Mosaic Church
Loving God, each other, our city, the underprivileged & the nations

Support England win the World Cup at Mosaic

CHANGE OF DETAILS

With Gateway church we are going to watch England vs USA - Saturday 12th June, 7.30 K.O

We will meet at the Original Oak in Headingley at 6pm and then walk down to Headingley Stadium where there is 100ft screen showing the game (for free)

This is a great opportunity to (a) develop community life within Mosaic and (b) invite friends to come and be part of the community

Contact Frank Mayfield on 07731708099 to find the people going from Mosaic on the day.

See you there…COME ON ENGLAND!

Support England win the World Cup at Mosaic image
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This is a great opportunity to (a) develop community life within Mosaic and (b) invite friends to come and be part of the community"

Support England win the World Cup at Mosaic
Steve Vaughan
Tuesday 25th May 2010
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Lamentations - A cry for God - Which Kingdom will you serve?

Israel are a nation that has been taken over by the Babylonians and as a result are living in an occupied city. Instead of staying true to the Godly heritage, they have forsaken (2:1) God and have followed the ways of the occupiers – resulting in God forsaking them! We live in a post Christian nation, a nation where we have seen revivals and the rapid growth of Gods church followed by its decline. We are a people that has put its comfort and personal splendour ahead of its devotion of God. We live in a Godless nation. God’s people lived in the same state – they were to all accounts a Godless nation.

Jeremiah speaks into this situation and writes in Lamentations of the process of Jerusalems destruction.

Around 150 years before Jeremiah and the Babylonian destruction of Gods people, comes another prophet, Isaiah speaking to the people of God about an imminent invasion by this time the Assyrians but also of a ruler of the nation unlike any other.  Read Isaiah 9:6-7

In Jeremiahs day, the people were looking for a perfect earthly kingdom and they never found it - as individuals and as a nation, we look to another earthly kingdom to satisfy and rule over us instead of a new true and better kingdom – and we always side with the occupiers – with the earthly kingdom.

Isaiah 61 paints this new heavenly kingdom in contrast to the earthly kingdom of Jerusalem and the UK.
Isaiah 61:1 and Lamentations 2:2,4,9,21:
Lamentations paints a picture of destruction and removing of the status, wealth and power of the earthly Kingdom.  Isaiah speaks of a new kingdom that brings freedom and release for all those in bondage to the earthly kingdoms.

Isaiah 61:2 and Lamentations 2:3,7,11,17,21
God is a God who demands justice.  The new king of the new kingdom makes a way for those who come in to receive the full favour of God because he has satisfied the full vengeance of God toward them, toward us. For God to be a God of love means he has to be fair.  To be fair means he has to treat us, as our sins deserve – which means we all deserve to die.  The new king takes our death, conquers it and allows us to receive the favour of the Lord.

All of this is given in the new Kingdom – why?

Isaiah 61:3 and Lamentations 2:1
So they will be called Oaks of righteousness- a planting of the Lord for the display of His splendour – the reverse of what is happening in Lamentations!  Not living for God only ended in destruction for Gods people in 586BC as Jeremiah prophesied.  But Jesus stands as the new King so we will not be destroyed.  Jesus begins his ministry by defining himself as the new king prophesied in Isaiah and so desperately needed in Lamentations.  Read Luke 4:16-21

Lamentation teaches us that there is no answer to the immediacy of disaster – and our prayers should reflect that – for we are not immune to pain and suffering – But that life in the new Kingdom, according to Isaiah gives us hope and safety during those times.  Our strength in dark times comes from the new king and his kingdom - in Christ and the kingdom of God.

How are you finding the book of Lamentations (truthfully)?
What earthly Kingdom do you follow (money, sex, power etc)?
How do you follow the new Kingdom?
In what ways does your mission group display the splendour of the Lord?
Do you live in the reality that Christ received all the wrath of God destined for you?


Image Creative Commons Copyright: Jeremia.

Lamentations - A cry for God - Which Kingdom will you serve? image
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The new king takes our death, conquers it and allows us to receive the favour of the Lord"

Lamentations - A cry for God - Which Kingdom will you serve?
Chris Mason
Monday 24th May 2010
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Lamentations - A cry for Comfort

Lamentations 1:1-22 All around the world, people experience grief, day in, day out. Over 100 people a minute around the world breathe their final breath. Sadly one day, if you’ve not experienced it so far in life, you’ll find yourself expressing the same painful cry as you find in the book of Lamentations. Essentially it is a book that offers the A to Z of grief.

The author Jeremiah is mourning the destruction of Jerusalem. Sadly the destruction of their precious homeland wasn’t swift and sharp.  But long and drawn out.
The city was under siege.  With people running out of food, paralyzed by fear, facing death inside the city and outside.
Lam 1:20 “See, O Lord, how distressed I am! I am in torment within, and in my heart I am disturbed, for I have been most rebellious. Outside, the sword bereaves; inside, there is only death.”

The grief is intensified for three reasons:
i) It has been mourning brought on by Israel’s sinfulness (verse 5) - The people deserve God’s judgement
ii) It is hopelessness brought on by loneliness (verse 2,7,16,19) - Everyone deserts Jerusalem, including her lovers, her friends, her priests and elders.
iii) It is destruction brought on by God’s judgment (verse 5) - The result is that God leaves her to experience her fate alone.

God has become her enemy. She has no hope.
Sadly, this is the predicament the bible casts all of mankind – we are as responsible for our plight as much as Israel.  Ultimately, the bible teaches us that we are without God, without hope in our present state (Rom 1).  This is the lament of Lamentation Chapter 1.

You may think I’m not that bad, but the reality is that even at your best, the moments in life when you absolutely nail it, when you love well, when you serve, when you’re selfless, when you help the helpless - all of that is stained with our sin (Rom 3:23; 6:23).  Therefore we face His judgement for our thoughts and actions.  We’re all guilty.

The good news however is:
If you divine justice condemns you, only divine grace can rescue.
If you can’t save yourself, you must look to someone else.

So how does God save us? We believe he sends his Son, Jesus Christ, into the world to die for our sins, even though he was innocent – he would receive the punishment for our sinfulness. Jesus suffers and dies, all alone on the cross so that when we feel alone in our suffering we can know God with us.  Jesus faces death inside the city and outside the city. When Jesus cries out ‘my God my God, why have you forsaken me?’ it so we never have to utter those words.

1 Timothy 1:15, “It is a trustworthy statement, deserving full acceptance, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners, among whom I am foremost of all.”

There is no other religion whose diagnosis of our condition is more penetrating and true to life than Biblical Christianity. And there is no other religion that offers a remedy for real suffering, real loneliness, real rebellion, deserved alienation from God, and real, deserved fear of death. This is life, this is true life. To experience this gift of God, through Jesus Christ, you must receive it as the treasure of your life. You must accept it gladly and willingly.

Mission Group Questions:
1) Can you remember the context of the book of Lamentations?  Try to read a commentary together to understand the background to the story.
2) Why is it important to study a book like Lamentations?
3) What do you think you will find helpful?
4) Can you explain the phrase ‘If you divine justice condemns you, only divine grace can rescue’ in your own words, using other bible verses?
5) How is the message of Lamentations helpful to the World?

 

 

Lamentations - A cry for Comfort image
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When God is against you –only God can save you."

Lamentations - A cry for Comfort
Matt Hatch
Monday 17th May 2010
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Tools for Change

Here is the PowerPoint from Rich D's preach a few weeks back. I thought people find the list of disciplines/ideas helpful.

From a position of grace…How do we engage with the change process?
1.  Intentionality
2.  Not Sowing to please the sinful nature
3.  Sowing to please the Spirit = saying yes to whatever strengthens my Spirit-inspired desires
- Bible reading
- Prayer
- Worship
- Community
- Service

Sowing to the Spirit: Bible
  Bible study (Follow references, word study with concordance etc)
  Memorisation
  Imagination
  Close Reading
  Bible in a year
  Meditation on scripture
  Reading a chapter on waking
  Bible audiobooks/podcasts

Sowing to the Spirit: Prayer
  Requests in the morning
  Thanks in the evening
  Intercession
  Praying in tongues (1 Corinthians 14)
  Palms down / breathing out = surrender
  Palms up / breathing in = receiving
  Opposite prayers when tempted
  Receiving prayer ministry
  “Dialogue with God” (Mark Virkler)

Sowing to the Spirit: Worship
  Re-focuses on God’s worth
  Draws us into an awareness of God’s presence
  Can bypass the brain
  Can be individual (with dancing, crying, lying down, kneeling)
  Can be corporate

Sowing to the Spirit: Service
  Sin is essentially orientation towards self
  Serving God & others helps us to look outwards

Sowing to the Spirit: Community
  Reminding one another of truth
  Praying together
  Accountability
  Opportunities for serving
  Model change and holiness to one another

Tools for Change image
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Tools for Change"

Tools for Change
Steve Vaughan
Thursday 13th May 2010
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God is Good - so we don’t need to look elsewhere.

MISSION GROUP QUESTIONS FROM SPIRITUAL GROWTH SERIES - 11/5/10 Genesis 1-3

We asked five questions of the text:
1) What needs does God create us with?
Food, water, intimacy, community

2) Why are we created with needs?
• Gives God a regular opportunity to show us what he is like – that he is good.
• Look to him to fulfill those needs
• Reminds us of a deeper truth – we are dependant on him.

Why so many different things? Why so many good things? Why so many ways of meeting our needs? What does it tell you about Him? - God is Good
Can you see these rhythms of needs that God created us with are meant to act as signposts, that point us back to him. He could have made it that we didn’t have to drink, eat, make love, create, sleep.  It is like these physical needs remind us of a deeper spiritual reality.

3) What was at the heart of the lie that made Adam and Eve choose to eat the fruit? (Gen 3:1-7)

They believed God wasn’t good enough to provide for them. You can almost hear Eve saying that to herself “I will be more satisfied if I have the thing that God hasn’t given”
In other words, God isn’t that good. What he has provided wasn’t enough.

4) What are the results of Adam and Eve not trusting the goodness of God? (Gen 3:16-19; 23-24)
Death, pain, Separation, fear, relationship breakdown.
Can you see – it is a distortion of a ‘good’ thing into an ‘ultimate’ thing. Another word for this is idolatry.
2 types of idols:
External idols are the presenting object or person on whom the idolatry manifests itself whereas the Internal idol is the underlying reason for the idolatry. 

5) What would be the fruit in our lives if we truly believed that God was Good?

• Wouldn’t chase other stuff
• Less debt
• Marriages stronger – priority of time, relationships,
• Security - Identity issues
• Trust – wouldn’t run to the quick fix.
• No fear
• Obedience -
• chastity and purity – for sex to be enjoyed to it’s fullest, needs to be in context of marriage.
• friendships better –
• intimacy and fulfillment in relationship with God.
• Handling exams and essays?
• The kingdom!

Questions for Mission Group:
1) Tell the story of the creation of the world, mankind and the instructions given to Adam and Eve, in your own words.
2) Describe the difference between internal and external idols
3) Why do we make good things into ultimate things?
4) Talk about how you can spot when you’ve made good things ultimate things by using the checklist below.
Look at the fruit of your decisions:
Perhaps look at the fruit of your decisions:
Does your down time truly restore you?
Does it result in a greater love for others and God?
Is it best for the people you love?
Is t your agenda or the family’s agenda?
Are you growing in self control, joy, patience, faithfulness etc..(Gal 5:22-23)

5) What have you most enjoyed/learnt about during this spiritual growth series - how is your life different?

God is Good - so we don’t need to look elsewhere. image
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Our heart is like an idol making factory."

God is Good - so we don’t need to look elsewhere.
Matt Hatch
Monday 10th May 2010
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GOD IS GRACIOUS - so I don’t have to prove myself

We are looking at the 4 G's of God and what it means to live in light of them. Here they are -

(1) God is Great - so I don’t have to be in control
(2) God is Glorious - so I don’t have to fear others
(3) God is Gracious - so I don’t have to prove myself
(4) God is Good - so I don’t have to look elsewhere.

We looked at number 3 last Sunday from the story of the Prodigal Son’s (Luke 15.1-2 & 11-32). It is a story of TWO Son’s, one of them is transformed by the father’s grace towards him and the other is not.

Here are the symptoms that follow if you do not know God is Gracious.

Younger Brother’s feel…
(1) Inadequate (guilt and shame)
(2) The need to pay God back (punish themselves and repay debt)

Elder Brother’s
(1) Restless anger (grace offends…when others are blessed and you are not)
(2) Joyless Obedience (God is a master who you must slavishly obey and never disobey his orders)
(3) Anxious Performance (in whatever area you rely on to “prove yourself’ = make yourself acceptable, valuable and worthwhile)
(4) Proud Comparison’s (Superiority at all those who haven’t proved themselves like you have)

Reflection and Application

(1) How does the context (vs1-2) and the 2 groups of people help us understand the story Jesus tells (vs11-32)? What was Jesus implying? What was Jesus hoping would happen? Why does the story end on a cliff hanger (does the elder son go into the feast?)

(2) What is the younger brother’s sin? What does it look like? How does he relate to his father? How does he relate to the wider community?

(3) Do you think he is genuinely repentant?

(4) How does he try and prove himself to his father?

(5) How does the father act graciously towards the younger son (throughout the story)?

(6) What is the older brothers sin” What does it look like? How does he relate to his father? How does he relate to the wider community?

(7) How does he feel he has proved himself? What attitude does that leave him with? Why?

(8) How is the father gracious towards the elder son (throughout the story)?

(9) Which Son do you most look like? Why?

(10) How does knowing the grace of God affect the way you try and prove yourself?

(11) What does repentance and faith look like for you today?


- If you want to read more on this story and the grace of God then please buy Tim Keller’s short book called “The Prodigal God”

- If you are struggling to forgive someone who has sinned against you then you will need to talk this through with someone. To be free from bitterness you will need to know the grace of God (that he forgave you) that gives you the power to forgive. However the pain and consequences of that person’s actions may be so deeply entrenched that you will need to talk this through with someone. You should not feel bad for finding it hard to forgive but you do need to start moving forward to forgive them.

*****PLEASE NOTE***** these reflections and application questions are to be tailored by whoever is leading the study. You do not have to do all the questions and you can add in extra questions. If it says that you are to “meditate or reflect” on a bible passage that is to be done during your time of sung worship (not in the study).

GOD IS GRACIOUS - so I don’t have to prove myself image
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It is a story of TWO Son's, one of them is transformed by the father's grace towards him and the other is not."

GOD IS GRACIOUS - so I don’t have to prove myself
Steve Vaughan
Tuesday 04th May 2010
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