Monthly Archives: June 2012

Visiting Churches

One of the things I like to do when I am travelling is to visit church buildings – not just the big fancy Cathedrals, but also small town churches and when in Norway, every Stave church I travel near.

I remember visiting Lincoln Cathedral and what struck me and pleased me was the rickety “white board” near the majestic front doors providing information on all the activities that day. In neat handwriting the church was saying, in effect, we are a part of the community and the community meets, worships, plays and prays here. I have visited other cathedrals and the first thing one notices is the entry fee. This is ‘cathedral’, not as community but rather as tourist attraction. I readily acknowledge these buildings cost a fortune to maintain, but  first impressions are quite telling.

In some country towns, in Europe and Australia, the small church has a notice board indicating how frequently, or usually, how infrequently a service is held. This too says much about faith in a community. Again, before I am chastised, I must acknowledge home churches and those who meet in places other than church buildings.

As I travel around I notice the condition of the building and the grounds, and the graves around the church. Each one speaks silently about their place and importance in the community.

Recently I sat in the balcony of a church in Spain. It was the evening before Maundy Thursday and the church was full. But from my vantage point I noticed that the vast majority of the heads were grey or bald.  Later as we left I observed that the younger people were in the Bars and Bistros.

Often my first reaction to the more obvious signs of the decline of the church is despair.  Not a helpful emotion! So now, rather than despair, when I visit church buildings I pray. I pray for the leaders of the church, the congregation and the community in which it sits. I pray that God will continue to raise faithful believers holding on to the truth of Christ and empowered by the Holy Spirit.

Every so often I come across a church building that shows that it is lived in by young and old. The Bibles and newsletters left in the pews, the children’s pictures placed on the walls, the programme of activities on the notice board, the pictures of missionaries smiling in far off places  and the wear and tear of the furniture and carpets, all attest that this is a “faith home”. This is a place where the people of God gather to celebrate, rejoice and weep. I still pray, but it is a prayer of thanksgiving.

Categories: christian, Christianity, Devotional, Faith, Travel | Tags: , , , | 5 Comments

Following Directions

Direct me in the path of your commands, 
    for there I find delight.  Psalm 119:35

When we were on the Camino in northern Spain the route was relatively easy to follow. There were signs, markers and arrows all along the way. When we did get lost it was usually quite easy to get back on track.

We got to our destination, Santiago, because we actively wanted to follow the signs. We looked out for them. They were our “life-line” and if we got lost we would back-track until we found the signs and then continue on our way. The key was following the signs because we knew that if we went on our own we would get desperately lost. We didn’t know the country or the language.

Our Christian walk is not that dissimilar. We need to actively seek God’s directions: His way. If we don’t, we will get hopelessly lost. Psalm 119 is a “hymn” to those directions. Verse after verse speaks of God’s word being “a light on my path” and whose statutes are our “counsellors”.

What is required from us is the faith to realise our need for those “directions”. That without them there is no hope. No matter how clever we think we are, there is no substitute for the Word of God and the life it offers.

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Be Prepared

But in your hearts revere Christ as Lord. Always be prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks you to give the reason for the hope that you have. But do this with gentleness and respect, keeping a clear conscience, so that those who speak maliciously against your good behavior in Christ may be ashamed of their slander. 1 Peter 3:15&16

I remember, way back, when I was a Boy Scout in Ocean Grove, our motto, together with every other boy scout, was, ” Be Prepared”. It was, and still is, a great axiom.

Peter challenges Christians with the same motto. “Be Prepared” to give an account of your faith with a grace that reflects Christ. Our calling is to reflect him – not C11th crusaders. Christians often find it difficult to “witness”. We see here that the clearest witness is our own lives; our relationships, marriage, family and so on. If someone were to ask us why our marriage works or our kids are on the straight and narrow, wouldn’t it be relatively easy to give glory to God?

Giving a clear and gracious account of our faith begins with the way we live our lives. The implied challenge of course, is to be distinct from the world. Now there is the rub!

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Poetry

“Poetry is when an emotion has found its thought and the thought has found words.”

Robert Frost

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Something Lighter

Yesterday I placed a John Calvin quote in my blog. However today I want to share a delightful scene I came across in Stockholm a few weeks ago. If you watch through to the end, the clip finishes with a Swedish version of a line dance!

 

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Calvin and the Holy Spirit

 “We have also seen, that since the knowledge of the divine goodness cannot be of much importance unless it leads us to confide in it, we must exclude a knowledge mingled with doubt, – a knowledge which, so far from being firm, is continually wavering. But the human mind, when blinded and darkened, is very far from being able to rise to a proper knowledge of the divine will; nor can the heart, fluctuating with perpetual doubt, rest secure in such knowledge. Hence, in order that the word of God may gain full credit, the mind must be enlightened, and the heart confirmed, from some other quarter. We shall now have a full definition of faith, if we say that it is a firm and sure knowledge of the divine favor toward us, founded on the truth of a free promise in Christ, and revealed to our minds, and sealed on our hearts, by the Holy Spirit.” (emphasis mine)

From the Institutes Book 3.2.7

Ref: http://www.reformed.org/master/index.html?mainframe=/books/institutes/books/indxbk3.html

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The Already and Not Yet

And God raised us up with Christ and seated us with him in the heavenly realms in Christ Jesus …
Ephesians 2:6
 
Comprehension fails
and imagination struggles.
 
There and not there.
Here and not here.
In heaven,
and on earth.
Unfathomable truth.
 
Complete and at peace – eternal.
Incomplete and struggling – temporal.
 
The already and not yet.
 
Raised and ascended with Christ
but day by day struggling 
with brokenness and sin.
 
But not forever.
 
The joy,
the inexpressible future
rings out:
The old order will pass
and every tear wiped away!
 
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Worship the Lord

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Where is God in Parkinsons?

Parkinsons is a cruel disease. Hands that don’t work as they should; no longer writing or giving a warm greeting. A mouth that can only mumble where it once spoke forth friendship and warmth. Eyes that once sparkled with humour now won’t shut or open as they should. And most cruelly, medicine that creates its own world in the imagination of the sufferer.

I returned today from visiting an elderly uncle who has Parkinsons.  He is a warm, friendly and beautiful human being who was the family letter writer, in the past, keeping a family separated by continents connected through his written words.

He recognised me when I entered his room at the nursing home, which pleased me. But soon he was mumbling about a fantasy world in English and Dutch. The amazing thing is that he has not spoken Dutch on a regular basis for 60 years. Yet that is where his mind takes him back.

I chatted and he mumbled for forty minutes. I read some of Psalm 139 and prayed. Then his eyelids drooped and it was time for me to go.

I felt so helpless and frustrated in the face of such a disease.

Today as I was taking the 2 hour drive home, all I could do was to hand it over to God. God please give comfort. God, please be present in his heart and mind. God give give strength and healing. God please …  So the prayer went on.

Parkinsons is one of the more dramatic and tragic manifestations of our human frailty. Cancer, MS and the myriad of other diseases point to the same reality; as much as we try, life on this earth is temporary. Ultimately our humanity crumbles.

Where is God? God is in the promise, that through His son son, there is hope and life beyond the frailty. His desire for us is not Parkinsons or cancer but a wholeness in mind and body, in His presence, for eternity.

Can I understand all that? No, it is beyond my comprehension. Do I believe it? Yes, for me and especially my uncle.

Categories: christian, Christianity, Devotional, Faith, Family, Parkinsons | Tags: , , , , | 11 Comments

Commit Your Ways to The Lord

Commit your way to the Lord;
trust in him and he will do this. Psalm 37 Verse 5

This verse sits above a building in the Stortorget in Stockholm’s Gamla Stan. As people were sipping their coffee outside the cafes with Ikea blankets on their knees (it was Stockholm in early May after all) this verse spoke silently.

The reason this verse struck me was that it confronts C21st sensibilities. The verse does not say trust in: your popularity, your money, your intelligence, your good looks, your broker etc. It calls us to humble ourselves before God and to acknowledge him as Creator and Ruler over all things.

Psalm 37 reminds us that evil is a real force for destruction and corruption in the world. Evil desires to destroy all that is godly. For many today this is an alien concept, but is real none the same. We do not have took far to see evil eating away at government, business, families, relationships and more.

The antidote lies in the verse that a person in Stockholm put above the front door in 1620. “Trust in the Lord”. That is, trust in God’s solution, which simply put, is a faith in Jesus Christ as Lord and Saviour. The message is so simple, but sadly, not heeded by many in today’s society whose “sophistication” puts such a faith beneath their dignity .

As I stood in the Stortorget I wondered, “How do we return to a time and attitude where we would be proud to place a verse above our house in the town square, for all to see, that declares what we know and believe to be truth?”

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