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Archive for April, 2009

Early Ringwood History: Christadelphians

Thursday, April 23rd, 2009

Ringwood was first settled by Europeans in the early 1850’s (first land sale 1854. Some aboriginals lived in the area before that). For the first 50 years or so, most of the settlers were subsistence farmers, with a strong focus on orchards serving the city markets, but there was a little antimony mining as well. These settlers generally bought land from the crown in multi-acre blocks, organised around the few roads in the district.

These roads have gone on to become the main roads of today’s Ringwood (Whitehorse Rd/Maroondah Highway, Deep Creek Road, Warrandyte Road). Many of the side roads are named after the owners of the original land on which they are built. On the wall at the little museum at Schwerkolt Cottage there’s a surveyor’s map of the Mitcham area (next to Ringwood) from about 1890, and the relation between the settler’s names and the resulting roads is obvious.

The first Christadelphian that lived in Ringwood that we know about came to the area in the early 1890’s, living on Wonga Road (apparently in the area now known as the “Golden Mile”). The nearby Unsworth Road is named after him. He and his family (8 children) lived in small cottage of which a visiting Christadelphian wrote “the dwelling is not welcoming, though less so inside”. Presumably it was somewhat like Schwerkolt Cottage - visitors can see why!

Mr Unsworth established a small Christadelphian group (called “ecclesia”) in Ringwood in 1896 to avoid the difficulty of the long trip into the city on Sundays. This group lasted until 1936 when it closed (cause unknown). A new group was established in Rupert St in 1956, co-joined to the Olivet Nursing Home which is owned and operated by the Christadelphian Community of Melbourne. We have existed since then, and we count 3 great-great-great children of the original Mr Unsworth among our members.

Links:

Band-aids for our Health, part #2

Thursday, April 2nd, 2009

This is a follow-up to a previous post, part of a series on “Band-aids for our health.”

Jesus died for us.

We don’t get saved by Jesus’ teaching, by doing what he said, but by his death. How does that work?

The Bible has a number of different explanations for how it works. The simplest is an executive summary: Jesus died instead of us.

Jesus  came to serve, not to be served–and then to give away his life in exchange for many who are held hostage. (Mark 10 v 45, The Message - as are all the rest of the quotes)

This is just the executive summary, like when my surgeon says, “This operation will make you feel better”. So when it turns out that I have a week of agony after the operation, did my surgeon lie? Of course not, he just overlooked that little detail. And it’s the same with Jesus sacrifice: there’s a lot more to it than simply that Jesus died in our place.

The Bible has a lot more to say about the details of how Jesus’ sacrifice works, many of them metaphorical. One of the more interesting metaphors is that of the cup.

Jesus’ followers remember his sacrifice regularly by taking the bread and the wine. When Jesus started this custom, he said:

“This cup is the new covenant written in my blood, blood poured out for you.” (Luke 20 v 22)

There’s a whole interesting symbology associated with the cup. To start with, there’s the whole idea of intimate fellowship associated with sharing a cup. Here’s an interesting example:

There were two men in the same city–one rich, the other poor. The rich man had huge flocks of sheep, herds of cattle. The poor man had nothing but one little female lamb, which he had bought and raised. It grew up with him and his children as a member of the family. It ate off his plate and drank from his cup and slept on his bed. It was like a daughter to him. One day a traveler dropped in on the rich man. He was too stingy to take an animal from his own herds or flocks to make a meal for his visitor, so he took the poor man’s lamb and prepared a meal to set before his guest. (2 Sam 12 v 1-5)

Well, that’s nice. A lovely image, feeding a cute little lamb - don’t all kids love to do that? But the metaphor isn’t only for nice things. Here’s a rather more common usage:

This is a Message that the GOD of Israel gave me: “Take this cup filled with the wine of my wrath that I’m handing to you. Make all the nations where I send you drink it down. They’ll drink it and get drunk, staggering in delirium because of the killing that I’m going to unleash among them.” (Jer 25 v 15-16)

This starts to provide some real depth to this notion of drinking up Jesus’ Sacrifice, one that underscores the notion of a covenant written in blood. “Drink this up” - just what are you drinking up? Whatever is in that cup, whatever you drink, that’s what’s going to happen to you. So what’s in Jesus cup, the one we drink?

How about this:

Then Jesus went with them to a garden called Gethsemane …  He plunged into an agonizing sorrow. .. He fell on his face, praying, “My Father, if there is any way, get me out of this. But please, not what I want. You, what do you want?” .. Again he prayed, “My Father, if there is no other way than this, drinking this cup to the dregs, I’m ready. Do it your way.” (Matt 26 v 36 - 42)

Jesus saw his sacrifice in front of him, and called it his ‘cup’. And that’s what’s in that cup that we Christians drink: Jesus sacrifice.

This is no cup of wine that you lift to your lips, toss it back, and cast it away: drinking this cup means that Jesus’ sacrifice is going fill our lives up too. This is where Jesus’ teaching comes into our lives: it fills us up, with it’s message of self-control, self sacrifice, service to others.

Jesus sacrifice: it’s no band-aid. It can really save your life.

Jesus sacrifice: it’s no band-aid that you stick on the outside of your life. You drink it up, and it changes your whole life.