Missed
the Word on Sunday? No Problem!
Now you can listen again to what was preached on Sunday from the comfort of your home, in work, or even in the car.
Each week we'll upload the Word from Sunday
morning's meeting, and you can choose to either listen online,
or download the clip and listen on CD or your MP3 player. You
will find
To Listen Online:
Simply click on the link below, and a new window
will open up. After a short wait the audio file will automatically
play. Please note that this will depend on having either Real
Player or Quicktime installed on your system.
To Download:
All you have to do is right click (or ctrl
click on a Mac) on the relevant link below, and choose 'save
target as'. You can then save the file to your PC or Mac and
once the file has downloaded you can then transfer the file
to either CD or to your MP3 player.
Sizes are in mebibytes* and are rounded to one D.P.
29 August 2010 - Don't despise small beginnings - 9.83MiB
Goichi Hirata tells us that small beginnings are just that a beginning. Don't be disheartened with what YOU think should be big and quit, if God can't trust you with what he knows you can do, how can He trust you to do what you can't?
22 August 2010 - God in your life - 6.35MiB
Pastor Roy Hackett talks about having God in your life and how it dosn't matter what you've done, He loves you.
08 August 2010 - Baptism - 5.85MiB
Guest speaker Ken Wilson talks on baptism and how it makes a huge change in your life.
11 July 2010 - Serving the Lord - 10.55MiB
Goichi Hirata teaches us about serving the Lord, our motives behind doing it, and how obedience is not accquiescence.
27 July 2010 - Role Models - 4.78MiB
Vanessa Hackett asks 'Who's your role rodel?'
13 June 2010 - Rejoice in the Lord always - 9.51MiB
Goichi Hirata talks on rejoiceoing in the Lord
06 June 2010 - Suffering - 8.76MiB
Goichi Hirata teaches us that nothing can seperate us from the love of God
* A mebibyte is the correct word for what is currently know as a megabyte. When your computer tells you a file is 10MB it really means it's 10Mib, ten mebibytes.
See these wikianswers for more details:
Why is 1 kB commonly said to be 1024 bytes instead of 1000 bytes?
Difference between megabyte mebibyte?