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From the Manse December 2005
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Dear friends
On
the last Sunday in November we celebrate our
church anniversary.
As I write, that date is still in the future. By the time you read
this, the day will have come and gone. Some churches make a great thing
of anniversaries. They hold special services, prepare huge teas, invite
friends from other churches. We’ve never done that. Yet it is right
that year by year we remember God’s goodness towards this church.
It was in autumn 1981
that a handful of folk began to meet in Edgeley, Cheadle Heath
and Cheadle Hulme for worship, Bible-study and prayer. We had left a
church that was evangelical in name but divided in doctrine and torn
apart by conflicts of personality. We had no idea what the future held
for us. We met together simply because there was no other church in the
area which we could imagine joining. There was no strategy, no plan for
the future, no conviction that we were called to establish a new
church. We called ourselves the
Cheadle Heath Christian Fellowship. We knew we were not a
church. We had no appointed leaders, no constitution, no formal
membership. We held no communion services together. We had no public
meeting place: all our meetings were in homes.
Three years later, late
in October 1984, we resolved that the time had come to form ourselves
into a church. During the three years of waiting, our sense of
identity had been crystallised. Our doctrinal convictions had been
strengthened. Our views of the biblical pattern for a local church had
been sharpened. We had come to believe that there was need for a
gospel-preaching, bible-believing, independent, reformed, baptist church
on this side of Stockport. We had drawn up a statement of faith, a
constitution, a covenant of membership.
On the 27th
November 1984, nine members of the Cheadle Heath Christian Fellowship
covenanted together to form a church: Grace Baptist Church.
Fourteen folk were present. They included our friend Michael Harley who
was then pastor at East Finchley in London. I was in the chair.
According to the minute-book, “The chairman opened the meeting with
prayer and the hymn ‘When in His might the Lord arose to set us free’
(Grace 558) was sung. The chairman reminded the meeting of the
resolution passed on 26th October, and read the text of the covenant of
membership. Those who wished to declare their assent to this covenant
were asked to stand and Pastor Michael Harley addressed them briefly,
reading Hebrews 11:8. He then asked them to signify their assent to the
stated responsibilities of membership. When asked whether they were
willing to undertake these responsibilities, those standing answered
with the words, ‘By the grace of God,
we will’.”
Later in the meeting, after we had put our names to the
covenant of membership, Michael “addressed the newly-formed church,
expounding Revelation 3 vs 7-13, outlining the qualities within a church
that win the approval of the Lord Jesus Christ. After a time of open
prayer, hymn no 562, “Not to us be
glory given” was sung. All present then stood to say the
benediction, “The
grace of the Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the fellowship of
the Holy Spirit be with us all, evermore.”
“Before dismissing the
meeting, the chairman introduced a resolution adopting the proposed
church constitution. The resolution was passed without discussion, nem
con.”
That
was twenty-one years ago. How the years have flown! I was just
twenty-three when the Cheadle Heath Christian Fellowship first met,
twenty-six when GBC was formed. And now, I’m forty-seven - as far as I
know, the longest-serving reformed minister in any church in the
north-west. More than half my life has been spent serving this
congregation.
Year after year, Michael Harley has come back to us on
the anniversary of that event (I think he’s missed just one year). He’s
more grizzled now and there’s not quite the same spring in his step as
there was back then, but he exhorts us still with the same affection and
seriousness. How much his friendship has meant to us over the years.
And what a lovely providence it is that we have his daughter,
son-in-law, grandchildren in the congregation.
Of the nine people who signed the covenant of membership
that night, only two - myself and Rose - still continue as members.
Some have moved to other parts of the country, some left us unhappy with
the direction the church was taking, one has drifted far from the faith
she professed then, one is in the grave.
Looking back over those twenty-one years is a sobering thing.
There have been many disappointments, many griefs and frustrations.
There has never been the outpouring of the Spirit, the tide of
conversions we dreamed of when our work began. In all, I believe we
have baptised thirty-five folk since the church was formed: of those
some were already believers when they came to us; others were children
of church members. How few conversions there have been out of the
world! And of those who have professed faith, not all have stood the
test of time.
We’ve seen divisions:
folk leaving us unhappily, some under discipline, some full of
bitterness. In all, eighty-three people have in the course of the years
put their names to our covenant of membership. Of those only
thirty-three are in membership today. Many of the rest have left for
good and honourable reasons. Some have been called home to glory. But
too many have left us under sad circumstances.
Many things we’ve sought
from the Lord have not yet come to pass. We don’t yet have our
own building: a visible presence in the area. Since David was called to
London, we don’t have the strong team of elders that we’ve prayed for
(though I believe we have half a dozen men who in terms of gifts and
graces would shine in any eldership). We’ve not yet sent out church
members into missionary service overseas (though we’re glad that Duncan
& Heather are strengthening the hand of a very needy church in France).
All these are reasons
for heart-searching: for everyone in the church, but for myself
above all. How much more might have been achieved if the church had
been served by a more godly, more zealous, more prayerful pastor - if I
had lived closer to Christ through those twenty-one years, and reflected
more of his character in my life and work. Take this anniversary as a
reminder to renew your prayers for the church and for myself. Spurgeon
wrote about the work of the pastor:
“Zeal is more quickly checked after long years of continuance in the
same service than when novelty gives a charm to our work... what must it
be to abide in the same pulpit for many years! In such a case it is not
the pace that kills, but the length of the race... he who at the end of
twenty years’ ministry among the same people is more alive than ever, is
a great debtor to the quickening Spirit”. You have covenanted
particularly to pray for those
who are raised up as leaders in the church. I need your prayers now
more than I did twenty years ago.
Yet looking back is also
a source of great encouragement and thanksgiving. When I look
back, I am constantly amazed that God has kept this church in existence
at all. How many times its life could have been snuffed out! We have
seen many churches close in the past twenty years, or depart from the
gospel. Yet God has kept us. He has supplied all our needs. Not a
Sunday has passed by without our meeting. And in every meeting there’s
been Bible-preaching and prayer. God has spoken to us and we have
spoken to God. And though progress may seem slow, it has been real.
How far we’ve come since that first meeting when nine folk met in the
front room of a house in Cheadle Hulme! We’ve had use of the
St John Ambulance HQ ever since 1984.
It’s not ideal, but it has met our needs. And how many opportunities
the Lord has opened to us! Our resources may be limited, but he’s made
it possible for us to reach out through the Sunday-school, to preach the
gospel in nursing-homes, to speak to youngsters on the streets. We’re
making the gospel known in Macclesfield and Bollington through the
Bible-study in Martin & Jacquie’s home. The Lord has enabled us to hold
regular meetings for the teenagers and for the ladies of the church. We
hold a regular missionary prayer meeting. We’re able to leaflet the area
at intervals. We get a constant trickle of messages from people around
the world who have been strengthened by the ministry of our website.
And now the Lord has opened the way for us to play our part in restoring
the work in Charlesworth. We’ve become a church on two sites! Looking
back, we can echo Jacob’s amazed words:
“I am not worthy of the
least of all the deeds of steadfast love and all the faithfulness which
you have shown to your servant, for with only my staff I crossed this
Jordan, and now I have become two camps!”
From our number we’ve sent out men to serve the Lord
elsewhere. Mark Richards is pastoring the church in Chesham today,
David Last in Leytonstone. Through our study-weeks we continue to play a
part in equipping men for the ministry in many places. This church was
instrumental too in starting the God’s
Glory Our Joy conference: that conference is playing a more and
more significant role in strengthening other churches around the
north-west.
These are just a few of the kindnesses God has done us.
He’s given us faithful deacons, willing workers, gifted preachers. He’s
saved many of our children, and many more sit and listen to the
preaching each Lord’s Day. I believe he’s given us much unity in
doctrine and much love for one another. What great things God has
done! And how grateful we should be.
Grace Baptist Church is twenty-one years old this year.
For any of us, coming of age is a time for serious reflection:
repentance, thanksgiving, renewed determination.
Let’s make it so.
‘Forgetting what’s behind, and straining forward to what lies ahead, I
press on towards the goal to win the prize for which God has called me
heavenwards in Christ Jesus..’
God
bless you all, Stephen
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