Main content
Sorry, this episode is not currently available

Keswick Convention 2024

From Keswick Convention, where 12,000 Christians join together each year for Bible teaching and sung worship in the Lake District. The theme this year is Resurrection.

For three weeks each summer Christians from many denominations gather in the beautiful setting of the Lake District town of Keswick. The theme of Keswick Convention this year is 'Resurrection.' The Convention began in 1875 and Keswick Ministries exists to inspire and equip Christians to love and live for Christ in his world. Presenters: Martin Salter and Jodi Whitehouse; Preacher: Glen Scrivener; Sung Worship led by Phil Moore; music mix: Matt Dennis; Producer: James Mountford.

38 minutes

Last on

Sun 4 Aug 2024 08:10

Script of Service

Web Script for Keswick Convention tv Sunday Worship 2024

Presenters: Martin Salter & Jodi Whitehouse

Preacher: Glen Scrivener

Music: Phil Moore band/Cornerstone Church

Producer: James Mountford

Jodi: Good morning and welcome to the town of Keswick in the Lake District. Each summer, 12 thousand Christians of all ages, from across the UK and beyond, gather here at the Keswick Convention for teaching, music, and encouragement. I’m Jodi Whitehouse –I’m from Liverpool. So near, to the tragic events that have overtaken Southport earlier this week and we want to lift all those affected in our prayers this morning.

Martin: And I’m Martin Salter, I lead a community church in Bedford. Jodi and I are trustees of Keswick Ministries and for the past three weeks, a congregation of two thousand gather in the main tent each morning and evening to hear from the Bible and come before the Lord in prayer for our world. Lets do that now

MUSIC: In Christ Alone

Jodi: If you’ve never been to Keswick, it’s a beautiful town nestled in the heart of the Lake District in North West England. It’s surrounded by mountains and sits on the edge of Derwent Water. We can’t guarantee the weather, but we can guarantee the views!

Martin: The Keswick Convention started nearly 150 years ago Its hope is to see the people of God equipped, inspired and refreshed, all while enjoying the beauty of His creation in a stunning setting. The theme at the Convention this year is ‘Resurrection’ - what it means to live now in the light of the fact that Christ is risen and Christ will come again.

Lets open in prayer, from one of our young people, Keziah….

PRAYER: Loving God and Father, give us ears to hear afresh what you have to say to us this morning. We thank you that your word is pure, trustworthy, and true. We praise you for this world that you have made, that you sustain moment by moment, this world that one day you will renew. Might we as resurrection people live in your world in ways which honor and please you - to the glory of your name. Amen

JODI: So why do people give a week of their summer holiday to come to Keswick? We’ve been around the site to find out why people come back year after year….

PACKAGE

MUSIC: Before the throne of God above

MARTIN: Our first Bible reading this morning is from Isaiah 25….

Lord, you are my God;
I will exalt you and praise your name,
for in perfect faithfulness
you have done wonderful things,
things plannedlong ago.
2You have made the city a heap of rubble,
the fortifiedtown a ruin,
the foreigners’ strongholda city no more;
it will never be rebuilt.
3Therefore strong peoples will honor you;
cities of ruthlessnations will revere you.
4You have been a refugefor the poor,
a refuge for the needyin their distress,
a shelter from the storm
and a shade from the heat.
For the breath of the ruthless
is like a storm driving against a wall
5and like the heat of the desert.
You silencethe uproar of foreigners;
as heat is reduced by the shadow of a cloud,
so the song of the ruthlessis stilled.

6On this mountaintheLordAlmighty will prepare
a feastof rich food for all peoples,
a banquet of aged wine—
the best of meats and the finest of wines.
7On this mountain he will destroy
the shroudthat enfolds all peoples,
the sheet that covers all nations;
8he will swallow up deathforever.
The SovereignLordwill wipe away the tears
from all faces;
he will remove his people’s disgrace
from all the earth.
TheLordhas spoken.

YOUTH FOCUS

MUSIC: Come people of the risen King

Martin: Shortly, we’ll hear from Glen Scrivener, who will be speaking out of the Gospel of Luke.

JODI: Our second Bible reading is from Luke chapter 24, and read by some of the young people at the Keswick Convention…

LUKE 24:13-35

GLEN SCRIVENER SERMON

Luke 24:13-35Glen Scrivener

“It’s the hope that kills you”. A saying which has become familiar to many sports fans over the year—especially those of us who follow a frustrating team. “It’s the hope that kills you”

An unfamiliar feeling dawns on you: optimism. But just when you begin to trust, it’s all snatched away. And you feel foolish for ever having believed: “It’s the hope that kills you.”

This happens in all of life. We all have deep longings for more, but so often we fear to acknowledge them.

Hope: we can’t live without it, but we struggle to live with it too. Because — what if our hopes are dashed? Proverbs 13 verse 12 in the Old Testament speaks of longings fulfilled as a tree of life. But it also speaks the brutal reality: “hope deferred makes the heart sick.” And many of us are heart-sick cynics. We’ve become wary of being suckered by hope.

In our reading there’s a couple who have exactly that experience. On the Road to Emmaus, they are returning from the worst weekend of their lives. They had followed Jesus of Nazareth. They really thought he was the answer to their prayers — to the prayers of a nation, the prayers of the centuries. They had come to believe: this Jesus was the long-promised Messiah. As they say in Luke 24 verse 21: “we had hoped that he was the one.” Hope and despair are contained in this one verse.

On one hand there is the hope of believing: He is The One. They had come to believe: a Saviour has arrived! Finally, the Messiah had dawned like sunrise in a dark valley.

To believe “He is the Oneis the most hope-filled affirmation. But to say “WE HAD HOPEDis perhaps the most bitter. We express terrible disappointment when we put hope in the past tense.

But that is the situation for this couple on the road to Emmaus. They had followed Jesus right up until the time he was arrested and tried, condemned and flogged, ridiculed and executed. They had seen their friend and teacher die on that Friday. In a deeper sense, they had watched Hope die.

So here they were on the Sunday, trudging home when who should sidle up to them but Jesus himself — Jesus incognito. And on this road the couple are brought not just from Jerusalem to Emmaus, but from despair to hope — hope reignited. How? In three moves.

Firstly Jesus draws alongside. It’s so unspectacular. Considering his public shame on the Friday, you might expect trumpet blasts on the Sunday — heralds and press conferences and noisy proclamations. But no, he quietly draws alongside: “What are you discussing?” asks the Lord of all on resurrection morning. They’re discussing all the things about Jesus of Nazareth. “What things?” Jesus asks innocently. He doesn’t simply end their sorrows, he enters them.

By the end of the Sunday, this couple realise who it was who shared the road with them. But not to begin with. This gradual dawning of faith was beautifully portrayed by CS Lewis in The Horse and His Boy. At the end of that novel in the Narnia series, the boy, Shasta, is walking on a road when he becomes aware of a Great Voice accompanying him (it’s the hero, Aslan, incognito). As they walk, Aslan reveals to Shasta that all the events of his life—the bitter as well as the sweet—had been arranged by one Source: “I was the lion” he says. I saved you from this peril and shepherded you on that path. I comforted you on those roads and arranged for that coincidence. We may feel like we’re alone on a road to nowhere, randomly turning this way or that. In truth, we have a companion: Jesus incognito.

On Easter Sunday, the risen Jesus draws near to this couple, but they’re not getting it. No-one really does. So here’s stage two of the journey: Jesus opens the Scriptures to them. In verse 25 he reminds them of “all that the prophets have spoken.” The couple have been foolish, they’ve been slow to believe. The Scriptures had always said that the Messiah must suffer and then be glorified. Isn’t this how all the stories go? The darkness before the dawn? The suffering before the glory? The death before the life? That’s certainly the Bible’s story — it’s certainly the Messiah’s story. As Hero of Heroes, he must go on the Hero’s Journey, descending to the great ordeal before rising to a greater hope. And so Jesus reminds this couple of the Scriptures.

Even when physically present in resurrection glory — even on Easter Sunday — Jesus’ way of meeting Jesus is through the Scriptures. That’s vital — vital for them, vital for us. If we want to know the presence of Jesus with us on the road, we need the Scriptures.

But notice that a Bible study alone does not fully open the eyes of these travellers. There’s another crucial stage on their journey: Jesus breaks bread with them. He shares a meal. It’s a kind of church.

Once home with the couple in Emmaus, Jesus takes bread, gives thanks, breaks it and gives it to them. Then—as verse 31 says—then “their eyes were opened”. That’s the eye-opening, hope-reviving moment: on this Sunday, gathered together, sharing the one bread. Faith and hope dawn on them in this church-like environment, enjoying a Lord’s Supper-like meal.

This is where faith and hope have dawned for 2000 years. This road to Emmaus is a journey that billions have taken: a journey in which Jesus goes from Stranger to Host and we go from despair to hope.

Have you lost hope? Jesus rose from the dead to give you his kind of hope — a hope that can plumb abysmal depths and rise to ecstatic heights. How can you have resurrection hope? In the same three stages:

First look for Jesus incognito. Look for the ways Love Himself has come to you, dressed as your life. But remember, he will remain a shadowy Stranger until, secondly, your vision is framed by the Bible. In the Scriptures, Jesus is properly centred as the Hero and we are properly de-centred as characters in his story. In his story—the Scriptures—we see the true shape of life. It’s the Hero’s Journey: suffering then glory, darkness then light, death then resurrection. And then, thirdly, don’t forget community. It’s in church that these things will make sense. As we break bread with other believers, eyes open and hearts burn. At last we learn that hope may kill us, but ultimately Hope lives again. And, with Jesus, so shall we.

MUSIC: King of Kings

Martin: Our prayers this morning are led by some of those who’ve attended the Keswick Convention…

As we begin our prayers this morning, we bring before God the truly shocking events that took place in Southport last Monday, those who’ve been bereaved and all those who’ve been affected. We give thanks to God for the emergency services and those who are still working hard to preserve life.

Loving Lord, we thank you for the Keswick Convention and all who attend and serve. May the words we have heard help to change our communities for better. We pray out of your church would be those who improve society, living out their faith with graciousness and love. Thank you for the Resurrection promise, that one day there will be no more suffering or pain. Thank you that your hope can never be extinguished. Amen

Lord Jesus, we pray for our country. That you would give wisdom to all those who make decisions for our nation. Bring hope to our damaged world. We pray for an end to war and violence. For the innocent, the broken and all affected, give them your protection and healing. We remember those who are grieving, would you meet them in their sorrow. We earnestly pray for an end to bloodshed but rather, may peacemakers bring forward solutions acceptable to all. Lord Jesus, have mercy. Amen.

Martin: As we prepare for a new week, let’s turn our eyes back to Jesus, the one who is our ‘all in all’, our strength, our comfort, our righteousness. As Paul wrote to the Galatians, ‘May I never boast except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, through which the world has been crucified to me, and I to the world.’ And May the blessing of God almighty, the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit, be upon us and remain with us always.(and Jodi) Amen.

MUSIC : All my boast is in Jesus

Broadcast

  • Sun 4 Aug 2024 08:10

A Passion for Hospitality

A Passion for Hospitality

Lent resources for individuals and groups.

Lent Talks

Lent Talks

Six people reflect on the story of Jesus' ministry and Passion from their own perspectives

No fanfare marked Accession Day...

No fanfare marked Accession Day...

In the Queen, sovereignty is a reality in a life, says the Dean of Westminster.

The Tokyo Olympics – Stretching Every Sinew

The Tokyo Olympics – Stretching Every Sinew

Athletes' reflections on faith and competing in the Olympics.

"We do not lose heart."

"We do not lose heart."

Marking the centenary of HRH Prince Philip's birth, a reflection from St George's Chapel.

St David's Big Life Hack

St David's Big Life Hack

What do we know about St David, who told his monks to sweat the small stuff?

Two girls on a train

Two girls on a train

How a bystander's intervention helped stop a young woman from being trafficked.

Sunday Worship: Dr Rowan Williams

Sunday Worship: Dr Rowan Williams

How our nation can rise to the huge challenges it faces, post-Covid-19.