Gungahlin Uniting Church

Welcoming of the stranger. Inclusive of all people. Sharing the faith journey together. Informal and friendly Christian community..

Sharing the faith journey together. Informal and friendly Christian community.
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Breath Lines

April 18, 2020 by Darren Wright

This simple prayer practice invites you to become aware of each breath, and to create something beautiful.

You will need a pen or pencil and some paper for this practice.

The bigger the paper the more you time you can spend on the practice, a really big piece would mean you may be able to spend an entire week or month on one drawing.

https://vimeo.com/408838369

Filed Under: Faith Formation - Spiritual Practices

Praying The Scripture – Lectio Divina

April 16, 2020 by Darren Wright

Lectio Divina

Lectio is the practice of reading scripture over and over again, each time with space to reflect on the word and to meditate on what it might have to offer.  

Lectio Divina refers in Latin to the practice of “divine reading.” This form of spiritual reading originated in the Benedictine tradition and involves a deeply personal and prayerful encounter with the presence of God through sacred scripture. Lectio invites us to listen to the word of God with our whole being and our longing to be touched, healed and transformed by the Holy Spirit.

Lectio is a great way to spend time with Psalms…

Step 1

Read the passage once in a prayerful and unhurried way. 

Simply take in the passage during the first reading and allow it to “register.”

Pause for 2-5 minutes.

Step 2

Read through the passage again in an unhurried way.

As you do listen for a word or a phrase that “shimmers” or reverberates in you. What is the word that attracts, touches, or even disturbs?

Spend some time with that word or phrase.

If you’re doing it in a group or family you may want to spend some time sharing the word or phrase that shimmered in you.

You might allow for some time to paint, draw, mould the word.

Step 3

Read the passage a third time.

This time you are invited to attend to the way this text connects to your life at this moment.

Consider how it relates to what you have seen and heard this day/week?

How does it speak to what is happening at home, at work, in your leisure time, in their community, in the world?

After the reading take an extended time to explore this connection in thought, in journaling, in art, or in movement.

If you’re doing it in a group or family you may want to spend some time sharing your response.

Is God calling you individually or collectively to any particular response in your present situation?

Step 4

Read the passage a fourth time.

This time you’re invited to listen for an invitation in the text, to consider if there is something in the text that is inviting something of you.

Take an extended time to explore this connection in thought, in journaling, in art, or in movement.

BIf you’re doing it in a group or family you may want to spend some time sharing your response, what have you heard, what have you discovered?

Close with an extended time of silence, simply resting quietly in the presence of God.

A spoken prayer may complete the silence.

Filed Under: Faith Formation - Spiritual Practices

Praying The Scripture – Entering The Story

April 16, 2020 by Darren Wright

The Ignatian method

The Ignatian method of reading scripture is an ancient prayerful practice that invites us all to enter the story. Developed by Ignatius of Loyola the process invites the reader to imagine themselves in the story, and as they do to allow God to be in control, to be open to the spirit to guide their imagination.

Brief Description:

Read through the story 4 times slowly, each time with different questions.

Time: 20-30 minutes

1st Reading

During the first reading listen to the story from the surface. Ask yourself

  • Where does this take place?
  • when does it take place?
  • Who is in the story?
  • What happens?

Give yourself 2-5 minutes of silence before you read the story again

2nd Reading

During the second reading listen for more information,

  • What are the people doing?
  • Who are the major characters?
  • Who are the background characters?
  • Who is named, who is not?
  • How do the people interact?
  • What is the setting of the story?
  • How would you describe the mood?

Give yourself 2-5 minutes of silence before you read the story again

3rd Reading

During the third reading Pay attention to more detail and start to place yourself in the story

  • Who are you, what are you in this story? (You can be a person, animal, stone, statue or even furniture…)
  • What can you see, smell, hear?
  • What are you thinking, feeling?
  • What can you smell?
  • What other details do you notice?

Give yourself 2-5 minutes of silence before you read the story again

4th Reading

The fourth and final reading Is a time of allowing your imagination to be free, experience the story as the object, person or animal you’ve connected with.

Sit with the story in silence for as long as you need, when you feel its time to finish thank God for opening the story to you and for today.

Filed Under: Faith Formation - Spiritual Practices

Soda Bread

April 10, 2020 by Darren Wright

Theo and I did some baking today., are you thinking about baking bread this weekend?

Perhaps you can make bread and remember your favourite memories of food shared with friends or family.

Perhaps you could sit around and eat the bread while remembering your favourite stories of Jesus.

Theodore and I baked a simple Soda Bread today, Soda Bread’s are simple, quick (no kneading, no yeast, no rising time) and oh so tasty, once pulled from the oven the bread is basically ready to break and eat.

This particular recipe was stolen from The Guardian online, it’s my favourite soda bread recipe…

https://www.facebook.com/100013333292509/videos/935144440273324/
Cooking with Theodore and Darren

The Perfect Soda Bread
(Makes 1 loaf)

450g coarse wholemeal flour
50g rolled oats 
1 tsp salt 
1 level tsp bicarbonate of soda 
1 tbsp treacle (or Molasses) 
1 tbsp honey 
450ml buttermilk (or sour milk, or milk with 1 tbsp lemon juice) 
1 tbsp melted butter, to finish

Preheat the oven to 200C/400F/gas mark 6 
and grease a baking sheet.

Once the oven has come to temperature, put all the dry ingredient into a large mixing bowl and whisk together to combine. 

Make a well in the middle. Stir the treacle and honey into the buttermilk until well mixed, then pour this into the well and, very quickly, stir together with your hands until you have a soft, sticky dough.

Form this into a round on your baking sheet and cut a deep cross in the dough. 

Bake for 50 minutes to an hour, keeping an eye on it, until the crust is golden and the loaf sounds hollow when tapped underneath.

Brush with melted butter and leave to cool before tearing into it. 

Eat as soon as possible, as it doesn’t keep very well.

Filed Under: Faith Formation - Spiritual Practices

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About GUC

We are a community on a journey, we’ve grown from a small faith community planted in Ngunnawal in the early years of Gungahlin’s development to a thriving inclusive, intergenerational & multicultural community. As Gungahlin has grown we have seen a lot of change.

We are an open and inclusive community, everyone is welcome to use their gifts in worship, prayer, leadership, hospitality and teaching.

Find out more…

Worship With Us

Every Sunday, 9:30am
Gungahlin Uniting Church and Community Centre
108 The Valley Avenue
Gungahlin, ACT, 2913

Worship is for all ages, (0 to 93!) and seeks to be meaningful in different ways for us all.

In Jesus Christ we see how he drew near to each and all and so we hope our worship expresses this nearness too.

Find out more…

Finding us

We worship at the Gungahlin Uniting Church & Community Centre.
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Car
Free parking is available in our on-site car park.

Light Rail
We are less than a 5 minute walk from the Gungahlin Place Light Rail Station.

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The ACT has a number of bus options for people travelling around, or to Gungahlin. Timetables available here.

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