After multiple airport runs this past weekend, we had finally welcomed the delegates from all around the world, and LDC got off to a good start this morning with a special breakfast and a very moving time of worshipping the Lord. It was a time when the Holy Spirit was moving among us, already touching lives, speaking words of prophecy and encouragement.
Then we had a creative meditation time, where the delegates moved to different stations around the house and garden, interacting with and responding personally to different aspects of our theme scripture, which this year is taken from John chapter seven. As in previous years, Stephe has also written a worship song based on this theme, inviting the Holy Spirit to come and overflow in our hearts and lives.
Thank you, by the way, to those of you who've been praying for my health. The coughing has almost stopped now, and the chest pain (tendonitis) caused by the coughing is also beginning to be less painful now. My energy level seems to be back to normal again.
I have to confess that having to stay out of the sun (in order to protect the burned part of my face) can be mildly stressful when so many of our LDC learning activities, meals, breaks, etc, take place outdoors in the Spanish sunshine. I do have a selection of different sun hats now - which means that I can swap mildly stressful for mildly ridiculous. (It's not for nothing that I've never been much of a hat wearer!!) Looking ahead to the summer months, when I was bemoaning the fact that I might not be able to do any swimming, someone suggested that I could get one of these swimming masks that were sometimes worn by women in the 1920s. This would allow me to trade mildly stressful and mildly ridiculous for mildly terrifying!!! (Please note that this is not me in the photo; it's some lady from the 1920s.)
Thanks for your prayers during this bonding week of the LDC. We'll be moving on later in the week to consider how different leaders have different personalities and giftings. Understanding ourselves, and how God has made us, helps us also to understand others and work in more unity as a team.
Monday, 28 April 2014
Tuesday, 8 April 2014
Health Update
Thank you to everyone who has asked how my health is doing now. I'm pleased to report that I seem to have turned the corner now. I went back to the doctor on Friday, concerned about the cough and the chest pain, and it turns out that the pain is mainly due to a damaged muscle, and the cough is slowly clearing up now.
My face is looking superficially good - just very itchy, which the doctor tells me is normal and might last for several months. For those of you interested in the details and prognosis, here's the information given on a patient leaflet about post-burn care:
Length of time for skin to heal
There are three phases in the formation of a scar. In the first phase, which lasts less than a week, the body begins to remove dead and dying skin tissue, fights infection, and sends cells that will begin the healing process to the burned areas. In the second phase, which takes a few weeks, the body makes collagen fibers to form scar tissue and creates tiny new blood vessels in the injured area. In the final phase, which takes months to years, the scar tissue matures, resulting in a stronger scar.
Itching
Itching is a common problem, especially in the first few months after healing. Occasionally it is severe and intractable, interfering with sleep and producing recurrent wound breakdown due to scratching. It is important to try not to scratch. Lukewarm showers, bath oil, colloidal oatmeal products, and moisturisers may help with itching. Sometimes medication such as antihistamines may be needed for persistent disruptive itching.
My face is looking superficially good - just very itchy, which the doctor tells me is normal and might last for several months. For those of you interested in the details and prognosis, here's the information given on a patient leaflet about post-burn care:
Length of time for skin to heal
There are three phases in the formation of a scar. In the first phase, which lasts less than a week, the body begins to remove dead and dying skin tissue, fights infection, and sends cells that will begin the healing process to the burned areas. In the second phase, which takes a few weeks, the body makes collagen fibers to form scar tissue and creates tiny new blood vessels in the injured area. In the final phase, which takes months to years, the scar tissue matures, resulting in a stronger scar.
Itching
Itching is a common problem, especially in the first few months after healing. Occasionally it is severe and intractable, interfering with sleep and producing recurrent wound breakdown due to scratching. It is important to try not to scratch. Lukewarm showers, bath oil, colloidal oatmeal products, and moisturisers may help with itching. Sometimes medication such as antihistamines may be needed for persistent disruptive itching.
Tuesday, 1 April 2014
Preparing to celebrate Easter...
It's April, and in just a few weeks' time we'll be remembering Jesus' death and celebrating His resurrection. Perhaps you, or a young person that you know, would like to join hundreds of others around the world in two weeks (14 days) of Bible readings on an Easter theme. Click below to download the booklet in English, or visit the Challenge 2014 website to download the booklet in either Spanish or French: www.biblechallenge2014.blogspot.com
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| Click here to download the Easter Bible Reading Booklet |
Spilled milk and creative reconciliation...
It’s been a while since I wrote a post from my daily reading in the Old Testament books of Samuel. (In fact, I’ve finished Samuel now and have begun reading in the historical books of Israel’s kings.) But here’s just one more thought from 2nd Samuel and a little verse that caught my attention in chapter fourteen. 2 Samuel 14: 14 says: Like water spilled on the ground, which cannot be recovered, so we must die. But God does not take away life; instead He devises ways so that a banished person may not remain estranged from Him.
This verse spoke so much to me of God’s heart for the lost. It’s a picture of how He pulls out all the stops to make it possible for selfish and sinful people to be reconciled with Him. And when it comes to “devising ways” to make that possible, surely there was no more precious and costly way than sending His own Son to die for us - a costly sacrifice that we’ll remember when we celebrate Easter later this month. But there are two important principles in this verse that can also be applied to reconciliation between two human beings:
Number one is the principle of “spilled milk.”
Sometimes real restitution is going to be impossible. Restitution is an important Biblical principle, clearly taught and demonstrated in both the Old and New Testaments. If you steal from someone, you need to pay back what was taken, and maybe more. If your gossip publicly destroys someone’s reputation, a public apology would begin the process of putting things right. But like the examples in this story in 2 Samuel 14 (where one son had killed his brother), there are going to be situations that are “like water spilled on the ground”: the damage done can simply never be undone, never be reversed in any way. The drunk driver can’t bring back the loved one that was killed; the betrayal or infidelity of a friend or spouse can never be erased. Unlike the old proverb, crying over spilt milk is an appropriate thing to do: grieving losses is an important part of our healing. Recognising, however, that no restitution can ever be possible can help move us towards the next step in these principles of reconciliation.
Number two is the principle of “devising ways."
It was totally impossible for man to find ways of atoning for his own sin. It simply couldn’t be done. And so God devised different ways of making relationship possible again: the serpent in the wilderness, the laws about the scapegoat, the sacrifice of animals... and ultimately the death of His own Son. If someone is estranged from us, and if we know that they have no way of putting things right, we need to consider what we can do from our side to make reconciliation possibe, so that the relationship is not broken forever.
What situations of “water spilled on the ground” have there been in your life? And what can you do, even this month, to devise creative ways of making reconciliation and relationship possible again?
Sometimes real restitution is going to be impossible. Restitution is an important Biblical principle, clearly taught and demonstrated in both the Old and New Testaments. If you steal from someone, you need to pay back what was taken, and maybe more. If your gossip publicly destroys someone’s reputation, a public apology would begin the process of putting things right. But like the examples in this story in 2 Samuel 14 (where one son had killed his brother), there are going to be situations that are “like water spilled on the ground”: the damage done can simply never be undone, never be reversed in any way. The drunk driver can’t bring back the loved one that was killed; the betrayal or infidelity of a friend or spouse can never be erased. Unlike the old proverb, crying over spilt milk is an appropriate thing to do: grieving losses is an important part of our healing. Recognising, however, that no restitution can ever be possible can help move us towards the next step in these principles of reconciliation.
It was totally impossible for man to find ways of atoning for his own sin. It simply couldn’t be done. And so God devised different ways of making relationship possible again: the serpent in the wilderness, the laws about the scapegoat, the sacrifice of animals... and ultimately the death of His own Son. If someone is estranged from us, and if we know that they have no way of putting things right, we need to consider what we can do from our side to make reconciliation possibe, so that the relationship is not broken forever.
What situations of “water spilled on the ground” have there been in your life? And what can you do, even this month, to devise creative ways of making reconciliation and relationship possible again?
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