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Our Time and Testimony

Trevor and Gwen Lucas

TrevorGwen3We hail from the wonderfully unique and exciting city of Liverpool. This was not Trevor’s birthplace, but it is where he was brought up from the tender age of four, just two weeks before the start of WW2. Gwen was borne in Liverpool two weeks early, which saved both her and her mother’s life. A German bomb destroyed the hospital in which the event took place just one week later. Already we can see God’s hand at work and although we were from opposite ends of the city ‘He’ brought us together and we were married in 1960. Gwen accepted Jesus as her saviour in a ‘Christian Endeavour’ meeting at the age of nine. Trevor had the privilege of being brought up in a sound bible based Church bearing the name ‘Calvary Church’, but he made his decision at the age of eleven at an interdenominational Saturday evening meeting in the city. This gathering was called the ‘Christians Rendezvous’ and was one of many excellent weekly outreach events in the City, where the gospel was preached and denominational interaction took place.  Liverpool was badly blitzed in 1941 and it speaks highly of its people that it remained operational and open to transatlantic convoys, which saved our islands from severe shortages. There are many memories locked up in both our minds, Gwen holds the knowledge of her miraculous escape at birth. Trevor recalls a bomb almost destroying their home, but being saved by a railway embankment between it and the final site of destruction. We met at a new Church plant and our courtship was still young when Trevor, who had been deferred ‘National Service’ on educational grounds, was finally deemed eligible for the RAF at the age of twenty-two. Our Church had announced that he was going to ‘serve the Queen’ and afterwards a Sunday school scholar asked him if he was really going to play the piano for the Queen!!  He was away for two years, which he found very different and tough, but it allowed him an opportunity for exciting things that would otherwise have remained impossible. During that time we became engaged and almost a year after my demob! we were married.

By 1963 we had been blessed with three little boys Keith, Mark and Glyn. They were expensive and very mischievous, but we had lots of fun. One night I crept into their room while they were sleeping and just felt constrained to ask God to be with them and use them to His glory. They all qualified in their various professions, but Mark and Glyn later left their jobs and re-trained for the ministry. Keith also has a wonderful testimony to God’s dealings in his life, including a potentially lethal bout with cancer about fourteen years ago. He was wonderfully restored to full health and strength. We were also greatly blessed with three beautiful daughters, Elizabeth, Rebecca and Abigail, each one now soundly based in Christ and active in His service. To our great surprise the Lord then gave us another son Timothy, then to our amazement, another daughter Naomi. Both are firmly grounded in Christ and now married and living in the USA, following our eleven years residency there. Elizabeth, her American husband and their four children also live in the USA. Twenty fine grandchildren (ten boys and ten girls!!) have further enriched our lives, which have been busy though punctuated with its ups and downs. Whilst bringing up eight children has been hard, it has also been a joyful blessing. Our greatest joy, along with a deep sense of humility has been ours as each one has individually accepted Jesus Christ as their saviour. God has been our refuge in times of difficulty and our strength when times have been easier and it would take too long to relate even a fraction of His dealings with us. Suffice to say that our greatest blessing was our marriage, and as our golden anniversary approaches we are both bemused, blessed and amazed that Gwen still puts up with Trevor.

Philippe and Jo

Philippe and Jo met in a ski resort in the French Alps in 1989.  Philippe was working as a ski lift mechanic and Jo had gone there to work for a British ski company.

PhilippeJoPhilippe came from a non practicing Catholic family and had no belief in God at all.  Jo became a Christian in her teens, but had sadly lost her way and had not attended a church regularly for several years.

Jo had no intention of seeking God whilst in France, but was astounded by the beauty of the Alps, and found herself constantly humming hymns of praise to the Creator.  Strangely, although there are not many, the resort had an Evangelical Christian Centre.  After much hesitation, Jo eventually plucked up enough courage to attend a Sunday morning service.  Within minutes, she knew that to have any real contentment in life she would have to find her way back to God, but it would take several more years to do this.

Philippe and Jos' relationship survived long periods of being apart, and they were married in 1991.  They spent several more years in France, but returned to England in 1995 to work in Horsham, where Philippe had been offered a job by his brother-in-law.  It was the opportunity Jo needed to get right with God, and she was taken under the wing of Rehoboth Baptist Church.  Philippe attended with her more out of curiosity than anything else, but for many months remained unbelieving.  Gradually, by hearing the gospel message on a regular basis he began to question his unbelief, but wasn't ready to accept Jesus as Lord.

Everything changed one day in October 2002 when Jos' sister was suddenly killed in a car accident.  Although the shock was terribly painful, the funeral was a joyous occasion as everyone present knew that she had a new eternal life with her Lord in Heaven.  The message that day was  very powerful.  The theme was of how fragile the human being is, and that in a split second we can pass from life to death, and need, above all, to know Gods' salvation before it's too late.  Later that week, Philippe asked for forgiveness of his sins, and accepted Jesus into his life.

Since then, Philippe has grown in grace, and they have been able to seek the Lord as a couple.  Along the way there have been some amazing answers to prayer and under Gods guidance they moved to Faringdon in 2004 and began worshipping at Wantage Baptist Church where Philippe has since been baptized.

What next?  They both fervently believe that God has a plan for every soul he saves, and it's a good one!  Next to being saved, the most important thing has to be finding that plan. God has clearly been gracious, and has followed them and watched over them, even when they didn't want to know Him.  Now its time for them to show their gratitude, and follow HIM.

Jez and Cathryn

JezCathrynJez: I became a Christian in 1992, after several years of increasing atheism. I was brought up in a Catholic family, was educated in a Catholic primary school and attended mass weekly until the age of 14. I was probably around 15 years old when I decided God did not exist and that religion was just a crutch for weak people. I went to college in Oxford for three years where I met and dated a Christian girl. I never realized how important her faith was until we broke up; for her, the strain of dating someone who was so anti-Christian was too much to bear. Only after we broke up did I start to wonder why her faith meant so much to her. I had never before met anyone who actually "loved" God. During the following weeks and months, I began to become more and more interested in Christianity until one day (6th January 1992), I read a small booklet called Journey Into Life by Norman Warren. It very simply told about Jesus - who he was and why he came into the world. That night, I wept for the years I had ignored him and asked him to become my Saviour. My life changed dramatically over the following months; I stopped taking soft drugs, began reading the Bible and started going along to Wantage Baptist Church. God blessed and guided me tremendously and by the time I went to University in October 1994, I was determined to love and serve him with all my heart. It was there that I met Cathryn.

Cathryn: I was brought up in a loving home with Christian parents who took me to church every week. I enjoyed going to Sunday School and learning stories from the Bible. I was always aware of God's existence and when I was 7 I asked my Mum, how do you become a Christian? I wanted that same relationship that my parents had with God. We sat together and I asked Jesus to come into my heart and be my friend. The years passed and so did my understanding of the Christian faith. I often realized that I had done things wrong and asked Jesus to forgive me and help me to live how he wanted me to. When I was 16 I was baptised because I wanted to show my friends and family what had been happening in my heart. I wanted to share with them that Jesus was part of my life and that I had a relationship with him. I wasn't perfect but I was following God's way, with his help. I went to University at 18 and was introduced to Jez at the Christian Union. We later married and I moved to Wantage where we both attend Wantage Baptist Church. I was made to feel very welcome and soon got involved in various activities where I could serve God using the gifts he had given me. We have been greatly blessed with a beautiful daughter, and my prayer is that she will one day ask that question, how do I become a Christian?

What is the Good News of Jesus Christ?

1. The Problem

The Bible says that God originally made the world a perfect place and created man without sin (wrongdoing). Adam and Eve, the first human beings, decided to go their own way and turned their back on God. From that time on, all human beings have “inherited” a sinful nature. Romans 3:23 says that “all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.” (NIV). Since God is holy and pure, He cannot look upon sin and will therefore confine to hell all those who reject Him in this life.

2. The Solution

Doesn’t sound much like good news, does it? Well here it comes — “God so loved the world that he gave His one and only Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish but have eternal life. “(John 3:16-NIV). Jesus Christ gave up the glory of heaven and came to earth as a man with one purpose— “to seek and to save what was lost” (Luke 19:10- NIV). He died on the cross for two reasons. (1) His body was broken to satisfy God’s wrath against sin, and (2) His blood was shed to forgive our sins. For “without the shedding of blood, there is no forgiveness [of sins].” (Hebrews 9:22-NIV). But it didn’t end there. Jesus rose from the dead on the third day to prove that He had conquered death and the power of sin!

3. The Benefits

Jesus said “come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest.” (Matthew 11:28-NIV). He came to fill the God-shaped hole that is in everyone’s life and make them complete in Him. Christianity is not a religion about God but a relationship with God, an intimate, personal relationship which provides the believer with love, joy, peace, fulfilment and meaning. The rewards quite literally last for eternity and death itself is merely a passing through to the next glorious existence in the very presence of God.

4. The Response

Becoming a Christian is as easy as ABC:

Admit that you are a sinner.

You don’t need the Bible to tell you this. You know it yourself. Sin is falling short of God’s perfect standard and all of us are guilty.

Believe in Jesus Christ as the Son of God.

Jesus provided many convincing proofs of His divinity, culminating in His spectacular resurrection from the dead. This was the ultimate sign that He was truly one with God the Father and no-one, either before that time or since, has ever come close to matching His power.

Call upon Him as your personal Lord and Saviour.

Many people follow steps A and B and neglect step C, but calling upon the Lord Jesus Christ is the most important part. Romans 10:9 and 13 says that “if you confess with your mouth, ‘Jesus is Lord,’ and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved.” And, “Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved. ” (NIV).

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Elder's blog

tonyhoughton

Lost and found

  • Then he calls his friends and neighbours together and says, "Rejoice with me; I have found my lost sheep." Luke 15 v 6

Many people have not even bothered to ask the question, 'who is Jesus?': and they can often be lost in desperation of the problems and challenges of life. Others do not feel too good about themselves sometimes, to such an extent that they think they cannot go into a church or go along to a course like Christianity Explored. Yet God loves everybody and wants all to find him.

There are two stories that Jesus told on this subject – the parable of the lost sheep and the parable of the lost coin. Jesus tells these short parables on the same theme after the church leaders of his day, the Pharisees, were criticising Jesus for spending all his time with the marginalised, those on the edge of society:

  • "Now the tax collectors and sinners were all gathering round to hear Jesus. But the Pharisees and the teachers of the law muttered, 'This man welcomes sinners, and eats with them.'" Luke 15 v 5

Having heard them complaining about gathering round him the despised tax collectors (Jews who were collecting taxes for the hated Roman occupiers) the beggars, the lame and crippled and women of ill repute, Jesus points up how God cares for these so much. The shepherd with 100 sheep leaves the 99 at risk to thieves and attack whilst he goes off and searches the lost sheep. The shepherd finds it, brings it to safety and rejoices with his fellow shepherds.

The second story is of a woman with ten silver coins who loses one and goes to much effort to find it.

  • Doesn't she light a lamp, sweep the house and search carefully until she finds it? And when she finds it, she calls her friends and neighbours together and says, "Rejoice with me; I have found my lost coin. Luke 15 v 9

So what do these two stories mean? Well Jesus explains:

  • "In the same way, I tell you, there is rejoicing in the presence of the angels of God over one sinner who repents.'" Luke 15 v 10

You might not be able to relate to sheep and shepherding but you can to money or jewellery mislaid in your house.

Lost sheep_BetelLast weekend we visited the Christian drug rehab work that started in Madrid. It began 20 years ago when Christians came to tell about Jesus in the universities and the only people who listened were those suffering from drug and alcohol abuse. Today there are centres all over the world with 2000 recovering in hostels. So many marginalised who have found Jesus, kicked their habit and have completely transformed lives.


Are you lost? It's not too late to join our Christianity Explored course Tuesdays for 7 more weeks 7.30pm. Relaxed, no pressure discussion so that you can ask questions to explore what the Bible says (go here for more details).

 16 May 2012, Tony Houghton