Monday, 20 May 2019

Lost in the shadows.....



At the beginning of the story of Peter Pan, Peter and Tinkerbell enter the Darling house searching for Peter's shadow. Their search wasn't exactly quiet, but it is Peter's sobs at being unable to find his shadow that wake Wendy and she asks:

"Boy........ why are you crying?"

Peter Pan was mourning the loss of his shadow. He saw it as part of him, what made him kind of ‘normal’ – something of his past that he wanted to keep as part of him. A trail of a former life. Where that shadow had been and what it had seen, perhaps he couldn’t remember, but the shadow was an important part of his life he felt he needed to carry, even if he didn’t know what it meant.

I have been reflecting on the Biblical story of Nehemiah which is a bit of an adventure story – a bit like Peter Pan but without the fairies. It is a story of discovery, a story of trying to find something that has been, even though the story is not clear. It’s a story of change, a story of discovery. It’s a story of coming home, even though the Israelites didn’t really understand where home was.

Nehemiah was a leader in Israel during a time of significant opposition. The Israelites are trying to find their home again in Jerusalem and face all sorts of rubbish. Nehemiah is a gifted administrator who can get stuff done, and he leads the Israelites in rebuilding the wall around Jerusalem so that they can feel safe in their home city.

Nehemiah's task, however, goes beyond the rebuilding of what has been before, to bringing the nation back to where their roots are founded – not in a place or a building but in God. Therefore, the first thing that happens once the building is finished is that Nehemiah gathers the people together to ‘read from the book of the law’.

Every morning the people get up, go and stand in the square, and Ezra reads to them, the priests explain it and then they split into groups to discuss it. This goes on for a week. The people are reawakening a tradition that had gone on for centuries before – where at the beginning of a new year, where, not the whole of the Torah, but passages from within were read out in public.

It was the first time of an old tradition. It was time for the people to rediscover their story – rediscover their place in history as the people of God. It is a reminder of the teaching of God and a telling of his covenant – a retelling of their very own story.

Our stories can be powerful and life changing. Our stories inspire us and remind us of who we are and where we have come from. Our stories spur us on.....

It's been a chaotic and crazy year for me and I have begun a new chapter in my life. My story has reached the time for a new sequel and as that happens I have spent a lot of time reflecting on the story so far....

Our stories are what make us. We all have our stories – our faith stories, our home stories, our church stories and they remind us of what has been, what could be and what will be. 

Our stories are our past present and future..... if we don’t tell the truth of our stories they become legends – embellished and not real; stories that speak of past greatness, of golden years, and we have got to always ask ourselves if those years were really much more golden than now, or are they a shadow we find in a drawer and sew on because the shadows of the past are much easier to understand than the unknowns of the future?

The Israelites thought they knew how great their story was – they thought they knew what God was going to do next. They thought they knew the story of a successful nation. They knew where they come from, they knew they were great in the past, and they had the possibility to be great in the future.

The glory days when Jerusalem sang, when people prospered, when peace reigned.

But then the story made them cry. Why? Why were they crying?

The glory days when Jerusalem sang – were they not as they expected them to be?

Why did the story make them cry?

Perhaps they were looking for their lost shadow – they realised they wanted to go back but knew that they couldn’t because too much had happened since. Maybe they wanted to sew their story back on, have an impact like they used to have it – perhaps their story was so far away from God’s story the shadow it cast hid away the work of God – their story as they’d like to see it was not something to be clung to.

When we tell our stories there is a danger that we get so caught up in our own past that we miss the fact that God’s story has moved in a different direction. We do that in churches – as we look back at the glory days, as we revel in our fullness, we think that we’ve got God’s direction sorted – we miss where we’ve walked off to a different rhythm..... we are so busy telling the stories of our past, we make legends that inform where we are today instead of coming to God’s word afresh. 

We’re living in a changing world, where God is still at work.... as we look at God we need to think (quoting one of my former tutors) – who is God, what kind of world are we living in, therefore what kind church is he calling us to be?

We need to try not to mourn for too long the loss of our shadow - that’s gone, this is a new start, a new beginning, a new world..... This is HIS day. There is a time for mourning – but we've not got to forget that there is a time for dancing too.

As we revisit our stories, we need to revisit them with our centres on Christ – discovering new things from the impact they made. As we retell our stories we learn of our roots, but that doesn’t mean we need to keep sewing our past back on - that makes moving forward more difficult......however golden our past is, it is not where we are now. 

Why are you crying? Stop mourning the past and look ahead. God is here, he is building now..... we need to remember the lessons learnt from history and learn from them, but not cling on to them or sew them back on - instead, we need to cling onto God and centre our stories on him. The next chapter - the sequel... has the potential to be so much more.

(and we probably need to begin to party a bit more....)


"Nehemiah said, "Go and enjoy choice food and sweet drinks, and send some to those who have nothing prepared. This day is holy to our Lord. Do not grieve, for the joy of the Lord is your strength"                                
Nehemiah 8:10

Wednesday, 15 May 2019

Onwards we row (together).....

Onwards we row....

A phrase I’ve said a lot recently. It speaks of the journey I’ve been on in the last year where seasons of change and celebration have arrived almost monthly as I’ve encountered exciting and challenging and life changing events that not only have affected my legs and my feet like a long walk, but have meant putting my whole self in and pushing onwards with my full being for the ride - occasionally just floating and enjoying the view before picking up my oars again and continuing on.....


Onwards we row.....


Around this time last year I was in York and stood watching three rowers in the river - racing rowers in their long thin boats. One boat had somehow got stuck on a tree trunk and couldn’t go anywhere. The other boats came up beside them and with much manoeuvring and team work they managed to remove the offending tree and dragged it back as the trapped boat was released to row once again. I watched as they manoeuvred the trunk to the side and then set off again on the journey. 



Onwards we row..... 

That picture of the boats in York has struck me again and again and as I sit in the week between induction when I was surrounded by those who have helped the path over the last year be as smooth as possible and Bapass where I will be handshook alongside some of my favourite dreamers (and missing the Eurovision finals again) I’ve come back to it.


We can’t be lone rowers because sometimes the tree trunk rises up from beneath. We can’t be lone rowers because sometimes we are so tired we need someone else to take the oars. We can’t be lone rowers because sometimes we might need to help others remove the the blockage from their path. We can’t be lone rowers because in those moments where we pause to glide we would have nobody to turn to and shout ISN’T THIS GREAT!! 


And that’s why community is so important - and why, for me, beyond and before leading a church community, being part of one is so important, because sometimes the rowing needs extra strength, and when I’m surrounded by those who get it, that extra strength to take the tree trunk to the shore appears without me even knowing and sets me again on my way. 


Onwards we row.....


The writer of Hebrews encourages the readers to “not give up meeting together” (Heb 10:25) - as we meet together we spur one another on to live out our faith and encourage one another to keep on keeping on....... Value your church community, value your support networks - your friends and your family - because you never know when you might need them to surround you and help you over the tree trunk that’s getting in the way. 


Onwards we row....