JONATHAN IS A NEW TRUSTEE

The Revd. Jonathan Forman ( Blaenau Gwent Baptist Church, Abertillery) has become a new trustee of the Baptist Union of Wales English Language Wing. He has been a pastor at Blaenau Gwent for the last six years.

His father was a minister of a church at Farnham, Surrey and Jonathan was a student at Moorlands College, Christchurch, Bournemouth for four years before he gained a BA degree in applied theology majoring upon pastoral and evangelism studies. It was there he met his wife, Elora, a fellow student whose home church was Rhiwbina Baptist Church, Cardiff. They were married in 2007 and have two young daughters – Lily-Rose and Hope Esther.

Both Jonathan and Elora felt the Lord was calling them to the South Wales valleys which resulted in them moving to Blaenavon in 2008. The couple served as outreach workers and then joint pastors at Blaenavon Evangelical Church for six years. Jonathan responded to a call and was inducted into the pastorate at Blaenau Gwent in November 2014 and the church has been blessed by their tireless work and service to the Lord. Jonathan completed a two-year course of studies at the South Wales Baptist College, Cardiff in 2016 becoming a fully accredited Baptist minister in 2019.

Jonathan is also a keen musician having studied contemporary drumming at the Guildford Academy of Contemporary Music and he enjoys helping to lead worship by playing the guitar and singing – in addition, of course, to preaching.

PRAYER PACK

Jonathan has taken a lively interest in the work of the Gwent Association and the Union since moving over to the Baptist family. He became a member of the Association’s Officers’ Group in 2017 and represents the Association on the BUW Home Mission Board and the BMS Council of Reference.

Jonathan firmly believes in the power of prayer and has taken the “lead” for the Association in arranging some inter-church initiatives including a 24-hour prayer event, supported by a comprehensive prayer pack, which took place over the weekend of 24/25 January. This was Gwent’s launch of its programme to mark the BUW 2020 Year of Prayer although sadly most of the face-to face prayer meetings have had to be cancelled because of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Association secretary Geoffrey Champion said: “”Jonathan is truly a humble and faithful servant of the Lord. He always makes a considered, positive, practical and godly contribution to our work as an Association and his ‘Can do’ approach is an inspiration to all of us.” He also expressed the Association’s gratitude to Mr. Huw Stephens ( Bethesda Baptist Church, Rogerstone) who stepped down from the role of BUW trustee after seven years of excellent service.

A letter from our new President

                                                                                         

Dear Friends,

It is a huge honour to be writing to you as the newly-appointed President of the Gwent Baptist Association. Thank you to those of you who joined us for our first ever ‘online’ Autumn Council Meeting (AGM ) where we were privileged to hear from the Revd. Dr. Arthur Brown from BMS World Mission sharing news about the work in Lebanon and Chad as part of the harvest appeal.

As many before me have said, we find ourselves in ‘unprecedented times’, but I am hugely encouraged that we are not in uncharted waters. Indeed, the people of God have often found themselves in situations that required new ways of thinking and acting: from those worshipping through the journey of exodus to those worshipping in the unfamiliar context of exile. God’s promises are unchanging, and it is on this foundation we can be assured that whilst ‘lockdowns’ and closures are occurring all around us, God is still very much on the move in the lives of those in our communities.

As we consider the new nationwide lockdown here in Wales, I am mindful of the amazing work which is being done by churches and volunteer groups up and down this Association. However, I am also aware that, as this process drags on, the needs of those in our communities increase.

I have recently been approached by a volunteer group from Risca who support the vulnerable within our community and further afield. Whether it is picking up shopping, making a phone call once a week to everything in-between, these people do an amazing job and make a massive difference to the wellbeing of so many.

SHOPPING

In recent conversations with leaders from this group, they spoke of the growing number of people they are now in touch with, across the region. People who are finding themselves in need of help or assistance – shopping, phone calls, prescription pick-ups etc. Two particular urgent needs have come to light in Crumlin where a gentleman needs a weekly shop and his bins putting out and another in Abertillery where a lady going through chemotherapy has just come out of hospital and would benefit from the kindness of an occasional telephone call and the offer to pick up some shopping.

Whilst I highlight these two particular urgent cases, more and more people are coming forward with simple needs, and it is here, I believe, we see the people of God being the hands and feet of Jesus for their communities.

Could you, or indeed someone within your congregation, help support someone in the local area with a phone call, a shopping trip or by picking up prescriptions?

If you are in Crumlin or Abertillery, could you support this dear lady or gentleman?

If you are interested in knowing more about these situations or exploring how you can mobilise the people of God to serve in the community, please do not hesitate to contact me by email – tmoody083@gmail.com – and I can help put you in touch with the appropriate people.

Please be assured of the ongoing prayerful support of all the Officers of the Gwent Baptist Association – for you and your congregations.

Every blessing,

Tim 

23 October 2020 

Pastor Tim Moody, Moriah Baptist Church, Tredegar Street, Risca NP11 6BU

GOD’S AMAZING WORK!

The Revd. Dr Arthur Brown

“Lebanon may be one of the most strife-torn countries in the world and its capital Beirut one of the most dangerous cities but God is still doing amazing things there through His church”, the Revd. Dr Arthur Brown, BMS World Mission director for mission, told the Gwent Baptist Association’s autumn council meeting held on 8th October.

In an informal interview with newly-inducted Association president Pastor Tim Moody, Arthur said Lebanon was on its knees and its people exhausted but yet the local church was growing amidst all the trouble and turmoil. Having been based in Lebanon working for BMS World Mission for a period, Arthur continued: “It is amazing to see once-sworn enemies, Syrian Muslims and Lebanese Christians, now helping each other and many are becoming brothers and sisters in Christ.”

Arthur said there was a great need for prayer for Lebanon because of the continuing violence, political, economic and social problems but we needed to thank God because he was bringing people to faith. He also referred to the outstanding medical work being undertaken at the Guinebor 11 hospital in one of the poorest African countries, Chad. He thanked the Association and churches in Gwent for their prayerful and practical support of these and similar BMS World Mission initiatives.

The Revd. D. Marc Owen (Moriah Baptist Church, Risca), who chaired the meeting, extended his grateful thanks to Arthur for his own personal contribution to the important ongoing work of BMS World Mission and for the organisation’s massive commitment to helping some of the poorest and most needy people despite all the obstacles they had to face.

Others who took part in the meeting were retiring president the Revd. Dr Suzanne Roberts, who led the opening devotions, and superintendent the Revd. Mark Thomas (Mount Pleasant Baptist Church, Blackwood), who said how encouraging it was that local churches had continued or embarked upon effective “online” ministry during the Covid-19 crisis.

About 50 people representing 15 churches were present at the virtual meeting which also incorporated elements of an annual general meeting.

A special appeal was made in aid of BMS World Mission. More information can be found at bmsworldmission.org/give/

TIM AT THE HELM

Risca-based Pastor Tim Moody has been inducted as the new president of the Gwent Baptist Association.

Part of the Baptist Union of Wales, the Association serves 34 churches and chapels in its area providing spiritual and practical help and advice in addition to financial support, where appropriate, for spreading the gospel in local communities and further afield.

Tim, originally from Weston- super-Mare, became assistant pastor at Moriah Baptist Church, Risca in September 2016 and recently successfully completed a ministerial accreditation course at the South Wales Baptist College, Cardiff. He and his wife Laura have a young daughter, Evie. Tim takes up his new voluntary role in succession to the Revd. Dr Suzanne Roberts who has served the Association excellently in the last two years.

Geoffrey Champion, secretary of the Gwent Baptist Association, said: “We are blessed to have quality individuals of the calibre of Suzanne and now Tim serving the Association and its churches. These are challenging times for everyone but it is great to see younger people like Tim working for the Lord and stepping up to take an important ‘lead’ helping the Baptist family and others in Gwent.”

WHEN THE DISCIPLES SELF-ISOLATED

AN EASTER MESSAGE FROM THE PRESIDENT OF THE GWENT BAPTIST ASSOCIATION, THE REVD. DR SUZANNE ROBERTS.

Dear Sisters and Brothers in Christ,

Normally, so much happens in Holy Week, perhaps beginning on Palm Sunday with the children’s’ excitement as they follow a real donkey along the road. Whether or not there are other meetings during the week, there will be communion on Maundy Thursday and perhaps a walk of witness behind a cross or a service on Good Friday, before we come to all the joyful celebrations on Easter Sunday. Either at sunrise or later in the day we hear again those wonderful words of joyful hope and assurance: “He is not here, He has risen.”

But there is an important day we may miss out. For the disciples it involved self-isolation – not from fear of disease but from the terror of anticipation that the authorities might do to them what they had done to Jesus. Fear compounded by the depths of their grief and by the seeming destruction of all their hopes for themselves and their nation. The life they had been used to for the previous three years had been turned upside-down, and the settled normality of being with Jesus had become anxious and fearful uncertainty. We cheat, in a way, by knowing the end of the story, but for them this new normality had no end in sight and the future seemed totally out of their control.

This present Coronavirus crisis may feel to us like a prolonged version of Easter Saturday; concern and anxiety, even fear, for ourselves, our families and friends – especially if they are in a frontline occupation – and for the future, national or in personal health and finance. We cannot at present see an end to this new normality nor how it will affect our lives in the weeks, maybe months ahead. It is a challenge to our faith – but is that a bad thing?

CONFIDENCE

Faith unchallenged can lull us into a comfort zone which stagnates our spiritual growth. James calls us to “Consider it pure joy, whenever you face trials of many kinds, because you know that the testing of your faith develops perseverance. Perseverance must finish its work so that you may be mature and complete, not lacking anything.” It’s an old book, but in ‘God of Surprises’ Gerard Hughes writes: “Faith is entrusting ourselves to the mystery in which we are living, trusting that love is at the heart of it.” We are able to trust that love as we see it poured out for us as Jesus hangs on the cross: “This is how we know what love is: Jesus Christ laid down his life for us. (1 John 3:16) – “And so we know AND RELY on the love God has for us.” (4:16) It is in that confidence in God’s love for all that we can pray; for ourselves and those we know who are grieving, ill or in any difficulty, for all those in health care and care homes, emergency services, shops and any other front-line setting.

Let us pray too for those unknown to us – those in the poorest parts of cities and countryside across the world who have no space to self-isolate, often no running water or soap to keep hands clean, and neither good health services nor financial fall-back. One hospital in Bangladesh has no ventilators and “two empty A4 plastic sleeves put through a laminator give a mask with the right thickness for protection”.

If it feels like Easter Saturday to us, remember it is into that despairing darkness that the words are spoken: “He has risen from the dead and is going ahead of you into Galilee. There you will see Him.” The disciples had no idea what the future would hold for them, but Jesus did and He would – and did – meet them there. We don’t know what lies ahead in our Galilee or what it will mean for us, but we can know for certain that Jesus knows and will meet us in that future, just as He is with us here and now and to the end of this age. In these difficulties we can find even greater joy in the promise of Easter Sunday, in the certain hope we have in the risen Jesus. May God help us to share that hope and joy that those living in anxious uncertainty may come to know the comfort and peace of the presence of the risen Jesus in their lives.

May God bless you with His comfort, strength, light and peace – a blessed and joyful Easter to you all.

In Jesus.

Suzanne.

THE LOVE OF JESUS GIVES US HOPE IN THE DARKNESS

AN EASTER MESSAGE FROM BAPTIST UNION OF WALES GENERAL SECRETARY THE REVD. JUDITH MORRIS

“Christ has risen! He has risen indeed!”

Whilst the Easter message is the same every year, our context this year means that our celebrations will be somewhat different as the COVID-19 casts its shadow over us.  

When Mary Magdalene went to the tomb on the morning of the third day two thousand years ago, it was still dark. She was not rejoicing but wept tears of great sadness. Those very same feelings are currently being experienced by thousands of people today yearning for a new dawn when the threat of the Coronavirus has completely disappeared. This is a time that we have never experienced before.   

However, in spite of the trauma and sadness that has been witnessed, we have, over the past few weeks, seen humanity at its very best: the staff of the National Health Service work tirelessly caring for and treating patients, key workers ensure that we can buy food, medication and shop for essentials along with the army of volunteers who help the frail and vulnerable members in our communities. Each and every one deserves a very special round of applause. But at the same time, some have exhibited the very worst tendencies of human nature. Examples of selfishness and greed have been seen as people attempted to travel to their second homes; others have insisted on socialising in large gatherings whilst others have stockpiled food and other supplies leaving our supermarket shelves empty. Thankfully, we can testify that we have seen far more goodness at work rather than the negative tendencies of our human nature. As we look forward to the coming weeks and months let us pray that we will continue to see more of the ‘positive’ rather than the ‘negative’ at work in society.

In the midst of this we have been truly horrified as the virus has increasingly claimed thousands of lives throughout the world. Urgent preparations have been made to ensure that there are sufficient beds available for those needing medical care. It is a source of enormous sadness to know that those who fall victim to COVD-19 will not have the company and comfort of their nearest and dearest at their bedsides. To compound this, we are not able to hold funerals in our usual way and friends and family are unable to visit the bereaved to offer support and comfort. In order to avoid contracting the virus we have no choice but to follow the Government’s instruction and stay at home. 

NEW LIFE

What therefore does Easter have to say to us in the middle of this emergency?

As Christians, we know that life’s journey is not easy. The shadow of the Cross is always a reality. But we know that the Cross is not the end. Jesus succeeded in transforming everything through His incredible love for us: He defeated death; He transformed the darkness and crushed all hopelessness. He gave us new life and a light that can never be extinguished and an eternal hope through His victory on the Cross. That is the message of Easter. He defeated death and gave new life to his disciples. Therefore, in the middle of this emergency we can but turn to our Lord Jesus Christ and receive of the peace that he gives to us.

As we look to the future, many people are already asking questions about our current way of living. Will we have learnt anything from this difficult period? Will this emergency have led us to live differently for the sake of our brothers and sisters and the whole creation? Will we appreciate and cherish our freedom to meet together for worship and social activity? Will we as Christians have engaged in a deeper and possibly more reflective relationship with God?

Time alone will tell whether we will be able to respond with wisdom and maturity to some of the questions currently being asked. In the meantime, let us cling dearly to the Easter message and may each and every one of us remember the timeless truths of the Gospel and know the power and strength of the presence of the risen Christ, the One who sustains and comforts us at all times.  

“Christ has risen! He has risen indeed!”

Judith Morris

General Secretary

April 9, 2020

WHEN THE DISCIPLES SELF-ISOLATED

AN EASTER MESSAGE FROM OUR ASSOCIATION PRESIDENT , THE REVD. DR SUZANNE ROBERTS.

Dear Sisters and Brothers in Christ,

Normally, so much happens in Holy Week, perhaps beginning on Palm Sunday with the children’s’ excitement as they follow a real donkey along the road. Whether or not there are other meetings during the week, there will be communion on Maundy Thursday and perhaps a walk of witness behind a cross or a service on Good Friday, before we come to all the joyful celebrations on Easter Sunday. Either at sunrise or later in the day we hear again those wonderful words of joyful hope and assurance: “He is not here, He has risen.”

But there is an important day we may miss out. For the disciples it involved self-isolation – not from fear of disease but from the terror of anticipation that the authorities might do to them what they had done to Jesus. Fear compounded by the depths of their grief and by the seeming destruction of all their hopes for themselves and their nation. The life they had been used to for the previous three years had been turned upside-down, and the settled normality of being with Jesus had become anxious and fearful uncertainty. We cheat, in a way, by knowing the end of the story, but for them this new normality had no end in sight and the future seemed totally out of their control.

This present Coronavirus crisis may feel to us like a prolonged version of Easter Saturday; concern and anxiety, even fear, for ourselves, our families and friends – especially if they are in a frontline occupation – and for the future, national or in personal health and finance. We cannot at present see an end to this new normality nor how it will affect our lives in the weeks, maybe months ahead. It is a challenge to our faith – but is that a bad thing?

CONFIDENCE

Faith unchallenged can lull us into a comfort zone which stagnates our spiritual growth. James calls us to “Consider it pure joy, whenever you face trials of many kinds, because you know that the testing of your faith develops perseverance. Perseverance must finish its work so that you may be mature and complete, not lacking anything.” It’s an old book, but in ‘God of Surprises’ Gerard Hughes writes: “Faith is entrusting ourselves to the mystery in which we are living, trusting that love is at the heart of it.” We are able to trust that love as we see it poured out for us as Jesus hangs on the cross: “This is how we know what love is: Jesus Christ laid down his life for us. (1 John 3:16) – “And so we know AND RELY on the love God has for us.” (4:16) It is in that confidence in God’s love for all that we can pray; for ourselves and those we know who are grieving, ill or in any difficulty, for all those in health care and care homes, emergency services, shops and any other front-line setting.

Let us pray too for those unknown to us – those in the poorest parts of cities and countryside across the world who have no space to self-isolate, often no running water or soap to keep hands clean, and neither good health services nor financial fall-back. One hospital in Bangladesh has no ventilators and “two empty A4 plastic sleeves put through a laminator give a mask with the right thickness for protection”.

If it feels like Easter Saturday to us, remember it is into that despairing darkness that the words are spoken: “He has risen from the dead and is going ahead of you into Galilee. There you will see Him.” The disciples had no idea what the future would hold for them, but Jesus did and He would – and did – meet them there. We don’t know what lies ahead in our Galilee or what it will mean for us, but we can know for certain that Jesus knows and will meet us in that future, just as He is with us here and now and to the end of this age. In these difficulties we can find even greater joy in the promise of Easter Sunday, in the certain hope we have in the risen Jesus. May God help us to share that hope and joy that those living in anxious uncertainty may come to know the comfort and peace of the presence of the risen Jesus in their lives.

May God bless you with His comfort, strength, light and peace – a blessed and joyful Easter to you all.

In Jesus.

Suzanne.

POWER OF PRAYER

If you truly believe in the power of prayer then please pray and keep on praying! That was the challenge given to Baptist churches in Gwent as they concluded a special 24-hour prayer event with a service of prayer and praise at Tabernacle, Newbridge on 25th January.

The Interns

The 139 internship @ Moriah is a new 10-month opportunity for young people to come and explore who God created them to be, based on Psalm 139 as a template.

A Secret

Speaking on the general theme of Protecting the Christian Future, Simeon said Christians still could feel confident about the coming years even if our society, in general, seemed to be drifting even further away from God.