Wednesday, 11 March 2015

Am I a Don Quixote seeing churches as windmills for producing food (flour)

DON QUIXOTE -  WINDMILLS OF THE CHURCHES

In a story by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra,   a short sighted Don Quixote and his farmer friend Sancho Panza,  rides around Spain charging at windmills in the mistaken view they are giants that need pulling down as they were terrorizing the people.   I sometimes wonder if I have  been like Don Quixote within the church,  except instead of giants I see God’s presence and instead of bringing down the windmills,  trying to make them work.

Everywhere I go I see windmills (churches) with shafts of light coming down from heaven and surrounding them with God’s glory so I charge towards them wanting to be part of what God is doing there.    As I get close,  I see people struggling to till the soil,  grow wheat on barren land and feed their children.    It is though clear that although the mill is bathed in light,  the wind blowing and the spirit moves,   the sails of the mill barely move or even turn at all.      The tenant mill owners and their worker instead of producing  flour from the grain the farmers bring,   are standing  around,   bathing in the shaft of light they are rejoicing because the wind is blowing and are crying out for the spirit to move even more.    Puzzled I ask the tenant mill owner why with all this wind,   the sails are not turning and  grain turned into flour and he says God supplies all the people need to eat.    The workers are happy dancing and singing and have all they need so why do they need more.    To that  I reply,    look around you,  the farmers do not have enough.   The people in the fields around you are ill through lack of food.   The mill could supply all the food needed if only your workers worked the sails that flap idly in the breeze.   The tenant shrugs his shoulders and asks what do I know of these things.   “Look”  I answer  “even though I may not be an engineer,  even I can see the sails flapping and hardly  turning no matter how strong the wind blows.   The mill stone is moving ever so slowly and the wheat we have does not make enough for ourselves,  let alone the farmers whose wheat it is.   Surely the owner of the mill would want us to do better than that.”    As I look around puzzled that so little is being achieved,  I notice the brake on the sails is not fully off.   The belt drive connecting the cogswheels on the sail to the cogs on the millstone is slack and slipping.   A couple of the beams are also missing.    I therefore ask the mill owner if I could fully push the brake lever on the sail to the fully off position.    Maybe take up some of the slack on the belt drive and possibly replace one or two of the missing beams.     Immediately I am jumped on by the workers standing by him.    I am bungled out of the door and before I know it put back on my horse and told to find another mill to harass.        Scratching my head,  I ride into the distance only to see another windmill with a shaft of light beaming down on to it.    I ride towards it and find again a similar story.    Again to be bundled out of the place and sent packing as soon as I ask why is there not more food for the people living near the mill to each.   And so it goes on.    Each time I see a windmill with the sun beaming down on it and a strong wind blowing,  I take it that God is there.    I therefore ride towards it as fast as my little steed can take me,  only to find the same story repeating itself.    I upset the owners and anger the workers.

After many such experiences I have to ask myself,    am I so short-sighted and mistaken.    Are the churches windmills,  which should be producing flour from the crops in the fields that surround  them.   Or they just dancehalls.    A place to come for a good time.    A place just for dancing and singing.   A place just to party with God?      The bible would tell me otherwise.    Christian stand up and preach the same things I am saying.     Even in the cool of the day,  over a pint as evening draws in,  I am told what I am saying is right,   so why do I evoke such strong responses.    Ah they say.    It’s the way you are saying it.    You are being judgmental.    You are judging them.   You have to wait for God to move.    You just have to be patient,  when God is ready,   He will move.    He will provide in His own time and in His good way.    You should just say nothing,  join in the dance and wait.    And in the meantime,   people go hungry,  people die for the lack of flour that is needed even though the fields are full of corn.

Reflecting more on this and why I provoke such anger by saying if we just release this lever,  tighten this belt or replace this beam,  I wonder.   The mill owner insecure and feeling criticized,  knows the mill could do more but he is busy as it is.    He has far too much on his hands to start with.    If he released the brakes,  the sails would move faster  and he could have a breakdown.       The deputies and senior hands.   If the tenant owner had wanted the mill to produce more flour,  he would have said so,   wouldn’t he?    Anyway who’s this young upstart saying he knows more that we who’ve been here all our lives?   The workers too are upset.    If the sails moved faster or the belt didn’t slip as much,  we would have to do more work.    The grain hoppers would empty and we would have to keep topping them up.    Then think of the flour,   more bags to fill.   To lift and carry outside to the wagons and distribute.     Even the neighbours would be upset,   think of the noise as the sails turn round faster.   The activity around the place,  all that coming and going.   The traffic,  think of it,  more and more grain brought on site.   The flour needing to be taken away.    No,  it’s better all round if the Don Quixote just kept quiet.   Kept his opinions to himself.   Better still just went away and pestered someone else.    As for the poor people,  the people around us desperately needing food.   That’s not our problem.    If they need feeding,  why don’t they do like we do,   come into mill and enjoy the dance.   What’s that,  they’ve not been invited.    Isn’t that the work of the Holy Spirit.    God’s responsibility not ours.    Come on let’s dance.   The music is starting up again.

Tuesday, 10 March 2015

For those contemplating getting their lawn mowers out this Spring

HOW DOES YOUR GARDEN GROW


GOD:
Hi Frank, you know all about gardens and nature. Tell me,  what in the world is going on down there?    What happened to the dandelions, violets, thistle and stuff I started eons ago? I had a perfect, no-maintenance garden plan.    Those plants grow in any type of soil, withstand drought and multiply with abandon. The nectar from the long lasting blossoms attracts butterflies, honey bees and flocks of songbirds. I expected to see a vast garden of colors by now.   But all I see are these green rectangles.


ST. FRANCIS:
It's the tribes that settled there, Lord.     The Suburbanites.    They started calling your flowers "weeds" and went to great lengths to kill them and replace them with grass.


GOD:
Grass? But it's so boring. It's not colorful. It doesn't attract butterflies, birds and bees, only grubs and sod worms. It's temperamental with temperatures. Do these Suburbanites really want all that grass growing there?


ST. FRANCIS:
Apparently so, Lord. They go to great pains to grow it and keep it green. They begin each spring by fertilizing grass and poisoning any other plant that crops up in the lawn.


GOD:
The spring rains and warm weather probably make grass grow really fast.  That must make the homeowners happy.


ST. FRANCIS:
Apparently not, Lord. As soon as it grows a little, they cut it ~ sometimes twice a week.


GOD:
They cut it? Do they then bail it like hay?


ST. FRANCIS:
Not exactly, Lord. Most of them rake it up and put it in bags.


GOD:
They bag it?   Why?    Is it a cash crop?    Do they sell it?


ST. FRANCIS:
No Sir.     Just the opposite.    They pay to throw it away
GOD:
Now let me get this straight. They fertilize grass so it will grow.    And when it does grow, they cut it off and pay to throw it away?


ST. FRANCIS
Yes, Sir.


GOD:
These Earthlings must be relieved in the summer when we cut back on the rain and turn up the heat. That surely slows the growth and saves them a lot of work.


ST. FRANCIS:
You aren't going to believe this Lord. When the grass stops growing so fast, they drag out hoses and pay more money to water it so they can continue to mow it and pay to get rid of it.


GOD:
What nonsense. At least they kept some of the trees. That was a sheer stroke of genius, if I do say so myself.   The trees grow leaves in the spring to provide beauty and shade in the summer. In the autumn they fall to the ground and form a natural blanket to keep moisture in the soil and protect the trees and bushes. Plus, as they rot, the leaves form compost to enhance the soil.    It's a natural circle of life.


ST. FRANCIS:
You better sit down, Lord. The Suburbanites have drawn a new circle. As soon as the leaves fall, they rake them into great piles and pay to have them hauled away.


GOD:
No.   What do they do to protect the shrub and tree roots in the winter and to keep the soil moist and loose?


ST. FRANCIS:
After throwing away the leaves, they go out and buy something which they call mulch. They haul it home and spread it around in place of the leaves.


GOD:
And where do they get this mulch?


ST. FRANCIS:
They cut down trees and grind them up to make the mulch.


GOD:
Enough. I don't want to think about this anymore. St. Catherine,  you're in charge of the arts. What movie have they scheduled for us tonight?


ST. CATHERINE:
"Dumb and Dumber". It's a real stupid movie about.....


GOD:
Never mind, I think I just heard the whole story from St. Francis.



Stubborn Love - Michael W Smith

 STUBBORN LOVE       (Michael W. Smith)
Here again, is your faithless friend,
Don't you ever tire of hearing what a fool I've been?
Guess I should pray, but what can I say?
Oh, it hurts to know the hundred times I've caused you pain.
The "forgive me" sounds so empty when I never change,
Yet you still say again and again I love you still, 
Forgiving me time and time again

It's your stubborn love that never lets go of me
I don't understand how you can stay.
Perfect love - embracing the worst in me
How I long for your stubborn love

Funny me, just couldn't feel;
Even long before I knew you,  you were loving me
Sometimes I cry and you must cry too, :
When you see the broken promises I've made to you.
I keep saying that I trust you though I seldom do.
Yet you still say again and again I love you still, 
Knowing some day, I'll be like you.

It's your stubborn love that never lets go of me
I don't understand how you can stay.
Perfect love - embracing the worst in me
How I long for your stubborn love


How do you know God’s Will - Thoughts which brought us back to Plymouth

HOW DO YOU KNOW GOD'S WILL


I have always been brought up to believe:-

  1. God speaks
  2. The Spirit within witnesses to the truth of what is heard
  3. It agrees with scripture and in keeping with what you know of God
  4. It is confirmed by others
  5. It comes about (in due course)

Just over a year ago in January 2008, both Julie and I felt that our time in Stroud was coming to an end as both our jobs in the area was about to finish.    Julie was then offered a job as a Community Manager for one of the Salvation Army Centres in Birmingham     A job which I would have given my eye teeth for but it was only offered to Julie although I could have helped and supported her.     During the interview Julie felt the Lord saying it was not for her and so turned it down.      At the same time though both felt the Lord was saying that each church should be a Christian centre,  Worshiping God and flowing from that serving man.    Serving man should lead us to God for only He can solve the issues of man and give us the grace, strength and wisdom to meet man’s needs.    The church should therefore be a both a centre for worshiping God and a centre for serving man.     It should in effect be a community centre worshipping God..     We also felt that it was time to return to Plymouth where our children had remained when we left there to move to Stroud.     

In February 08 we arranged to “house” sit and look after the grandchildren whilst Sue joined John (my son) for a week in Dubai.     Whilst in Plymouth  that week  we explored the possibility of returning permanently.     House prices seemed high but compatible with what we could sell our house for in Stroud.   We went to our old church and found that although it had changed and part had reverted back to it’s roots as City Church with Kit Mason and Roy Beaumont whilst the other remained as Church of The Nations,  Although both had moved to different locations, we felt as though we had come back home.   Even though there were only a few people left at City church,  it felt good to be back.    We also caught up with what was happening in the City, renewing acquaintances with Colin and Lorna Trent and learnt about what they were doing with regards to debt counselling.    There was also the talk of setting up a Food Bank in Plymouth,  both of which we were involved in, in Stroud.    Add to that during the week there,  three independent and totally unconnected people told us on different occasions about  Tony Jopson and how he often needs help with his accountancy practice.    It therefore seemed right on our return to Stroud to take steps to put our house on the market and take steps to return to Plymouth.

In the first three or four weeks of putting our house on the market we had had 6 or 7 viewings but financial market was on the verge of collapse and no one made any offers to buy.  Shortly after putting the house on the market and without warning both Julie’s and my job came to an end.   Despise the housing situation and first signs of the global credit crunch we still felt it right to return to Plymouth and so arranged to live with my daughter Joanne for a while until our house was sold.

In June we returned therefore to Plymouth and revisited old friends and acquaintances, worshiping on a Sunday at various churches and fellowships as we sought to find out where we should become a member and work out what God had laid on hearts.

We felt God was saying that each church should have a vision for the lost and a driving desire to build up the the Kingdom as they sought to meet the needs of the local community in the area that they had been planted.    We therefore were seeking a church where there was:
  1.  A lively place of worship where we felt we belonged
  2. An active driving desire to grow    and
  3. Serving the community from the centre where they were worshiping that we could play some active part in.

So we began to look for a church that we could set down roots and play a part in the building up of the Kingdom.   Alas even now 6 years later that search continues


God has given us a clear sense of church which should be like a light set on a lamp stand (Matt 5 14-16) with all the para church organisations as it were drawn back under the umbrella of the church.   For too long the church has been hiding it’s light under a bushel,  staying in the shadows whilst the serving heart of the church has been expressed through either individuals as they go about their daily work or through para-church organisations with inoffensive names like SALT,  Plymouth Focus,   Plymouth Foodbank etc etc.     The man in the street therefore does not necessarily see these organisations as Christian or if they do it’s such a low key connection that it doesn't really matter.    As for church,  it has no relevance to their lives or place in society any more than any other club or organisation.    God would rather have it the other way.    The church in the foreground with the para-church organisations in the background playing a supportive role..    People would then again see the church playing an active role in the community and when they are in need say to one another let’s go down to the church for they will be able to help us in this hour of need.    It may well be that that particular church is too small to have the resources or particular expertise and will need to draw on the resources of other churches or para-church organisations nearby.    In this way churches will once again be seen as relevant and have something to say on particular matters.    God will once again be given the glory for help that has been received and a connection made between the help provided during the week with the worship that takes place in the same building on a Sunday.

7 years on God is still saying that but the churches are they listening?   Or is me and it I who have got it totally wrong?

Missing Limbs - an article from 16th October 2006

A BODY WITH MISSING LIMBS

I  was watching a really fascinating programme on BBC2 called “Beyond Boundaries: The African Challenge” (Sundays at 9pm).   A group of physically disabled people with apparently no help from able-bodied folk are attempting to walk across Africa and this week they will be the first group (able or disabled) to walk through the Etoshia Game Reserve where there are about 500 lions as well as elephants, rhinos and other big cats roaming wild.     I am saying apparently because apart from the expedition leader and a doctor,  the impression is given there is no one else with them except the camera crew recording the trek.  Apart that is on the occasions when they have to hire guides or as in tonight’s episode need to take a number of game wardens with rifles in case the wild animals get too close.     In the group there are three amputees (one having lost an arm in an accident,  the other two, one a leg in a car crash, the other when a tree fell on top of her.)   Then there is a person who was born with no arms and has learnt to dress, feed and wash himself with his feet.   Another two people are in wheel chairs,  another has no control over her muscles, walking on two crouches with a very tiring and awkward gait    Three others who are the closest be being “able bodied” two who have been deaf from birth and the other with Tourettes.

What is really fascinating and amazing is not just how they have overcome their physically disabilities which is fantastic enough in normal everyday life but how they are pushing themselves through  really difficult terrain which would defeat most “normal” people,  let alone those with serious handicaps.    None of the group had meet each other before trek and so on arrival in Africa there was a meal and the opportunity to get to know each other over fun and food.    It was only though as they trekked through swamps,  torrential downpours,   deserts and wild inhospitable wildernesses,  did relationships develop.    That first evening together they had a really good party with plenty to eat and laughter,  each talking about who they were,  why they had come and what they hoped to get out of it.   It was only as the going got tough and the tough got going,  did they really find out about each other and relationships were forged.     One thing soon became obvious though as they set out the next morning,  despite all that they had been told,  despite all the fine words about this being a team effort and they all had to work together,  they were all strong minded individuals who had never given a thought for anyone else,  let alone worked as a team.    Understandable when you come to think of it,   they all had enough to worry about with their own problems without worrying about someone else.    They had enough pain of their own to overcome,  to give any thought for what someone else was going through.    Also,  all their lives they had battled to overcome difficulties and develop an independence so not to have to rely on other people.    The expedition leader though from the very outset was concerned as he repeatedly reiterated that if they were to get across Africa they had to learn to work together as a team

 As I am watching it I could not help thinking of what someone had brought to share at the Family night the previous evening and again thought just how wrong what she was saying was.     As the group progressed on their journey through Africa,  there were quick glimpses of their lives, how they had become disabled and the struggle they go through everyday to overcome the difficulties.    At no point though do you get the impression that they would rather not have their missing limbs back,  or that they lived quite happily without them.    Without their limbs,  life was one big struggle and they have to fight everyday to overcome the handicaps they suffered and the walk across Africa demonstrated that even more so.   The man who had lost his arm said he was in a deep depression for about 6 years after losing his arm and on a number of occasions wanted to die.    It was only later did he start to “pull” himself together,  learn to manage with one arm and now has quite a good life with only one arm to do everything.    The girl who lost her leg had to have numerous operations before she could have an artificial leg fitted .   The long slow process of learning to walk with an artificial leg,  followed by more operations and fittings as the stump,  which is all that’s left of the leg,  grows,    Each time it grows even a little bit,  a new artificial leg has to be fitted.   Then there is the replacement of worn or broken ones.   Each time there is more struggling to adapt,  more pain to endure.    As well as all that,  the stump easily gets infected, blisters, rubbed raw and so constantly needs to be looked after and so more pain.    One thing is certain,  losing a limb was not taken lightly or glibly dismissed, as the article would seem to imply

The man with no arms was the first to give up.    Although still fit and could still have gone on he was finding it increasingly difficult to wash himself in the trek situation.    He became therefore increasingly concerned about his personal hygiene and fearful of his feet becoming damaged or diseased.    He became fearful that if something did happen to his feet then he would not be able to look after himself in anyway what so ever,  so became the first to drop out and fly back home.    He certainly was concerned about losing a limb and gave up his dream to ensure he didn't lose another one.     Others were to drop out as the weeks went on and it was fascinating to see how they coped as they struggle across the desert, dealt with the heat and the ever presence danger of wild animals.

I don’t have a copy of the article that was read out and I may therefore have misheard but the gist of it was we need the church but the church does not need us,  which seems in total contrast to what Paul said in 1 Cor 12:14-21 especial when in v 21 he says The eye cannot say to the hand, "I don't need you!" And the head cannot say to the feet, "I don't need you!"(NIV)

The article went on to liken the church to the body in that if the body loses a limb,  life goes on and it doesn't die.    The limb though that is lost does and is fit only to be thrown on the rubbish tip or destroyed.    That of course is true if you see people like limbs just pieces of flesh to be thrown away or discarded.    If you stop and look more closely though,  not only does the body need all it’s limbs if it loses one,  it will die without some very radical and skilled surgery when that limb is damaged or lost.     Take as an example those people in the TV programme,  each one who lost a limb almost died but for speedy intervention.     Each of them,  whether it was the person trapped by a falling tree or involved in a car accident,  would have bled to death if help had not been quickly at hand to stem the bleeding and rush them to hospital where highly skilled surgeons then operated on them.    The same would happen to anyone who loses a limb,  no matter how small or insignificant it may be,  even chopping off a finger or toe would have the same effect if the wound was not quickly bound up and the bleeding stemmed.    Even if the bleeding is stopped,  unless the wound is treated and looked after for some time afterwards,  infection would set in and poison the blood stream.   This if not treated will in time kill the person.     As for the limbs,  although Christ said it is better to lose a part of your body than for your whole body to be cast into hell (Matt 5:29-30)   I don’t think he was in any way implying you do not need your eye or hand,   on the contrary he went about healing the withered arm (Matt 12:10) and re-attaching the limbs back to the body.  

The limbs are, contrast to what the article would appear to be saying,  such an important part of the body that we fight tooth and nail to keep them and only at the last resort are they removed and cast into the waste bin.     In an accident where a limb,  whether it is just a toe or a major organ,is severed,   everything is done to save it.   At the scene,  people search until they find the missing limb.   They then wrap it up in clean cloth and if possible,  pack it in ice before rushing it along with the patient to hospital.   There the hope is the surgeon will sew it back on.    Even where a limb is diseased and may have to be removed for the health of the patient,  the doctors are reluctant to do so until all else has failed.    For example my father who was 86 has had to have his toes removed on his right foot.    Even though he was 86 and only had a few years to live,  the doctors did everything in their power not to have to remove them.   For months,  he went into hospital on a regular basis for treatment.    Even when it was obvious they had to be removed,  the doctors continued to try and save them,  cutting away only the bad bit, time and time again hoping  the flesh that was left would recover.   Eventually though they had to give in and remove all of the toes.   Why?   if it doesn't really matter about the limbs and the body can function quite happily without them.    Yes,  dad eventually managed quite well without toes on his right foot but  several months after the operation,  the wounds hadn't properly healed and the district nurse had to go in every other day to dress his foot.  He had also to go regularly to the hospital to make sure it is healing properly and infection hadn’t set in.

Is the lesson to be learnt here not as the article would seem to imply that we need the church but the church does not need us but rather the church needs everybody.   We need every limb and we should be fighting tooth and nail to keep everyone that Christ gives us.    If through accident or disease a limb is detached from the body then we should gently and carefully rush them to the Chief Surgeon to be re-attached and when the operation has been done,  to dress the wound until it is fully healed.    Alas,   instead we have taken the artilce to heart.    We say it doesn't matter that we have lost a limb or a member.   The body can manage without an arm, or a leg or even a little toe.    Look again more closely at those who have lost a limb.   See what they went through in order to survive without the limb and ask ourselves again if the mantra “We need the church but the church does not need us” is really true and is that really what Christ is saying