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A Skinny Fairtrade Latte in the Food Court of Life - Page 448

  • Fourth Wednesday in Lent - A Poem

    Last Sunday's lectionary was the man born blind and we used this poem:

    Through The Eyes of A Blind Man
    by Virginia Haefner Wark

    I saw a homeless beggar
    On my way to work each day.
    I never paid him too much mind
    As I went along my way.

    But this day he looked saddened
    And his eyes began to weep
    As he held his cup out pleading
    To the people on the street.

    I paused to ask this question,
    "What virtue do you find
    In begging coins from strangers,
    Is it because you're blind?"

    "Blind," he asked, "How silly!
    It is they, it isn't me
    Who cannot see the virtue in
    Simple charity."

    "Most people think I'm cripple,
    Others call me blind
    So work they will not offer
    To people of my kind."
    "No, I cannot see their faces,
    Nor do I know their name,
    But pity I have for them
    For I can feel their shame."

    "They pass me by each morning
    And again, most every night,
    Yet never stop to lend a hand
    To a brother in his plight."

    "Their hearts are full of apathy,
    And little do they fear
    That only for the Grace of God
    They could be sitting here."

    "I feel their footsteps pounding
    As they go along their way,
    All of them too busy to
    Enjoy this lovely day."

    "They will not hear the flutter
    Of a sparrow's wings in flight,
    Or listen to the love song
    That it warbles through the night."
    "Nor will they stop to listen to
    The music of the breeze
    As it gently plays its' harp stings
    Through the branches of the trees."

    "No, I cannot see their faces
    Or the color of their skin.
    I can only see the beauty
    They possess from deep within."

    "So I view my brother's virtue
    As a soul that knows no sin
    If he'll take the time to drop a coin
    Into my cup of tin."

    In my haste, I left him crying,
    As I had to catch a flight,
    But the thought of him still plagued me
    Into the long, dark night.

    Long before the sun would rise,
    I set out on my way
    To fill his cup with silver,
    So to brighten up his day.

    But the pale moon's light soon led me to
    The place he occupied,
    Where an empty cup of silver lay
    At the beggar's side.

    His eyes were no more weeping,
    Nor his spirit racked with pain,
    For the Lord in all his mercy
    Had called him home again.

    As I knelt there next beside him,
    In the dim light I could see
    That the blind man I'd been praying for
    Was no one else but ME!

    My heart became so heavy,
    And my eyes soon welled with tears,
    As I thought of all the needy
    I had passed by through the years.

    Right then I made a promise,
    Though I knew not where or when,
    Should a brother ever need me,
    I'd not pass him by again.

    The night now seemed so endless,
    As the time was only three.
    As I cursed the dark around me,
    A light soon came to me.

    I understood his message now,
    And changed my life would be,
    For only through a blind man's eyes,
    Would I begin to see.

  • "Put on the slap, and get on with it"

    On Monday I spent a lovely day with the Order for Baptist Minsitry, a kind of neo-monastic diasporic community thingy, with whom I certainly want to 'journey' for a while to see if it is 'for me'.  It was a safe enough space to admit to 'spiritual tiredness' (there, I said it in public too!) and my need to find new wells or new buckets or something for refreshment.  I came away feeling I'd made a new friend (at least online), with a kind of confirmation of something (or a couple of somethings actually ) I want to try with church, and that energises and excites me.  During our chats, in a small group of five, we shared quite openly some of the challenges of the public/private interface in ministry with someone saying "sometimes you just have to put on the slap and get on with it"... a very pithy expression of what I concluded in my reflections for NZ.

    Yesterday I had an interesting day with the College of Baptist Ministers, an embryonic 'professional body' that insists it is not a trade union (though some of what it says sounds a bit like one) or a replacement for Ministries Dept (though some people are certainly hearing it in that way) but I'm not entirely convinced I know what it is.  Parallels were drawn with the RCN (which is a union I think) or the RCP or RCS (which are learned bodies).  I think the aspirations are good, if sounding a little legalisitic and I am certainly going to think very seriously about signing up, largley because it does offer a sense of accountability (albeit epxressed in what seems a very 'male' 'functional' model).  If the law changes, and ministers become 'employees' rather than 'office holders' then organsiations such as this may prove important.  However, if the motivation for them is purely and simply projected legal changes and an increasingly litiginous society, then I am disappointed - we should be inviting people to covenant their committment to CMD because it's the right the to do, not because we want to protect ourselves from nasty court cases.   Alas, the timing and motivation suggest more of the latter than the former - even if the intent is, I am convinced, good.  At £75 per year, it's not cheap (it was pointed out to me it's about half what I pay the engineering institutions... but then I get paid less than half what I would if I were in industry) but I expect that once I've mulled a bit further, I will sign up, at least for an initial couple of years.

     

    In between I got to watch 'Rev' sat next to the BUGB Team Leader for Ministries and his wife.... :)  Divine humour in every sense of the phrase!!

  • Rose (Daffodil, Tulip, Chrysanthemum, etc) Sunday

    Fun with flowers... everyone present had some, everyone we could think of not present but readily visitable was sent some... all good!

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    Photo (c) Barbara Fisher

  • Smile, it's Lent 4!

    aka Laetere Sunday - Rejoice Sunday (leatere Jerusalem)

    aka Refreshment Sunday - the day in Lent on which abstentions can be set aside (even more than on any old lenten Sunday for purists)

    aka Rose Sunday - because traditionally priests wore rose coloured vestments rather than penitential purple

    aka Mothering Sunday - the day people returend to their 'mother' church (Victorian inventinn I think) and excuse to bake and eat Simnel cakes!

    aka Mothers' Day - at least in the UK; a day to celebrate mothers and motherhood, and try not to do too much harm to those for whom it is a day of pain, emptiness or regret

    aka BST begins day - spring forward people, and if you're really late for church please tiptoe in quietly, turn up the last hymn and be ready for the blessing!!

    Whatever your day, may it be charactersied by refreshment, rejoicing and roses (literal, metaphorical or chocolate!!)

  • Hope - A Photo

    This probably my favourite photo of folk from church... it illustrates something of our aspirations, our fraility and fallibility, our hope.

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