Friday 30 May 2008

So long, farewell....
















There's a sad sort of clanging
from the clock in the hall
And the bells in the steeple too
And up in the nursery an absurd little bird
Is popping out to say "cuckoo"

Regretfully they tell us
But firmly they compel us
To say goodbye . . .
. . to you.

(raises hand in final salutation before scratching backside through chafing lederhosen)

Dear friends,

I've been feeling for some time that I need a wee break from blogging to re-think why I am doing it.

Who am I writing for?

If it's me, then I think the blog is not best serving my needs.
If it's others, then there are precious few listening and I might be better to lose my anonymity and open up to wider circulation within my church and parish.

Whatever; I think I hoped for more community out of this, and perhaps these feelings are God's way of saying I need to seek that out elsewhere. That is very much a part of the Slow Work I need to be about.

Despite that, Liz, Anna, Carla and Paul, I really appreciate having read you (and will continue to do so), and wish you God's blessing in life. Thanks for calling by and sharing part of the journey with me. You have been funny, wise and supportive companions.

Don't think of this as goodbye;
more of "adieu, adiueu, to you and you and you".

Blessings

FBL

Thursday 22 May 2008

The Sands of Time....

... have trickled by for a long time since my last post. Study leave seems a long way away and I've been completely immersed in getting ready for a Public Inquiry relating to a local sand and gravel quarry. Apart from the fact that this area already has far too many "bad neighbour developments", these particular developers want to put a 15ft bund around two sides of the house belonging to an elderly couple in my congregation. It'll be like living in a WW2 trench. They are money grabbing swine and they have to be stopped.

I've read through a mountain of paperwork relating to all this and have to get my submissions in by the weekend. The inquiry's in June. Talk about a steep learning curve....

Anyway - have had little time to post, but wanted to include the following as it ties in with my study leave reading and made me smile. It's a quote from Terry Pratchett's "Good Omens".

“God does not play dice with the universe; He plays an ineffable game of his own devising, which might be compared, from the perspective of any of the other players, to being involved in an obscure and complex version of poker in a pitch dark room, with blank cards, for infinite stakes, with a dealer who won't tell you the rules, and who smiles all the time”.

Friday 2 May 2008

Study Leave - Part 4

When I was in primary school I took a packed lunch each day. Mum would wrap the sandwiches in greaseproof paper, stick a drink, some crisps and a biscuit in my lunch box and pack me off to school knowing that I had enough nutrition to keep me going.

But one day, about the age of six or seven, I must have got the end of a loaf because when I ate my sandwiches the bread seemed a bit tough. I decided in my little mind that I didn't like them, but I was canny enough to know not to throw them out in school. A teacher might see; or the janny; or maybe some other kid would spot me doing it and get me into trouble.

So I ambled home after school (those were the days when you could do that, aged six or seven), all the while wondering what to do with my lunch. Again, I didn't want to dispose of it on the way in case some of the kids who lived nearby saw what I was doing. Bereft of ideas, I arrived home with said uneaten lunch in my schoolbag. I knew this was a scenario unlikely to end well.

But inspiration struck! At the top of our first flight of stairs there was a wee room with the hot press, a few cupboards and an old upright piano. In a flash of genius I realised that there was a perfect little space between the back of the piano and the wall, just right for swallowing up uneaten sandwiches. So I clambered up on the stool and dropped the greaseproof paper package down the back and heard a satisfying thud as it hit the floor. Problem solved!

So successful was this little scheme that I made it a daily ritual. You see, I'd convinced myself that my sandwiches would always be hard and that I really didn't want to eat them. So this went on for weeks and weeks. It got to the stage that I couldn't get any more down the back, so I had to start shoving them underneath as well. You can tell that this room wasn't used much, can't you....

And then, judgement day arrived. Mum was hoovering the stairs and saw the corner of a package sticking out from under the piano. She pulled it out. It was a lunch. She stuck her hand in. Another lunch. Suspicions aroused, she moved the piano forward and watched incredulously as three weeks worth of mouldy lunches fell to the floor. Complete with maggots.

She called my name in the kind of way which tells you you're already in trouble, and when I stepped into the room and saw for myself the incontravertible evidence of my utter stupidity it was like scales were taken off my eyes. In my young mind I'd genuinely thought that those sandwiches would just disappear. Now I knew that they'd hung around, and that everything - my not eating, my futile attempts at concealing the evidence - was uncovered.

I hared down the stairs and hid in the wee cupboard under the stairs that folk in Ireland (and Scotland too, I think) call the 'glory hole'. I stayed in there for about three hours, dreading my father coming home. Mum didn't drag me out or anything, and my sister came and played games with me. I think she maybe even brought me some juice. Come to think of it, mum probably sent her.

Finally dad arrived, and I heard voices in the kitchen. Mum came through and told me gently that I'd have to go through and see him. I knew I'd reached the point where resistance was futile and steeled myself for the worst. But to my amazement there was no hauling over the coals. No smack or slap of punishment (they weren't really into that anyway). Dad just looked me in the eye for a long time, reading my face, and then he said "You know that what you did was stupid, don't you son?". I nodded. "And you're sorry, aren't you. You won't do it again, will you son?". I shook my head. "Well say sorry to your mother and let's just forget it ever happened."

..............................................................................................

I remembered this story on Study Leave, and tears came to my eyes when I realised that in many ways this is a picture of what Judgement is really like. Judgement is when the truth comes out. When we finally see the truth that we'd hidden from ourselves; the truth that we thought had got lost down some deep dark hole where no-one would ever find it.

God speaks that truth, and we are forced to confront it. Burning pain; shame; running and hiding; shutting ourselves off in the darkness. Hell, maybe?

But at the end comes a gentle summons, and the grace of a Father who only punishes to bring restoration, and refuses to punish when the lesson he needs to teach us has already been learned.

Thanks be to God.

Friday 18 April 2008

Study Leave - Part 3

This is how I feel today.


















I am like a man buying a second-hand car. Walking around it; kicking the tyres; checking the mileage; looking for spots of rust or bumps and scratches that only reveal themselves on closer inspection.

The theology Keith Ward puts forward is pretty shiny, and I like the look of it, but I'm not sold on it just yet. I need to get under the hood and check out the workings in a bit more detail before I'm ready to put my money on the table.

Am feeling a bit tired by all of this, and a bit displaced by being out of routine. Mind you, I always feel a bit on edge when I enter a salesroom and have tough choices to make.....

Thursday 17 April 2008

Study Leave - Part 2

Yesterday was Rosie's birthday and it was great to be off and able to chill out a bit. We opened presents in the morning and went out for tea with the kids after school.

In between, I got caught up in a worthwhile but lengthy visit about replacing some of our church windows, so it was a less studious beginning to the fortnight than it might have been!

This morning I've been going further through Keith Ward's "What the Bible Really Teaches".

This is what it feels like:




















A whirlwind of ideas and texts swirling around in my mind at breakneck speed; yet the whole thing moving forward slowly and methodically.

Much disorientation, but every now and again I glimpse something beautiful and shining on the margins of the storm. And I want to grab those things and hold onto them because I know that they're important. Vital, even.

Wednesday 16 April 2008

Study Leave - Part 1 of many

Look at that optimistic title there.... pure class. How long do you think I'll keep this up?

Yes - two weeks of Study Leave. One here and one in God's Own Country on the north coast of County Antrim. Lots of beard stroking (my own beard), coffee brewing and pleasant thumbing through life changing tomes. After seven years incarceration - whoops, I mean in divine service - I bloody deserve it.

The 'study' part will involve a closer look at Universalism. This has been on my mind for some time. Put simply (for I am not a person of great depth) I want to be a Universalist in my heart, but my head holds me back. More specifically, that part of my head that's filled with scary Bible stories and stern voices from my past. Sometimes my own stern voice.

Quite where this is going to lead I don't know, but I'm determined to enjoy the journey. I'd like you to join me for as much of it as you can, in the midst of your busy, non study-leave existence.

To begin with, I'd welcome suggestions for titles for the 'essay' that the good people at 121 George Street (church HQ) will require in return for graciously giving me a two week break after seven years incarceration - whoops - I mean divine service.

Preferred options so far:

1) A wideness in God's mercy. How good is the good news? (this is the serious one)

2) 99.8% of all human beings who ever lived will burn forever in a fiery pit. Is this good news?

3) Saving the one sheep. Why we really shouldn't bother about the other 99 because it was their fault anyway.

4) Blogging - the ideal way to evade your study leave assignment.

Progress so far. Have drank lots of coffee, gone for a walk, updated my answerphone message, set up an out of office reply on the email and read chapters 1 and 2 of Keith Wards "What the Bible Really Teaches" which has reassuringly confirmed that I am not a heretic for sliding into a more open stance on the status of Scripture. At least, as far as Keith's concerned.

I think that's not a bad morning's work....

Blessings

FBL

Saturday 12 April 2008

Beginnings















The hours I spent in that room.

It was at the top of the house, three stories up.
Smaller than the other bedroom on that floor,
which my sisters occupied like possessive lionesses.

Twin beds, an ottoman, a chest of drawers
and a wardrobe, only just concealing the alcove
which was all that remained of a fireplace.
Far and away, the best hiding place in the house.

The years I spent in that room.

I remember stories with dad,
and listening to him shushing my baby brother to sleep
in the next bed.
I remember delirious nights there – swimming in and out of a haze while mum kept vigil at the bedside.
I remember clambering onto a chair and opening the skylight.
Getting a birds eye view across the other rooftops,
all the way down to the local park.
Or sitting there on wet days
listening to the raindrops drumming angrily
off the window’s curved plastic.

I remember hours spent hunched over home computers,
or reading books;

discovering the kind of music I liked,
discovering writing.
Discovering girls.

And then, at the age of 18,
I remember discovering God.

I’d been in the church all my life.
Knew the books of the Bible from Genesis to Revelation
and most of the stories in between.
I’d been to Sunday School, Children’s Church and Bible Class,
I’d belted out the choruses, rhymed off the catechism, and sat through the sermons.
I’d spoken about God, sang about God and read about God.

The years I spent in that church.

And then, at the age of 18,
after all that hand-me-down belief
and reluctant dutiful attendance,
I discovered God for myself.

Not in a holy building,
or with my nose stuck in the Bible.
But outside under the stars.
with friends around a campfire.
A night of laughter, food and chat;
love even.
God was with them, somehow,
those young Christians.
And suddenly I knew that he wasn’t just with them
He was with us; with me – right at that moment.

The unseen guest who’d dogged my dreams
and haunted many a waking moment
with the ghost of his possibility,
was there among us.

And the shivers I felt
weren’t just from the chill September air.
It was the finally knowing that God is.
And the understanding that with that truth
I would have to change.

But you know what?
In those moments, that scarcely mattered.
What mattered more
was the realisation that my world had changed.
My world had always been too small;
but from that point on I had a bigger canvas to paint my life on.

And here I am, 22 years later.
Older.
Maybe a little wiser.
And a professed servant of the one
whose spirit moved among us
that autumn evening,
in the firelight at Glenariffe

22 years of chasing him, following him,
losing him, denying him.
22 years of all the wonderful, maddening foibles
of life in this thing called church.
And my heart is still not at rest,
Because the spirit won’t rest
until God has finished his work in me, and in you;
and brought us to the place
where that fleeting sense of his presence
stretches out to fill all the time we will ever know.

That encounter
set a fire in my heart
that still smoulders.
A desire to know this God;
and be known by him,
and make him known
in a world shorn of wonder.

The hours I spent in that room, from that day onwards;
poring over the Bible I liberated from my sister’s bookshelf.

I remember the smell of the pages,
and the old-fashioned look of the print.
I remember learning from the apostles,
the prophets, the psalmist. the evangelists.
Hearing their words, Gods words,
as though spoken directly to me
for the first time.

Come to me all you who are weary and burdened and I will give you rest.

Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart and you will find rest for your souls.

See, I have set before you life and death, blessings and curses. Now choose life, so that you and your children may live, and that you may love the Lord your God, listen to his voice, and hold fast to him.

Those words came to me like a long lost letter
from a Father I’d never known.
Or the wise counsel of a new friend
who spoke as if he’d known me for years.

Suddenly I had a direction to my life.

And suddenly I had a community to call my own.

Church became more than a duty –
it became the place where I could meet with other folk
who were making the same journey.
People who’d caught the strains of God’s song
and were trying their best to hum the melody.

I remember going to University with a newborn faith, weeks old,
and finding a whole group of people
who were singing this particular tune.
And I found a home among them.

I remember the different churches,
each demonstrating some new facet of this vast God
whose household I had stumbled into.

The church in Sutton,
a milder offshoot of the Brethren movement,
where the congregation brought prayers and readings and insights from their daily living
into the place of worship.
No clergy in sight.
Just the fellowship of believers
sharing their experience of walking with God.

I remember the Afro-Carribean church in Handsworth,
the exhuberant worship
and simple thanks
that flowed forth from the lives of those big hearted,
wide-girthed women in the choir.
All dressed in yellow one week.
All in blue or lilac the next.

I remember the struggling wee church in Saltley.
Trying so hard to work out how to be good Christians
in a neighbourhood where 70% of the residents
were of a different race and religion.

I remember the meals, the discussions, the debates;
learning how to pray; learning to respect the vast diversity
of Christian experience.

I remember those formative years with great fondness.
And though I paint them with a rosy glow,
I wouldn’t change a thing about them.

For they laid the foundations of what I’m giving my life to.
The pursuit of God.
And the honouring of him
in the midst of this rag-tag assembly of broken but becoming people
that we call the church of Jesus Christ.

Tuesday 8 April 2008

Our God Is Many Things

Just back from a weekend away with Ruchill Church where I used to work. It's the first time I've led a whole weekend away for another congregation and though it was a lot of work, it went well and I was really blessed by the experience. We went to the Atholl Centre in Pitlochry and enjoyed a couple of days of worship and banter and catching up; warm fellowship despite the blizzards outside!

We were looking at the theme "God is Closer Than You Think" picking up on the John Ortberg book of the same name.

On the Friday evening I ripped off an idea I'd read in a book by Adrian Plass and got them to write a poem (though they didn't know that's what they were doing!). I asked them to complete this sentence anonymously and as honestly as they could.. "At this moment, for me, God is......"
I then arranged their responses in an order which sounded poetic and drew out how differently people were experiencing God in that moment.

Here is the result - it's called "Our God Is Many Things". Please forgive the gendered language if it annoys you.

OUR GOD IS MANY THINGS

Our God is many things…..
He is leading me, keeping me going, shaping me.
He is planning, working and answering.
He’s getting closer to me and my heart.
He’s distant in my life, and not an active participant.
He’s goading me.


Our God is many things…..
He’s huge; he’s good.
He’s waiting.
He’s in everything.
He’s not immediate.
He’s difficult to talk to.
He’s hard to understand.


Our God is many things….
He’s beginning to get closer.
He’s wanting me to be closer and deeper.
He’s near, but I need to stop more and enjoy his presence.
He’s a gracious friend on whose friendship I presume too much.
He’s someone I know I should experience, but life takes over and I’m not motivated enough to love.


Our God is many things….
He’s constant, despite my feelings.
He’s wanting me to draw near to him.
He’s what I most want.
He’s available, but I don’t seem to be interested.
He’s squeezed in at the end of the day;
there, but not the focus.


Our God is many things….
He’s getting closer by the minute.
He’s a great God who has done wonderful things.
He’s unfathomable.
He’s not a priority.


He’s very close to me.
He’s the furthest he’s ever been.


Our God is Many Things.

I'll reflect on what that reveals in my next post

Sunday 30 March 2008

Under the clothes

I need to see Jim today.

We're off on holiday this week and I won't have another chance.

Jim had a stroke years ago and keeps falling at home.

This time he's really done it. A broken hip.

I go to the ward, but they're working with him.
So I take myself down to the chapel to pass the time.

I've never been in this room before
but already I love it.

The low lighting,
the space
the artwork.

And best of all
the background hum of the air conditioning.

Sitting there, alone,
I'm back under the clothes.

I'm three or four, I think,
and it's wash day.

Mum working the twin tub,
pulled out from under the draining board.

I love to burrow
under the warm, spun dry clothes
and hide in the darkness,
sidling up to the cosy metal
and feeling the vibrations
pulse through my wee body.

And the low thrum of the machinery
lulls me better than any cradle song.

This is a womb.
And in the womb of my soul
the seed of the numinous is planted.

And the glory of this little idiosyncrasy;
this spiritual fingerprint,
is that any time I hear the quiet hum
of a machine going about its business,
it takes me back under the clothes
to feel again the warm contentment of innocence.

Mum is there,
God is there
and all is well.

Friday 21 March 2008

A Good Friday

The phone rang at 9:15am and usually that means only one thing. Another death call.

So I picked up the handset with an already heavy heart.


But this time it was different. One of my elders with the good news that her daughter had given birth to a baby girl.

This was better news than normal.

Some people you just will to get a break in life.
New mum is one of those.

A few years ago this poor young woman
lost her husband and twin babies in a matter of months.

And still she comes to church.

God bless her. God bless them all.

Life comes, even in the midst of death.

**********************************

After hours slaving away over a hot PC to get things together for tonight's service, I had to laugh when a powercut at 7:15 put paid to another Powerpoint extravaganza.

The sight of Willem Defoe naked on a cross will have to wait for another year.

We decanted to the hall, taking only what we needed,
and had our service by the dim security bulbs,
candle and torchlight.

We sang a-capella, with a little guitar accompaniment,
and with readings and prayers,
one by one
we stripped away the layers of coloured cloth
we'd placed upon the cross.

Gold for heaven.
Silver for Sinai.
Red for the Temple.
White for the swaddling.
Brown for the carpenter.
Bloodstained for the crucified.

God, seeking to be understood,
peeling off layers of mystery
'til finally naked.
Stripped of clothing, friends and life itself.

God, whose face we cannot look upon,
hanging dead in the sky for all to see.

Wednesday 19 March 2008

Peched Oot

Those of you who are clergy (or obliged to live with them) will understand the pressures of this week with so many extra services to prepare for, and the need to keep things fresh for people because these stories are so familiar. It's hard hard work - hence no new posts for a while.

But I had to tell you of a couple of funnies which, though rather irreverent, made us laugh this week.

Rosie came through late last night to ask how things were going with the Good Friday service, to which I replied "Good. I think I've nailed it". Whoops.

Then today, Pudge toddled through into the study where we have a five-foot cross waiting to be taken over to the church. Rosie followed her in and noticed Pudge straining and red faced as she stood and looked up at the cross. She pointed this out to me and before I could stop myself I said "Yes - that's her leaving her heavy load at the foot of the cross".....

Sorry Lord. I'm sure you understand.

Monday 10 March 2008

In the soup

A choice phrase leapt out at me from our Social Committee's most recent minutes. These are prepared by someone we really appreciate in St Hackett's - one of the good guys - but my oh my how I laughed when I read it.

There was a bit of dispute about the quality of the food at our Burns Supper (in my view it was fine), especially the cock-a-leekie soup which was a bit stringy.

The phrase in question?

"It was agreed that the leeks could have been cut smaller".

What was it Jesus said about straining out a gnat and swallowing a camel?

Tuesday 4 March 2008

My Lovely Poem

No hits on that last post.

It really shouldn't bother me, but it does.

I feel like Ted and Dougal at the Eurovision Song Contest.

Nil Points from the jury from Blogland!

Monday 25 February 2008

Smiling at Funerals

Make what you will of this.....


Smiling At Funerals

Sometimes it’s hard,
among the flowers and the hymnbooks,
and the mourners all assembled,
not to smile.

Perverse thing, that.

I emerge from the vestry,
face fixed, as needs be, in that neutral mien,
conveying what, one hopes,
is an appropriate amount of gravity.
But the weight of those watching eyes;
the silent, controlled tension of those moments,
forces me into an unnatural self-consciousness.

Can I trust my face?
Do I look sad, or just vacant?
Peaceful, or indifferent?
God forbid;
How can I be sure I’m not grinning like a loon?!

So every now and then,
I twitch the muscles in the corner of my mouth
To make sure my lips are set solemnly straight.
And in so doing,
momentarily,
superficially,
I smile.

I hope no-one sees.
They might think I’ve grown calloused
and insensitive to grief,
when the truth is,
standing beside the dead and deadened,
sorrow, gratitude, love, despair and hope
mingle into one emotional continuum,
like streams surrendering to the river’s course.

And rooted on this bank,
from which I see, however faintly,
the estuary spreading out towards the boundless, open sea,
I think I can allow myself a smile.

Friday 22 February 2008

Comic Timing

Comedy has always been a release valve from me.

(That began as a typo, but on reflection I think it's a truth. Scarily Freudian. A release valve from me, rather than for me. Hmmmmm.)

It began as a kid when we'd watch Not the Nine O'Clock News and the Young Ones and run through the routines the next morning in school assembly. Kudos for those who could remember the most. And it's continued well into adulthood - when I'm tired and just want to switch off my brain, it's Dave or UKTV Gold I gravitate to. I never tire of re-runs of Fawlty Towers, Alan Partridge, HIGNFY or Buzzcocks.

Half the DVD's and videos in my collection are standup: I love the storytelling skills of Billy Connolly and the mad surrealism of Eddie Izzard and Harry Hill.

I was watching Dara O'Briain late last night, and one of the things he does is pick on members of the audience and improvise whole chunks of his act around a conversation with them. It's a remarkable gift.

But one of his questions to the audience stopped me in my tracks last night and made me think long and hard. He pounced on one poor guy with "what's the most amazing thing you've ever done?". Try answering that in five seconds! I'm struggling 12 hours later!

What would you have said?

Monday 11 February 2008

Pluscarden Reflections - Part 3

A few years ago my spiritual director of the time asked me to go and write my own obituary. This wasn't her way of telling me to 'go forth and multiply', but a tangential approach to helping me think through what it is I really value from life and want to be remembered for.

Boiling all of that thought down, the essence is this: I want to make a difference by helping others connect with God.

This is my hope and my heart. And the converse is my fear. A life where I make little or no difference. A life where I don't leave footprints in anyone's heart.

I took that thought with me to Pluscarden, and voiced it among the guys on the first night together. When I'm tired and overworked, these are the times when I wonder what it's all about and whether anything I'm doing has any lasting value.

The next day I realised I'd thrown an envelope in the back of the car - my treasurer had handed it to me as I left the church and I hadn't taken it indoors when I got home. I opened it and read these words from a young woman whose wedding service I'd taken just before Christmas (and I record them to show that God is good, not me!)

"We wanted to thank you for your beautiful service and acknowledge the time and energy you must have put in to personalise our special day. Your heartfelt words touched both Steve and I, and your warmth, humour and sincerity reached out to all of our weddings guests. In fact we were bombarded by friends and family who said it was the happiest and most joyful service that they had ever been to, and we owe that to you alone.... we look forward to continuing to see you on Sundays"

I see a providence in the fact that those words were there for me to read on that day. It was God's way of saying - "There you go. Take heart. These are the kind of footprints you're leaving"

Thursday 7 February 2008

Pluscarden Reflections - Part 2

Apart from the sheer magnificence of the building, the crowning glory of the Abbey is its stained glass, much of which was designed and manufactured by the monks themselves.

On the Monday afternoon I set off for a wander as the light was beginning to fade, and as I walked past the end of the Abbey I noticed something odd.

The stained glass window in the North Transept depicts Mary’s visit to her cousin Elizabeth, both women pregnant with unexpected sons. At that time of day the window was almost entirely dark because the chapel wasn’t in use, but there was a solitary light burning inside. The light from that bulb illuminated one small panel with uncanny precision; the one showing the women’s faces close together: loving, contented and united. Their faces stood out in bright colour, against the blackness of the rest of the window.

I stood there for a good ten minutes in the cold, soaking up this lovely image– passers by must have thought I’d lost the plot! - but I knew that God was saying something important to me through it. And what I think he was saying was this – “This is what you were made for. For intimacy, with one another and with me.”

If I could ask one thing for myself and for my church it would be this. To help people draw closer to God and enjoy a deeper and more intimate fellowship with him. For me, this is what the church is for. Everything else we might do, however important or enjoyable, is a distant second to that first priority. Mission, outreach, worship, social action – all these things flow from the ‘spring’ that is our own connection with God.

Friday 1 February 2008

Pluscarden Reflections - Part 1

Two weekends ago I went on retreat to Pluscarden Abbey, the only medieval monastery still in use in the UK. It's set in beautiful countryside near the town of Elgin and is home to a community of Benedictine monks. Guests are free to come and go as they please, but are invited to join with the brothers in their times of worship.

After arriving, we joined them for vespers at 5:30 and sat through 45 minutes of ritual, song and prayer that I’m guessing had changed very little in seven centuries. And although I didn't understand the Latin liturgy (and there's still a part of me that balks at ritual), it was a blessing to be there because the experience opened up for me a window into the mystery of God.

Incense hung around us like a cloud as the priest consecrated the bread and wine, and having done so, we kept silence together before God in that great room, for fifteen minutes.

Fifteen minutes of absolute silence. It felt like the whole of heaven was holding its breath. It was an experience of the Numinous.

This Sunday's lectionary readings - Moses on Sinai and Christ's Transfiguration - can feel a bit problematic because of the whole son et lumiere thing. How do we, who have never and probably will never have that kind of experience, relate to what Moses and the disciples went through?

Answer - the very same light and sound is breaking through all the time in little ways if we have eyes to see and ears to hear. Gerard Manley Hopkins was spot on:

“The world is charged with the grandeur of God. It will flame out like shining from shook foil”

Friday 25 January 2008

The Waiting Room

An offering for Sunday based on Matthew 4:12-22














Waiting rooms all over the world are the same. Those uncomfortable plastic chairs; dog-eared magazines piled on the table; information leaflets displayed in racks along the walls, looking like no-one’s touched them in years. This one was no different.

The venetian blinds were almost closed, but the glare of a perpetual noon still filtered through from outside, sending dust-speckled shafts of light into the room.

The occupants busied themselves with little nothings. A slight, elderly lady toyed with the strap of her bag; a heavy-set young man with a sleeveless denim jacket took bored interest in the posters around the room; and a somewhat older man, tanned of face and with thinning grey hair, sat with arms folded, and the kind of preoccupied smile people wear when they’re in company and waiting for something important to happen.

A buzz and a flashing light on the secretary’s desk punctuated the stillness. He lifted the receiver and nodded, before saying “James Chandler? You can go through now. It’s the door on your left”.

The older man nodded and smiled as he got to his feet, buttoning his jacket before making his way across the room to the scruffy panelled door, showing traces of turquoise beneath its present brown façade.

Before he was even half-way through it, he noticed the sudden change of atmosphere. The mild claustrophobia of the waiting room had given way to an airy lightness that seemed somehow familiar. Looking around, he realised why that was. The fountain; the bespoke furniture; the polished granite floors and tastefully arranged plants; this was just like the foyer of the church he went to in New York. Exactly like it, in every aspect but one.

In the middle, by the fountain, stood a tall woman, lithe and beautiful, and dressed in robes of purple and white. On her dark head she wore a crown of silver, or white gold, mounted with jewels of every colour.

She smiled her welcome and indicated a leather chair beside her. “Please sit down, Mister Chandler. I hope you don’t mind our little ways. We want you to feel at home here today”.

“No, no – this is great. It’s remarkable!”, beamed Chandler, taking his seat while looking around the room with bemused incredulity.

The lady sat down opposite him in a similar chair and took a businesslike, if not unfriendly tone “As you’ll understand, there are a few procedures we need to go through before we can progress with your repatriation”.

“Sure”, said Chandler, leaning forward. “Ask me anything you like. Anything at all. You can even hook me up to a lie-detector if you think that’d help” he joked.

“I don’t think that’ll be necessary, Mr Chandler” she said, humouring him. “After all, this is heaven; and I am an angel. There’s not much chance of avoiding the truth here…..”

“I guess not” said Chandler, the smile still present, but a little less certain than before.

“So how do things work here? Do I have to pass a test or something?”

“Well, yes and no” said the angel. “Not the kind of test you’re thinking about, like those multiple choice exams you had to sit in Secondary School. It’s more of a conversation, but a conversation that starts with a question. Would you like to hear it?”

“Do I have a choice?”
said Chandler

The angel shook her head, almost imperceptibly, and then leaned forward and looked directly into his eyes for the first time. Her gaze was both beautiful and terrifying, like staring into the unfathomable depths of the night sky. Chandler felt as though his soul had been stripped of all pretence.

“You were given one command to obey during your lifetime, Mr Chandler. “Follow me”. How well do you think you’ve obeyed that command?

Chandler sat back in his chair, the smile replaced with a frown of concentration.

“I guess I’ve always been a follower of Jesus” he offered, choosing his words carefully. “I was baptised into the church, raised in the church, and I’ve given the best years of my life to serving the church as a member and then an elder”.

The angel made no move to affirm or deny any of this. “Go on” she said.

“I’ve been faithful in all my duties” he said, warming to his task. “I’ve tried to live a good life and be kind to people. I’ve been a regular attender since I was in my teens. I’ve visited the people under my care as often as I could. I don’t know what more I could have done to be a follower of Jesus”.

The angel gave a slight nod and said, not unsympathetically, “No-one’s questioning your commitment to the church, Mr Chandler. But I’m asking about something rather different. I’m asking about your commitment to Christ."

"You and I could go for a walk outside these walls today and I could show you any number of people who have been fanatically devoted to the church, but wouldn’t know the Spirit of Jesus Christ from the Ghost of Christmas Past. They tend to be the ones who start wars and organise inquisitions."

"And there are many good and kind people in the world who don’t believe in God at all, or are trying to follow him in a different way. We’re commanded to be good and kind to others, that’s true; but that’s only one facet of what God asks of us. And the words he spoke to you weren’t 'Be Good': they were ‘Follow Me’".

“I’m sorry”, said Chandler, looking puzzled. “I don’t get this. I thought that doing my duty for the church and trying to be a good person was all there was to it…?”

“Yes I know” sighed the angel. “That’s the problem. It should all have been so different”.

With that, she pulled a remote control from the folds of her robe and pointed to one of the flat screen televisions mounted on the wall.

“Take a look at this, she said”. The screen flickered to life, showing a picture of a lake shimmering in the morning light. A young man walks beside it, stopping every now and again to pick up a choice shell or stone. Out on the water, some fishermen are plying their trade, throwing their nets into the water. He shouts to them and seems to be recognised. And then – the strangest thing – he asks them to leave their nets and follow him, and they do exactly what he said, almost without hesitation.

“You have to understand, that wasn’t the first time they met him” said the angel, turning to Chandler. “They were followers of John the Baptist, and they got to know Jesus not long after he got baptised himself. I think they’d been building up to this moment for a while. You know who they are?”

“Yes, of course. Those were the first disciples. Peter and Andrew and then James and John”.

“I’m glad you used that word ‘disciples’ Mr Chandler. That’s one of the words we need to be talking about today. What’s a disciple?”

“Well, I guess it’s someone who’s trying to follow Jesus”

“And what would that have meant for Peter and Andrew and James and John?”

“Well they’d have left their nets and their fishing business behind, and even some of their relatives. James and John had to leave their father with the hired men and we know from elsewhere that Peter was married”.

“And did they know where they were going to?”


“No. I don’t think they had a clue about that. They probably didn’t know where they were going from day to day, let alone where all of this was going to end. It wasn’t all mapped out. They took each day as it came and learned from it as they watched Jesus going about his ministry.”

“And what do you think they learned from watching Jesus?”

There was a long pause as Chandler reflected on that question.

“They learned that God is here with us, at work in the world in ways we can’t even see. They learned that when you stay close to God in prayer you find strength to face whatever your day brings; but more than that, you begin to see opportunities that would otherwise have passed you by.”

“Opportunities for what?” said the angel.

Again, Chandler thought hard before speaking.

“Opportunities to help people move a little closer to God. Times when you say something that gets them thinking, or do something that makes them think well, not of you, but of the God you serve.”

The angel nodded. “That’s right. Do you remember what Christ promised as he asked these four men to follow him? He promised to make them….”

“…fishers of men” they said together, and Chandler smiled as he remembered the chorus he’d sung about that in Sunday School.

“So, did you do much fishing in this busy church life of yours?” she asked, catching his eye with the same penetrating gaze.

“I guess not” said Chandler, looking away. “Somewhere along the line we got so preoccupied with running the church that we forgot that that’s why the church exists in the first place.”

“Exactly” said the angel. “The church is busy with a thousand things, but rarely the things that really matter. Ministers run themselves ragged trying to fulfil everyone’s expectations, when they should be doing less, praying more and grounding themselves in Christ’s expectations.

Church leaders work themselves into the ground to keep all the different aspects of the institution going, but they never have time to stop and ask whether these are the right things for the institution to be doing.

Faithful members come along on Sundays, but how many follow Jesus into a life of prayer and committed action during the rest of the week, while many others, calling themselves members, might as well not be, for all that they contribute to the life of the church”.

“Following Jesus. You make it sound so easy” Chandler said, with a trace of bitterness in his voice. “Maybe part of the reason we substitute running the church for being disciples is that it’s hard to follow someone you can’t see or hear!”

“I don’t doubt that’s true” said the angel. “But is it so very different for you than it was for those first disciples? Listen to what you said just a few moments ago.”

Again, she fished out the remote control, and on the screen Chandler saw an image of himself talking to the angel in this very room:

“What do you think they learned from watching Jesus?” she was asking

“They learned that God is here with us, at work in the world in ways we can’t even see. They learned that when you stay close to God in prayer you find strength to face whatever your day brings; but more than that, you begin to see opportunities that would otherwise have passed you by.”

She pressed pause.

“So what is there in that description that you couldn’t do?

Ok – you can’t see Jesus. But don’t you remember his promise to send his Spirit into your life to be your Counsellor and Guide? Hasn’t he given you his word to guide you, and an open door into the Father’s presence when it comes to prayer?

You had everything you needed, Mr Chandler. Everything. But you chose not to use it. You settled for less than discipleship because it was easier and less personally demanding. You settled for a cosy, shallow life in the church, when Christ was calling you to the risks and adventures of faith."

Once more she pressed the remote control, and images from Chandler’s life played across the screen. Images not of things that had been, but things that might have been if he’d approached his faith in a different way. Relationships that could have been deeper; experiences that could have been richer. Wonderful surprises and blessings that would have made his heart swell with joy and thankfulness if only he’d known them.

Beside what could have been, the life he’d lived seemed like a drab watercolour and as he watched, his head sank lower and lower with the weight of missed opportunities.

A hand touched his shoulder gently, and he looked up to see his wife and two sons smiling kindly at him. Through a door came several neighbours, and then some friends from work. There were folk from the church there, greeting him with a wave; people from his student days; people he’d met on holiday, children he’d taught in Sunday School; all filing into the room and standing behind him as he looked on, open mouthed.

And all the while the angel sat there, watching, until the last one took her place, and a pregnant silence filled the room.

Rising from her chair, the angel spoke for the final time, and there was a determined resolution in her voice.

“Mr Chandler, we follow a God who can make wine, even out of the poor water that we offer him. A God who can feed a multitude with the scant rations in a schoolboy’s backpack. He has taken what you’ve offered him, even in weakness and ignorance, and made something worthy of it. This is your catch. These are the people you brought closer to God throughout your lifetime.”

And in unison they surrounded him; patting him on the back, hugging him, blessing him and thanking him for what he’d been able to do for them.

And then, at the last, silence descended once more and a solitary figure no-one had noticed made his way across the room. He held Chandler by the shoulders for a moment so he could look him full in the face and then embraced him with nail-torn hands.

And as they stood there for those precious moments, Chandler swore that he heard someone speaking, though he couldn’t say whether the voice was in his ear, or mind, or heart, or Spirit. But the words were clear enough, and he never forgot them.

“It’s time James” the voice said. “Come, and follow me”.

Wednesday 16 January 2008

Who are you?

Am kicking off this Sunday's sermon with this:

This story begins at a hypothetical party. The company’s good, the night is young and there’s plenty to eat and drink. So naturally, you’re happy. Hypothetically.

But half-way through the evening, a pleasant stranger comes up
and says “Hi – who are you?”.

So you smile and give your name. But the stranger leans in closer, and says, with an intensity that kind of unnerves you: “No. I mean – who are you?”

So you start wittering on about what you do in life and your family and where you come from, and all the things that seem to define you as a person, but the amusement in your inquisitor’s eyes tells you that this still isn’t hitting the mark.

“No no. That’s not who you are. That’s the stuff you do and the people you belong to; they’re important, but they’re not you. Take them away, or wake up alone some day on a desert island and that part of you called ‘you’ is still there. So who are you?”

Of course, by this stage you’re looking around nervously for any excuse to break off the conversation, so when the doorbell goes you practically leap across the room saying “Sorry. I’d better just get that.”

And you make your escape into the hallway before spending the rest of the night avoiding the stranger like the plague. But you can’t avoid the question. It’s there now: and the worrying thing is, you don’t have a clue how to begin to answer it.

Tuesday 15 January 2008

Minister in Useful Fraternal Meeting Shock

We had our fraternal today and though numbers were small, I think we're beginning to get somewhere. In my experience elsewhere, these meetings can either be stiff and guarded or gossipy and banal, both of which say something about the lack of trust that exists between so-called colleagues.

Things are improving though. We were talking about prayer this morning and sharing how we approach leading public prayer, and it was genuinely good to learn from the others' experience. Our local Episcopal priest put on some music and prayed a prayer that a lay person had written in his congregation, and it was unusally moving in its insight, simplicity and honesty.

It reminded me that what matters, both in preaching and leading prayers in public, is that we don't worry about fine words, but that we make a visceral connection with people. You don't need a theological education for that. You just need to be walking closely with God.

I found similar words by Anselm Grun in his book "Through the Year with Jesus"

"Jesus didn't talk about God like many of the scribes, who used the right words but didn't speak from their own experience. Because Jesus had experienced God, he spoke of God in such a way that people instinctively sensed "Yes, God's like that. That's the truth. This God is important to me. I can't evade this God. He fulfils my heart's desires".

A good thought to start another year of preaching and praying with.

Blessings to all of you called to this work and privilege.

Monday 7 January 2008

Slowly to Recover

It's been a better Christmas break than I could hope for. In the weeks before it all kicked off I prayed a very small, but heartfelt prayer that I would get the space I needed to catch my breath, and I'm deeply grateful that it was answered. It's been the quietest Christmas, pastorally, since I came to St Hacket's. We've had some good days together as a family - off to the panto in Aberdeen (3D specs have come a long way since I was a kid!), to the movies and bowling, out for walks and meals, and even a wee mini-break at Granny and Grandpa's. Catering and childcare included in the tarriff!

In a couple of weeks I'm getting a break at Pluscarden Abbey, a Benedictine centre, with some new friends and I'm really looking forward to some space with God to help me find focus for the year. I went away this time last year to the Bield at Blackruthven, and one of the fruits of that time was that I started dabbling in poetry again - something I'd not made time for for ages. This is the piece that kicked it all off - written after a lovely, languid, solo swim in the Bield's pool. What is it with me and slowness.....?!

Slowly To Recover

Just me and the pool.
Water slopping in the drains
and the sonorous hum of machinery doing
exactly what it was meant to do.

Twenty, thirty, forty.
Then one length slowly to recover;
what exactly?
The now.
This gifted moment I am living.

Golden ochre shimmers on the waves’ crests,
dappling the undertow of blues and indigoes
with liquid light.
A thousand swells,
dancing, dying, reborn.
Beyond describing.
Beyond even seeing.
Simply beheld, with sheer gratitude.

Steaming shower,
slowly to recover.
Soothing aches;
kindling limbs, and thankfulness,
to life again.