Thursday 17 February 2022

A friend in need...

Last evening, as those 70 mph winds started to whip up, there was an unexpected knock on the Manse door.  We opened it to a neighbour we had never spoken to before, who had thoughtfully come across to tell us our blue bin had blown over and our recycling rubbish was now making its way into every garden in the close!  Amid the howling gale this was actually a very nice encounter, full of friendly banter and, at the request of our neighbour, an opportunity for him to meet the dog.  He’d only heard her bark before! 


After saying ‘goodbye’, and before I dashed off to lead a Housegroup, we organised a family activity to clean up our rubbish and secure the bin more firmly for this morning’s collection.

Isn’t it so often the case that we humans seem to get along more easily if we can lend a helping hand.

If someone seems to have life sown up we sometimes avoid them, yet if we and they share a common need, or if we can lend a hand, then empathy flows and the door of friendship opens a little easier.

Perhaps that old adage is right: A friend in need, is a friend indeed.

Certainly Jesus found that often those who felt accomplished and self-sufficient avoided him.  Yet those who ‘owned’ their vulnerability in life readily opened their hearts to him and his message.

And perhaps that’s the key. It’s as we recognise and appreciate each other’s humanity, both its weakness alongside its strength, that we covenant together to walk as friends, with Jesus in the middle.

Blog holiday next week.

Thursday 10 February 2022

Change and Stability - Brother and Sister?

 

Talk given at LunchBreak on Tuesday 8th February 2022

70 years is a long time and a BBC programme on Sunday evening, one of many I guess that will help us celebrate the Platinum Jubilee, charted the social changes that have occurred in our society over these past seven decades. 

With the inevitable help of a sprinkling of celebrities the programme recalled the Queen’s first PM was Winston Churchill, that the rationing of the early 1950’s seemed even more severe than that of the war years, that opportunities for women were now unrecognisable compared to 1952 and that the World Wide Web seems to have changed everything with Sir David Attenborough making the dry observation that ‘nowadays people spend more time talking to their phone than to one another’.

Perhaps the TV programme was a little bland as the general conclusion was that so much was now much better than it was at last century’s half way point.  I suspect we’d need more than just celebrities to have a true and in depth evaluation.  And, after all, there is no need to be Pollyanna-ish about change.  It isn’t inevitably positive.  Indeed Princess Anne was asked a couple of years ago if she thought the Queen was an optimist about the future and she replied, quite honestly, ‘probably not’!  I suspect a long life gives a more balanced and nuianced perspective.

The other year I was given a 1957 copy of The Radio Times for a Christmas present.  That’s because it had a piece by one of my heroes, Alistair Cooke, about the 500th episode of his radio talk Letter from America.  It makes for fascinating reading!  There is a page of TV listings, and I noted that programmes didn’t even start until 3pm and concluded around 11.30pm with an Epilogue and the National Anthem!  Many more pages were devoted to the radio – the wireless – listing the Home Service, The Light Programme and the Third Programme.  I looked up the Sunday schedule and found that across the network there were no less than five church services broadcast every Sunday – now it’s just Songs of Praise after lunch!  Other things have changed too, such as Women’s Hour being in the afternoon and Listen with Mother broadcast around mid-day.

I was struck by Lulu’s words in Sunday night’s programme, she rather affectionately said of the Queen: I can honestly say she’s been the one constant in my life.

I suspect that change and stability are brother and sister and need each other.  You can accept change much better if there is stability at the core of your life.  And stability fossilises unless it adapts and changes when greeting life’s new phases.

You can always take lines from hymns out of context, so let me be a bit naughty and do that now.  There’s one such line that runs: for nothing changes here. And sometimes that’s what people say about some churches, and I suppose it’s true.  It’s sad to see a congregation dwindle because it no longer feels relevant to people who might otherwise have joined it.  It’s equally sad to see a church ‘implode’ as a result of too much aggressive change.

I sense that we love the idea of the stability and faithfulness that comes into our lives through a belief in God.  To have a faith that believes God is always present, always trust worthy, always loving, and always ‘for’ us, can bring us comfort and confidence in our ever changing and challenging lives.  Prayer, worship and faith ground us and offer a great foundation.

So, here’s to the next 70 years with a prayer that change and stability will continue to walk hand in hand.

Thursday 3 February 2022

Sells Owt Tha Wants

 I was listening, rather than watching, a news report on the telly this week about Mary’s Farm shop located, so BBC Yorkshire said, in the hamlet of Colden, near Hebden Bridge in the ‘middle of nowhere’!


I thought the owner Mary had a young voice, yet as I looked up and saw her she was telling the camera she was 81 years old and didn’t want to give up.

Mary has been running her shop since 1974, which has a hand painted sign advertising its wares saying ‘Sells Owt Tha Wants’.  She freely acknowledges it’s in the middle of no where and once the local Pennine Way closed, she thought the shop would too.  Yet, it’s thriving, as is Mary.

Mary Stokes puts these 48 years of success down to ‘True Yorkshire Grit’ and she may be right.  But I think she’s also discovered a particular Elixir of Life that keeps us young, namely the joy of ‘service’ and the value of ‘community’.  Mary so obviously loves serving her community.

This weekend many of us will pause and, in our prayers, give thanks for the Queen’s 70 years of service as she marks her Accession Day on Sunday. 

Now there’s two names to note: Mary and Elizabeth.  In the bible they too were women who willingly and faithfully served God.

‘Service’ and ‘Community’, two ingredients that characterise the ‘young at heart’.

Othering

  I belong to a couple of book discussion groups, and both have looked at the former Chief Rabbi’s brilliant tome entitled Not in God’s Name...