Category Archives: The Word on the Week

The Word on the Week

Exit of Brexit

Exit of Brexit                         Word on the Week                      1st February 2020.

Midnight in Brussels or 11.00 pm in London heralded the departure of the UK from the EU, although it will continue to follow EU rules and enjoy most of the benefits of membership until the end of 2020.   The occasion was low key.   The ‘Leavers’ who gathered to sing songs were decidedly out of tune.   Even the amplification failed to work properly – perhaps an omen for how the UK will manage in future.

In taking leave from Brussels, Nigel Farage the architect or rather the disrupter of the EU could not resist (although it was forbidden) a final waving of the Union Jack.   Nigel, like the rest of us, does not like being told what to do but in his case his dislike focused on the EU.   “We will not take orders” said the leading character of the divorce from Europe, a role he in which he had had a couple of personal experiences of in the past.    By way of contrast many tributes were paid to UK officials by their EU colleagues who had worked alongside them for a portion of the 47 years since the UK joined.  

The 31st January opened in Brussels with a rendering of the European Anthem.  It is Friedrich von Schiller’s poem adapted by Ludwig van Beethoven called “Ode to Joy,” from the last movement of his Ninth Symphony.    Schiller’s poem draws on the mythology surrounding the Greek god Elysium whose place at the ends of the earth is where certain heroes are conveyed by the gods after death.

The day ended with the singing of ‘Auld Lang Syne’ – which seemed to sum up the affection the workers held for each other.    There are, of course, 11 months to December 31st to thrash out a trade deal.   Let’s hope they will still be singing at the end of it!

Setting national pride apart, does it matter if the UK are out and Ireland, for instance, are in the EU?    The answer depends on who we are serving.   If it is ourselves we are accountable to then perhaps even Nigel Farage makes sense!   But if conscience has been tutored by the word of God then we will be guided by Micah’s words in chapter 6 verse 8; He has shown you, O man, what is good.   And what does he Lord require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly] with your God.  

The Lord requires us to show the primary forms of love – justice and mercy, kindness and faithfulness, and to walk humbly with our God.

God is more interested in how we behave in relation to each other and to the countries and their citizens with whom we align.   Jesus said we are to “Seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness” and all the things we think are important will be dealt with by Him (St Matthew Chapter 6 verse 33).

Goldfinch

Goldfinch                          Word on the Week                          25th January 2020.

“Look at the birds of the air” Jesus said when he was illustrating God the Father’s provision.    I was in need of a topic for this blog and there outside my window were a flock of Goldfinches!   Their multi-coloured plumage lit up the grey January day with red, white and yellow feathers the most noticeable.

It was these feathers that made them popular as far back as the 19th century.   Then they were sought after as cage birds.   This practice of catching them was almost their undoing. They became a threatened species and were only prevented from extinction when their capture and caging was banned in 1933.   

It was observed that they had a passion for thistle seeds.   In the eighth century this gave them the name of ‘Thisteltuige’.    The name literally means thistle-tweaker. The birds can be seen in late summer, the male with his slightly longer beak, eating the teasels and the female with her short beak eating the thistle seeds.

To attract these birds to your garden I’m not suggesting you let the thistles grow although the odd one or two would be for a good cause!   They are seed feeders and the relatively expensive niger seed is their favourite meal.   You need to purchase the appropriate feeder otherwise the seed will get wasted.    What falls to the ground is usually claimed by the Chaffinch who is a ground feeder and gratefully eats the seed that falls from the Goldfinches table!

Their nests are built of grass and mud and are lined with wool to create a deeply cupped well insulated nest. They decorate the outside of the nest with lichen, presumably to camouflage their location which is at the very top of the tree.  Their eggs number 5 or 6 are white and spotted.   They time their chicks to arrive when seeds are most plentiful, usually June and a second family in the Autumn to eat the thistle seeds.

Goldfinches are easily alarmed and often take flight en masse.   It is then that their delightful flight calls can be heard.    They sound something like the tinkling of bells. This song has earned the goldfinch the lovely collective noun, ‘Charm’. 

Solomon wrote, “He (God) has made everything beautiful in its time”.   And so we have the birds but supremely the Goldfinch.   “Also, he has put eternity into man’s heart, yet so that he cannot find out what God has done from the beginning to the end.”  (Ecclesiastes Chapter 3 verse 11).    We know there is more to life than this present existence – eternity has been placed in all our hearts – and God has channelled our ability to finding out about eternity through faith in Christ.  

“What no eye has seen, what no ear has heard, and what no human mind has conceived” — the things God has prepared for those who love him—                                  1 Corinthians 2 verse 9.

Crime Pays!

Crime Pays!                       Word on the Week                          18th January 2020.

When you survey the bloodshed of this week you see the ugly face of crime.   It is as if the whole country has been affected by an incurable virus which can only be curtailed not cured.    It broke out in Drogheda, the North-side of Dublin and Cork.   In these places it became visible in the form of dead bodies and in one case a dismembered corpse.

Driven by the craving for drugs and paid for out of the relatively prosperous times we live in, the demand rises.   Drug bills add up (who does the addition – who dare argue with the arithmetic) and the wider family are called upon to clear the debt.   Fear is on the side of the debt-collector and no threat can be lightly dismissed.

For those who cannot pay there is a job offer of sorts.   They can join the gang and pay off the balance due by doing what was done to them – intimidating the customer.   Recruitment amongst young boys is particularly insidious.    They can deliver the drugs, largely un-noticed, and reap the reward of designer clothing.   Who wouldn’t go for ‘Boss’ gear at age 14 and the promise of a BMW at age 17!    

The 17-year-old who was cut into pieces this week had been involved, among other things, in petrol bombing the houses of rival gang members and received a custodial sentence which, unfortunately for him, was suspended.     This murder seems to have been designed to maximise the fear factor sending notice to rival gangs to keep off ‘my patch’.   The bosses of these gangs avoid the limelight perhaps living abroad.   Their ability to avoid capture must make on the ground policing a daunting task.

For them crime pays.   They live in luxury.   Their consciences have been hardened or as Scripture puts it, consciences have been seared as with a hot iron (1 Timothy Chapter 4 verse 2).     For those murdered crime pays a dreadful price – their lives.

Scripture promises a payday – For the wages of sin is death; but it also majors on the fact that, the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord (Romans chapter 6 verse 23).    This gift of God is a gift of love from the heavenly Father.   Like other gifts it required no payment.   It is received by the empty hand of faith.   The faith is in the resurrected Jesus Christ.     The love of the Father is greater than your sin.    There is no sin that Jesus did not die for – every sin can be forgiven by His grace (St John Chapter 3 verse 16 and 1 John Chapter 1 verse 5 to 7). 

So every time someone asks you to snort a couple of lines of cocaine on a Friday night remember that they are supporting the drug gangs, the cultivation of the plants and the destruction of many lives.   Show them a better way – the way of Christ for this life and the next, (I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me (St John chapter 14 verse 6).

Forgive and Embrace

Forgive and Embrace                       Word on the Week              11th January 2020.

Last week’s blog had scarcely hit the bin when the dreams of times past turned into nightmares!    Commemorate that lot – not on your life!   One correspondent, in a fine show of charity said, “forgive and forget” people were OK with that, but “forgive and commemorate” was a bridge too far to cross!

What is it about forgiveness that is so difficult?    It’s the thing that can so easily come back to bite us.   The theologian, Miroslav Volf, is a Croat who has written on the subject.    He found himself stumbled when at a question and answer time at his university he was asked if he could forgive the Serbs?    The Serbs had done dreadful things to his people.    He deferred answering the question!

You see Volf had recognised that forgiveness is not simply saying sorry and keeping out of the other’s way but goes much deeper and takes time and work.   Sometimes it helps to take the other person’s position and they yours and argue the case from the other’s point of view.   Repentance is always necessary, although at first it is hard to acknowledge it.   It too is costly as you are exposing your feelings to the other.

If there was a way that avoided making yourself vulnerable –wouldn’t that be good!   Especially where the events that engendered the hatred seem to point to the sins of the other.    And where your own kith and kin are involved and they are watching you…better to take the family line which is usually the hard line.

Suppose the Prodigal had died in the far country and the Father on hearing the news (perhaps years later) decides to commemorate the event.   Would the elder Brother come to it?    What about all the years he had worked and never got a helping hand from the young fella.   He had always been a waster!    Why should I commemorate him? (St Luke Chapter 15 verse 29 paraphrased).

In forgiveness it is hard to realise we are dealing with a human being.   One like myself.   Part of the human race.   Irrespective of colour or creed.   The divine imperative to love the ‘other’ as yourself (St Luke Chapter 10 verse 27) had no excluded race.    Jesus’s illustration that followed featured a Samaritan whom the expert in the law had excluded!

To the government’s credit their intention was to have no excluded groups.   The Royal Irish Constabulary and the Dublin Metropolitan Police were to have their 100th commemoration in Dublin Castle next Friday.    These groups, through no fault of their own ended up on the ‘wrong’ side and today’s descendants of those on the ‘right’ side will not permit it to take place.

 Then said Jesus, Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do.                       (St Luke Chapter 23 verse 34).

An Epiphany of Dreams

An Epiphany of Dreams                   Word on the Week              4th January 2020.

The last decade in Ireland commemorated the centenary of the 1916 Rising and the decade we are entering promises many more of the same!   Community-led events are planned in the locations where they occurred historically and funding will be available to artists and writers by the Department of Culture.

As these centenaries affect communities on both sides of the border the Department of Foreign Affairs Reconciliation Fund will also contribute.   The Department of Education is to re-establish the ‘Decade of Centenaries Irish History Competition’ for primary and post primary schools.   University College Cork’s School of History will also be involved.

Some of the events they have in mind are The War of Independence, Bloody Sunday, the Sacking of Balbriggan, the execution of Kevin Barry the Connaught Rangers Mutiny and the Civil War.

We are assured that the Government’s aim is to provide a “supportive structure so that the very difficult events that occurred during the struggle for independence will be remembered in a measured and non-partisan manner”.    Dream on!   One can begin to sympathise with the recent suggestion that History be dropped from the school curriculum!

All this takes place against a background of negotiations for a united Ireland.   Brexit affords an opportunity for the ‘Remainers’ in the Northern Ireland to bring their country into the European Union.    Then we could look forward for the ‘struggle for interdependence’ to begin!    Perhaps more dreams – but they are of a better tomorrow!

The Apostle Paul mentions another epiphany, this time it’s of the grace of God and is for all without distinction – there is no excluded group.   He writes; For the grace of God has appeared that offers salvation to all people.  It teaches us to say “No” to ungodliness and worldly passions, and to live self-controlled, upright and godly lives in this present age, while we wait for the blessed hope—the appearing of the glory of our great God and Saviour, Jesus Christ,who gave himself for us to redeem us from all wickedness and to purify for himself a people that are his very own, eager to do what is good (Titus Chapter 2 verses 11 to 14).

The Apostle looks forward to a day when the disparate tribes of Adam will find their unity as citizens in the Kingdom of God each redeemed by the blood of Christ.     Then our dreams will become a reality in His eternal reign (Revelation Chapter 11 Verse 15).

Coming Home for Saturnalia

It had been an eventful year in Jerusalem.   My Legion had been there from the start. Who could ever forget that memorable crucifixion.    The one where my Centurion (who had his belief in God confirmed) said “In truth this man was the Son of God” (St Mark Chapter 15 verse 39).

Events followed with the body of Christ disappearing from the tomb under the noses of the guards.   They were trusted soldiers who would not have been easily frightened.   But they were terrified at what they saw when the angel came and rolled the stone away so that all could see that the tomb was empty.   The angel told the women who had come to mourn, not to be afraid because Jesus had risen and had gone into Galilee.

Of course the Chief Priests would not believe a word of the soldiers report and paid them some hush money to say that the body was stolen while they slept.   I am not sure how the men got round it but sleeping on guard duty was punishable by death!   However, they made up their story and I am ashamed to admit they took the money.

I was captivated at Pentecost when St Peter spoke with great authority.   I was on duty and could see the effect his words had on the multitude of Jews from many lands.  When they realised they had crucified their Messiah many broke down and cried, “what shall we do?”   They were told to repent of their sins and be baptised in the name of Jesus Christ.   These new believers had their sins forgiven and received the gift of God the Holy Spirit to be in them (Acts Chapter 2 verses 37/38).

I thought this salvation was a Jewish thing.   Later when Centurion Cornelius and his household were converted I realised it was for all nationalities.  It was then that I too repented of my sins and believed in Jesus as My Saviour and Lord.

Now I am back in Rome on my first leave in time for Saturnalia and delighted to be able to meet up with fellow believers – mainly army men from the provinces.  

I had an interesting encounter with my old Centurion friend who questioned me: –

“I hear you have a new religion – where is your Temple?”  “Jesus is our Temple.”  

“Where do you make your sacrifices?”   “Jesus is our sacrifice.”

“Who is your priest?”   “Jesus is our priest.”  

“By Jupiter what kind of religion is that!”   And of course my friend is right – it is not a religion.   It is a relationship with the living God.   We know Him through Jesus Christ.

John 14:6-7 Jesus says to his disciples, “I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me. If you really knew me, you would know my Father as well. From now on, you do know him and have seen him.”

So this year I will be celebrating Saturnalia a little differently!

Incarnation Fleshed Out

Incarnation Fleshed Out        Word on the Week              21st December 2019.

“Oh, that you would rend the heavens and come down, that the mountains would tremble before you” was the Prophet’s cry as he looked at the sinfulness of the people.   “All of us have become like one who is unclean, and all our righteous acts are like filthy rags.” He analysed our condition realising the depth of our depravity (Isaiah Chapter 64 verses 1 & 6).

Isaiah sees the heavens as a vast curtain concealing God and pleads with God to tear them apart and reveal Himself.   Perhaps he was thinking of an earth shattering event such as Micah writes; “Look! The Lord is coming from his dwelling place; he comes down and treads on the heights of the earth.  The mountains melt beneath him and the valleys split apart, like wax before the fire, like water rushing down a slope.  All this is because of Jacob’s transgression, because of the sins of the people of Israel Chapter 1 verses 3 to 5).

But when Christ came it could not have been more different.   It took the powers and authorities by surprise.    None of the Religious were there to welcome him except Simeon a faithful old believer and 84-year-old Anna who recognised the Child as the one who would provide redemption for Jerusalem (St Luke Chapter 2. Verses 25 & 36).

Like today the powers and authorities barely tolerate Christianity.   Herod embarked on the ‘slaughter of the innocents’ (St Matthew Chapter 2 verses 16 to 28).    Today in many countries it is forbidden to follow Christ and in an increasing number of places the persecution of a Christian is condoned or even permitted at law.    

But there was a time when God visited earth and broke through the curtain of the temple. This occurred the moment Christ died on the cross.   The curtain which fenced off the altar of sacrifice and which was only parted once per year on the day of atonement, to let the High Priest enter with the blood of the offering for the sins of the people, was torn from top to bottom: – “And when Jesus had cried out again in a loud voice, he gave up his spirit.   At that moment the curtain of the temple was torn in two from top to bottom. The earth shook, the rocks split and the tombs broke open … When the centurion and those with him who were guarding Jesus saw the earthquake and all that had happened, they were terrified, and exclaimed, “Surely he was the Son of God!” (St Matthew Chapter 27 verses 50 to 53.

From Isaiah’s cry for God’s intervention to Jesus’s cry as he gave up the Spirit we have a narrative arc in which everything moves towards its completion at the cross and resurrection.   It is the cross, not the temple, where forgiveness of sins now takes place and a foretaste of the general resurrection was illustrated.    Let the Apostle John have the last word: – This is love: not that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as an atoning sacrifice for our sins (1 John Chapter 4 verse 10).   

Get Brexit Done Election

Like something reminiscent of a fairground ventriloquist’s dummy we had the Prime Minister of the UK endlessly repeating his chant “Get Brexit Done”!   All through the election hustling’s the refrain rang out from his lips.   It was incorporated into the answer to almost every question.   It reduced public debate to a mindless mantra – but it won him the election!

This was an election where words carried a hidden meaning.   Brexit was always the elephant in the room.   The phrase “get Brexit done” meant leave the EU and to be silent on this issue was the equivalent of saying “I wish to remain in the EU”.   Other major issues such as Health and Housing were dismissed by pledges of enormous sums of money to put them right!

The election itself was theatre on a grand scale!   The National Broadcasting Co of the UK – the BBC, dramatised the proceedings by illustrating the country on a large floor map composed largely of red (Labour) and blue (Conservative) tiles.   Initially they showed the current holders of the seats but as the night wore on the colours changed to reflect the gains and losses.    Enthusiasm was high at each counting centre and votes were counted, stacked and checked at great speed.   

This view of democracy in action was beamed around the world by the BBC World Service.   There was an absence of bloodshed, which blights so many overseas elections and often results in the army taking charge, turning the event into a military dictatorship.   

Of course many countries do not give their people a choice in how they are to be governed.   The individual has no say in addressing needs and righting wrongs.   But in lands where the Bible is read and those in authority prayed for, those governing do not have to resort to strong arm tactics.   2 Timothy Chapter 2 verses 1 to 6 are key: – First of all, then, I urge that supplications, prayers, intercessions, and thanksgivings be made for all people, for kings and all who are in high positions, that we may lead a peaceful and    quiet life, godly and dignified in every way. This is good, and it is pleasing in the sight of God our Savior, who desires all people to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth.     For there is one God, and there is one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus, who gave himself as a ransom for all, which is the testimony given at the proper time. 

And that proper time we remember at this time of year: – When the fullness of time had come, God sent forth his Son, born of woman, born under the  law, to redeem those who were under the law, so that we might receive adoption as sons.    And we enter this relationship by faith in the ransom Christ Jesus has paid for us!

Fieldfares and Francis

We had a couple of days of frosty weather this week and, right on cue, came our friends the fieldfares.   They come from Scandinavia in their winter wanderings and usually remain on higher ground of the Wicklow hills until cold weather brings them down to us in Kildare.

They come in flocks sometimes mixed up with their friends the Redwing but this time it was only the larger Fieldfare that were in evidence.   It was the red berries on the Hawthorn trees, left over from the Blackbirds, Thrushes and Finches, that was part of the attraction.    When all the berries were eaten they come down to earth combing the grassy fields for what they could find to eat.

They are handsome birds, some 10 inches in length and have an unmistakable alert and upright appearance when alighting on the treetops.   Their head is a grey colour as if they were wearing a cape.   The throat and breast is a rusty yellow streaked with black.    Their tail is also black with a grey rump and white underside to their wings.   The flight call is a noisy chatter – they appear to enjoy each other’s company and have a lot to say!   

I am not surprised to read that St Francis (1182 – 1226) was fond of the birds.  Their presence and singing brightens up the countryside whereas their absence adds to a feeling of desolation.    St Francis possibly knew something of the latter when as a soldier in the Assis army at the age of 22 he became ill.   This led to a spiritual crisis which enabled him to view life differently.  

He dedicated himself to a life of simplicity and poverty following Jesus words to his apostles in St Matthew Chapter 10 verse 1 and Chapter 16 verses 24 to 26 which reads; Then Jesus told his disciples, “If anyone would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me. For whoever would save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for my sake will find it. For what will it profit a man if he gains the whole world and forfeits his soul? Or what shall a man give in return for his soul?

It was not to be however.   The order which he founded including St Francis himself came under the authority of an appointee of the Cardinal.   His quest was to point the church back to its spiritual foundations and to illustrate the manner of life that pointed people to Jesus.

St Francis never became a priest.   He wanted to be “married” to Lady Poverty and walk with Sister Charity and to serve as a praise leader of all creation.   Canticle to the Sun has the verse; The heavens are telling the glory of God, And all creation is shouting for joy!
Come, dance in the forest, come, play in the field,  And sing, sing to the glory of the Lord!
Praise for the wind that blows through the trees, the seas’ mighty storms, the gentlest breeze;
they blow where they will they blow where they please to please the Lord!

Shades of St John Chapter 3 verse 8 “The wind blows where it wishes, and you hear its sound, but you do not know where it comes from or where it goes. So it is with everyone who is born of the Spirit.”

Getting and Giving

Getting and Giving               Word on the Week             30th November 2019.

Black Friday has been successfully negotiated this week with many accounts in the retail sector safely in the black.   This import from the US (it is reputed to have started in Philadelphia) comes without the prior Thanksgiving Thursday where Americans celebrated the success of the Pilgrim Fathers first corn harvest in 1621.

Perhaps as an antidote to the slogan “shop till you drop” we now have, as a follow up to Black Friday – Cyber Monday!     It was created by retailers to encourage people to shop online from their home presumably surfing the internet for leftover bargains left behind from their exertions on the previous Friday.

Not all retailers are in favour of such an extension to the price reduction market.   They feel it will spoil the traditional commercialisation of Christmas.   There is a limit to the spending power of shoppers they say.   Others argue that we are having a good year financially so there is more disposable capital to be garnered!     Let the buying frenzy (known commercially as market forces) begin.

Of course it wouldn’t be Christmas without Santa and stockings and gifts.   The latter originally were intended to remind us of God’s gift of his Son to us (2 Corinthians Chapter 9 verse 15).    But just as Black Friday, on this side of the Atlantic, has been shorn from Thanksgiving we have all but shorn the giving of gifts from the real meaning of Christmas (St John Chapter 3 verse 16).

This is the time of year that charities do better at fundraising.   Ireland is well placed for choice.   There are seven major charities dealing with the homeless.   Overseas giving through Dochas, the umbrella organisation for overseas charities in Ireland, presents the choice of 42 members and a further 13 associates.    With suicide prevention/bereavement there are 48 separate agencies in the field.   

It is right that we should look after our own.      1 Timothy Chapter 5 verse 8 reads “if anyone does not provide for his relatives, and especially for members of his house-hold, he has denied the faith and is worse than an unbeliever”.     There are also the needs of Christians living in countries where they are persecuted for following Jesus Christ.    If you are a believer, you are related to them.    They are our brothers and sisters in the faith.   The Kingdom of God has no boundaries (2 Corinthians Chapter 16 verses 1 to 3).

Gifts can be sent via Barnabas Fund (UK) or the Dublin based Church in Chains – www.churchinchains.ie