Amberlea Church

Christian Worship, Contemporary Music, Groups for Kids, Youth, Adults

Member of the Presbyterian Church in Canada
1820 Whites Rd, Pickering, Ontario, L1V 1R8
905-839-1383
Church Office: Tue & Thu 9:45 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.
Worship: SUN 11:00 a.m.

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New Perspective from the end of the driveway.

July 28, 2021 by Rev. Mona Scrivens

Have you ever run away from home?

I remember when I was 6 or 7.  I asked my mom if I could have a dog.  

She said “no”.  

That seemed rather unreasonable so I decided to run away from home.  That was probably the extent of my thinking on the matter.  I packed up my green and brown checkered suitcase with only the essentials, my stuffed animal and a pair of underwear.  And off I went.  I said goodbye to my mother and walked out the front door.  When I got outside I realized that I didn’t know where I was going to go.  So, since I had started this I was going to walk to the end of the driveway.  Yup, that’s where I went, to the end of the driveway where the driveway met with the sidewalk.  I wasn’t allowed to cross the street by myself, so there I stood.  

My situation suddenly seemed different at the end of the driveway.  I began to miss the comforts of home. My room. My toys. My mom. ‘I suppose I really didn’t have to have a dog’, I thought to myself, ‘maybe I could get a cat!’  

As my perspective changed I decided that I had made my mother suffer long enough so I went back up the driveway.  I opened the front door and pronounced to my mother - who was exactly where I left her 5 minutes earlier - that I had decided to stay.  She seemed relieved.

Sometimes a little time away is all we need.  As we break away from whatever our ‘situation’ is and take time to reflect, often our perspective changes. You may find that the situation doesn’t seem as bad when you take the opportunity to step away from it.  It doesn’t have to be a long time, but just a time, to be quiet, to pray, to reflect (see Matt. 14:23) and in that time away we may realize how very blessed we really are! 

God knew that about us and created the Sabbath.  

As you stand at the end of your driveway today, I pray that you may gain new insight into whatever your ‘situation’ is.  I pray you sense a new HOPE and experience the virtue of gratitude. 

Through the month of August, I will be taking some time to do this as well. Be blessed by our speakers, meet with one another safely, and let’s pray that we might be able to gather together in person in September.

“Be still, and know that I am God; I will be exalted among the nations, I will be exalted in the earth.”   Psalm 46:10


July 28, 2021 /Rev. Mona Scrivens
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Standing firm

July 21, 2021 by Rev. Mona Scrivens

Have you ever heard the saying, ”Remember, God has something up his sleeve besides his everlasting arm”?  While purging some old files I found this little saying on a card that I received from a friend. I looked at it and tossed it in the garbage but to be honest I’ve been thinking about it ever since.

“God has something up his sleeve…”  God has sleeves???

That’s a good thing to remember when we’re under pressure, or under threat or under stress.  No matter how desperate our situation, God always has something up his sleeve. God has a plan and a purpose for our lives — and for the ages. God has a plan that covers every detail, every need, every problem of your life and mine.  That is a pretty good reminder!

Here’s the thing, God may have a plan but that doesn't mean that you and I will necessarily understand what it is!  The other thing is this: just because you don’t see anything doesn’t mean God is not doing something. 

I don’t think we could even begin to comprehend God’s plan for the universe or for our individual lives. Our minds are finite and God is most definitely not. You and I have been around long enough to know that there will be times in life when God will allow us to go through something —difficult —for reasons that we can not understand.  Like maybe a “Global Pandemic”?

No one understood this principle better than the Old Testament prophet Daniel. Daniel was one of the bright and rising stars of Israel when the nasty King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon ordered that he be taken captive. He was uprooted from his home and culture and suffered anxiety, humiliation, and persecution as a captive of the Babylonians. Yet, even in the midst of all that Daniel remained faithful to his God. 

AND God had not forgotten Daniel. The Babylonian invasion was not a surprise to God. God worked all of those events together in Daniel's life to accomplish a positive purpose in a negative world. 

Daniel became a strong witness of truth and encouragement for his people — and to us even today because he was able to stand out, stand up, stand strong and stand firm in faith.

Maybe you are experiencing something today that looks like a setback, a failure, the end of everything— but God has something up his sleeve. You may be surprised by the events of this life, but nothing surprises God. 

So take heart. You are not alone and you never will be. Your faithfulness and willingness to stand against pressure and persecution will not go unnoticed. You are connected to a limitless, powerful God. 

God makes that unlimited power available to you and that power is as unlimited as God himself.

Stand firm in your faith!


July 21, 2021 /Rev. Mona Scrivens
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Called to be different.

July 14, 2021 by Rev. Mona Scrivens

I remember a little gaggle of us sitting around in my friend’s basement.  I was 11 years old and we were gathered together to celebrate the birthday of said friend.  It was a fun party and we, as little girls are known to do, were laughing a giggling about this and that.

One of the girls said to another, “What’s your middle name?”  

“Lynn” replied the other.

“Mine too!” Sequels erupted and then other’s joined in.

“Hey, my middle name is Lynne too!”  

“No way!” The first Lynn shouted.

“My middle name is Kathrine.”

“Elizabeth” said another.

“Suzanne”

“Anne, with an e”, said my friend with the red hair.

Then all eyes were on me.  I knew the question was coming, I was the only one who didn’t offer. I didn’t have a middle name but I so desperately wanted to fit in. I was already so different from my fair skinned friends.

“Lynn,” I said. Trying it out in my head. Sure, Mona Lynn sounds ok.  “My middle name is Lynn too.”  I said sheepishly.

“What! That is crazy!  All four of us have the same middle name, what are the chances!” my friend exclaimed.“We should become a gang, and get t-shirts.”  She pulled us in close and we all put our arms on each other shoulders.  We were a gang.

I felt like a fraud but the amazing feeling of being like the others far outweighed the tinge of guilt I felt for lying.  In that moment, I vowed to myself that as soon as I was older, and knew how, I would get my named legally changed to Mona Lynn Manocha.  Guilt assuaged.

Eventually it came out that I indeed didn’t have a middle name. Embarrassed as I was, that hard lesson had a lasting impact. It was better to be me than try and be someone else. It was OK to be different.

So often we ignore, play down, dismiss our own value (or in my case lie) because we want to belong. We underestimate our worth, completely forgetting that there has never been, nor will there ever be, another person on this earth like us. Failing to honour what makes us unique, we deny the gift of life God has entrusted us with and the distinctly beautiful person God has made us to be.

Did you know that we are are more than the 37.2 trillion cells composing what you see in the mirror? We exist beyond the physical and according to Genesis 1:26-28, we are not an accident or an afterthought. We are divinely created souls, made in the image of a living God.

Embracing the beauty of my differences has honestly been something I’ve had to learn. While I don’t do it perfectly, I’m definitely better at accepting my unique God-given design than I was in junior high.

Jeremiah 1:5 tells us God intentionally made us to be different. “Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, before you were born I set you apart; I appointed you as a prophet to the nations.”

But, we must each choose to embrace our unique design and live serving the God who made us.  And as followers of Jesus we are called to be different. To think differently than the world. To act differently than the world. To love differently than the world. God made us to be different!

July 14, 2021 /Rev. Mona Scrivens
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