Devotional

The Pressure Points in Marriage

A recently married person asked me the other day what the pressure points were in our 38+ years of married life. Things have been so calm for a number of years ( apart from a moment on an Italian motorway), I had to think. Yes, there had been times when we had to work hard to love each other. Or as an old Dutchman once said, “I never, absolutely never, ever thought of divorce – it never entered my mind, never, … but murder, quite a few times.”

For every couple those pressure points will be different. Their personalities, character traits and circumstances will mean unique pressures on their marriage. Here are some that I struggled with.

1. Having a large family, money and unemployment were issues on occasions. In my early 30s I was studying and working part-time jobs. We had three young children. Money and time were scarce. As a husband and father I had to ensure there was time for my wife and children. In the balancing act that didn’t always happen the way it should. The consequences were tensions and anger. Sadly, while studying Christology I was not always Christ like!

2. Working in people intensive vocations like teaching and the pastoral ministry, this has sometimes led to the family coming second best. Being a “people pleaser” I had the ironic tendency to neglect the people closest to me. On one occasion my wife phoned to tell me that someone needed to speak to me. At the appointed time, she marched in. Before I could protest, my wife reminded me that if it had been anyone else I would have dropped everything and listened. So I listened, and she told me a story of a husband who was never available for his wife and kids and worked all hours. Now if I get too involved in work she says, “Can I make an appointment?” I get the message. Happily, that has occurred less frequently in more recent times. I do learn – slowly.

3. Another area of tension has been immaturity and selfishness- usually mine. This is when we want to get our own way on the issue. Sometimes the issue even slides into the background and it becomes a power struggle between two human beings. Unedifying to all concerned and especially to any children who happen to be watching.

The solutions nearly sound cliched – prayer and devotions. Committing time to each other and communication, communication and communication. Having regular set parts of the day where  you find time to talk together is crucial. I know it is easier said than done but it is so important.

Sometimes is it is good to remind yourselves what brought you together in the first place: The faith, shared values, interests and passions. Also the older I get I realise that there is one special person with whom I share so many memories – memories that only the two of us share. That is precious and worth protecting.

Most of all we share a journey with God. He is the third strand (Eccl 4:12). If there were times when we were weak, we had to rely on Him even more. So even when we let each other down He has never let us down.

Categories: christian, Christianity, Devotional, Faith, Family, Uncategorized | Tags: , , , , , | 3 Comments

Confidently Wrong – It is Time for a U-Turn

There is a scene in the Martin Sheen film “The Way” in which he starts his pilgrimage to honour his dead son. He leaves the Alburgue (hostel) turns left and commences his walk. The camera remains focussed on the door. A few seconds later we see a group of pilgrims walking past the door going in the opposite direction. A few seconds later again, a humbled Sheen, follows behind.

My wife and I laughed out loud when we first saw this scene because we had made exactly the same mistake on the first morning of our pilgrimage. In the dark, early in the morning we confidently set off only to meet pilgrims walking in the opposite direction. Sheepishly, we too had to turn around. We felt smug 20 minutes later when we met a group in the morning gloom heading towards us and we had the opportunity to correct their mistake. Naturally we didn’t tell them about our own error.

This little tale is crammed with our humanity: wrong decisions, damaged pride, needing to correct ourselves and so on.

What if we hadn’t turned around? Obviously we wouldn’t have reached our destination or reached our goals. It made perfect common sense to turn around and learn from our error. As the aphorism declares, “The problem with common sense is that it is not common.” As a society we don’t learn from the past or the mistakes of others. An area that is of great concern is the flippant attitude toward sexuality and marriage that is rampant today. Rather than being treated like hugely precious gifts that need to be nurtured and protected, we treat them as cheap trinkets that can tossed aside without thought. We can add to that, the recent notion of children as designer accessories rather than human beings born into  eternity – either of heaven or hell. ( A topic for another day).

We complain about the fragmentation of society, increased levels or violence, drug addiction, depression, family breakdown, delinquency and etc. but we refuse to reflect on the basic building block of society – the family. The family  is where socialisation is developed, security is found, values built and character shaped. When the family crumbles society falls too. We try to compensate with more laws and police but this is only a stop gap answer at best.

What is needed is a Biblical view of the family or at a minimum, the recognition that the family needs to be protected and nurtured. It is time for us to realise that the moment has come to turn around, as daily, we are striding away from where we should be going.

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The Church, The Industrial Revolution and The Family

What do the three things above have to do with each other? A lot it seems.

Have you noticed that the body of Christ in many, particularly larger churches, has morphed into a series of “departments”: children’s, youth, men’s, women’s, singles and etc. Sadly this is also, too often, reflected in worship services. Children have their own “Children’s Church”, youth have theirs and so on.

I am told that many modern parents don’t want to be annoyed by their children in church.

To be honest, this is a tragic state of affairs and the church can only be poorer for it. The church should be the epitome of an integrated, mutually dependent body, functioning for each other’s good and promoting the Kingdom as one in the world – not a loose connection of independent limbs.

Charlie Chaplin in Modern Times

The industrial model may work well on assembly lines but not the church. The older members need to be reminded of the calling they have to nurture the young through word and example. The young remind the older members of the wonder and naïveté of faith. We need each other. We weren’t meant to be separated – just as a family is not meant to be compartmentalised.

Of course there are times when separate activities are sound and worthwhile, but this shouldn’t characterise the church. To have integrated worship services and activities can be difficult. It requires us to think carefully about the needs of each member and their relationship to the whole. But isn’t that the very challenge that makes it worthwhile! And finally, how many Sunday Schools, Youth services, and specialist departments can you find in the New Testament. I could only find one, the Deacons.

Categories: christian, Christianity, Church, Devotional, Faith, Family, Reflections, Uncategorized | Tags: , , , , , | 4 Comments

The Living Word of God

Keldby Church, Denmark

Before anybody gets me wrong, a caveat: I am really pleased we have the written Word of God available to us daily!

Now to my point. Universal literacy is a relatively modern occurrence. Going further back to the period covered by the Old Testament, the stories, history, laws and commandments were carried by word of mouth from generation to generation.

In medieval times church attenders were often reminded of the stories through pictures on the wall or windows. I love the naive pictures on the walls and ceilings of village churches in Europe – particularly Scandinavia. Without books and literacy there is the need to know and remember the stories in order to pass them on. For that to happen, the stories need to be an integral part of  the person so he or she can share them with children and others.

Is it possible that we have become lazy because we have the Bible in a book, on a shelf which can be readily accessed. We have concordances (even easier now with computers) which help us look up a word, text, passage or name in an instant.

Keldby Church, Denmark

How do we encourage each other to know the Word of God deeply and to eschew our C21st  habit of using Scripture as we do a fast food outlet – quickly and superficially?

I have observed some good programs and apps that encourage memorising the Bible. I have also heard of friends who challenge each other to memorise a chapter or book of Scripture

One of my favourite memories is of an old lady dying of cancer and she was nearly blind. She only spoke Dutch. So, as a keen young pastor I would practise a Psalm in Dutch. When I read the Psalm to her in my halting Dutch she would continue from her memory and get to the end before I could. Over a number of months I tried to catch her out with a Psalm she didn’t remember. She never failed. She had learned all the Psalms as a small girl on a barge that plied the canals of Europe 100 years ago. She had very little schooling, but the Word of God was in her heart and mind.

Would we be able to call on our memory to recite God’s Words to ourselves in a time of need?

Categories: Bible, christian, Christianity, Devotional, Faith, Reflections | Tags: , , , | 2 Comments

The Bandana

My wife has alopecia. As she also suffers from eczema, wearing a wig is problematic. So as an alternative she wears a bandana. This has interesting consequences. Some people come up to me secretively to ask if she has cancer. When she meets bikers in the street she gets a knowing wink.

A bandana means different things to different people: cancer sufferer, biker’s mole or gypsy fortune teller. In my wife’s case it means alopecia sufferer.

For me it is a reminder that people are not stereotypes or clones. In the words of Psalm 139 we are all unique and individual.

For you created my inmost being;
    you knit me together in my mother’s womb.
I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made;
    your works are wonderful,
    I know that full well.  Psalm 139:13 & 14

Before we judge some one or think we know “who they are”, let us take time to really know them. We might be surprised – even pleasantly!

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Harvest and Storm

Then he said to his disciples, “The harvest is plentiful but the workers are few. Matthew 9:37

The LORD is slow to anger but great in power; the LORD will not leave the guilty unpunished. His way is in the whirlwind and the storm, and clouds are the dust of his feet. Nahum 1:3

The Harvest and the Storm

The picture, above, was taken near Mysen in Norway. It has an eerie quality. The other day I realised why it was eerie. There is a crop of wheat ready to be harvested and in the background a storm is approaching. At harvest time a storm doesn’t delight the farmer.

But there is deeper symbolism in the photo. There is a reminder of the Christians’s task to share and spread the “good news”. However, every day we hesitate or delay, is a day closer to the return of the Saviour/Judge – Jesus.

This photo is my personal challenge to myself: “How serious am I about the Kingdom?

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My Toes and the Power Saw

Many years ago I was building a fence and needed to trim the palings in a straight line. So I went to a friend to borrow his power saw. I saw him remove it from a vice, unplug it from the wall and change the blade as he had been cutting ceramic tiles. He told me to be careful as the safety guard was not working as it should. By this stage a number of warning bells should have gone off in my head. They didn’t. All I was thinking about was the easiest ways to trim the top of the fence.

When I got to the fence in question, I placed the saw on the ground near my foot and plugged the saw cable into the live extension cord I had arranged. Immediately the buzz saw sprang into life and raced across the grass. I did not have time to move my foot but instinctively I pulled my toes in. The saw sliced off the top of my sneaker and sock but left my toes without a scratch. It stopped when it cut through its own cord.

Ever since I treated power saws, in fact, all power tools with far more respect. It could have been a more painful lesson, but thankfully it wasn’t. I should have noted all the clues leading up to the incident but I was more interested in getting the job done easily.

How often do we need to learn the hard way rather than having listened and accumulated wisdom from those around us; those who have walked certain paths and learned lessons before us?

Proverbs 12:15 declares: The way of fools seems right to them, but the wise listen to advice. I was a fool. It did teach me to listen and watch more carefully. But in so many areas of my life it is a lesson I need to learn and learn again.

Categories: christian, Christianity, Devotional, Faith, Reflections, Uncategorized | Tags: , , , | 1 Comment

To Hear You Again

Another morning awakes,
and my soul leaps
for another word
from You.
Another reminder
of love and place,
of family and eternity.
 
 Creation bows before You,
each day anew.
Birds sing and warble 
their praises.
Flowers and trees bow to You.
 
Lord, thank you for
my undeserved place before you
and hearing  my prayer
and loving me!
 
My place with you
is greater
more blessed
and life giving
than any trifle the world
can offer.
 
My reflections on the, far more beautiful, Psalm 84
Categories: Christianity, Church, Devotional, Faith, Poem, poetry, Prayer, Uncategorized | Tags: , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Heroic Sacrifice

Mousehole Cornwall UK

On the 19th December 1981 the Penlee Lifeboat based in Mousehole (pronounced Mowsel) Cornwall was called to rescue the crew of the MV Union Star whose engine had stalled in horrific seas off the Cornish coast on a trip to Ireland. The story is told in the moving BBC documentary Cruel Sea: The Penlee Lifeboat Disaster.  

Sixteen people lost their lives: Eight from the lifeboat and eight from the ship.

We are often assaulted by the depraved behaviour of humans in wars and atrocities but we should also be encouraged by the altruism we discover as well. In floods, bushfires and other crises, such as rescues at sea, there are stories of people putting their lives on the line for others. We read of heroism in the recent storms in the US, which is a nice change from the shooting headlines that are trumpeted in newspaper and television reports.

What I find exciting is that whenever these altruistic events occur we see a glimpse of Jesus, the God/Man who died in our place on the cross. I find it encouraging that there are moments in everyday life through heroism, sacrifice and putting the other first, that we glimpse Jesus through the actions of ordinary human beings. We are given a momentary insight into how God originally created us and is now recreating us in Christ.

And being found in appearance as a man,
    he humbled himself
    by becoming obedient to death—
        even death on a cross!   Philippians 2:8

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A Long Long Time Ago… or … Will We Remember?

I love Roman archaeology:  Hadrian’s Wall, the Forum, aqueducts, amphitheatres, Roman Roads, baths and the list goes on. Wherever the Romans went they left their mark. You cannot travel around Europe without being aware that eons ago this civilisation was dominant in much of Europe, and in deed, northern Africa and Palestine. Even the builders of Winchester Cathedral became acutely aware of the Romans when they realised their building was sinking because the land was once a river which neat Romans had straightened out.

In two thousand years time, or even 1000, or maybe 500, if Christ hasn’t returned, will people be aware of C21st western Christianity? Will there be vibrant bodies of Christ challenging the ethos of the day and declaring biblical alternatives? Will there be people of passion seeking the spiritual health of the souls of men, women and children? Will there be a zeal for justice and the plight of the voiceless? Will there be worship that gives society a glimpse of heaven in the midst of the daily grind? Will Jesus be known?

Nearly 500 years ago, on October 31st, Martin Luther nailed 95 theses against indulgences on the door of the Castle Church Wittenberg. Many consider this to be the match that lit the Reformation. Other reforming hearts had come before him; Wycliffe, Tyndale, Hus and many others, but the time was right to challenge unbiblical views within the church of the day. The remembrance of this monumental event in history is even being forgotten in the churches this event begot.

It is a scary thought. Except, thank God, the advancement of the gospel is not in our hands. Although we are responsible.

Only be careful, and watch yourselves closely so that you do not forget the things your eyes have seen or let them fade from your heart as long as you live. Teach them to your children and to their children after them.  Deut 4:9

God’s people on their Journey to the promised land were urged to remember the events that had occurred and laws that had been given up to this point. They were all pointers to God’s amazing grace. Forget them and they will forget God and His message and purpose for them.

Our churches and families have an important and monumental task to teach our children and children’s children about God, His message and purpose for them.

Categories: 95 Theses, christian, Christianity, Devotional, Faith, History, Reformation | Tags: , , , | 2 Comments

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