Sunday 17th August 2025

Here’s our Zoom link –

Topic: St Martin’s Sunday Worship. To Join Zoom Meeting:
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81508696154?pwd=cnErZFM5VG5OQVhsZkxYc0dxOHdvUT09

Meeting ID: 815 0869 6154
Passcode: 712158

NOTICES:

A very warm welcome to all who worship with us today. Please join us for morning tea following the service.

Wednesday Walkers 20 August: meet 9.30am in New World carpark Peer Street Ilam where we will have coffee after a walk around the area. All welcome. Marilyn 027 363 1642

Combined meeting of Men’s Group & Fireside Monday 18th August 2pm. Emma Hay & Mitch Jeffery from Fire and Emergency NZ will give a presentation. Afternoon tea will follow. All welcome. Rob & Margaret.

NEXT MOVIE AFTERNOON: Saturday 23rd August 2pm in the lounge – the movie will be the 25th Wedding Anniversary Special of To the Manor Born.“Twenty -five years after their hugely popular love-hate relationship was resolved, Audrey fforbes-Hamilton and Richard DeVere prepare to celebrate their silver wedding anniversary. The scene is set for a grand party, until an extraordinary confession gets in the way. With Marjory’s help, the fearless Audrey goes into battle to defend her community, safeguard 400 years of history and save her marriage”. Come and enjoy. Sue.

Donations: if you would like to support the ministry at St Martins our bank account is: 03-1598-0011867-00. Please include your name as a reference

Feeling forgetful these days? Memory loss is not inevitable. Join the next Brainfit for Life four week course Wednesdays 1.00-2.30pm here starting 27 August facilitated by Ina Meeten. Cost $250. To book or for more information email ina@happybrain.nz

THIS WEEK AT ST MARTINS                                    

Monday 10am               Tend cuppa & chat (lounge) Emily 022 094 1492

Monday 2pm                  Men’s Group & Fireside (lounge) Rob 384 4320

Monday 4.15pm           Meditation Group (church) Dugald 021 161 7007

Tuesday 10.30am         South Elder Care (lounge) Jeannette 332 9869

Tuesday 7-9pm             Mums n Tums (lounge) Livvy 027 327 6369

Wednesday 9.30am      Walking Group: Ilam Marilyn 027 363 1642

Wednesday 10am         Funeral (whole complex)

Wednesday 2pm           Parish Council meeting (lounge)

Wednesday 7-9pm       Cantabile Choir (lounge) Rose 027 254 0586

Thursday 10am             Crafty Crafters (lounge) Sally 332 4730

Thursday 1.30pm          Sit & Be Fit (church) Anneke 021 077 4065

Friday 10-11am             U3A meeting (church) Joy 337 2393

Friday 11.15am             Mums n Tums (lounge) Livvy 027 327 6369

Saturday 2pm                Movie afternoon (lounge) Sue 960 7657

Sunday 3rd August 2025 ~ Rev Hugh Perry

Peace Through Victory or Peace Through Justice and Loving Kindness

In his book In Search of Paul Dominic Crossan dramatically describes the sea battle where Octavian, who was later to be named Augustus, united the Roman Empire.  Augustus created peace through victory and therefore received the titles of Lord Saviour, Redeemer and Liberator. Divine Son of God.[1] 

Crossan says those titles were Roman Imperial Theology and the glue that held the empire together.  The book then goes on to describe how Paul claimed all those titles for Jesus and spread a new vision of peace through justice and lovingkindness throughout the Roman Mediterranean.

That vision of peace seems most appropriate to explore when citizens of the land where Jesus was born walked and died are firing missiles at each other and children are starving to death.  Furthermore, Russia and Ukraine are also firing drones and missiles at each other and moving closer to dragging Europe into a bigger conflict and the United States is looking to profit from selling weapons.

In such a world of tension peace is not simply an absence of war.  Peace comes about through a creative process. We have to make peace.

Both our readings today point towards the suggestion that we begin making peace in our families.

The book of Hosea uses a dysfunctional and abusive household as a metaphor for a dysfunctional and disempowering nation.  Our Gospel reading begins with a dispute between brothers and then moves on to the parable that demonstrates the foolishness of hording possessions which is so often what causes disharmony in the family. 

Disputes over inheritances are often bitter and protracted and capable of destroying lifetime relationships.  Furthermore, when people start regarding other members of a household as possessions, family disputes can become lethal.

I have been doing a lot more reading since I retired and, as my mother taught me to read Agatha Christie, I have read all Ann Cleeves’ ?Vera Stanhope novels, all her Shetland series and impatiently await the next Vera book due this month.  None of those books feature shootouts, car chases or battles with sharks.  They reflect real life where most of the murders occur because of dysfunctional families.   I also moved on to Robert Galbraith who I quickly discovered is actually J. K. Rowling.   Through her superb wizardry she introduced her damaged, but astute, ex-military detective and his assistant who worked her way into and out of a dysfunctional marriage.  Certainly, her opening book began with a presumed suicide of a fashion model surrounded with wealth and glitz.  But when everything was unravelled, we discover the woman was part of a dysfunctional family and murdered over disputed inheritance.  

A summary of statistics about victims of murder, manslaughter, and infanticide in a New Zealand police report published in September 2018 stated that around 1 in 5 homicides were committed by a current or ex-partner and 75% of victims were female. 

Furthermore, children under the age of five made up twelve percent of homicide victims.[2]

Peace-making must begin in our homes, in families where individuals, regardless of age, gender or relationship are regarded as fully human persons.   Violent and abusive families create violent and abusive communities.  Children, who have been bullied, and their behaviour modified by violence, bully other children and grow into adults who seek to define their own space in the world by being violent to others. 

We know very little about what induced a young man to walk into two Christchurch mosques and murder unarmed people.  But from what we read about far-right ideology we can assume he felt threatened by people different to himself and reacted violently. 

What we can be totally proud of is the inclusive response of the wider community and the recognition that we truly are a diverse community.  

I have also read David Close’s small book about his father’s memories of being a prisoner in the First World War which reminded me of the absolute misery of that war.  That misery was also reflected in the film about J. R. R. Tolkien and, during the film, I wondered if writing fantasy was the way he dealt with his post-traumatic stress.  

Nations often form an image of a god that not only supports them in wars but is expected to inflict violent punishment on anyone who does not honour that god. Karin Armstrong suggests that Yahweh was originally such a god of war and so Maurice Andrew’s comment on our reading from Hosea demonstrates an evolution in the understanding of God.  

In today’s reading we can see that Yahweh begins to be understood, not just as the Hebrew war god but the God of all humanity.  The God who behaves in an unexpected way.  Israel is not preserved because of the nature of the people or their violent reaction to others, but because God’s nature is to stop doing what god’s or ideologies are usually understood to do.  Rather than a god of destruction and revenge God loves all people and seeks to restore all people.

In accepting such a God, we can learn that a family who loves each other with God’s unconditional love allows children to grow into members of a community that is equally loving.  A community that looks to restore the lost rather than seeking revenge for the consequences of their dysfunction.,

However, we appear to be returning to a time when our nation seeks peace through victory as a way of controlling crime.

Once again, our government is promising tougher policing, crushing kid’s cars, longer prison sentences, and more jails.  Meanwhile we are pulling back on social housing, restricting benefits and experiencing a growth in homelessness.

Many sports and other activities are becoming too expensive for most young people, who are genetically and hormonally charged, to seek adventure.  Meeting that need and providing hope of a fulfilling life could well be a more constructive path to community peace.  However, as someone who had boxing lessons at primary school, the growth of martial arts worries me.

But violence always seems more direct and one of the characteristics of the historic development of the nation state was that the state claims the monopoly on violence and uses that monopoly to control its citizens. It then uses violence to create a sense of national pride by inflicting violence on other states. 

In George Orwell book 1984 he had the world divided into three.  At any one time two of those super states were at war with each other while the third was neutral.  They swapped places regularly, so all three states had the advantage of blaming inadequate government and failed economic policy on ‘the war.’

1984 has past but the world still manages to shift its enemies and allies around to keep the focus off domestic justice issues like poverty, housing and health care. 

Up till now that shuffling of friend and foe has been cautious because, the bombing of Hiroshima was extra frightening.  That bomb was considerably more destructive than the bronze weapons of Hosea’s day. 

On the 50th anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima I heard the Reverend Professor Ian Dixon speaking of being stationed with a unit in Europe when the bomb was dropped.  The officer in charge of his unit was a young physicist who was devastated by the news.  He said that he would rather be shipped to the Pacific and face another four years of war than have that terrible weapon used on human beings. 

Through that dreadful act the world was given peace through victory at a huge cost in terms of human suffering. 

But now someone wants to make America Great again and that is a worry as it looks to join all the great empires, from the Babylonians that threatened Hosea’s people through the Romans of Jesus’ time.  All the empires of the past and the would-be empires of today, have discovered that the violence needed to maintain a forced peace finally succumbs to the rebellion of an ever-increasing number of repressed marginalised people. 

Just like abused children, who may grow to inflict abuse on others, violently repressed people cannot conceive any hope of liberation without violent revolution. 

The seeds of terrorism and the embryos of suicide bombers are nurtured in exploitation, hopelessness and injustice that is always the dark side of peace through victory.

The farmer in the parable was simply foolish and all his wealth was derived by favourable agricultural conditions.  But in our world farm income can come from trade with wealthy nations that makes New Zealand butter too expensive for kiwis. 

The message of Hosea was that no matter what idols we build, or create in our minds, to support what desperate, or threatened people may see as a just war, the true God’s nature is to seek peace.

Our God does not punish the unjust with the force of a Hiroshima bomb.  The God we Christians image in Jesus Christ forgives, restores, and transforms. 

As followers of that Christ we are called to live our lives as Christ to others, forgiving, restoring and transforming both our lives and the lives of those around us. 

We are called to be rich in the way God understands wealth by seeking peace through justice and lovingkindness, not just for us, but for all humanity.

Such a peace is true, eternal wealth where Christ and all humanity are one with God.


[1] Dominic Crossan In Search of Paul (New York: HarperCollins 2004) p.4.

[2]https://www.police.govt.nz/about-us/publication/homicide-victims-report-2017-and-historic-nz-murder-rate-report-1926-2017

Sunday 10th August 2025

Here’s our Zoom link –

Topic: St Martin’s Sunday Worship. To Join Zoom Meeting:
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81508696154?pwd=cnErZFM5VG5OQVhsZkxYc0dxOHdvUT09

Meeting ID: 815 0869 6154
Passcode: 712158

NOTICES:

A very warm welcome to all who worship with us today, and many thanks to Rev Alan Webster for leading our service. Please join us for morning tea following the service.

Wednesday Walkers 13 August: meet 9.30am at the Bus Exchange at 9.30am for a wander around town.  Coffee at Ballantynes Café downstairs.  All welcome. Sue 03 960 7657.

Combined meeting of Men’s Group & Fireside Monday 18th August 2pm. Emma Hay & Mitch Jeffery from Fire and Emergency NZ will give a presentation. Afternoon tea will follow. All welcome. Rob & Margaret.

NEXT MOVIE AFTERNOON: Saturday 23rd August 2pm in the lounge – the movie will be the 25th Wedding Anniversary Special of To the Manor Born. “Twenty -five years after their hugely popular love-hate relationship was resolved, Audrey fforbes-Hamilton and Richard DeVere prepare to celebrate their silver wedding anniversary. The scene is set for a grand party, until an extraordinary confession gets in the way. With Marjory’s help, the fearless Audrey goes into battle to defend her community, safeguard 400 years of history and save her marriage”.   Come and enjoy. Sue.

Christchurch City Choir invites you to a special evening of music: Night at the Opera Saturday 23 August 7:30pm at The Piano: Centre for Music and the Arts. This uplifting programme includes highlights from Mozart, Verdi, Donizetti, Purcell and more, featuring acclaimed soloists Rebecca Ryan (Soprano) and Kieran Kelly (Baritone), accompanied by Christchurch pianist, Sarah Youngran Kang, and the full choir. For attendees with accessibility or seating needs, please contact The Piano directly so their staff can assist: (03) 377 5000.

Donations: if you would like to support the ministry at St Martins our bank account is: 03-1598-0011867-00. Please include your name as a reference

Feeling forgetful these days? Memory loss is not inevitable. Join the next Brainfit for Life four week course Wednesdays 1.00-2.30pm here starting 28 August facilitated by Ina Meeten. Cost $250. To book or for more information email ina@happybrain.nz

THIS WEEK AT ST MARTINS                                    

Monday 10am               Tend cuppa & chat (lounge) Emily 022 094 1492

Monday 1.30pm            U3A focus group (lounge) Richard 022 533 5444

Monday 4.15pm           Meditation Group (church) Dugald 021 161 7007

Tuesday 10.30am         South Elder Care (lounge) Jeannette 332 9869

Tuesday 7-9pm             Mums n Tums (lounge) Livvy 027 327 6369

Wednesday 9.30am      Walking Group: Sue 960 7657

Wednesday 7-9pm       Cantabile Choir (lounge) Rose 027 254 0586

Thursday 10am             Crafty Crafters (lounge) Sally 332 4730

Thursday 1.30pm          Sit & Be Fit (church) Anneke 021 077 4065

Friday 10-11am             U3A meeting (church) Joy 337 2393

Friday 11.15am             Mums n Tums (lounge) Livvy 027 327 6369

Sunday 3rd August 2025

Here’s our Zoom link –

Topic: St Martin’s Sunday Worship. To Join Zoom Meeting:
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81508696154?pwd=cnErZFM5VG5OQVhsZkxYc0dxOHdvUT09

Meeting ID: 815 0869 6154
Passcode: 712158

NOTICES:

A very warm welcome to all who worship with us today, and many thanks to Rev Hugh Perry for leading our service. Please join us for morning tea following the service.

Wednesday Walkers 6 August: meet 9.30am at Homebase car park 199 Marshlands Rd for a walk around the area and then have coffee at Esquire which is just near the corner of Homebase and Marshlands Rd. Barbara & Alan 021 142 7668 or 021 1263801

New Sunday roster available today – please check in the foyer to see if there’s a copy for you. You will notice we have returned to rostering two readers most weeks. Thank you. Anna.

NEXT MOVIE AFTERNOON: Saturday 23rd August 2pm in the lounge – the movie will be the 25th Wedding Anniversary Special of To the Manor Born. “Twenty-five years after their hugely popular love-hate relationship was resolved, Audrey fforbes-Hamilton and Richard DeVere prepare to celebrate their silver wedding anniversary. The scene is set for a grand party, until an extraordinary confession gets in the way. With Marjory’s help, the fearless Audrey goes into battle to defend her community, safeguard 400 years of history and save her marriage”. Come and enjoy. Sue.

Greetings from Dan: All our belongings have arrived safely and cleared customs. We have bought a house in Madison and will move in two weeks.

Feeling forgetful these days? Memory loss is not inevitable. Join the next Brainfit for Life four week course Wednesdays 1.00-2.30pm here starting 28 August facilitated by Ina Meeten. Cost $250. To book or for more information email ina@happybrain.nz

Donations: if you would like to support the ministry at St Martins our bank account is: 03-1598-0011867-00. Please include your name as a reference.

THIS WEEK AT ST MARTINS                                    

Monday 10am               Tend cuppa & chat (lounge) Emily 022 094 1492

Monday 1-4pm              Foot Clinic (lounge) Janette 021 075 6780

Monday 4.15pm           Meditation Group (church) Dugald 021 161 7007

Monday 4.30pm            MenzShed & Men’s Group dinner (lounge)

Tuesday 10.30am         South Elder Care (lounge) Jeannette 332 9869

Tuesday 7-9pm             Mums n Tums (lounge) Livvy 027 327 6369

Wednesday 9.30am      Port Hills U3A (whole complex) Joy 337 2393

Wednesday 9.30am      Walking Group: Marshlands Alan 021 1263801

Wednesday 7-9pm       Cantabile Choir (lounge) Rose 027 254 0586

Thursday 10am             Crafty Crafters (lounge) Sally 332 4730

Thursday 1.30pm          Sit & Be Fit (church) Anneke 021 077 4065

Friday 10-11am             U3A meeting (church) Joy 337 2393

Friday 11.15am             Mums n Tums (lounge) Livvy 027 327 6369

Sunday 27 July 2025

Here’s our Zoom link –

Topic: St Martin’s Sunday Worship. To Join Zoom Meeting:
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81508696154?pwd=cnErZFM5VG5OQVhsZkxYc0dxOHdvUT09

Meeting ID: 815 0869 6154
Passcode: 712158

NOTICES:

A very warm welcome to all who worship with us today. Please join us for morning tea following the service.

We pray for the Linscott family as they mourn the death of Viv’s father Peter Anderson, whose memorial service was held here last week. Rest eternal grant unto him, O Lord, and light perpetual shine upon him.

NEW TIME for Meditation Group – during the winter months this will be at 4.15pm each Monday.

Wednesday Walkers 30 July: meet 9.30am at Homebase carpark,199 Marshlands Rd for a walk around the area and then have coffee at Esquire which is just near the corner of Homebase and Marshlands Rd. Barbara & Alan 021 142 7668 or 021 1263801. All welcome.

Annual Reports are now due. If you convene a parish group, please email a report to the Parish Office by 17th August. The AGM is on 21st September.

Donations: if you would like to support the ministry at St Martins our bank account is: 03-1598-0011867-00. Please include your name as a reference.

THIS WEEK AT ST MARTINS                                    

Monday 10am               Tend cuppa & chat (lounge) Emily 022 094 1492

Monday 4.15pm           Meditation Group (lounge) Dugald 021 161 7007

Tuesday 10.30am         South Elder Care (lounge) Jeannette 332 9869

Tuesday 7-9pm             Mums n Tums (lounge) Livvy 027 327 6369

Wednesday 9.30am      Walking Group: Marshlands Barbara 021 142 7668

Wednesday 7-9pm       Cantabile Choir (lounge) Rose 027 254 0586

Thursday 10am             Crafty Crafters (lounge) Sally 332 4730

Thursday 1.30pm          Sit & Be Fit (church) Anneke 021 077 4065

Friday 10-11am             U3A meeting (church) Joy 337 2393

Friday 11.15am             Mums n Tums (lounge) Livvy 027 327 6369

“Being Green” ~ from Fern:

Ways people are making ‘green choices’ around the world – and in New Zealand – a good news spin to the green message – we are not alone in the world.

  • We have been burning fossil fuels on international flights recently and sleeping in a number of different hotel rooms and this is where we have noticed small green changes. When I was a child and Dad went ‘away for work’ he would return with the empty individual cereal packets which we fought over and played with, so it is a family tradition to collect these souvenirs! Or, in other words, a family tradition never to throw away ‘anything which might be useful’.  Since then, hotels introduced little containers of shampoo, body wash and hand lotion. These were found in abundance on the West Coast during the big clean up after the Fox River flood. You will remember hearing about this in 2019 – it took until 2022 to clean up and cost over $3 million. Well, we have noticed that in most places we stayed, these liquids are now in refillable bottles and Budapest was the only place that had these presents for our grandchildren.
  • However, in Vietnam we managed to collect lots of toothbrushes and combs… some bamboo and some plastic. Plenty for all the grandchildren.
  • In Amsterdam the focus was on shoes—giveaway shoehorns and polishing cloths—and early in the morning here we saw lots of litter on the streets but being rapidly cleaned up.
  • In Hong Kong they offered the toothbrushes, combs, hairnets, sewing kits etc but from the main desk for $5US as part of their green ethic. We were given disposable slippers [in Budapest too] possibly because of the swimming pool.
  • Hong Kong had ‘reverse vending machines’ where you could feed clean plastic bottles [with lids] into a machine and either receive a credit or donate it to charity. We saw a number of people scouring the streets for bottles to return. The plastic is used again and again in a closed loop, helping to preserve precious resources.

Anyway—we are not the only place in the world trying to make a difference and cut back on plastic waste.