Thursday, 21 August 2014

Heart attack!!


Staying fit as I get older has always been a priority for me. So I try to get to the Southwick gym twice a week during church office lunch time. Wednesday 13 August was no exception.

There were no noticeable warning signs earlier that day, until I started my very first gym machine - the rowing machine. Because I am asthmatic, I take my sprays before I enter the gym. Halfway through my 5 vigorous minutes on the rower, I began to feel tightness in my chest! My first thought was that my asthma spray must be empty and need renewal - it's only good for 200 puffs.

Concluding that the spray was the problem, I decided to stay clear of all the other aerobic machines, where you get breathless quite quickly, and concentrate on the less heavy-breathing equipment – the weight training machines. That worked!  That worked, only until I reached the lower back machine.

Not only did the chest tightness return, but now I was covered in sweat and beginning to feel light headed. Heart attack was now becoming a thought, this was no asthma attack, but maybe, just maybe, this is a stomach upset and that became the dominant thought.

Leaving the gym promptly, I trundled down to the "conveniences" - but it became apparent that this was not a feverish stomach upset either. There was no other alternative left - this was a heart attack!

I made it to the changing rooms, walking slowly, because I felt I could have keeled over! I determined that I would speak to anyone present in the changing rooms, to ask them kindly to inform Reception of my distress. That was the best and wisest thought of the day!

Reception staff came quickly; they were trained to recognise a heart attack apparently. Within a further 5 minutes, an ambulance was called.

Minutes later I was inside a blue flashing light ambulance with siren wailing, speeding our way towards the Royal Sussex Hospital. I was informed that we were not stopping at A & E but we were going straight to the Operating Theatre!

I was wheeled on a stretcher through countless hospital corridors at high speed until I arrived in the prescribed room. Eight people were waiting for me! They worked with incredible speed and efficiency, within 20 minutes, all was completed! A stent was put into my left ventricle of my heart, blood was flowing freely and the chest tightness had gone!

During the whole “blue light emergency” procedures of the previous hour, I just knew a supernatural peace in my heart. To say that my Father was with me, holding my hand is no understatement.

That evening, church member Axi Charles introduced herself to me on the ward! She was the Sister on the Cardiac Unit! How amazing!

The following day in my Bible in a Year reading programme, the ascribed portion was God mercifully extending Hezekiah's life, after a close encounter with death! I feel that is what God has done for me - He has divine purpose in extending my life, which is much more my simple self-centred desire to grow old gracefully!

Praise God! I am so thankful for His mercies and the professionalism of the Cardiac Unit at the County. Onwards and upwards!

Sunday, 15 September 2013

Church Notice Sheet evangelism!


A great idea!

Ever come across a CCK Sunday Notice Sheet lying around as litter in the Centre or even your own home/car? I bet you have!

I pass on a great idea that someone mentioned to me recently. Take the Notice Sheet, fold it in half, and purposefully and prayerfully leave it in a public place – on the bus seat, coffee shop table etc. I guarantee that a significant number would be picked up and read by the next person.

Imagine this happening every week of the year, with the vast majority of our weekly Notice Sheets. Spread the word.

Monday, 17 December 2012

Lies, damned lies and statistics - how the government tricked you with regard to gay marriage!


Dear Friends,

You will probably have heard that this week the Government issued a response to its ‘Equal Civil Marriage' consultation and announced plans to introduce a Bill to allow same-sex couples to marry.

The Minister for Women and Equalities, Maria Miller MP, described receiving ‘a record' 228,000 responses to the Government consultation earlier this year.  However, we were extremely disappointed that despite previous assurances to do so, the Government had chosen not to include in this total of consultation respondents the 500,000 people who signed the Coalition for Marriage petition by the June deadline.  Using this lower figure the Government was able to announce that a majority of respondents (53%) were in favour of redefining marriage while 47% were against.  Of the 228,000 responses to the consultation, 132,000 were anonymous submissions through the Home Office's online response form which could have been made multiple times, by anyone anywhere in the world.  Using such an anonymous system casts doubts over the credibility of the consultation results on an issue of such importance.

Mrs Miller described a ‘quadruple lock' which she said would ‘protect religious organisations' but we have very real concerns that the proposed safeguards will not be sufficient if cases are brought before the European Court of Human Rights. Recent rulings from Strasbourg have declared that if a member state decides to allow same-sex marriage, but treats homosexual married couples differently from heterosexual married couples, it could be challenged under European human rights law.  Legal experts have questioned the strength of the Government's assurance that with proper drafting ‘the chance of a successful legal challenge through domestic or European courts is negligible'.  It is not certain that challenges wouldn't emerge on the basis of the blanket ban on clergy of the Church of England or whether individual ministers could be prevented from performing same-sex marriages.

The battle to uphold marriage is far from over and it is certainly one we can still win.  CARE will continue to work hard on your behalf with the Coalition for Marriage to defend the legal definition of marriage as the voluntary union for life of one man and one woman to the exclusion of all others.  We will keep you updated with future developments in Impact Direct and you can read more detailed analysis of the Government's announcement here.

Thank you for standing with us.

Nola Leach

Chief Executive

Tuesday, 11 December 2012

2011 Census


2011 Census:          Two cities stand out for non-religious reasons

 

 
Christian
No Religion
No Comment
Brighton
42.9%
42.4%
8.8%
Norwich
44.9%
42.5%
8.2%

 

Contrasting with Knowsley near Liverpool

Knowsley
80.9%
12.6%
5.7%

Thursday, 1 November 2012

Urgent prayer requested

Luana Hall is a valued friend of CCK, well known and active in one of our small groups in Kemptown:
This is an urgent prayer request from Luana Hall for her husband Alan. He was hit by a bus last Sunday week (21 Oct) and he remains critical with severe brain injuries. He’s in a coma and it’s touch and go at the moment. Please join with us in prayer for Alan’s recovery and for Luana and their friends and family. 

Sunday, 2 September 2012

At last - a user-friendly look at the two natures of Christ

"For in him all the fullness of God was pleased to dwell" (ESV).
"For it was the Father's good pleasure for all the fullness to dwell in Him" (NASB).
"For God was pleased to have all his fullness dwell in him" (NIV).
 
Paul literally says that "all the fullness" was "pleased" to dwell in Christ. But "fullness" is not a person and only a person has conscious and willful intent; only a person can be "pleased" to do something. So both the NASB and the NIV translate the verse to indicate that God the Father is the subject of the verb: it was his good pleasure that the fullness of the divine nature dwell in Christ.
 
Let me begin by urging you not to be misled by the word "dwell". Paul is not suggesting that there was a man named Jesus in whom deity or divinity resided. In other words, the fullness of deity didn't dwell in Jesus the way the Holy Spirit dwells in you and me. When God the Son became a human, the fullness of the divine nature "became flesh" (John 1:14), yet without ceasing to be divine. The divine and the human united in the one person of Jesus Christ.
 
The early church wrestled with how best to articulate this marvelous and mind-bending mystery and reached its conclusions at the Council of Chalcedon in 451 a.d. Here is that portion of the statement that attempts to explain what Paul is saying in Colossians and elsewhere in the New Testament. Jesus Christ is "to be acknowledged in two natures [one divine, one human], without confusion, without change, without division, without separation; the distinction of natures being by no means taken away by the union, but rather the property of each nature being preserved, and concurring in one Person and one Subsistence, not parted or divided into two persons, but one and the same Son, and only begotten, God the Word, the Lord Jesus Christ . . ."
 
The authors of this statement had three primary goals in mind.
 
(1) Their point in saying the two natures were not confused or changed is to prevent us from concluding that the divine and human were so united that an altogether different third thing, neither truly divine nor truly human, was created. For example, if you have a glass of water and a glass of wine and mix them together in a pitcher, you end up with something different from what you started out with. The water is now somewhat alcoholic and the wine is now somewhat diluted, but the substance in the pitcher is different from what was in either of the two glasses.
Contrary to what some in the early church suggested, the divine nature did not "swallow up" the human (as the ocean would a drop of ink), nor did the human dilute the divine into something less than truly God.
 
(2) Their point in saying there was neither separation nor distinction is to prevent us from concluding that the divine and human natures in Christ were artificially bonded, almost like one would glue together two separate pieces of wood. There was more than an external "connection" between the divine and human: there was and is a true union of the two.
 
(3) Finally, they wanted to be certain that the union between the divine and human not be construed in such a way that we think of the incarnate Christ as if he were two separate persons. He is one person, wholly divine and wholly human, neither less divine because he has a human nature nor less human because he has a divine nature.
 
Yes, I know it's mind-boggling! But if our Lord Jesus Christ were anything less or other than the God-man, one person who is truly divine and truly human, we would still be in our sin.
 
Marveling in the Mystery,
 
Thank you so much Sam Storms!

Thursday, 2 August 2012

CCK small group leaders - I need your help!


Hello leaders of Zones and small groups - I really do need your help!

Would it be possible to get your City small group details bang up to date?
 I appreciate that some small groups don’t use The City, but this request is not to recruit you to a “facebook” lifestyle!! Did you know that your recorded small group details are our only church database? So when a new person asks us at the Connect Point:
  … for a Thursday group – we need to know which ones we have
  … or can I join the same group as Fred Bloggs on Alpha? – we can only direct them if Fred has signed up!
  … do you have a small group near BN3 3RE? – we can only tell them if you have put a postcode in your group address


Here are the six top tips:
1.       Make sure someone (preferably yourself) has “leader” status in your group not just “manager” status. Please choose appropriately from the drop down menu.
2.       When you filled in your personal contact details in the City for the first time, if you didn’t tick the boxes:
o Show to members
o Show to friends
Then your contact details are automatically set to invisible to everyone, even your best friend and marriage partner!
3.       Even if your group venue moves from week-to-week, make sure you choose one venue with a postcode. The software does a Google maps display
4.       Make your group description cheery and upbeat. Please avoid jargon and make your description welcoming and inclusive to all, especially those on the edge of church life. No-one from your group will look at this group description, only people who are currently not in your group! Food for thought?
5.       Please include the day and time you normally meet.  If your group also doesn't meet during the holidays - please state that in the description
6.       If you have easy access to a computer and the internet, a daily quick look on The City is invaluable.
It's been a year since we first launched The City, we've grown in our knowledge of what to do and not to do! If you have any problems with the above, then please feel free to contact me (Alan Preston 07962217655) during the month of August.