Yesterday it was my privilege to lead the Free Church service at St Alban’s Cathedral. As I looked around the impressive architecture, I remembered our first visit there as a guide told us that some of the stones from a former pagan temple had been incorporated into the building of the Abbey.
The past always influences the present. We
simply don’t live in chronological
isolation because what happened yesterday, the way we thought and lived
back then, has a bearing on what’s going on in our lives today.
As we pour over recent news stories of invasions, conflicts and political
upheaval we may indeed have a sense of DeJa’Vu; we’ve surely been here before
and, of course, we have.
I’m sometimes surprised to hear people speak of current events as if they were
the worst of all time. Any casual
appreciation of history would see that a hundred years ago our world was also
struggling after pandemic, stood on the brink of war, and was collapsing under
the Great Depression.
Of course, the past doesn’t
solve the problems of today. It may not
even offer the right solutions because of the nuisances of every generation.
Yet the past can comfort us, reminding us that we have been here before and
survived, and perhaps in some situations even thrived.
The past can inform us as we
stand at the fork in the road, yet we must make our own decisions on what way
to take.
That’s where the bible
stories we hear at church and read at home can be our guide and compass. For they speak, even thousands of years after
first being penned, of issues that are still relevant. These narratives are both helpful and
comforting. Yet, after reading them we
have to make up our own minds about the directions and decisions we take.
Next week we will enter Lent and be reminded of, what we Christians believe is,
the greatest story ever told. The stories
of Jesus can be our guide as we stand at all the crossroads of life.
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