From the Manse – Sept 2010

August 29, 2010 by Web Administrator  
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On August 15th we celebrated and remembered with gratitude the laying of the foundation stone of our present church building.
In fact whenever and wherever we meet as Christians, we celebrate the laying of the foundation stone of the church! We celebrate the stone that was laid by God in the Lord Jesus Christ! “Whoever trusts in Him, will never be put to shame!” writes the prophet Isaiah (Isaiah 28:16).
Our forefathers trusted in Him and were not put to shame! They have primarily built their lives upon that living stone, the Lord Jesus Christ. Their faith and all that they have achieved by faith and faithful commitment is their legacy to us!
On 27th March 1844 a small group of Christians was formed into the United Presbyterian Church of Helensburgh. The roll counted only 33 members. On 22nd June 1845 the young congregation opened their church - the wee Kirk, our present King Street Hall. It could accommodate about 400 people at the cost of £800.
Under the faithful ministry of their first Minister, the Rev Alexander McEwen, and the Office Bearers, the small congregation rapidly grew and became stronger. By the end of 1850 the wee Kirk was found to be too small for them, so next year a gallery was erected to accommodate a further 150. By the time Mr McEwen left in 1856 even this extended church proved to be too small. However, the contemplation of building a new church did not come to fruit at that time.
Under the ministry of the congregation’s second Minister, the Rev David Duff, the congregation continued to prosper. The small size of the wee Kirk continued to be a problem.
The opening of the railway between Glasgow and Helensburgh caused the town to expand. Many Glasgow merchants moved to leafy Helensburgh and commuted to the city by train. During the summers the size of the town increased even further by the temporary residents. Especially during the summer, the church was overcrowded and
uncomfortable.
The congregation, with great vision and missionary zeal, resolved to build a new church which could accommodate the summer visitors and also kept in sight the hopeful increase of the congregation! So a plan was made for a church that could hold about 900 people!
The Foundation Stone was laid on 14th August 1860, by Mr William Yuile, Preses to the Managers, who had given the stone three hearty thumps with the mallet in token of the work. Mr Yuile had the rare privilege of laying the foundation stone of the first church some 14 years earlier too!
The Foundation Stone contained a number of historical and contemporary documents: United Presbyterian Magazine; Missionary Record; Juvenile Magazine of this Month; Dumbarton Herald of 9th August 1860; Glasgow Herald; North British Daily Mail; Morning Journal; Bulletin & Scottish Press.
The Clerk of the Managers, Mr William Forsyth, recorded the following prayer for the new building: “And now unto Him whom the Heaven cannot contain, and who hath put it into our hearts to build a house unto His Name. Even to Him we would ever cry: have respect unto the prayer of thy servants and to their supplications, and let Thine
eyes be open towards this house night and day.”
Following the ceremony the congregation and their friends enjoyed a soirée in the wee Kirk. I don’t know where the Foundation Stone was laid. I wonder if we actually need to know. I don’t know if the documents and the news of the age are still there and intact.
But I am convinced that we need to know where the Foundation Stone of our lives and faith lies. We need to know that the stone, rejected by men but chosen by God, is risen, and reigns forever.
We need to know our risen Saviour and all the good news He has for us: hope and healing, guidance and restoration, comfort and resurrection! May He always hear us when we cry out to Him and may His eyes be open towards us, night and day! Amen.

Thought for the Week – Helen Caldwell

December 22, 2008 by Web Administrator  
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Luke Chapter 2 Verse 7

“And she brought forth her first born son and wrapped him in swaddling clothes and laid him in a manger”.

The Christmas Story seems to mean more to me, reading it from the King James Version of the Bible, than any other. It brings back so many childhood memories and I am sure many of you will think that it is a sign of old-age creeping up on me!

Happily, many of the primary schools have their own Nativity productions at this time of year.

There is something very special about seeing and hearing of the Christmas Story through the eyes of a child. This was brought home to me recently at the Dorian Choir Concert, hearing the lovely voices and seeing the bright faces of the Hermitage Primary School Choir, telling the Story in song.

In these politically correct times in which we live, how refreshing it is to know that our children are hearing the Story of Christmas.

Prayer

Dear Lord,
This Christmas, may we all take time out of our busy lives, to remember the wondrous Story of Jesus’ birth.

Amen

From the Manse – December 2008

December 14, 2008 by jgregor  
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Bethlehem - Nativity

Bethlehem - Nativity

“You will find a baby wrapped in cloths and lying in a manger.” (Luke 2:12)

I was browsing through some Christmas images to use one as an appropriate illustration of the meaning of the occasion. Then I found this by a Hungarian artist Andras Simon. Somebody remarked it is a nice picture, but one hardly can see Jesus in it. He was right, indeed He is hardly visible on it, but it is exactly this aspect that makes the image so relevant today.

There are so many images that imply the coming of Christmas. Christmas trees are decorated, homes adorned with bright flashing lights, preparations for Christmas dinner keep us busy, and in the celebration – Jesus is hardly visible.


People keep notice and are waiting for the sales and the best bargains. (The other day Sue was in one of the great retailers in Glasgow and remarked it to the lady at the counter that it was very quiet in the shop. ‘Yes – she answered – everybody is waiting for the 20% off sale that will start tomorrow.’ Well, we missed it again.) Presents are exchanged as an expression of love, and even in that – Jesus is hardly visible.


Children’s attention is focused on Santa Claus and the attractions of grottos, where – Jesus is not at all visible.

On special stamps to mark the occasion (the birthday of Jesus Christ!) it is more likely to find some wintery scene or a panto character – for Jesus is hardly visible in today’s Christmas.

It seems that the western world celebrates a Christmas without Christ; a birthday without a birth; and the coming of a kingdom without a king.


But one had to look for Him on the first Christmas night too! I am afraid I never quite appreciated enough the words of the angels to the shepherds: “You will find a baby…” What an encouragement and promise. You will surely find Him if you go and look for Him. Therefore so did the shepherds and later the magi.


Can those who are seeking more this Christmas than just the mince pies, mould wine and good time, find Him? Can they find Him in us that are called to be His followers? Let us seek and display Him in our celebrations. May we find Him afresh in our midst, in our lives, so that we will be able to show His love and power when the celebrations are gone. For we are celebrating a living Saviour whose return we are awaiting.


Have a blessed Christmas and a Happy New Year.

With every blessing,

From your minister, George

In memory of Jack Gregor

November 11, 2008 by Web Administrator  
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From the Manse – Oct 2008

November 8, 2008 by  
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My Dear Friends

This summer has been as sunny and dry as many expected it to be. Nevertheless, did you have a nice summer? For a pleasant time depends a great deal upon what did you make of it? Even a wet, dreich time can be fulfilling and pleasant if one made the most of it.

Last week, we had five students from Transylvania staying with us for a few days. For the last three summers they got into a car, well stocked with food from home, and they travelled around Europe.This year, they came to the British Isles. The weather wasn’t the best, but that did not bother them too much. One day, they rode up to Loch Ness and back! Surely sunshine would have made their trip even more pleasant, but even so they made the most of the opportunity.

During the Olympic Games we could witness how athletes made the most of their opportunities, mentioning just a few, the swimmer Michael Phelps, the runner Usain Bolt, the Scottish cyclist Chris Hoy or, coming a bit closer to home, Stephen Park who had instrumental part in coaching the British sailing team to collect five medals (three of which are gold). The British Olympic Team made the most of the opportunity also. While initially hoping to be about the eighth on the medal table, they achieved an amazing fourth place! If you think about it the conditions at Beijing were not idyllic at all. The heat and the smog did not help the competitors. Still, what mattered was to make the most of the given opportunity. And they did! We hope that the British Paralympians will also make the most of their opportunity at the Paralympics (6-11 September), in which, together with Helensburgh, we will follow with great interest the progress of young Gordon Reid in the tennis tournament.

The rich young man did not make anything of the great opportunity he received (cf. Matthew 19:16-30)! And what an opportunity he had! He wanted to get eternal life and to his question he got the answer from Jesus. His quest was over, he had the answer. He even received an invitation from Jesus to follow Him (have you noticed that Jesus did not invite everybody to follow him?). But he turned it down.

At church, we are beginning a new season that will present us with new opportunities. The conditions will not be favourable all the time, but the opportunities will be there. Will we make the most of them? Besides the usual services (Easy Worship and Morning Worship) we will have our Harvest Celebration on the 14th of September, when our retiring offering will support the RNLI, that indeed make the most in saving lives in the most unfavourable conditions!

We will also have the opportunity to celebrate, together with the pupils of Hermitage Primary School, on the 21st of September, a unique opportunity to dedicate the new school year to God’s merciful love.

We also will have the opportunity to adopt a child in prayer, the details of which will follow shortly. Our God, the Lord of all seasons, brings opportunities to us, He gave us His Spirit to make the most of them. Trust in God and in Jesus Christ your Saviour and walk in the power of the Holy Spirit to make the most of the opportunities you receive.

Thought for the week

November 3, 2008 by Web Administrator  
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As a child I was fascinated by my mother’s Russian Doll. Inside it was another doll, and inside that another, and so on. I knew there were five of them, but it was in opening them up that I experienced the wonder of these nested dolls.

The Bible is a bit like that. I know it contains amazing messages for me, but it is in opening it up and delving deeper that I experience the wonders of God’s communication with me. And, unlike the Russian Dolls, there is no end to the hidden insights waiting to be found.

Thought of the week from Paul Dowie

August 9, 2008 by Web Administrator  
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“Foxes have holes and birds of the air have nests, but the Son of Man has no place to lay his head” Matthew 8 v 20

Where is home ? Do you feel at home ? We are trying to find a house to live in as a family. When you are without a permanent house, and know that you have to move on to a new house it reveals how much we draw on it for security and identity. It tells us how much and how little a house matters. Many never feel at home anywhere – and this may not be so bad if we are looking to our heavenly home.

In the meantime home, rather than a house, with all that comes with it – family, schools, neighbours, church – and the good and bad in all of these – is the place that we grow up in and continue to be shaped by. It is amazing and frightening as a parent to think of how much is moulded in the home. It is where we continue to discover our potential and our limitations. It is where we get a true measure of learning how to live with ourselves and others. Home and family is the workshop; I hope sometimes the artist’s studio; and too often the hospital where God has moulded us and is making us.

We continue to search for a house, a place to provide a roof over our home. As we do this  we seek to listen to what Jesus said so that “…everyone who hears these words of mine and puts them into practice is like a wise man who built his house on the rock.” Matthew 7 v 24

Paul Dowie

Thought for the week from Douglas Sammon

June 9, 2008 by Web Administrator  
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Jesus answered them, “ Whoever wants to serve me must follow me, so that my servant will be where I am.  And my Father will honour anyone who serves me.”
John’s Gospel – chapter 12, verse 26

So what is this event; this life we’ve entered?  Is it a modern decathlon, based on the ten commandments?

Fortunately, it is not: Jesus says it is a single discipline, a pursuit race – following Him.  The medals are for those who stay in His slipstream.

Douglas Sammon

Thought for the week from Melville Mathieson

April 9, 2008 by Web Administrator  
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Often, as we walk along the street looking at other people, we make assumptions regarding their relationships in life. We may assume contentment when we see a smiling face, happiness when we hear someone laugh: so many different observations with so many interpretations. Often this can make us feel less confident and it is not unusual to feel a degree of isolation when everyone around you seems to be in harmony with their surroundings and at ease within themselves.

When we experience this feeling of isolation, it is important to focus on the inner relationship we have with ourselves and God. Our relationship with God is unconditional, constantly supportive and freely available at all times. We truly have a constant source of energy to help us rise, with confidence, to the challenges of our daily lives.

Be strong and of good courage, be not afraid, neither be thou dismayed; for the Lord thy God is with thee whether soever thou goest.

Lord, help us to appreciate the many blessings you have given us to lead our daily lives. May we use them to the best of our abilities that others may share the joy of your presence.
Amen

Melville Mathieson

Thought for the week from John Stephen

March 9, 2008 by Web Administrator  
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I recently arrived at church rather earlier than usual for our 11am service. This allowed me precious time to sit quietly and contemplate the importance of my connection to St Columba. I realised that church plays a vital part in my life and rightly so.

Of course, when I think of the church I am thinking of more than just a building. The bible refers to the church as a body of people who are united in their devotion to Jesus rather than as a building or organisation. In fact early Christians met for worship in ordinary houses before Christian churches were built. St Columba gives us many important things. Among these is the precious opportunity to enjoy fellowship with closeness to God and  fellow Christians.

Like most people, I tend to take many of Gods blessings for granted. From now on I shall try to fully appreciate the importance of this fellowship. If you feel the same, perhaps you might like to say this shorty for the opportunity to come nearer to You in our church. Please help us to seek fellowship, coming together with fellow Christians in the name of Jesus. Please help us also to reach out to those who cannot always join us in church. This we ask through Jesus Christ our Lord, Amen.

John Stephen