Central Church Port Kembla public
[search 0]
More
Download the App!
show episodes
 
Loading …
show series
 
Becca introduces us to Walter Brueggemann's pattern of the life of faith. We are always moving in different ways (and perhaps even in different parts of our life) from:* secure orientation - where life makes sense, all seems well, we're in a state of equilibrium; to* painful disorientation - where life is chaotic, disordered, things don't make sens…
  continue reading
 
Becca hosts Laura, Bekk and Kim as they share their thoughts and experiences with the motherheart of God. They share ways in which seeing God as mother has been healing, and also the ways they see God as beyond gender. This is a really authentic and honest discussion and highlights the ways each of us have an individual and unique relationship with…
  continue reading
 
The Myth of Redemptive was a term popularised by Theologian Walter Wink in 1945, in his book The Powers That Be. It is the idea that war brings peace, might makes right, and out of violence and chaos comes peace and order. We see this myth at work all throughout human history and still today in our everyday lives. We think that if we, the good guys…
  continue reading
 
The Sacrament of the Present Moment is the practice of being present and aware of God within the individual moments of our lives. This reminds us that God is everywhere, all the time, always waiting to engage us. In this message, Oran looks at how we might practice this sacrament in our daily lives, and observed the writings of Jean Pierre de Causs…
  continue reading
 
We continue with our lent series sitting with Henri Nouwen’s wisdom. This week Caro unpacks how our self worth can be stuck in what other people say or think about us. We wrestle together being honest with how we struggle with this as well as looking at Jesus and asking ourselves ‘how was he able to live from such a sense of beloved identity?’…
  continue reading
 
We wrap this contemplative service around Henri Nouwen's wise words: "I'm not what I have, I'm not what I do, I'm not what people say about me. I am the beloved of God." Caro leads us in a practice that helps us ground ourselves in our belovedness and Becca shares how needing to be in control or responsible for things has been a challenge in her li…
  continue reading
 
It is easy to assume that the way we read and interpret the Bible today, with our modern and scientific minds, is the way it has always been done. That the words we glean through scripture from God are the same today as they were for the early church. However, it may be surprising, and perhaps confronting, to realise that our way is a relatively yo…
  continue reading
 
Walking through the lectionary texts Caro invites us to consider the trajectory of God’s presence in Scripture which ends in the high point of our bodies being the dwelling place of God. We then unpack what this means about the sacredness of our bodies and how we might listen to our bodies to hear God speaking to and in us.…
  continue reading
 
Caro looks at some of the stranger details of this story including how Jesus liked to wander in ‘in-between’ places; how these men in their physical suffering had found a remarkable social healing; and how this might just be the unsexiest miracle Jesus performed. She finishes by reading a Rilke poem which alongside this passage encourages us to sta…
  continue reading
 
The content of Acts 10 lends itself well to the idea of spiritual direction. Caro shares with us a little about what Spiritual direction is and then we hear an imaginative interpretation of Peter unpacking his vision and it’s implications with a spiritual director (Kym Dixon kindly agreed to participate as a director.)…
  continue reading
 
In this episode, Oran takes a look at Peter's vision of the animals in the sheet from a psychological view, considering the mindsets around disgust, purity, sacrifice and mercy and how they affect our interaction with those around us. Peter's reaction to the vision of the unclean animals is not exclusive to just ancient times, that same psychology …
  continue reading
 
As we continue to explore ways of decolonising our church practices, Caro leads us into a communal exploration of Acts 10. We read the passage with some context explained. Then we wrestle together with what this story might show us about what God is doing and how God is ‘doing’ it.By Central Church Port Kembla
  continue reading
 
Caro shares how liturgical prayer has been a source of life for her. Liturgy can be a gift to our prayer lives, a way we can join in the rich prayer life of the church across geography, time and history. As part of this service we had the opportunity to spend 15 minutes engaging with some liturgy. If you’d like to have a taste of this, get in touch…
  continue reading
 
Food is a highly political topic. The injustice between the “haves” and the “have nots” can be seen in our local communities, as well as on the global scale. In Jesus’ times, the Romans controlled the food supply, and the Pharisees wrapped so much religious red tape around food, many of the Jewish people struggled to keep their families fed. Yet am…
  continue reading
 
This week Oran gives an overview of the biblical narrative through a lens of generosity. This lens shows God's love as abundant, plentiful and generous. Sin, on the other hand, is not so much scarcity, rather the lie of scarcity - that there is not enough and we must take as much as we can to find wholeness and happiness. We can see this lie come t…
  continue reading
 
There are different things in life that are invitations to us to slow down in this fast paced world. Some are natural, like winter; some are unexpected, like illness or loss; and others are practices we adopt to intentionally slow us down, like boundaries or spiritual practices. 6 people from our community share briefly how one of these things has …
  continue reading
 
After anointing Jesus with perfume, the disciples/pharisees grumble saying that perfume could have been sold to feed the poor. However, Jesus rebukes them saying "you will always have the poor but you will not always have me". As onlookers, or as people in a position of power, this response from Jesus does not make sense. We can only begin to under…
  continue reading
 
We read the story of Jesus’ entry into Jerusalem on a donkey and consider how it was an act of political street theatre. A subversive way that Jesus models a different kind of power. Caro then invites us to keep imagining ways we can live the alternate way of Jesus, and we look at the lives of three different followers of Jesus to see how they live…
  continue reading
 
Becca shares out of James Cone’s book how through the horrific period of lynchings in America’s history, Black Christians saw in their own suffering Christ crucified with them. Becca connects this perspective with all those who have been oppressed and brutalised through history, especially here in our own context, the past and present injustices do…
  continue reading
 
Loading …

Quick Reference Guide