Dear Fellow Salvationists,

I write in the Name of Jesus to greet and encourage you.

Here in London we are in the late weeks of the Autumn season, but the weather is unusually mild just now and we can venture out of doors, without the need for heavy clothing, to enjoy the falling leaves as the trees turn golden brown. The children walk and skip to school with a carpet of fallen leaves beneath their feet. As they kick happily at the gathered gold, a sudden gust of wind will propel the fallen foliage once again into the air. It is an enchanting season. In the southern hemisphere you are in Spring-time, with promise and hope bursting outward and upward from the earth to remind you of new life.

Like all Christian believers, Salvationists are a people of hope. In mentioning hope I do not mean that shallow, facile optimism that says, 'Things will probably turn out alright in the end.' Christian hope proclaims the certainty that in Christ Jesus all is well now, regardless of our outward circumstances, and that we have the gift of hope from God not only for this life but for all eternity too. In 1 Corinthians 15:19 we are reminded that we have hope in Christ not only for this earthly life. Were this untrue then we are to be pitied above all others.

Titus 3:7 describes true believers as 'heirs having the hope of eternal life'. In this promise, and in many more found in Scripture, we sense the certainty of God's provision and the sureness of His promises. He does not toy with us. He offers us the gift of hope. We are free to accept or to reject His offer. My heart is filled with praise to God for each one of you reading this who has gladly and wholeheartedly accepted the Heavenly Father's infinitely gracious offer of hope - hope for today and for all our tomorrows.

I am very aware that as I write to you there remain only a few months of my term as the General of The Salvation Army. I will hand over to another, technically at midnight at the close of Friday April 1, 2011. The theme of hope is therefore very close to my heart in these days. I am full of hope for the future of the Army. I am full of certainty that God will bless and use to His glory the person, as yet unknown, who will become the General after me.

I urge every one of you to be filled with that same hope at this time. The 109 members of the High Council will gather at Sunbury-on-Thames near London in January 2011. They will come together from every corner of the earth on January 16th for a few days under my leadership as the General's Consultative Council. Then on January 21st the formal High Council proceedings begin, with the Chief of the Staff presiding over the opening session before a President is elected. The President then guides the Council in the election of the next General.

The High Council members will travel to London filled with holy hope. They will believe that God will guide them in their task. They will be open to the promptings of the Holy Spirit. The Army world will cover them with prayer. These will be sacred days, days brimming with holy hope.

I close this Pastoral Letter by thanking you again for your fidelity to Christ and for your sanctified obedience to the divine leadings of God in your life and in your Army service.

Thank you too for your prayers for Commissioner Helen and for me. I am fully fit and well again. Commissioner Helen awaits the results of further scans to find out the full effect of recent radiotherapy. With me, she commits you all to the matchless love of Christ.

Together we say to you, with the Psalmist: 'Be strong and take heart, all you who hope in the Lord' (Psalm 31:24).

God be with you and make you a blessing to others.

Yours in Christ,

Shaw Clifton
General

clifton_shaw_gen_smlGeneral Shaw Clifton is the international leader of The Salvation Army. It is his deep hope that each of his Pastoral Letters will be read wherever Salvationists are to be found, whether in private or in public settings. The chosen themes may prompt discussion, prayer and - as appropriate - action.

Press the play button to hear the General read his pastoral letter.

Comment

On Monday, November 29, 2010, Nigel Gillson said:

I am moved by the words of the General in his most recent pastoral letter. Although I do not attend a corps at this time, though God is really talking to me sternly and lovingly about that, I find that God works even in my life. The sense of hope, what the General talks about, inspires me daily as I work with children in Cumbria, over a hundred miles away from my own family. As a teacher, I find God's love supremely necessary in controlling my own personality, but also in directing, teaching and guiding the young people under my care. The hope in Christ, that whilst I work to improve the lives and chances of these young people, helps me continue on regardless of what happens to me, to those around me and whilst I am separate from my wife and children.

I praise God, that he has saved me. Even though, I have not attended a Corps in almost 3 years, my heart is still as a soldier. I yearn to return, but fear that what happened to me and my family previously, in a corps, would happen again a third time. I miss the Salvation Army. I miss being apart of the fantastic opportunity for community outreach, for reaching to children, for caring for the elderly and yes, for Christmas Carolling in the shopping centres...but most of all, I miss testifying about God's work in MY life, about praising God in every way possible, about preaching God's message and challenging those who would listen.

My hope in Christ is a solid rock. A rock of deep foundation. My hope IS Christ! Who else can I depend on so much? Who else will still accept me despite the sin I commit. Who else would love me for the life I lead? Who else? Christ! My hope is built on nothing less, than Jesus' blood and righteousness!

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