2024 Internships

Are you passionate about church ministry and eager to progress in your discipleship journey? If so, our 2024 Internship Program may be the perfect opportunity for you! We are excited to invite applications, offering you the chance to work closely with one of our dedicated ministry pastors. An internship is a transformative adventure, nurturing your growth in leadership, discipleship, and providing invaluable insights into ministry.

Click on the link below to apply.
Internship Application
Please note that applications close on the 27th of October.

Or if you would like more information or to talk to someone further about internships please email internships@thestreet.org.nz

Sam LienertAll, Newsarchive
Shared lunch

To celebrate being in our new venue, please bring some kai to share and stay for lunch after the service on Sunday 15th October!

Jonathan R Seaton
We love the Lord

As we think about discipleship at The Street, there are four words we use as an overarching framework. Upwards, Inwards, Outwards and Onwards. The first is “Upwards: We love the Lord.”

Upwards means the goal of our growth as followers of Jesus and our helping one another grow is not simply to grow in our knowledge of God. Our goal is to grow in our love of the Lord. This moves our faith from the head to the heart from which everything else we do flows. Can you see how important it is? Jesus summarised Israel’s Law—all 613 laws—into just two. Love God with all that you are and love others as yourself. Even the goal of the Law was love.

At the moment, I’m reading through the Psalms and this morning I found David coming to the same conclusion.

“Because I love your commands more than gold, more than pure gold, and because I consider all your precepts right, I hate every wrong path.” (Ps 119:127-8)

When David thought about the privilege that the eternal God of creation had spoken authoritatively and accurately to his people, he knew that those written words were more precious than any gold he could amass. He also knew that God had a perspective on life that was more accurate and life giving than the collective wisdom of humanity. He knew that in these commands was the opportunity for a full life and it led him to love God’s commands. What’s more astounding is that his love wasn’t for the gospels but for the Torah - the first five books of our Bible.

What is your motivation for reading Scripture today? Is it obligation? Is it routine? Is it to grow in knowledge? Or is it to grow in your love for the Lord? Routine and knowledge aren’t bad things so long as they lead us to love. Only that will be truly life giving.

As you think about your view of Scripture, what is a step you could take today to help it lead you to love the Lord? One of the things I have changed over time is to not worry about how much I’m reading and focus more on processing and applying what I’m reading. How about you?

Much love,
Simon


This post is part of the Senior Pastor’s weekly blog. Go to the the blog feed >>

New Location Pastors Announcement

This week marks a milestone in our multi-site journey as we announce the appointment of two couples as Location Pastors.

When we embarked in this direction, we believed in faith that God had been preparing people and would call people to these roles and the leadership teams of Locations. These announcements show his faithfulness to us in providing for where we believe he is leading us. It’s also a milestone because these appointments are for volunteer roles. We have been shaping our structure to provide the necessary support and resources to make volunteer teams sustainable. However, part of their roles will be to foster a culture of team leadership. This means they will need the faithful support of people around them.

Andrea MullerAll, Newsarchive
New venue from 15th October

From 15th October we will no longer be meeting at 56 Hobart St, but instead will be in the chapel at St Patrick’s College in Kilbirnie. A new venue always takes a bit of getting used to so give yourself some extra time to get there and please let’s have lots of grace with one another while we iron out any wrinkles!

Due to being in a new venue there are some things to be aware of:

  • Father Crawford and the leadership team of St Pat’s have been very kind to allow us to use their chapel. The altar (the large table on the stage) is a special part of the chapel and we mustn’t place anything on it. If you have children, please keep them away from the stage area, thank you.

  • There is no food or drink allowed in the chapel

  • We are no longer in any hurry to get out of the building after a service so we will return to having morning tea after the service instead of before. We will have this in the staff room (there will be signs to point the way!)

  • Kids Zone School-Age will be in one of the nearby classrooms, and Kids Zone Pre-School will be in the Staff Room for their programmes. The check in area will be by the chapel for you to check your kids in when you arrive.


    There is parking onsite and you can find photos and instructions for how to get there in this information sheet.

Jonathan R Seaton
Refugee resettlement

It's go time! We are so excited to welcome our first refugee to Wellington in the coming weeks, 

Thank you so much for your generosity over the last week - you have so generously donated almost the full $10,000 we were hoping to raise in order to support these men when they arrive in New Zealand. If you’d still like to contribute by purchasing items for the house you can find a list of items needed here. (please purchase and then drop off to The Life Centre during office hours). If you have any questions please contact Jerram.Watts@thestreet.org.nz

Jonathan R Seaton
Not All Doctrines Are Equal

This week we’re heading into our 4th ‘Pillars’ series called Salvation. Pillars first came about because I was concerned that we were grappling with some big issues in out culture without a basic Biblical framework. The purpose of the series is talk through the basics of what Christians have always believed so that we can have meaningful discussion.

However, sometimes talking about this means we do encroach on areas where there is lively debate. That’s where we get to this weekend. At the start of our series on Salvation, we have to talk about the very beginning of the salvation story - predestination. We’ll focus on what we all agree on, but it’s inevitable that we’ll get into territory where people have different positions.

With this in mind, I thought it might be helpful to share something to guard against unnecessary disagreement. It’s the idea that not all doctrines are equal.

When we’re talking about a point of theology, it’s good to think through just how important it is. 

At the top level there’s dogma—core beliefs. There are about seven of them and they include things like the Trinity, the deity and humanity of Jesus, the resurrection, and salvation by grace through faith. To not believe these things is really to claim that you’re not a Christian. These core doctrines can be discussed but they can’t be doubted. I would die on a hill for these.

Next level down there are doctrines. These are important and will often define how our faith is practiced, how we interpret Scripture, or how a church is run. They include things like whether women can be Elders, whether Jesus will rule on earth for a literal 1,000 years, and you guessed it… predestination. Is it about God’s sovereignty or human will?

The point about these issues is not that they don’t matter. It’s just that they’re not worth falling out over. I have good friends who see each of these issues differently to me and we don’t fall out. We understand that there are intelligent people on all sides of the discussion and they don’t actually affect whether we’re included in the family of believers.

The final level is that of opinion. These are issues that we really don’t know about because God hasn’t made it clear. It includes things like the identity of the Two Witnesses in Revelation. We don’t actually know, we can try and work it out but it has no bearing on how we live or how we lead churches.

The problem is that some people try to load as much as possible into the core beliefs category while liberals relegate as much as possible towards opinion. The former make unnecessary divisions while the latter has nowhere firm to stand. Both are poor choices. Instead let’s affirm our unity around what is core and then, as brothers and sisters, have meaningful conversation with one another about everything else.

The truth is that sometimes these things can be a horrible distraction. There’s so much that God has made clear and I want to suggest that our focus should be more about putting what is clear into practice rather than getting too hot under the collar about things that aren’t.

Much love,
Simon


This post is part of the Senior Pastor’s weekly blog. Go to the the blog feed >>

Andrea MullerSPblog, All
Help for moving venues

Sunday 8th is our last Sunday in this venue, and we need to clear it out of all of our things. We need help, please!

We have a van, but we will need people to help clear things out of our cupboards and load them into the van. We also need people who can go and help unload it at Hania Street. We think we should be able to do it in two trips, or maybe less if we have some cars that can help too.

We will also need help on 15th October to move what we need into St Pat’s College, where we will gather until Term 1 next year.

There will be a sign-up sheet at the service on Sunday 1st October - if you can help on either/both dates, please add your name to the sheet. Or you can email me at east@thestreet.org.nz to let me know.

Jonathan R Seaton
New Pillars sermon series—Salvation

Over the past years, we have been chipping away at a series called "Pillars", where we look at some core doctrines of the church. We've looked at the Bible itself in our Bestseller series, as well as the doctrine of the church. Last year, we did Origins, and now we begin our next instalment looking at Salvation.

Check out this short promo video from our Teaching Director, Jerram, on what to expect in this next series.

Jonathan R Seaton
Lessons in our culture: Life with Christ as Lord

Today in this series of blogs, we turn to 1 Peter — where the context is suffering for doing good. Peter reminds us that we will be overlooked, misunderstood and mistreated for our belief in Jesus and the life we live as a result. This just can’t be avoided.

In fact, it’s more concerning to find yourself living an easy, comfortable life because it provokes the question, “am I too assimilated into this culture?” It’s the feeling we don’t quite fit in that reminds us that here is not home, we’re destined for somewhere greater!

In 1 Peter 3:15-16, Peter teaches that the way to live in the midst of this tension is to live with Christ as Lord. Such a life, Peter says, provokes a question about the hope that we have. Questions we should be ready to answer.

So what does it mean to live with Christ as Lord?

One thing it doesn’t mean is being an overly dogmatic person who loves to trumpet truth. That’s not the gentleness and respect Peter was after (1 Pet 3:15). Nor does it mean someone who frowns at everything they don’t agree with. This is a life that shuts down all questions, conversation and friendship.

Living with Christ as Lord means letting your life do the talking. That’s the life that provokes a question.

For a start, if this is the case, you’re living with a completely different sexual ethic. Faithful marriage, celibacy, dating honourably and not sleeping around. A guy who doesn’t stare at a woman in a low-cut top. A woman who doesn’t complain about her husband. Standing out in this area is not even that hard.

From there, just look through the Sermon on the Mount. We don’t just treat our friends well but we love our enemies (Matt 5:43-47). How would it look when we don’t talk behind another’s back? What about continuing to be kind when we’re insulted or honouring your boss rather than undermining them?

What about our anxious age? We’re worried about the cost of living, increasingly anxious about the climate, and bereft of contentment because we just can’t live up to social media’s view of what our lives should be like. Has there ever been a greater need for the church to show what it’s like to be generous with those in need and to live with an abiding trust in Him rather than the harassment of worry?

Let’s live with Christ as Lord and with an unshakeable hope that He will soon return to bring about a world made right. Let’s live lives that show Jesus’ way of life so that some — maybe many — might be invited into it too.

Much love,
Simon

Questions to ponder:

  • Can you think of a time where someone has noticed or commented on how you live your life differently as a Christian?

  • How are you doing in the areas mentioned: sexual ethic, loving others (including “enemies”), contentment and generosity? Does your faith in Christ show in the way you live?

  • Can you think of any other areas where it would be easy to stand out as a Christian?

  • What is one step you could take this week to be different (in a good way!) from the world around you?


This post is part of the Senior Pastor’s weekly blog. Go to the the blog feed >>

Andrea MullerSPblog, All
Update on our search for a venue

Our last Sunday in Miramar Uniting will be Sunday 8th October. We are so thankful to God that we have just this week been able to confirm St Pat’s College as our new venue which we will use up until the start of term 1 next year!

We still plan to try and secure Miramar Central School from term 1 next year and we will keep you updated about those negotiations. Jenny will meet with the Principal again in October.

Jonathan R Seaton
Come prepared for worship Sunday 24th

We have one Sunday each month with no worship team, where we allow time and space to be led in worship by one another. This is your one week’s notice to come prepared for that on Sunday 24th September. You might want to share a Psalm or another scripture. You might have a prayer on your heart. Or you might want to lead us all in a song. Or something else! Whatever is on your heart to bring, let’s do it joyfully in order to glorify King Jesus together as His church! It’s going to be beautiful!

Jenny Gill
Sound and Media team

Due to three of our team recently becoming unavailable for various reasons, we’re keen to bolster this team. Caitlin will be shoulder-tapping some people, but if this is a way you think you might be able to contribute to our Sunday services, please get in touch with Caitlin to find out more: caitlin.ormiston@thestreet.org.nz

Jonathan R Seaton
Lessons in our culture: Seasoned with salt

My Mum once made porridge for us both using a new recipe I assume was Scottish. I assume this because one of the ingredients was salt. The problem was that there was too much salt for our liking, and we effectively spat it out. It is the one and only time in my life I have seen my Mum throw something out as inedible.

I wonder if this is the reaction that many people in our culture have towards Christians these days. While the message of Jesus and being identified with Jesus are inherently polarising, we have to take ownership of the fact that the posture of Christians has, in some ways, contributed to this reaction.

In Colossians 4, Paul gives us a recipe for correcting our posture in how we engage with people who do not believe.

“Let your conversation always be full of grace, seasoned with salt, so that you may know how to answer everyone” (Col 4:6).

Grace is the means by which God does everything in our lives as a free gift. Grace creates the environment in which we can thrive. Salt is mixed into a dish to enhance flavour. It’s clear that salt is a distinctive ingredient. As Christians, we bring a different perspective — truth from God designed to enhance people’s flavour of life (John 8:31-32). But too much salt — too much truth — will overpower the hearer and be rejected.

In any recipe, the proportion of ingredients is important. This recipe is no different. Our conversations are to be full of grace but only seasoned with salt. Let me give some suggestions of what I think that could look like.

Kindness
Grace means we’re to be warm, welcoming, and kind. No matter what someone believes, they are a person made in God’s image. We should love and care for them more than anyone.

Listening
We’re to listen well to people even when we disagree with them. We’re to listen long enough to make sure we truly understand why they see the world the way they do. Listening is a lost art but one of the greatest ways to love.

Common ground
Our culture is pretty post-Christian. It means people want the values of Christianity even if they have no desire to believe in Jesus. It also means there is plenty of room for common ground. The moves to embrace Māori culture or to welcome people’s gender fluidity arise because we’ve realised it is not okay to abuse and marginalise people of different cultures and worldviews. This is a good thing borne out of a desire to love others. We may not love all of the ways this plays out, but we can affirm the intention as a good one.

All of these things — and I’m sure there are more — are ways to build genuine friendships with people who are different to you. My favourite name for Jesus in the gospels is “friend of sinners.” Could it be that some of us might be called this over time?

And when we’ve built genuine friendships, when we’ve listened long enough to truly understand, maybe then we will have earned the right to sprinkle a little salt. To ask a question or share something small that helps people to see—from a place of friendship and common ground—a way to see the world differently and a way to see how Jesus meets their need.

Much love,
Simon

Questions to ponder:

  • Who are some people that don’t know God that you would call genuine friends of yours? If you can’t think of many, ask yourself who are some acquaintances or people you cross paths with that you could pursue a deeper friendship with? Pray for these people that God would draw them to Himself, and perhaps use you in that process.

  • While thinking of the people in your life that don’t know Jesus - do you think your past conversations with them have been seasoned with too much or too little salt?

  • Maybe you are someone who keeps your faith private outside of church and Christian circles. What are some ways your faith could be a natural part of everyday conversations, no matter the context?

  • Who is someone in your life you’d like to make more time to listen to?

  • What are some areas of ‘common ground’ you have with the non-believers around you? How could you use these areas to form deeper friendships?

  • If God is real, but you didn’t know Him — how would you want Christians to reach out to you?


This post is part of the Senior Pastor’s weekly blog. Go to the the blog feed >>

Andrea MullerSPblog, All
Potential new elders

In addition to the pastors and other staff, The Street has an eldership board that carries out a combination of governance and shepherding for our church.

Elders are volunteers who provide spiritual oversight for the overall church, as well as being available at our local services to support the local leaders and be available to the congregation.

Now that we are meeting in even more multiple locations, we want to ensure we have a local eldership presence at each of our locations.

We want to propose Andrew Smaill and Peter Martin as potential elders. We are giving the church three weeks to pray and provide feedback before the elders decide whether they will join the eldership.

Andrew attends our Night Location, and Peter is part of our East Location.

If you have any feedback to provide, please contact elders.chair@thestreet.org.nz. Your email will go to the chair of our eldership board, Matt Conway.

Jenny GillNight, City, West
CAP Sunday

Next Sunday we have the CEO of Christians Against Poverty; Sam Garaway, coming to help us celebrate 10 years of our CAP Debt Centre. He will be speaking live at East and we will be celebrating the impact of CAP in our city, and also hearing how we can support this incredible ministry. We hope to see you there!

Jonathan R Seaton
Missions Update

Missions is a big part of who we are as a church. We love to support missionaries who have answered a call to go out and make disciples full-time. One of the missionaries we support is Sally Hong who is serving as a full-time missionary with Student LIfe and Tandem Ministries to reach university campuses across New Zealand with the Gospel. Sally is based on Victoria University campus, where she shares the Gospel, disciples students and equips them to take part in the great commission. Please be praying for her in the following ways:

  • For more students to have a desire to share Jesus with those around them. “The harvest is plentiful but the workers are few”

  • Summer Missions trips - to Auckland, Nelson, and Sally is leading an overseas trip to Thailand. Pray for Sally as she leads that trip, that students in Thailand would come to know Jesus.

Jonathan R Seaton
Miramar Christian School Community Fair

Ben Edwards—Youth and Families Pastor at Gateway Baptist—has helped Miramar Christian School organise a fair early in term 4 for the last few years. It is an opportunity for children and families from the local community to have a fun day, and it’s also a chance to promote the school and raise some funds. This year’s event is on Saturday, 4 November.

Another goal is for the Fair to be an opportunity for the churches in the area to bless the community by putting on a fun, quality event to demonstrate our creativity, skills, passions, and love for others. Ben would like to know if anyone in our church would like to get involved in some way.

There are lots of ways you could help:

  • Set up and pack down.

  • Running games and activities or welcoming.

  • Putting on an activity of your choosing - live music, face painting, outdoor games.

  • Donations to the silent auction or a cake for the cafe.

  • Run a stall selling crafts or goods (there would be a small cost to do this).

  • Helping promote the event with letterbox drops.

  • Pray for good weather and that people would be blessed and connections made.

If you would like to help with any of these things, please contact Ben by 22 September at youth@gatewaybaptist.org.nz or 022 401 5720.

Jonathan R Seaton
Lessons in our culture: Drawing the line

As a church, we want to be a community that’s helping one another become total followers of Jesus Christ. One of the important aspects of this is that we’re doing so in the cultural context of Wellington in the 2020s. In this environment, I am increasingly hearing questions about what this looks like in the context of social and cultural expectations, particularly in the workplace. How do I follow Jesus in a workplace where people are asked to wear rainbow lanyards? Should I go along with putting personal pronouns in my email signature? When everyone has to stand and say the agency’s karakia, what do I do if I don’t agree with the words?

I can’t tell you what you should do and there aren’t always ‘right’ answers. However, over the next few weeks, I hope to lay out some thoughts that we might use as way markers—guidelines to help each of us come to conclusions we are at peace with before the Lord. Please be gracious with one another as we will sometimes come to different conclusions.

For this week, Daniel 1 is a great place to start. He was about 11-15 years old when the Babylonians first invaded Jerusalem in 605BC and he was taken 500 miles away from home to Babylon where he was put into the service of the king.

Why not have a look at Daniel 1 for yourself. Here are three thoughts I’ve drawn from it.

Daniel learned about culture
This is a nice way of saying Daniel was indoctrinated. He was purposefully taken away from his family and culture and immersed in the language and literature of Babylon. Moreover, God helped him and his companions to excel in their learning (Dan 1:17). I notice that Paul also took the time to learn about the culture of the people he was seeking to reach (Acts 17:16-34 is a masterclass of contextualised gospel-sharing). You may feel more immersed in our culture than you want to be but maybe it’s something God wants to use to help you minster to people in that culture.

Daniel excelled in the culture
Part of God enabling Daniel and his companions to learn was that they were able to excel in their work. At the end of their training, the king found them far better than others in his service. You would expect Daniel to be known for subterfuge and sabotage — for undermining pagan authority. Rather, Daniel was a blessing to his captors and his wisdom was sought after. As a follower of Jesus, you bring a unique perspective and posture into whatever environment you are in. You have a higher view of the inherent worth of humanity than anyone else. You know that leadership is about service, not subjection. What does it look like for you to do the best job while being generous and kind to others in the process?

Daniel knew where to draw the line
Daniel drew the line at eating the king’s food, potentially because it was sacrificed to idols. There came a point where he said no. Notice that he was discrete and polite about it but this didn’t compromise the firmness of the no. What I find interesting is that his line was probably further than he was comfortable. After all, he didn’t object to being given a Babylonian name. What’s fascinating about Daniel is that the first 11-15 years of his life had been lived out in the spiritual revival of Josiah’s day (2 Chron 34-35) when God’s word took prime place in Judah. It seems therefore that his upbringing was strong enough that even when taken 500 miles from home and immersed in a new culture, it was God’s word that became the plumb-line in his life. Can I encourage you to be someone increasingly immersed in Scripture and allow the Spirit to guide you in wisely knowing where to draw the line, even if it is further into the culture than you would naturally be comfortable.

Much love,
Simon

Questions to ponder:

  • Can you think of any areas of your life currently where you feel immersed beyond your comfort zone in the culture around you?

  • Ask God what He thinks about these areas of discomfort for you. Do you sense He’s asking you to draw a firm line and say no to something? Or rather do you sense He could be calling you to lean into the discomfort and embrace the opportunity that might be there?

  • When was the last time you truly took the time to listen and learn from someone who has very different perspectives and opinions from you? Can you think of anyone you could make space to listen to and learn from this week?


This post is part of the Senior Pastor’s weekly blog. Go to the blog feed >>

Guest UserSPblog, All