patrick in a dream, commanding him to return to Ireland to preach the gospel and plant churches for the pagans who lived there.

The Roman Catholic Church had given up on converting such “barbarians” deemed beyond hope. The Celtic peoples, of which the Irish were part, were an illiterate bunch of drunken, fighting, perverted pagans who basically had sex with anyone and worshipped anything. They were such a violent and lawless people, numbering anywhere from 200,000 to 500,000, that they had no city centers or national government and were spread out among some 150 warring clans. Their enemies were terrified of them because they were known to show up for battles and partake in wild orgies before running into battle naked and drunk while screaming as if they were demon-possessed. One clan was so debased that it was customary for each of their new kings to copulate with a white mare as part of his inauguration.

Unique Missionary Strategy

In faith, the forty-something year-old Patrick sold all of his possessions, including the land he had inherited from his father, to fund his missionary journey to Ireland. He worked as an itinerant preacher and paid large sums of money to various tribal chiefs to ensure he could travel safely through their lands and preach the gospel. His strategy was completely unique, and he functioned like a missionary trying to relate to the Irish people and communicate the gospel in their culture by using such things as three-leaf clovers to explain the gospel. Upon entering a pagan clan, Patrick would seek to first convert the tribal leaders and other people of influence. He would then pray for the sick, cast demons out of the possessed, preach the Bible, and use both musical and visual arts to compel people to put their faith in Jesus. If enough converts were present he would build a simple church that did not resemble ornate Roman architecture, baptize the converts, and hand over the church to a convert he had trained to be the pastor so that he could move on to repeat the process with another clan.

Patrick gave his life to the people who had enslaved him until he died at 77 years of age. He had seen untold thousands of people convert as between 30-40 of the 150 tribes had become substantially Christian. He had trained 1000 pastors, planted 700 churches, and was the first noted person in history to take a strong public stand against slavery.

Roman Opposition

Curiously, Patrick’s unorthodox ministry methods, which had brought so much fruit among the Irish, also brought much opposition from the Roman Catholic Church. Because Patrick was so far removed from Roman civilization and church polity he was seen by some as an instigator of unwelcome changes. This lead to great conflicts between the Roman and Celtic Christians. The Celtic Christians had their own calendar and celebrated Easter a week earlier than their Roman counterparts. Additionally, the Roman monks shaved only the hair on the top of their head, whereas the Celtic monks shaved all of their hair except their long locks which began around the bottom of their head as a funky monk mullet. The Romans considered these and other variations by the Celtic Christian leaders to be acts of insubordination.

In the end, the Roman Church should have learned from Patrick, who is one of the greatest missionaries who has ever lived. Though Patrick’s pastors and churches looked different in method, they were very orthodox in their theology and radically committed to such things as Scripture and the Trinity. Additionally, they were some of the most gifted Christian artists the world has ever known, and their prayers and songs endure to this day around the world, including at Mars Hill where we occasionally sing the “Prayer of Saint Patrick” and the Celtic hymn “Be Thou My Vision.”

Mark Driscoll

For Further Study:

  • At www.ccel.org there is a free copy available of Patrick’s book Confessions.
  • Steve Rabey’s book In the House of Memory is a good introduction to Patrick and Celtic Christianity.
  • Thomas Cahill’s book How the Irish Saved Civilization is a fascinating historical look at Patrick and the implications of Celtic Christianity on western history.
  • www.ChristianityToday.com/history is the site for Christian History and Biography magazine, which is a wonderful resource that includes an entire issue on Patrick and Celtic Christianity.

Friday 6 March 2009

Random Thoughts About Dentopedology

Random thoughts is one of my favourite ways to think... well actually it is not so much a favourite as it is one of those things that just happens a lot. Here I am working through a bunch of papers on my desk and came across a Courier from September that I pored over to figure why I had saved it. Suddenly off the page jumped a reminder of why I had saved this particular editorial section. There is this random thing I do way too often and joke about it by saying that "I open mouth and insert foot." Well this particular copy from September 10, 2008 had the scientific definition of that syndrome; "Dentopedology is the science of opening your mouth and putting your foot in it. I've been practising it for years."--The Duke of Edinburgh.

So not sure what kind of company that puts me in, I guess it depends on one's point of view on the Duke of Edinburgh. I wish I could also put in the cartoon that is next to it as a construction worker type says; "we need another @#!#*#@# swear box--this one's @#!#*#@# full!!"

But thinking of this reminds me of James as he points out the challenge we have as we face our day to day lives and deal with the whole thought process and the words we use and he makes the case so well that if we can control our tongues we can control the other areas of our lives as well. Our words can be a blessing or a curse. A salve or burning fire. Small compared to our body our tongue is compared to a rudder that steers a ship and so it is with our words as we say things we sometimes have to live up to the words we speak and sometimes if our words are not right they steer us a wrong direction. But if our words are right and true then they can steer us in a good way as well.

There are days that it is a real challenge to bite my tongue both in a negative way but also in a positive way. There are times my human nature gets in the flesh and I want to say something that is not of value and would in the end come out as course and vulgar... the times I don't give in to this are victories in life. But there are other victories that are the times I want so desperately to meddle in the lives of people around me, to say things that while good for them and could possibly make their lives better that I say nothing as I realize that they are not in a place in their lives to appreciate the comment and the intent behind it.

The challenge as well is to know when to actually speak up and help someone's life be better. It is finding that balance between saying the right thing for the right reason at the right time to make a difference and being a busybody...

May God grant the grace to pick which is right at the right time.

Here is to us speaking Godly,

Rev. Jon

Sunday 22 February 2009

4 Reasons Why We Need to Tell People About Jesus

These reasons were provided during a talk given at the Christianity Explored conference in Edinburgh on Saturday 21st February 2009.
  1. Grace - We know the awesome good news of the grace of Jesus and our desire is to share it (Romans 1: 5-6).
  2. Gehenna (the Jewish equivalent to the concept of Hell. The name derived from the burning garbage dump near Jerusalem) - We know he is the only way to salvation (Romans 1: 16-17). Imagine knowing there was a bomb on a plane before it takes off, disembarking unnoticed and watching the plane take off loaded with passengers destined to die.
  3. Glory - because like the apostle Paul our motivation is to see God alone glorified and we all know the chief end of man is 'to glorify God by enjoying him forever'.
  4. Godliness - because being Godly is not suppressing, but proclaiming the truth of Jesus (Matthew 28:19)

Friday 20 February 2009

What should Church be like

You are important to God and important to us!!!

We are seeking to do a Christ centred ministry with you in mind.


We are interested in what you think
!!!

What would you change about church if you could?

What causes you to dislike church or what keeps you from attending?


What is missing from most church services?

What kind of service would meet your needs or the needs of your family?

Please Help us by responding to this blog - Giving us your insight.

Thursday 19 February 2009

Questions

Ok here is a question place... maybe... again in the learning curve so will have to see how this works. Ask a question and we can carry on a discussion to see where it takes us. I will moderate the comments and hopefully come Biblical conclusions...

Tuesday 17 February 2009

First Endeavour

Setting up a blog shouldn't be too hard... it is the ability to keep up with it that is the challenge. But we shall see. So this is a first, but hopefully not the last. I hope to use it as a tool to chat amongst our Fellowship and get us better connected. It should also be usable as a tool to ask and answer questions and hopefully keep up with the events of Brechin Baptist Fellowship.

Here is to getting started,

Jon