No Thanks

“Nae the noo” or in English “Not for the present!” The Scots have spoken. 0r at least 84% of those eligible have opted to vote and a 55% of voters want to continue the marriage with the rest of the UK.

After all the marriage had weathered many a storm in its 300 plus years of existence. In recent times Prime Minister Cameron wanted a straight YES or NO on the ballot paper. Not much “wiggle room” there! He wanted divorce or stay as you are. But that was at the beginning of the campaign!!

When he saw the blue of the Saltire flags gaining prominence and heard the eloquence of Alex Salmond making a strong case for independence the promises and pledges began to flow. What had been thrown out of court as unworkable, the “devo-max” or maximum amount of devolved government that could be granted short of total independence, began to be talked about.

As the polls massaged public opinion towards a photo finish Westminster caved in and devo-max it would be – only do not leave us! The stark choice of YES or NO on the ballot paper (who wants to be a NO – so negative) had been cleverly tempered in the hustlings by posters proclaiming “No Thanks”. A little politeness never comes amiss when you are getting your cake and eating it!

So the tale has a happy ending. The Scots got their devo-max. The 1.6 million who voted for Independence form a substantial reminder to Westminster to follow through with their pledges and Gordon Brown has promised to ensure that it happens.

Just how contrary this is to the usual behaviour that arises when a little country wants to leave a bigger one and take its assets with it. One group of sinners telling another group of sinners that we want divorce or permanent separation. National pride normally kicks in and the larger country flexes its muscles and the blood and gore that ensues skew relationships for generations.

Of course civic empowerment is seldom exercised with total restraint and we may yet see pockets of unrest. In an imperfect world the full devo-max may never be put in place. But a measure of national unity is possible resulting from Christ’s prayer in St John’s Gospel chapter 17. There he prays that they may be one (verse 11). Who is he speaking about?

They are the people the Father has given to the Son (verse 2), the born-again ones of Chapter 3 and those down through the centuries who have heard the message and believed in Jesus. They are the salt that preserves society from corruption (St Matthew Chapter 5 verse 13). They bring a message of a Saviour who forgives and restores broken relationships making unity between independent people not just possible but actual.

Breaking up is always easier than the hard work of uniting people, who by nature want their own way. But believers having been forgiven much will love much and provide society with the glue that is in for the long haul. And what is true at national level is also true for individual relationships. Jesus ends his prayer with the words of assurance that he (by the power of the Holy Spirit) will be in them (St John Chapter 17 verse 25/6).

The Swallow

This was the week the swallows chose to leave us for warmer climes. Not even the present spell of fine weather could persuade them to stay. The migratory instinct was too much – they had to leave.

Last Sunday they were massing on the wires that crisscross the 14 acres. The chatter was powerful. They were making their travel arrangements.

This year’s chicks would need to listen carefully as it would be at least 6 months before they would see the green fields of Ireland again.

Most importantly they need full stomachs and the aerial gymnastics around the Pines and Ash trees indicated a rich harvest of insects were being delivered to them on the gentle breeze.

The musical twittering notes which had heralded their arrival last April were now amplified to the full orchestra with the excitement of the imminent departure. It was farewell to the nests so beautifully sculpted in mud and straw to produce the bowl shape that would hold the 4 or 5 chicks.

Gone but not forgotten as they would return to the same spot next Spring. Swallows mate for life and the offspring remain with the parents in so far as they too return to the same spot and build their nest next door to where they were born!

But for now the yard is empty. They are on their way to South Africa to enjoy their second summer of the year! Their distinctive forked tail and pointed wings cutting a path across the Sahara Desert and Equatorial Africa until they reach the same place they left many months ago.

We are so prone to worry about the things the Swallows take on trust.

Jesus pointed out how uncharacteristic it should be for the Christian who having trusted God for his salvation should worry about everyday things.

“Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat or drink; or about your body, what you will wear. Is not life more than food and the body more than clothes? Look at the birds of the air; they do not sow or reap or store away in barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not much more valuable than they? Can any one of you by worrying add a single hour to your life? (St Matthew Chapter 6 verses 25/7)

We each choose our master – either faith or worry. Which is it to be?

Wars and Rumours of Wars

It was reported recently that next year – 2015 – could be the first year since 1914 that the British military have not been engaged in fighting somewhere in the world. This week’s announcement from the Welsh summit of 60 nations put paid to all that! Prime Minister Cameron has pledged 1,000 troops to be available to destroy the new Islamist State’s war machine.

It is this machine which has shown superior media savvy in the modern warfare of traumatisation. The broadcast of the public beheading of a journalist effectively shred the emotions of Americans, and had the Deputy President ranting about hell, shows just how effective such provocation is.

The UK journalist who faces a similar fate will test Cameron’s resolve not to follow Germany, France and Italy and pay ISIS a ransom. In this type of psychological warfare hard choices have to be made.

While all this is going on Russia’s move into Eastern Ukraine makes progress. The current cease-fire would seem to be but a ploy in the light of Putin’s boast that he could take Kiev in two weeks.

In a bid to curb Putin’s expansionist ambitions NATO plans to strengthen its defences in the countries it acquired from Russia in the ‘90ies when Russia slipped from being a world power. The use of “sanctions” imposed by the West on Russia are designed to create economic hardship but these must be muted as Eastern Europe is dependent on Russian oil and gas. You don’t have to be a military strategist to realise what an increasingly powerful weapon this becomes as winter approaches.

These are only two of the many hot spots in today’s world where wars are raging. The human suffering of people fleeing from conflicts is immeasurable but its scale at 50 million refugees is the highest since the 2nd world war.

Jesus was never in any doubt but that the world as we know it would come to an end. When it would happen has not been revealed but the three synoptic Gospels all predict that it will be preceded by wars (St Matthew Chapter 24 verse 6). In addition to various physical phenomena another sign is that the Gospel of the Kingdom will be preached to all nations (verse 14).

This Gospel heralds the reign of Jesus in all who have yielded their allegiance to Him: “But to all who did receive him, who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God, who were born, not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man, but of God” (St John Chapter 1 verse 12/13).

To those who remain faithful and obedient through the difficult times of persecution St Luke encourages with the words, “When these things begin to take place, stand up and lift up your heads, because your redemption is drawing near.” (Chapter 21 verse 28).

The daily news will not give much to rejoice over unless we can see it as part of a chain of events leading up to the return of Jesus.

As St Peter put it “But in keeping with his promise we are looking forward to a new heaven and a new earth, where righteousness dwells” (2Peter Chapter 3 verse 13).

A Nation Once Again

One of the hazards of being a Scotsman living in Ireland at the moment is that you are assumed to have some insights into the Independence Referendum. There is a general disbelief that one whose accent still sounds Scottish could not but be in the thick of it!

In some of the more Irish Nationalistic circles to declare that the Scottish debate is a lot of nonsense is tantamount to treason.

Any suggestion of “Better Together” is met with the charge that you are gripped by greed for English gold! The notion that one can quite agreeably live with the English/Welsh/Northern Irish is met with disbelief. Have ye no national pride they cry betraying a mindset that dreams of the four green fields in the glory days of Ireland.

To mention how well East and West Germany have united and where today the disunity is created by disproportionate incomes not accents is seen as somehow undermining 1916 and all that.

After the US gained its independence from Britain in the late seventeen hundreds the country did not fragment despite becoming home to a multitude of nationalities. Today the ethnicity of these immigrants can be seen in the flying of the flag of their Motherland in their front garden but it is usually flown alongside the Stars and Stripes of the land of their adoption.

In Scotland today the Saltire is being flown in the front garden in defiance of, not alongside the Union Jack flown in the neighbour’s garden. The discord, seen in rural areas, sparked in some street fighting in Glasgow last night between the “Yes” and the “No” sides. Whichever side wins the last thing Scotland needs is an aftermath of disunity.

The Bible recognises the Nation-State and startlingly declares that its authority comes from God. It further states that resulting from this fact we should submit to its laws with very few exceptions, Romans Chapter 13 verses 1-2.

On the other hand there is nothing sacred about national boundaries which over centuries fluctuate to accommodate nationalistic ambitions. The trouble begins when we want the power that goes with the authority thinking that if only we had it we would do a better job running our own affairs. A kind of divine right to rule as we fragment to smaller and smaller units or if we had the weaponry into bigger and bigger ones!

Jesus was clear that his kingdom was not territorial, St John Chapter 18 verse 36, but uniquely his subjects would inhabit every land. There were to be no frontiers that could not be crossed. Its citizens would be those he purchases with his blood from every language, people and nation, Revelation Chapter 5 verse 9.

The inhabitants of his kingdom would come from all walks of life and would be equally welcome Galatians Chapter 3 verse 28. So if you are a citizen of Jesus’ kingdom St Peter says you have a job to do, “You are…a holy nation, a people belonging to God, that you may declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his wonderful light” 1Peter Chapter 2 verse 9.

Sir Elton John

It is always interesting to learn what a celebrity thinks of Jesus as opposed to what he thinks of the Church. The latter always gets a bad press but not so Jesus.

Sir Elton told Sky News a short time ago: “If Jesus was alive today, I cannot see him as the Christian person he was and the great person he was, saying this [gay marriage] could not happen. He was all about love and compassion and forgiveness and trying to bring people together and that is what the church should be about.”

Apparently Sir Elton is keen to have Jesus blessing on his proposed wedding next year to his partner David Furnish. Perhaps like many, he wants the ultimate celebrity endorsement – that of the Son of God.

Whatever the reason looking at Jesus through the eyes of Sir Elton makes it difficult to recognise the one who refused to be called good by the rich ruler who wished to ingratiate himself into his company. St Luke records how Jesus answered him, “Why do you call me good?” Jesus answered. “No one is good—except God alone. You know the commandments: ‘You shall not commit adultery, you shall not murder, you shall not steal, you shall not give false testimony, honour your father and mother (chapter 18 v 19/20).”

In fact Jesus went further when he preached that it was not only the act but the lustful look that is sinful when it came to adultery and that losing our temper is akin to murder. By such teaching Jesus showed that God knows the thoughts and intents of all our hearts. Thus keeping the law was revealed not so much as an outward and external behavioural exercise but an inward and invisible practice which was known only by God.

But his thoughts are not ours, his standards are profoundly different from ours and his call to discipleship is much more radical than Sir Elton’s comforting thoughts.

Sir Elton would be shocked to discover that it is precisely because Jesus is loving and compassionate that he defined marriage as being between a man and a woman. The Bible uses marriage to illustrate Jesus’s intimate relationship with his church (Ephesians chapter 5 verses 29/31).

The fact is that Jesus is alive, knows our thoughts and has set his love on us sinners who fail so miserably to follow him in the many forms of “marriage” on the market today. He, the living Jesus, is able to transform – not only the marriage but the life of the repentant Eltons’ and you and me.

The church and Jesus its founder is all about this new life – abundant life which Jesus offers to all who hear his voice.

Robin Williams deceased

Robin Williams the American Actor and Stand-up Comedian died by his own hand on Monday. In his lifetime he has won many awards and established himself among the Hollywood greats. On Broadway in New York City, theatres dimmed their lights for one minute in his honour. 

In his life he had struggled with dependency on cocaine which he was able to give up – only to fall prey to alcoholism. His wife confirmed that he was in the early stages of Parkinson’s disease. To cap it all he suffered from depression.

There are many instances of successful comedians, people who could make the dourest of us laugh, but who in their own lives suffered from recurring bouts of depression. Solomon knew a thing or two about these things which he expresses in Proverbs Chapter 14 verse 13. “Even in laughter the heart may ache and joy may end in grief.”

Unfortunately there is nothing new about the clown who commits suicide. What is new is the public outpouring of grief via the vehicles of social media. This catharsis which was indulged in by so many this week has been called by one journalist “recreational grief”. It first came to our attention with the mountain of flowers and teddies that marked Lady Diane’s death.

It is triggered by the untimely-ness and the manner of the death, the more dramatic the bigger the impact.

Perhaps it is because we have anesthetised death from view so that the only bodies we see are those on the TV news. They are abstract, impersonal and remote from our experience so that our momentary grief soon passes. Real grief is for those unfortunate women in Burqas who almost jump down the lens of the camera recording the event.

When it comes to the death of Christ a zillion images of plastic, wood or whatever have succeeded in removing the reality of the crucifixion from the vast majority. There is little chance of that personal identification taking place whereby the sinner sees his sins laid upon his Saviour. Even less chance of understand that all the Saviour’s merits have been laid to the sinners account.

This knowledge comes from believing the promises of God, written in scripture, so that by trusting in Him we are made right in the eyes of God. As St Paul put it “For our sake God made Jesus to be sin (on the cross) who knew no sin, so that in Jesus we might become the righteousness of God”. 2 Corinthians Chapter 5 verse 21.

Grief needs to find its outlet, not in the death of a stranger, but in the recognition of our plight before a thrice holy God.

For those from whom God takes the scales from their eyes and shows them what they are really like, the reflex reaction is to turn to Jesus, and find that, in him, they have the peace which eludes so many and is not to be found in this world but comes from God.

Comet 67P

“The heavens declare the glory of God, and the sky above proclaims his handiwork.
Day to day pours out speech, and night to night reveals knowledge.
There is no speech, nor are there words, whose voice is not heard.”

The opening words to Psalm 19 which King David penned some three millenniums ago capture something of the magnificence of our summer sunsets that light up the evening sky. This universal language which transcends spoken language speaks of order and consistency as night follows day in unbroken succession.

Into our solar system came the Rosetta Probe. It was launched from France 10 years ago and, rather like the stone in David’s sling which he used to kill Goliath, it was whirled three times round the earth in an increasing orbit then let fly for Comet 67P. It arrived this week at its destination, a lump of ice, dust and rock all frozen together and measuring 2.5 miles wide. The plans are to drop a land craft onto the surface in November to see what it is made of. In particular they want to test the water which is melting on the comet to compare it with our water on earth.

It seems a long way to go to check out water quality but, of course, the underlying quest is for origins – who made water and where did it come from?

Having left the Biblical explanation of creation behind in junior school and having decided that the order and consistency that we take for granted must have evolved they take God out of the reckoning. As St Paul puts it in Romans Chapter 1 verses 19/20, “For what can be known about God is plain to them, because God has shown it to them. For his invisible attributes, namely his eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly perceived, ever since the creation of the world, in the things that have been made. So they are without excuse.”

But there is another water that Jesus spoke about when he analysed its quality for the Samaritan woman. It is recorded in St John’s gospel chapter 4 verses 9/26. This he described as “living water” and said it would satisfy and sustain her for the rest of her life.

This gift from Jesus of the Holy Spirit can be received without a trip to Comet 67P but with a simple prayer of faith to Jesus the giver of living water.

Ebola Virus

This lethal virus, for which there is no known cure, is in West Africa – sufficiently remote from us not to cause panic. But for our school children on our “Once” programme and the Sankoh’s extended family in Freetown it is a very real fear.

The disease, which is highly contagious, started back in March in Guinea but soon crossed borders to Sierra Leone and Liberia. It has now reached Nigeria.

The outbreak has been blamed for the deaths of 729 people, according to World Health Organisation figures, and has left over 1,300 people with confirmed or suspected infections.

Ebola begins with the sudden onset of flu-like symptoms characterized by general malaise, fever with chills, sore throat and severe headache. Part of the problem is the ordinariness of the signs which lead to denial instead of people going for tests.

There have been 60 medical personnel deaths including Dr Khan who passed away on Tuesday. He had been at the forefront of those fighting the disease. Sadly it is now medics and officials who are being blamed by panicked populations for spreading the virus. They have been threatened with knives, stones and machetes and their vehicles sometimes surrounded by hostile mobs. Log barriers across narrow dirt roads block their way to the villages where the virus is suspected. Sick and dead villagers, cut off from help, are infecting others.

Many are pulling out of the danger area but help is on hand from the World Health Organisation who has launched a health plan with a budget of $100,000. It has the support of teams from organisations such as Doctors without Frontiers.

In another corner of the African continent in a previous century one called Joseph was, by God’s grace, able to turn around plans for his removal and cope with disaster which threatened the population of his day. Joseph was the only one who could save them, “You intended to harm me, but God intended it for good…the saving of many lives” (Genesis Chapter 50 verse 20).

There is also an eternal dimension to suffering which Joseph foreshadows. The remedy to that is found in Jesus Christ of whom it was said “He was pierced for our transgressions, he was crushed for our iniquities, the punishment that brought us peace was upon him and by his wounds we are healed (Isaiah Chapter 53 verse 5).

For those with the virus eternal healing is their only hope.

Commonwealth Games

There is something quaint even old fashioned about the Commonwealth Games which opened in Glasgow this week. The athletes all had their moment of glory as the familiar scene was re-enacted. They followed the established custom of marching behind their flag bearer as they entered the arena to the strains of their own national anthem.

A Scottish twist was the Scotty dog wearing a “waistcoat” with the name of the Country clearly visible and led by his owner, preceding the national flag bearer.

The high tech tricks were kept to a minimum with one side of Ibrox Stadium totally occupied by a massive electronic screen. On it we were treated to some views of the glorious Scottish countryside which were rather spoiled by the electronic attempts at reproducing tartan!

The dancers and singers did well although the scarcity of the latter was reflected in an old clip of Andy Stuart belting out “Scottish Soldier” which brought back fond memories to people of a certain age!

The host city, Glasgow, got maximum publicity with its motto “Let Glasgow flourish” writ large. What they failed to mention was that in more Christian times the motto read “Let Glasgow flourish by the preaching of the Word and the praising of His Name”. With the editing out of the last two clauses Glasgow is left with a motto which begs the question as to why anyone should let Glasgow flourish after they have turned their back on their Maker and Redeemer. A question for another day perhaps?

The torch had travelled around the world in true Olympic style arriving by seaplane on the river Clyde which runs alongside the arena. The Queen was there to receive it and read the message which she had placed in the torch many months previously. A moment of comic relief occurred when the Chairman of the Games could not get the message out of the torch, he and the torch-bearer wrestled with it to the amusement of the crowd. The Queen, who could have probably done the job herself, had her own copy of the text so by the time the original was obtained it was seen to be redundant!

Using their maxim, Humanity Equality Destiny the Games shone a light on the equality or rather the inequality that exists between rich and poor. We were encouraged to subscribe £5 to UNICEF using cell phones and the resultant response jammed the network!

Mind you the tactic to extract the £5’s from Scottish pockets was pictures of the all too familiar starving children, from hot countries, projected across the side of Ibrox Park.

When St Paul was fundraising in Corinth, a city which Glasgow resembles, he spoke of the grace of God in giving us Jesus and the grace of Jesus in giving Himself. “For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ that though he was rich, yet for your sake he became poor, so that you by his poverty might become rich.” (2 Corinthians Chapter 8 verse 9).

The Corinthians had been redeemed and their lives turned around so now they could see what equality meant. It was reciprocal. They met others needs according to their means and when poverty hit them they received from others – verses 13/14.

Generosity not based on guilt but based on Biblical values out of a knowledge of Jesus.

Malaysian Airlines

The latest tragedy to hit Malaysian Airlines is the shooting down of their flight MH17 as it flew over Ukraine’s war zone on its way from the Netherlands to Malaysia. It was taking the direct route, perhaps to save fuel or simply following the normal flight path feeling safe at a height of 33,000 feet.

Travelling at a speed of between 500/600mph one thing is certain it was not a bullet from a Kalashnikov rifle that brought down the jet killing all 298 people on board. It is much more likely to have been a guided missile from the Buk system which the rebels have obtained from Russia presumably to continue their practice of shooting down planes from the Pro-Western part of Ukraine.

If you give a child a loaded weapon it is unlikely that he will be able to resist using it. In the same way the rebels with their new rocket system may have not been able to resist trying it out on the commercial airliner when it appeared in their airspace. There is also the report of a Ukrainian transport plane flying in the area and it may have been the original target.

The wreckage has fallen in rebel held territory and reports confirm that they have secured the two black boxes. I would think the chances of them being sent to Malaysia are slim!

Whilst all the world powers have had something to say about the tragedy Russia’s Putin blaming Western Ukraine “as they had resumed fighting against the separatists” is particularly myopic!

Of all the soft targets that the rebels could find this must be the softest. The Boeing 777 did not stand a chance. Once the rocket locked on to it there was only going to be one result. The bodies and the wreckage were strewn over several kilometres.

Christians know what is like to be a “soft target” in many countries today. Take the case of Asia Bibi in Pakistan. More than four years ago she was the victim of persecution by some Muslim women who wanted her to confess the prophet Muhammad. Instead she asked them what had their prophet done for them – she said Jesus, her saviour, had died for her.

This unanswerable question landed her in Jail for blasphemy, convicted by the Lower Court in 2010 and now awaiting the result of her appeal to the Lahore High Court. The appeal has been postponed four times by judges who seem to have come under pressure from Islam extremists and would prefer not to get involved.

Meanwhile Asia languishes in death row in wretched conditions in Multan rather that renounce her faith. “Blessed is the one who perseveres under trial because, having stood the test, that person will receive the crown of life that the Lord has promised to those who love him. James Chapter 1 verse 12.

Christian Church in Dublin City Center