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All Along the Watchtower

~ A new commandment I give unto you, That ye love one another; as I have loved you … John 13:34

All Along the Watchtower

Tag Archives: Joy

Joy in the (late) morning.

24 Friday Jul 2020

Posted by audremyers in Anglicanism, Audre, Blogging, Faith

≈ 25 Comments

Tags

Joy, Virtual Church

Zoom!

As difficult as riding this virus storm has been, it’s an ill wind that doesn’t blow someone some good. During the darkest part – called ‘shelter in place’ in Florida (as when facing a direct hit from a hurricane) – when we had no contact with our churches, our priests, our church families, it was indeed dark and lonely and depressing and fearful. Kindly intended emails were nice, even the deeply concerned ones but we are a gregarious animal by nature and we tend not to do well with extended periods of lack of contact with other folks. Technology came to the rescue. We weren’t alone anymore.

Old news now, of course, but priests and ministers across the nation mastered enough technology to at least live stream on Face Book using their laptops or desk top computers. Wealthy congregations got cameras and sound to their priests. The really brave priests went to companies like Zoom – said a prayer, and took the leap. Zoom was like manna in the desert – it fed us with the faces and voices of our church families and our priests. It was fun, it was surprisingly intimate, and we were together again.

Churches are opening across America, thank God from Whom all blessing flow, but the smart priests are keeping their Zoom meeting rooms. As we are still not out of the woods regarding the virus (as the ‘news’ so happily tells us), smart priests are using Zoom for Bible study. We ‘Zoom’ at 9 a.m. on Sundays when we would normally gather for Bible study. I attended another Bible study with my sister in New Hampshire at 7 p.m last night.

The Zoom Bible study that got me excited, however, was a complete surprise. I also attend a Zoom Bible study, presented by one of our Bishops, in Dunwoody, Georgia at 11 a.m. Bishop Chad was called away for a family funeral in Maryland and he left us ‘students’ in the hands of a young man named Creighton. I was skeptical; you know us old folks. I should have known better.

Creighton was astounding! Friendly, knowledgeable, outgoing, not at all intimidated dealing with folks very much his senior. Quick to laugh, eager to explain. I asked a question and he paused to think about it and simply said he wasn’t comfortable answering my question – I think it may have been a little over his pay grade, so to speak – but he was fine with telling me that and I was truly impressed. Creighton will have his deacon ordination next month and I couldn’t be more delighted! The Church of the future is in good hands if Creighton is any indication.

So, yes, joy cometh in the morning, even if it is at 11 a.m.

 

 

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With thanks

22 Sunday Jan 2017

Posted by John Charmley in Faith

≈ 20 Comments

Tags

Christianity, Conversion, Joy, religion

looking-at-the-path-of-a-christian_t

I do not often write personal posts, and this is one of the few, and it is not about me but about a friend whom I shall call R. R is one of the brightest men I know. He served his country in the armed forces for some years before moving into civilian life and taking a PhD, after which he entered the academic world where his life-experience put him, it would be fair to say, somewhat at odds with the usual ways in which academics do things. R liked to see results, he liked to be know why we were doing things and wanted to be able to calibrate the results; where was the data? Intellectually he was entirely untouched by groupthink. In a collectivist profession, he was an individualist. In the end he tired of it and went to do other things with his life. This was, I thought, academic life’s loss. On a personal level, because it meant I saw less of him, I was upset; though from his point of view, I could see, entirely, why he’d done it.

One of the areas where we had respectful disagreement (R was a gentleman to the core and had no other sort of disagreement) was my Christianity. He could see, historically, what Christianity had contributed to the history of Western Europe and to its value system, but beyond that, it eluded him. He was not an atheist who felt any need to attack or undermine Christianity, or who felt hostility toward it; but nor could he see why anyone might be a Christian.

Imagine, then, my surprise, a few days ago, to receive from him an email telling me that he had converted to Christianity and was now, with his family (a wonderful wife and two marvellous children) attending an Evangelical Alliance Church near to where they live. We have not, yet, had an opportunity to talk about this, but he thanked me, inter alia for recommending this site, and says he has found it very useful as a new Christian. My delight is threefold. R is simply one of the best men I know, a man of searing integrity who would rather suffer financial and personal loss than compromise his integrity. He is also a man who has his own ‘thorn’ as St Paul called his own ailment. So that He should have found Christ is simply a source of huge pleasure. It has been transformational, he says, and there seems to me a rightness in that. It is right that such a man should, in the encounter with Christ, find his world transformed. And that thought that this place has been useful to him, is all the justification I ever needed to keep running it.

So, R, welcome, and I know I speak for all the shades of Christian witness present here, in expressing joy that you have passed from darkness into light. My pleasure for you and your family is unbounded, my old friend, and I look forward to our being able to expand our conversations into this new area for us.

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reflections, links and stories.

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A new commandment I give unto you, That ye love one another; as I have loved you ... John 13:34

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