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Children's Day service by singing
the hymn 690. The hymn 690, Jesus bid us shine
with a clear, pure light, like a little candle burning in the
night. In this world is darkness, so we must shine, you in your
small corner and I in mine. The hymn 690, we're going to
stand while we sing. ♪ Jesus is a shine without limit
♪ In this world of darkness, don't
be too shy. In your small corner, don't be
too shy. Jesus lives to shine, first of
all, for him. Where he sees and knows Him,
his heart and voice sing. He lives high from heaven to
the sea of shine. Here in your small corner and
now in mine. ♪ Jesus brings us shine and for
all are gone ♪ ♪ Many kinds of darkness in this world upon ♪
♪ Sin and war and sorrow so lowly must shine ♪ ♪ Universal corner
and light divine ♪ Let us just bow together in prayer. Let us take a moment just to
settle ourselves, to close our eyes, and to ask for the Lord's
presence and help with us here this Sabbath morning. Our gracious
God and eternal Heavenly Father, we thank Thee for the privilege
that is ours of coming before Thee. We thank Thee for our access
We rejoice that thou hast told us even to come boldly, and we
come boldly this morning to praise and to give thanks unto thy great
name. We thank thee for the gift of
thy Son, the Lord Jesus Christ. We rejoice that at Calvary he
died, he rose again, so that whosoever believeth in him should
not perish but have everlasting life. And Lord, it is our prayer
this morning that each and every one whether they're young or
elderly, that they might look unto thee and know thy so great
salvation. We thank you for the Sabbath
school. We thank thee for every boy and
girl For the word of God that has been taught to them, we ask,
Lord, that thou wouldst hide it deep in their hearts. We ask
especially for them this morning, as they would take part in the
service, we ask, Lord, that thou wouldst take away nervousness,
and that it might not be a chore to them, but that it might be
a blessing even to their souls this morning. so be with them.
We thank thee for our Sabbath school teachers, and we pray,
Lord, that thou wouldst bless them. Over the last year, they've
been giving out the word of God, and we pray this morning that
thou wouldst be with them and bless them. And Lord, we come
this morning and we remember those who are not able to be
with us. We think of the elderly of our congregation. We think
of those who are sick. We think very especially this
morning of those who are in hospital. We remember, Lord, our sister,
Mrs. Bagley. We ask for thy hand upon
her. We think also this morning of
of Kyle and we pray Lord that you would be with him and we
ask that you would give to the doctors wisdom and guidance and
undertake for them. We thank you for thy hand upon
the Reverend McLernan for bringing him through his surgery. We pray,
Lord, that you would continue to touch him and undertake for
him, even at this time. Others, Lord, who are going through
bereavement, we think of the Stitt family. We ask, Lord, that
you would be with them. We pray that they might know
thy sustaining grace in this time of need. And so, Lord, we
pray that thou wouldst be with us this morning and that thou
wouldst help Samuel as he would introduce the various parts of
the service, and, Lord, that in all things that thy name would
be lifted up and that thou wouldst be greatly glorified. So hear our prayer and be with
us this morning, for we ask these things in thy name and for thy
glory. Amen. Amen. Could I just at this
stage of the service bid each of you a very warm welcome. Of
course, we welcome very especially the members of the Sabbath School.
Without you here this morning, our service would be very short
indeed. But we thank you for coming, for practicing. And we're
looking forward to you taking part this morning. Also, welcome
everyone. We have a number of visitors
with us. We appreciate you taking the time to come along. And I know that as you hear the
Sabbath school taking part, your own heart will be blessed. And they've been working hard
for this morning. And the theme, not only this
morning, but the theme throughout the day, is missionary work. Of course, one of the great pioneer
missionaries was David Livingstone. He left Scotland and he went
to Africa, dark Africa, no light of the gospel, and he faced many,
many hardships. And he said, if a commission
by an earthly keen is considered an honor, how can a commission
by a heavenly King be considered a sacrifice. And whether we're
called to be a missionary in some remote part of the world
or a missionary here in Lurgan, it is an honor, it's an honor
to serve the Lord. So I trust that as the boys and
girls take part this morning that our hearts all will be challenged
afresh. I also want to say a very warm
word of welcome to our special speaker this morning, the Reverend
Ron Johnson. Before Mr. Johnson was a minister
here at home, he was a missionary away out in Papua New Guinea. So he's an ideal speaker for
this morning when the theme is missionary. And boys and girls,
if you don't know where Papua New Guinea is, here's your challenge
for today. If you've got a map at home,
you get a map and you look up and find Papua New Guinea. Or if you haven't a map, you
can Google it. Maybe the quicker way of getting it. So we welcome
our brother. along this morning, also welcome
Mrs. Johnson, and she of course was a missionary in Papua New
Guinea as well, so we welcome them today. I have an easy day,
so having done that, I'm going to ask our brother Mr. Todd to
come to make the announcements at this stage, and then immediately
after that, our brother Mr. Samuel Dominga is going to introduce
the program for the boys and girls. Well, good morning, everyone.
Could I reiterate the welcome that the Reverend Murray has
given this morning to one and all, the boys and girls, mums
and dads and family members with us this morning. It's good to
see you in God's house. We have a few visiting with us
as well. I see the Reverend and Mrs. Timothy
Nelson with us, and I see also Mr. Matthew Hall all the way
from Tasmania. You're very welcome with us this morning. Could I
also give a warm welcome once again to the Reverend Dr. Ron
Johnson, who's our guest speaker for today. I'll try and get through
the announcements as quickly as I can. Do please bear with
me, there are quite a few. First of all, a reminder about
our evening service tonight at seven o'clock. Sunday school
children will be taking part once again, and you're all invited
back again for our evening Children's Day service. That service will
be preceded by a time of prayer in the committee room for those
who join with us in prayer. The midweek meeting will be on
Tuesday at 8 p.m. and this Tuesday it will be a deputation meeting
on behalf of FAME who are seeking to help to reach the people of
Kenya about 100 miles northeast of Nairobi. There will be a video
presentation introduced by Mr. Rodney Davison and an offering
will be lifted in support of that work on Tuesday evening. Services next Lord's Day will
be at half past 11 and 7 p.m. with times of prayer in the committee
room beforehand Since we couldn't have our normal communion service
this morning, then communion will be held following the morning
service next Lord's Day. As some of you already know,
Mr. Aaron Fitzsimons has received a call from the John Knox Memorial
Congregation in Belfast. That call will be presented to
him at the presbytery this Friday night, at which Mr. Fitzsimons
will be given the opportunity to respond. In light of this,
Mr. Fitzsimons will give a personal
word of testimony next Sunday evening, and tell of the Lord's
leading in his life. In appreciation of his service
to this congregation, all loose money next Sunday evening will
go to support him as he seeks to do the will of God. The offering for Let the Bible
Speak last Lord's Day came to £325, and we thank you for your
continued support for that work. As you are aware, Let the Bible
Speak have been using our back hall to record their TV broadcasts
for a number of years, but are moving shortly to a new studio
in Ohoho. And they would like to have a
photograph of the congregation to remember their time here.
That photograph will be taken this Tuesday evening at half
past seven sharp before the prayer meeting. And we would encourage
a good crowd to come along, not just those who are directly involved
with LTBS here and the recordings, but any and all who have taken
part over the years in the services. So that will be at half past
seven this Tuesday, if you'd like to be included. Maybe you
wouldn't like to be included in the photograph, but if you would
be, that's half past seven this Tuesday evening. The final broadcast
to be recorded here will be on Thursday the 13th of June. The
Lurgan congregation have been invited to be that audience.
Therefore, we will be canceling our prayer meeting on Tuesday
that week, and I encourage you to come along on the Thursday
evening instead. I will leave out a sheet on the
hall table this morning. LTBS obviously like to know how
many are coming so that they can fill the seats. So I will
be leaving a sheet out on the hall table this evening and also
on Tuesday. If you would like to come along
that Thursday, please do fill your name in on the sheet just
to give us an idea of numbers. And then just an announcement
here from the Sunday school. The annual Sunday school trip,
as in previous years, will be on Saturday, the 15th of June,
going to the Ark Open Farm. Lunch will be provided for everyone.
A coach will be provided for transport. After the farm, we
will continue our day back at the church for a barbecue, games,
and bouncy castle. If anyone requires a lift from
home to the church and back, the buses will be doing their
normal route from 9 AM. All children must be accompanied
by an adult, and we trust it will be an enjoyable day for
all. There will be no Sunday school next week, and it will
recommence on Sunday, the 15th of September, God willing. We
trust you will have a blessed, safe, and enjoyable summer, and
look forward to welcoming all the boys and girls back in September.
The itinerary for the trip is half past nine, we'll be leaving
the church. Half past 10, approximately arrive
at the farm. Half past 12, picnic lunch. Half
past two, leave the farm. Half past three, arrive back
at the church for fun and games. five o'clock, barbecue, and then
six o'clock finish. Could I also say that tonight
there will be supper in the Minor Hall, so please don't rush away
tonight. If you're here at the service
tonight, please stay for that supper. You'd be very welcome
to join with us, and trust that the Lord will bless our service
tonight once again. Thank you very much. It's really good to see such
a good turnout this morning to Children's Day, and I really
do appreciate you coming out to see the boys and girls. And
as Mr. Murray has said, our theme is
missionary work. And it's been said missionaries
are often far away from their home, their families, and their
friends. But they are willing to go wherever
the Lord sends them. And remember that God supplies
their every need. We thank thee. So we're going
to start. You're going to get a big, big
welcome from Sarah's class. And we have Lois, Sarah, Jane,
Jacob, and Summer. And Sarah also will be filling
in for two children because they couldn't make it this morning.
OK. Welcome. We're not too young
for glad to say we speak to Jesus on his day. We're here to tell
you about God's love and sending his son as heaven above. He said
he's worth for all he's said. Please open your heart and let
him in. That was really good, thank you.
Now we have Melissa's class, we have Noah and Elijah. That was really good. Thank you. Now
we will have the junior choir. And they'll be singing, how great
is our God, my God is so big, and God made the stars to shine.
♪ Great is our God ♪ ♪ How great
is his name ♪ The great is our God, forever
the same. He will bathe the waters of the
mighty Red Sea. And He said, I'll never leave
you, have to trust in me. My God is so big, so strong and
so mighty, there's nothing my God cannot do. My God is so big,
so strong and so mighty, there's nothing my God cannot do. The rivers are His, the mountains
are His, the stars are His and they work too. My God is so big,
so strong and so mighty, there's nothing my God cannot do. Oh, when the stars do shine, twinkle, twinkle,
lead me, And this is why I love Him For
me He bled and died The Lord of all creation Became the Crucified
He also He made the sun to shine on everyone. He made the rain and snow and
the flowers that grow. And this is why I love Him, for me
He bled and died, the Lord of all creation. ♪ Became the crucified
♪ Now we're going to have Ruth's
class. And the title is One Need Not Go to Foreign Land. And that's
by Phoebe, Joshua, Annie, Charlie, and Lily. We need not go to foreign land. We need not go to foreign land
to be a missionary. Just do the work that is in hand,
that all that is necessary. For we can stumble both our hair
in this and that island nation. Don't be surprised if some appear
among your own relation. If you would save a soul or two,
do not wash across the seas. There's plenty here for you to
do. Why not save a few of these? If saving souls be what ye crave,
ye will not have far to roam. First ask the Lord for your own
to save, then do mission work at home. Well done. Now we have Alice
from Sean Walker's class, and she'll be doing a Bible reading
of Romans chapter 10, verse 15. This morning I will be reading
from Romans chapter 10 verse 15. And how shall they preach,
except they be sent, as it is written, how beautiful are the
feet of them that preach the gospel of peace and bring the
tidings of good things. Well done, Alice. Now we're going
to have the full choir, Sunny School Choir, and they'll be
singing Children All Around the World. So, across the land and sea. Then he did not Jesus die, but
this, he set them free. Who would go against the newborn
Lord sent me? Jesus loves the little children. ♪ All the children of the world
♪ ♪ They're yellow, black, and white ♪ ♪ All are precious in
His sight ♪ ♪ Jesus loves the little children of the world
♪ He died and came alive again
and lives in heaven today. Help me go and let them know
the Lord is my way. all the children of the world. Jesus, Savior, God, most High,
in the glory that's within, Jesus, Light of all the children of
the world. ♪ Bring them in from the fields
of sin ♪ ♪ Bring them in, bring them in ♪ ♪ Bring the wandering
ones to Jesus ♪ ♪ We will go and let the noble Lord stand
with us ♪ Very well done, boys and girls.
Now we're going to have the offering hymn. And it is number 695. I am so glad that our Father
in heaven will keep our seats for the first part of the hymn,
please. I am so glad our Father in heaven
Has always loved and ever be has been Wonderful things in
the life that I see This is the nearest that Jesus loves me I
am so glad that Jesus loves me Jesus loves me Jesus loves me
I am so glad that Jesus loves me, Jesus loves me greatly. Though I forget and I wander
away, still He will follow me wherever I stay. Back to His
dear, loving arms will I flee, when I remember that Jesus loves
me. I am so glad that Jesus loves
me. Jesus loves me. Jesus loves me. I am so glad
that Jesus loves me. Jesus loves me, baby. Jesus loves
me, and I know I love him. have a I am so glad that Jesus loves
me. Jesus loves me. Jesus loves me. I am so glad that Jesus loves
me. Jesus loves me when he... We'll start in the same place. have a Now that Jesus loves me, Jesus
loves even me. Oh, and there's only one soul
I can see, when in His beauty I see the great King. This shall my song in eternity
be. Jesus loves me. I am so glad
that Jesus loves me. Jesus loves me. Jesus loves me. I am so glad that Jesus loves
me. Jesus loves me. Now we're going to have Frances'
class, and the title is Obeying God's Call. We have Louisa, Jonah,
Harry, Jake, and Oliver. And after their piece, we'll
call. Obeying God's call. Every Christian
is a missionary. Every non-Christian, a mission
failed. Missionaries throughout history
have been travelling all over the world in obedience to the
call of the Great Commission. If Jesus Christ be God and died
for me, then no sacrifice could be too great for me to make for
him. So I'm teaching my kids how to
read and write. I support families through kindness
and God's love. Missionaries are often far from
home and away from their families and friends, but they will go
willingly, knowing that God is with them and will supply their
every need. Missionaries help communities
in practical ways. Some help build houses and schools. If God calls you to be a missionary,
don't stoop to be a king. Well done, boys and girls. You've
done really, really well. So proud of us all. Also, it's
my great pleasure to introduce our speaker for today. He's no
stranger to us, the Reverend Dr. Ron Johnson. And he's preached
here many, many, many times. And I'm going to ask him now
to come and tell a lesson, please. Thank you. Well done, boys and girls. That
was tremendous to listen to and wonderful, wonderful truths.
Now, if you come back tonight, I'll be showing you in the pictures
where Papua New Guinea is. And I'm going to bring along
tonight something that you've probably never seen, a stone
axe, and it's a real one. Because the people we lived among
in Papua New Guinea, some of the people still used stone axes. Some of them had never seen metals. But you come along this evening. Now, I've been asked to speak
about missionary work. And here's a great verse of scripture,
Romans chapter 1. The apostle Paul, a great missionary,
wrote this. For I am not ashamed of the gospel
of Christ, For it is the power of God unto salvation. A missionary is someone who tells
others. They go on a mission. They go
on a responsibility to tell others the good news of the Lord Jesus
Christ. And I want to tell you about
a girl called Helen. And at 12 years of age, she went
to Sunday school. But at that age, she began her
missionary work. And you know her missionary work
reached all around the world by the time that she died. And when I see this, and I have
a bar here, and it's half eaten, and I didn't eat it, but Cadbury's,
you've all seen Cadbury's, and I wonder which favorite bar is
yours. Let me tell you a secret. Reverend
Thomas Murray likes fruit and nut. Okay? Cadbury's chocolate. And every
time I see Cadbury's chocolate, I think about Helen. I say, well,
why do you think about Helen? Did she eat so much chocolate?
Well, that's not really the reason. You see, Helen grew up in a family
where they drank coca a lot because her grandfather had a tea and
coffee shop in Birmingham. And then when he saw all the
drunkenness and the sorrow that came through alcohol, he decided
to introduce a drink Coca, or hot chocolate. Have you tried
it? Well, he introduced it way back in the early 1800s. And
then his two sons developed chocolate bars, all the different bars
I showed you. And Helen's dad and uncle, not
just a sweet shop, but a chocolate factory. Can you imagine that,
boys and girls? your daddy owning a chocolate
factory. But every day, they would eat coca. In fact, her
father wrote a book about coca. But more importantly, her parents
loved the Lord Jesus Christ. And they sent her along to Sunday
school and other meetings. But she didn't really know the
Lord as her own savior. And at 12 years of age, she went
with her father to a mission hall where he helped. And she
heard the preacher reminding her that she needed to trust
Christ herself. It wasn't enough just to go to
Sunday school and church. So she waited behind after the
meeting was over. And her father came and spoke
to her and asked her, have you decided to give your life to
the Lord? And she said in her book, she
said, yes, Papa, I understand he died for my sins, and I want
to trust him as Savior. Well, she trusted Christ as her
Savior. And because of that, she wanted to tell all her friends
in school Some of them didn't go to Sunday school, some did,
but she wanted to tell others. And so a few weeks later, she
picked up the courage and she spoke to her best friend, Anna.
And she told her, I've become a Christian. Are you a Christian?
You know what Anna said? Of course I'm a Christian. I
go to Sunday school and church. Everybody's a Christian. And
Helen began to tell her, no, no, no. You have to come and
believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, that he died for you on the cross,
and you must come and place your trust in him to be accepted before
God. And Anna wasn't too pleased,
but she came back later, and of course Helen prayed for her,
and she trusted Christ as well. And they began to tell others
about the Lord. And they would open their Bible,
and they would point them to scripture verses. But here's
the problem. You know, it's like in school,
walking about and carrying books and so on. And the Bibles were
big and she would keep a big Bible in her desk at school and
she'd open it and show verses of scripture to her friends to
tell them to believe in the Lord Jesus Christ. But they were so
big. And she said, I wish I had a
smaller one. And she spoke to her father,
and her father said, well, I will get some small New Testaments
printed that you can carry with you. And so the father did that,
and Helen began to tell others in the school about the Lord
Jesus Christ. And one day, her brother and
his friend looked in to a sewing room. See, the Cadburys lived
in a big, big house, and they actually had a room where sewing
was done. They said, what are you doing?
We are sewing pockets onto our little pinafore or dress for
school. And they were sewing, what are
you sewing pockets on your dress for? So that we can put a little
New Testament. That is what he's made for us.
And we're going to carry it in our pocket at school. And we're
going to read it every day. And we formed a club. It's a
special club for school children at our school who promise to
carry their New Testament every day with them, to carry it, to
read it, and to share it with others, and tell them the good
news about the Lord Jesus Christ. Well, our brethren, can we join
as well? Of course you can. And do you
know, when Helen left high school, there were 60 members of this
special club, the Pocket Testament League. Now to join it, you had
to sign. You had to sign that you would
read your New Testament every day and share it with others. Well, the time came when she
had to leave school and she went to college. And one of her teachers
said she was a Christian. But here's what's so sad. You
know what she told Helen? Oh yes, I'm a Christian like
you. But you know, there's parts of the Bible aren't really true.
And you can't believe it all. Some of the stories mean creation,
we don't believe that. We believe in evolution. No,
no, there's some nice stories in the Bible, but it's not really
true all the way through. And Helen was really confused. She couldn't understand that.
Surely the Bible's God's word. How can it not be true? And she
was confused. And you know what happened? She
wasn't reading her Bible every day. And it came where she wasn't
praying every day. Well, her father decided to take
the family on a trip. And this was back in the 1800s,
a long, long time ago, away to the Middle East, to Egypt and
Israel and places. They were very rich, of course.
And on that trip, her father took ill and died. And so Helen and her mother had
to come back to England. And there was a large funeral
for her father. Over 10,000 people attended her father's funeral.
He was so, so well known. Helen was so sad. And you know
what she realized? I need to come back to the Lord.
And she opened up her Bible again and began to read the Bible and
attend the church and go to the meetings and begin to tell others.
Remember, I'm not ashamed of the gospel of Christ. She began
to tell others about the Lord Jesus Christ. Well, a great mission
came to England by an evangelist called Reuben Torrey. And he
had a song leader. And his name was Charles Alexander. Now some of you older ones here
remember the Alexander hymn books, do you? No, anybody remember
the Little Red Alexander hymn books? Well, Charles Alexander,
he had great evangelist campaigns. And Helen brought around some
of the poor areas in Birmingham, and she would bring some of the
young ladies with her to the meeting and sit with them. And
when they came forward to accept Christ, she would go up with
them, put her arm around them, and help lead them to Christ.
And she saw Charles Alexander, this American. And you know what
happened? They fell in love and got married.
And from then, she traveled many, many places in the world. As
I said, Belfast, yes? We came to Belfast on a great
mission in St. George's Market. I have a photo
of it at home in the book. But one day, Charles Alexander,
another evangelist, said, it's so sad that there are many people
don't read the Bible. And even those who come forward
in the meetings to be saved, we need to encourage them to
read the Bible every day. And Helen heard these evangelists
speak. You know what she said? Well,
Charles, Reuben Torrey, Wilbur Chapman, those were their names,
You saw it at the start of the Pocket Testament League. The
what? What's that? I've never heard
of it. Oh, when I was at school, a 12-year-old, we began a club
for the schoolchildren, and we had 60 members, and we had a
Pocket Testament League, and we covenanted, we promised that
we would read the Bible every day. And so they started the
Pocket Testament League in London, over in Canada, in Australia,
in America, they set up the Pocket Testament League. And you know,
New Testaments went all around the world. Millions of them,
millions of them have gone around the world since that day, and
they've had many, many, many missionaries down through the
years giving out the New Testaments. But you know, the First World
War came, and you know, they gave out millions of New Testaments,
and I have one of them here. One of the little New Testaments
that they would give to the soldiers, and there was Many received them. That's a picture of this one
when they went off to war. The very first time they went
out in 1914, there were 400,000 given out and many more. And it had in it there, as you
might be able to see, a little statement. And it said, believing
that the Lord Jesus Christ died for me, I now accept him as my
savior. I trust him to blot out all my
sins. And there's another page where
you could put your name. and it asked people to promise
that they would read the Bible every day and carry it with them.
And there was even a song in it. I don't know the tune it
goes to, but here are the main words of it. Carry your Bible
with you. That repeated over and over again.
Carry your Bible with you. Carry your Bible with you. Well,
during the World War I, a soldier was in battle and he had his
little New Testament in his pocket. And there it is, it's on the
screen. That's in a museum in England. That pocket New Testament
saved his life. But you know what's even more
wonderful? Giving out the New Testament that tells us how to
be saved has saved many, many, many people by giving them eternal
life. that they'll never be in hell
forever, but through the Lord Jesus Christ. And from then,
it went on and on. I just want to quickly tell you
a little story. It would take hours to tell it.
There are books and books on it. You see, this week, there's
an anniversary of D-Day. when the Allied soldiers, that's
Britain, America, and so on, went back into France and pushed
Germany back. Well, anyway, not going to, you'll
probably hear about it this week, maybe in school and so on. Well,
during the Second World War, Japan came into the war and they
attacked the American fleet at Pearl Harbor. And the commander
of the planes, Fuchida, not, try the rest of his name. He
cried the famous words, Torah, Torah, Torah. There's a movie
of that. A movie of that. Nelder and My
Last Church bought it for me on a DVD. Very famous. And they, so many American battleships
were destroyed in the harbor. It was a very famous time. Because
of it, America come into the war. And maybe, boys and girls,
you know American soldiers were stationed in Lurgan here. Isn't
that right, Brownlow House? Well, Second World War. Well,
the man who led it, he wasn't a Christian, of course. He didn't
believe it. But let me tell you about another man. He was an
American. And when he heard what had happened at Pearl Harbor,
he was mad and hated the Japanese. And he joined the Navy, but it
was a pilot off the battleships. And he was shot down. And he
became a prisoner of war in a Japanese prisoner of war camp. But you
know, he came to know the Lord Jesus Christ as Savior, and God
gave him a love for the Japanese people. And after the war, he
went back as a missionary to the very city that he had bombed,
and he started a church there, the very city that he had bombed. Well, one day, this man who had
commanded the planes was going through the town, and he was
handed a tract And it was, I was a prisoner of war of the Japanese. And it was that American missionary. And because he read it, but he
thought Christianity is a foreign religion. I don't want anything
to do with it. And he met a man, he had no one
who had served in the Japanese army, hadn't seen him for years.
And he said, Fuchido, I'm a Christian now. What? That foreign religion? What's wrong with you? Oh, when
we were in the camp, a missionary and his wife were killed in the
camp. But you know their daughter, she cared for us. She would come
and help us and we were their guards and we'd say, why are
you doing this? And the girl would say, because
I love the Lord Jesus Christ, and I want you to know him. But
your parents were killed by us. Oh, no, I want you to, and I've
trusted Christ. Well, all that, you know what
happened? That man, Fichito, came to know the Lord Jesus Christ
as a savior. And here's the interesting thing. Do you know what he became? Think
of it, the pilot that led the attack in that war. through an
American former pilot, came to know Christ, and he became a
worker for the Pocket Testament League. He actually went around
preaching, preaching with the American around the world, telling
their story of how the Lord Jesus Christ had saved them. And that's
the one I should have said, that's the motto. They're still around
today. They've given out well over 100 million Hundred million
New Testaments. The Pocket Testament League produces
Gospel of John's to give out. Hundreds and hundreds of thousands.
When the King was crowned last year, they published hundreds
of thousands of Gospel of John's with the King's photo on the
front. Giving out the Word of God, that's
missionary work. Not being ashamed of the Gospel
of Christ. You see, part of missionary work
is getting the Bible out. God's Word. getting literature
out. On Thursday, my wife and I went
with Reverend and Mrs. Murray and others from the church
here with the friendship group. And we went to the Revival Association. That's up in Canalham. And we
were amazed, amazed at the millions of items of literature that they've
sent around the world. Last year, I think from memory,
3.8 million pounds they brought in to support it. Now, here's
boys and girls, how it brings it back to you. To support the
printing of New Testaments like this and gospel, Sunday schools
and churches give offerings. And that's where our money goes
to, to help print the word of God. And of course, think of
it, a 12-year-old girl who was not ashamed of the gospel of
Christ, and what an influence, what an influence. She died in
1969, and I was alive back then. and many of you older ones, she
died at 92. What a legacy she left. 12 year
old, age of some of you, and she came and said, I'm going
to trust Christ for myself. And she believed in Christ. And
she began to tell her friends. And they came to Christ, and
she formed the pocket testament league that promised to read
her Bible every day. So I ask you, children and older,
have you trusted the Lord Jesus Christ as your savior? Have you
believed in him to blot out your sins? And who knows what God
can do with your life? Be a missionary. You can be a
missionary here. And that's the verse that's on
Helen's grave. That's the verse. For I am not
ashamed of the gospel of Christ. And if you were to go to England,
and see her gravestone, you know the gravestone, that's what you
would see on it. And what is a missionary? Someone
who is not ashamed of the gospel of Christ. That's why there's
a Sunday school. May the Lord enable us all to
trust in the Lord Jesus Christ and to be missionaries for him. Could I thank the Reverend Johnson
for bringing the Word of God to each of us. And I trust boys
and girls, not only boys and girls, but dads and moms, that
you'll take up that challenge and that you will give out the
Word of God, be a missionary for the Lord. Someone once came
to William Booth the founder of the Salvation Army, and said,
well, I haven't been called to do that. Well, William Booth
turned and said, not called, did you say, not heard the call,
I think you should say, put your ear down to the Bible and hear
him, and bid you go and pull sinners out of the fire. God
has challenged us today, and I trust that we'll take that
challenge and be little missionaries and big missionaries for the
Savior. We're going to close our service
by singing the hymn 334. It was down at the feet of Jesus,
O the happy, happy day, that my soul found peace in believing,
and my sins were washed away. The hymn 334 will stand while
we sing. It was hard at the feet of Jesus
for a happy, happy day, and my soul found peace in believing,
and my sins were washed away. Let me tell the old, old story
Of His grace so full and free For I feel I'm giving Him the
glory For His wondrous love to me of Jesus, were thy heart such
perfect rest, were the life were strong of thy spirit, and thy
soul was free. Let me tell thee of God's glory,
of His grace so firm and free. For I feel I'm giving Him the
glory for His wondrous love to me. It was by that feet of Jesus,
where I brought my guilt and sin, and He cancelled all my
transgressions. Remain standing for prayer. Our
Father in Heaven, we thank Thee for Thy presence with us We thank
Thee for help given to the Sabbath school members. We thank Thee
for the challenge of Thy word. And Lord, our prayer is that
each and every one might come to know Thee as Savior. And Lord, that trusting Thee
enable us then to be witnesses to carry forth thy word, and
to seek to deposit it, if not in the hands and the hearts and
minds of men and women, boys and girls. We thank thee, faith,
cometh by hearing, and hearing by the word of God. And so, Lord,
hear this, our prayer. Part us now with thy blessing.
Take us to our homes in safety. Be with the boys and girls. Bless
them as they would take part this evening, and be with us. For we ask these things in thy
name and for thy glory. Amen. Amen.
Children's Day - Missionary Work - Rev Ron Johnston
Children's Day Service- Dr Johnston tells the story of Helen Cadbury of Cadbury's chocolate fame. Her influence in spreading the gospel to many soldiers during war time and others since.
| Sermon ID | 62241739388156 |
| Duration | 58:12 |
| Date | |
| Category | Special Meeting |
| Language | English |
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