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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Waiting, expecting and hoping

November 25, 2021 by Rev. Mona Scrivens

The past few months have been filled with joy as we have had opportunity to gather after so long apart. It has been good to see people make their way back to the sanctuary — minding seriously all COVID protocols — where we can worship God in community.

As you enter the sanctuary on Sunday you will notice that our hospitality team has been hard at work to help us to prepare for Christmas.  The tree is up, beautifully decorated and lit.  You may also notice a beautiful Advent wreath adorned with five candles.

So what does Advent mean?  

Advent is a season of waiting, expecting, and hoping. Beginning four Sundays before Christmas and ending on Christmas Eve, Advent helps us to prepare for the coming, or “advent” of the Christ child at Christmas. 

Have you ever wondered about the origin of the Advent wreath?

For hundreds of years, Christians have used an Advent wreath to inspire their hopes for the coming of Christ. By lighting candles and reading Bible verses, we are reminded about the meaning of Christ’s birth and, if you are anything like me, become more excited about his coming in the past, in the future, and in our own lives.


There is no set meaning for the candles of the Advent wreath (except for the middle candle, which always signifies the birth of Jesus and is often called the Christ Candle). The four candles around the Christ Candle, most often point to peace, hope, joy, and love.  However, some churches identify the candles with key figures in the stories of the birth of Jesus, such as the shepherds, the angels, Joseph, and Mary.


Advent wreaths can also have candles with a variety of colours. Some wreaths use all white candles; others use three purple or blue candles, one pink candle, and one white candle in the middle. 

The purple/blue candles remind us of how serious and solemn God’s people have been in waiting for the Messiah. The pink signifies the joy of our waiting. The white is triumphant and celebratory because Christ is born.

Each Sunday (beginning this Sunday) leading up to and including Christmas eve at Amberlea we will gather around the Advent wreath in a new and surprising way.  You are very welcome to join us in person or online to share in the Advent season, a time of waiting, expecting, and hoping. 

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This Sunday we will begin a new four part sermon series entitled Finding the Missing Peace.  In-person or Online!  Join us in the way you feel most comfortable.

Advent Blessings to you!



November 25, 2021 /Rev. Mona Scrivens

What's your "that"?

November 17, 2021 by Rev. Mona Scrivens

I spoke with a friend the other day who stated, with great determination in her voice, “I am going back to the gym.”

“That’s great.”  I said

She continued, “I have decided I am going to run a marathon next September and if I want to do that I need to be in training, asap.”

She is not trying to run a marathon, she is in training to run a marathon and if you were with us on Sunday, or joined us online, we talked about the significant difference between trying and training.  Check it out.

Honestly, how many of us can just get up off the couch after a long season of Netflix binging and run a marathon without conditioning and training our body?  I would say not many, if any at all.  It would be unthinkable not to mention dangerous!  My friend knows that. So she has committed to a training regimen to prepare her to achieve her goal.

I am not a runner but I, probably like you, have goals that I would like to achieve. My friends’ words were spot on for all of us.  

“….and, if I want to do that I need to be in training, asap.”

What is your “that”?

What is the goal you want to achieve?

Maybe there is a change you want to make, or a habit you want to break.  What is your that?  What is it that God is calling you to do, to change, to add or remove from your life?

Perhaps it is time to stop half-heartedly trying to achieve our goals, and go into deliberate, intentional training of our body, mind and heart to achieve the outcome we want… but perhaps more importantly… becoming the person God has created us to be.  

And who are we called to be?

The Apostle Paul said to his young protege, Timothy. "Train yourself to be godly.” (1 Timothy 4: 7)

We are each called to that - to be godly. And guess what?  It doesn’t happen by accident.  We don’t just stumble into godly behaviours, attitudes and thoughts.  We are to be in spiritual training to become who God created us to be.  And as we honour God, we will be blessed in ways we can hardly imagine!

Join me Sunday, in-person or online, as we conclude our series entitled Our Sure Reward.




November 17, 2021 /Rev. Mona Scrivens

What does God think?

November 11, 2021 by Rev. Mona Scrivens

Have you ever taken a personality test? Or maybe a quiz in a magazine or on social media that inform you of who you are? Are you a lion, a beaver, an ENFP, the skeptic, the giver, a competitor, and activator? We all want to know who we are, don’t we? 

As helpful, and as fun as those tests can be, have you ever stopped to ask, “What does God think about me? 

Who does God say that I am?”

God actually has a lot to say about the matter — a whole bible full!  From the beginning of the bible to the very last page, we are told that we are valuable (Matthew 10:31), created in the very image of God (Genesis 2:7; Genesis 1:27; Psalm 139:16). That God knows everything about us and that we were fearfully and wonderfully made (Psalm 139:13; Matthew 10:30; Psalm 139:4; Psalm 139:14).

We are told that we are free and forgiven (Romans 8:1-2; I John 1:9) We have been saved by grace (Ephesians 2:8). We are secure in God (Romans 8:39; John 10:29; Hebrews 13:5).  And that is just the tip of the iceberg.

Go on a hunt to discover what God thinks of you…you may find that the quizzes can’t define you… but what God thinks of you does!

On Sunday we sang this amazing song.  Check it out. Who You Say I Am

(Words and Music by Ben Fielding & Reuben Morgan)

VERSE 1

Who am I that the highest King

Would welcome me

I was lost but He brought me in

Oh His love for me

Oh His love for me

CHORUS

Who the Son sets free

Oh is free indeed

I’m a child of God

Yes I am

VERSE 2

Free at last

He has ransomed me

His grace runs deep

While I was a slave to sin

Jesus died for me

Yes He died for me

CHORUS 2

Who the Son sets free

Oh is free indeed

I’m a child of God

Yes I am

In my Father’s house

There’s a place for me

I’m a child of God

Yes I am

BRIDGE

I am chosen

Not forsaken

I am who You say I am

You are for me

Not against me

I am who You say I am

November 11, 2021 /Rev. Mona Scrivens
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