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Showing posts with label Dingwall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dingwall. Show all posts

Thursday 15 September 2022

Dingwall Baptist Church Induction

 

Induction Dingwall Baptist Church

On the 3rd of September 2022 I was privileged to be at Alness Baptist Church, where I had been a member twice in the past, to witness the induction of Stephen Ilett into the Dingwall Baptist Church. This Church is relatively new, constituted April 1999 from like-minded people, some having previously been in Baptist fellowships, and the Church called the US Baptist Missionary William Rainey as Pastor. I was secretary  and worship leader for a period before moving south of the border to work for a  Charity in Cambridge.

Both Churches had grown from the work of individual pioneers.

Alness  Bill Clark

( BUS supported work. Bill holding church in cafes in the 70’s!!)

Dingwall William Rainey

(American Baptist supported by Churches from the USA)

Stephen Ilett, I knew from the Alness days and he like I had been “Sent” to support the work by the Alness Church.

The day in question was emotional as I met people from 20 and 40 years ago under the same roof. That roof on the Alness Church was a new repaired one, but that is another story. The ceremony was in line with the Baptist Unions template and the Union was represented by Martin Hodson, General Director of th Baptist Union of Scotland.

A lightly formal meeting was concluded with an encouraging preach from the Alness Pastor Robert Adair followed by the Alness Church putting on the customary food and teas.

The conclusion of the day for me was seeing a friend take up the formal post of a church which I had been a part.

The church itself like so many is going through a review process to affirm the type of ministry it will have in the community.

Tuesday 10 May 2022

Chatty Chappies!

The facebook group Chatty Chappies has a new programme out this week. We have a few more in the can. Drop in and listen to the crack! Friday 13 May. Chatty Chappies! ( Group)on Facebook

Friday 29 April 2022

Chatty Chappies!

The facebook group Chatty Chappies! is really taking off. Strange that its the "butteries" that has prompted a move forward. Recent programme ( number 4) we talked about butteries an Aberdeen roll locally known as a rowy. There was also a chat about parking in Dingwall. Programme 4 Chatty Chappies! Two more programmes to follow and we hope to record again this coming week.

Thursday 17 May 2018

Highland Church Part five

Despite the challenges of the North and the Presbyterian culture, there can be new pockets of witness, like Dingwall, where I had a vision for a church way back in 1982,- but the work does need commitment. 

The roving activities of someone building relations is important in addressing the Baptist cause. A lack of relationship will surely reduce any possibility of growth. If we are there at the start of the new work in Fortrose then we have an opportunity to help it grow and add value! Strategically there is lots to consider in the Highlands if looking at a Baptist increase in Witness. 

Firstly What is there to be done where might the focus be? Monthly mass worship in different areas? A quasi church that accommodates some who are members of other churches. An electronic fellowship to link those with distance difficulties. What skills are required. Who are key people with a vision and contacts. What sort of budget is required to move forward. Who will fund such a plan. Who has the commitment for year on year work.

 There is a real difference in church life between the Highlands and the Central belt.
Few appreciate the differences and culture that still exists in the Highlands. Nevertheless. the Baptist witness still has an opportunity to captivate people who are not so drawn to a Presbyterian church form. Concluding thought In a wide spread area it is difficult to pull relationships to have a sense of community in church life. There is a difference between a few Christians getting together regularly and a group wishing to constitute as a church.

A Baptist witness in the Highlands needs to have a clear strategy taking into consideration the Highland culture and investing resources in a long term work with mini “splashes“ as a way of promoting both the Kingdom and Baptist Union. Work may not simply rise up from one corner, and therefore the personnel all need to be flexible in “co-coordinating” work rather than “pinned” to a specific geographical area. I have observed that North folks like to see continuity of personnel and a 7 year plan headed by a “known” person will have a good kick start effect on the work. In my time rubbing shoulders with various Free churches in the Highlands there are many active people with a measure of Baptist conviction but found in their parents Church which is not Baptist. What is needed is a concerted group effort assisted and supported by neighbouring Baptist Churches to address the only alternative to Presbyterianism in the Highlands. Churches be they small, who have recently be created tend to affiliate or take pastor leading from those who they know. 

A Baptist increase presence in the Highlands could encourage groups to grow and in turn constitute to a Baptist fellowship. I sense if we are not there at the beginning we will never be able to help. Finally I would encourage any strategic plan to be most of all encouraging groups to “listen to God” All leaflets and correspondence need to be measured against this observation. Baptists have taken 250 years to conclude their theology,new churches are only on the road to discovery. However right from the start Baptist understanding should be incorporated and I am sure that this “fresh to the hearers” approach will strike a warm cord. A feedback session from Church representatives from neighbouring Baptist churches would be a good starting point to formulate a strategy, a plan, and the implementing of a blessed work.

 May God add to our numbers and maturity as we seek his face.

Highland Church part four

Consider scripture, there is no divide “The Enlightenment” and future generations have created the myth about a secular and non – secular world.

How damaging that is. We know we do not need to go to a church building to pray, yet we constantly compartmentalise on the basis of modernity. The secular / non secular dos/ and don't s might have worked for a generation but scripture calls for a more radical reformed “reform!”.


The result of this secular divide is the thought that God is no longer required; based on the modernity of the church it is no wonder. 
 

The emerging church folks, have noted that the church needs to be wholly working in the community and certainly not seen as a non secular group of people. Their worship is less scripted with beginnings and ends and more of a flow of what was happening before “formal worship”.

However we are in this post modern post Christianity era where people are discovering mysticism and spirituality. All the more the Church can bring God to the spiritual seeking community who are not in this generation stuck in a dual format of thinking of secular and non-secular. The work in the Highlands could grow if a long term commitment could be made by the Union. When churches are joining and constricting under Synod instructions at the disapproval of the members an opportunity to promote the “local church - Baptistic” could well have success once more.



I appreciate we cannot fund 27 Baptist missionaries in the Highlands like in the past but there is a need to have a presence and to support Christians who wish to worship and be an evangelical witness North of Perth.



Apart for the extensive work of the Perth Christian Centre there are a few itinerant ministries.



Despite the challenges of the North and the Presbyterian culture, there can be new pockets of witness, like Dingwall, where I had a vision for a church way back in 1982,- but the work does need commitment.

Sunday 13 May 2018

New Church in the Highlands ...Take stock Part One



A brief look at the Baptist Witness and increase in particular for the Highlands and Islands of Scotland by Brian Robertson





Background



With some years working in the Highlands, then away and back again several times, I have had the opportunity to be in church circle and observe the changing state over a 25 year gap.



During that time I have been in leadership in Alness, Thurso, Perth, Dingwall, Pitlochry and now back in Perth. In two of these situations I was privileged to see a fresh growth in maturity and numbers in the Church. I have also spent time South of the border and seen other church situations. I draw on this experience with also my Baptist origins in Stirling to comment on the Highlands and Islands work.

But before that, it is important to consider the current situation in the Western world.



Why must the Western Church study Culture today?



  • Because of the incarnation. Jesus did it.
  • Cultural understanding is essential as good mission practise
  • Christendom and Modernity are in rapid decline
  • The West is in the midst of a huge cultural shift
  • The Church is in decline (numerically)
  • Current church practises are cultural accommodations to a society that no longer exists
  • Primary modes of communications in the Western world and culture have changed.
  • New culture means new organisational structures are required.
  • The “Boomers”(over 46's) are the last generation happy with “modern Church”
  • Increase appeal of Spirituality derived from other religions
  • Many Christians no longer follow the religion of their parents' 2nd generation not coming through!



However it would be worth the Baptist community considering the future “state of play” so that we can be effective where we are in the changing world. This, with the Spirit of God blessing the plans, and activity could turn the community around and increase the Kingdom. This is particularly relevant to the Highlands who, as a new generation, are looking for spirituality but all they know is Presbyterianism.





The days of Sankey we know are over but, so too, the days of Hillsong and other Modern large praise events are probably on the decline.

Some churches are doing a “new” old church, when maybe the answer is a “new” new church!



I sense with others that the new generation of believers are looking for reality in Christian practise, no religiousness, more reflectiveness, less clutter and a strong “missional” discipleship under the code name in America of “Spiritual Formation”. (“Google” Spiritual formation!)



It is not a simple matter of the Church re branding. The changes in culture have been too great for church to change in “window display”. Recall in the past the printing press and the education of the community linked to the church. The corresponding requirement for an engaging church in the community, that is not a sub-culture, but is, or changes, the culture is clear. This has not to be a liberal or compromising stance but rather relevance, rediscovery,and, in fact more biblically based mission. The “Hillsongs” mega churches might not survive even if they don't ever make an impact in Highland Scotland.


The church needs to be looking at ways to deal with those who want to be submerged in the culture and not seen to be different from others and to the individualists who make a stand on their pet conviction. A tough task. Yet I think there are those being groomed by God for the job, some closer than you think.



What is happening



Pockets of interest have been formed who want to move towards a commitment together. In November 2007 15 were baptised as believers in Brora- did the Union know? Were they invited?



There are “Baptistic” gatherings in Castletown, Dornoch, Lairg, Brora, Tain.....



Thirty years ago it was impossible to think of a Baptist Church in Dingwall , yet it has been constituted for more than 10 years. In fact there is another “baptistic” Church in the town.



Stornoway, New Elgin, Argyll, and Fort William have glimmers of hope. Kinlochbervie has like-minded folk.





Possible future



So how does the Church invest in the future in a new church framework that caters for the Highlands and Islands? How does the Baptist Union look at the Highlands?



Is it a duty we better do something or is there a burden to help those who want to press their heads above the Presbyterian plateau? How do Scottish Baptists facilitate the “promotion” of “baptistic” gatherings in areas where Scottish Baptists are simply not known? Especially when these groups have not considered all the Baptist principles that Baptists adhere to. How does a Union accommodate Baptistic groups still on a road of discovery, without it looking like the Union is shoving the group through a Baptist programme, like a mincing machine with groups coming out with the same inclination at the end. North of Inverness Baptists are placed in the group of “strange” people like Mormons and JWs.

How does the Baptist Union promote to non-baptists that there may be similarities in thought?

There are many in the Highlands who watch God TV and want to participate in modern worship. Many have moved to settle in the Highlands with a wider church life experience.






 



I carried out a small survey with a group in Brora who were considering setting up a fellowship. They marked high, Worship, and regular Communion - Baptism was an agreed assumption - their conviction was “believers baptism” .



Reasons for a Baptist Church - Brora feedback Oct 2006










  

Missional

In an age after the post-modernist the structure and effective communication of the Church to the unchurch, requires a total re-think. This is particularly hard for the Highland Presbyterian churches who work from a dated template that in some quarters has lost its relevance. Activities to the unchurch that worked say 20 years ago will not work these days. While the message must stay the same, and there was a danger in the 1970's that the method change messed up the message (not a problem now), the presentation must be appropriate to the audience and age. In a culture of switches, electronic media, i-pods and downloads, there is a clear need for a professional presentation to the masses that engages them before they even enter a church building.

When the large PLC market a new brand or product there are hours and hours of getting the message across and the need for the product goes before the product launch. The hype for X-box 360 started before a box had been created.

I would suggest that today the norm should be power point presentations to support the preaching and words for all praise on visual screens.

One cannot consider the "neglecting the saints .." as a constructive way forward but new ways of communicating new ways of fellowship are inevitable for future generations. 
 

Electronic communications

Role of Internet-Hyperspace is not as relational as face to face.

There are many Internet Churches throughout the world and, although this form of fellowship is good, it does lack the personal relationship with the face to face. Scottish Christian website is a solid communication assisting the church. Interestingly the logs linked to the website have a large number of Scottish Episcopalian contributors. I wonder if this is a denominational preference or an aspect to the age of the ministerial staff. It might also be that one individual had an influence on other clergy colleagues. Nevertheless the use of logs is widening the communication among themselves, their sheep and the wider bloggers. One American church leader said “I engage with the community. If they want to hear me preach, I preach on my blog!”


Thursday 26 October 2006

Rogart flood 26 Oct 2006

This clip was taken at lunch time. I m sure there will be a lot of news regarding the flooding in the Highlands and in particular DINGWALL AT HIGH TIDE 2.30PM.







Tuesday 5 September 2006

Dingwall Baptist Church




Dingwall Baptist Church ...well their building to be accurate!
A Non-Presbyterian Evangelical Church in the Highlands.

Friday 18 August 2006

Dingwall and Strathpeffer Free Church of Scotland















The building of the Free Church of Scotland Dingwall is a fine building sitting proudly at the end of the High Street across from the railway station. I am convinced that Dingwall, geographically, has a strategic importance to the Highland church of the future. Interestingly the Theological College moved to Dingwall from Elgin some years ago.