Wednesday, 28 June 2017

Life Lessons

Isn't it amazing that you can read the same Bible passage again and again, and still discover new things in it? But sometimes it's the opposite that happens, and it's the old lessons that come flooding back to your mind. This weekend, while reading in Joshua chapter three, I opened my journal and made a note of four principles that stood out to me as I read. As I paused to look back over my notes and pray, I was struck by the fact that these were not new insights; they were "life lessons" - things that had cropped up several times over my lifetime. I could remember writing some of them in a notebook way back when I was a teenager. I could remember when one of the verses had been significant in a time of personal decision making in 1985. I reflected on the time God used that passage to speak to us as a ministry in early 2000...

Do you have verses or passages like that? They played an important role in your journey with God, and when you re-read them, you are reminded of some of the life lessons that God has taught you throughout your lifetime? Here are four of my recurring life lessons that God has taught me through the events of Joshua chapter three. (It's the story of how the waters of the Jordan river part, in order to allow the people to walk across and enter the Promised Land.)

Vs 4 - when you're in unknown territory ( you haven't been this way before) it's particularly important to follow God's guidance, and not rush ahead too fast.

Vs 5 - intentional purity is a prerequisite for seeing the power of God work in you and through you.

Vs 8, 15 - 16 - sometimes you need to take a seemingly risky step of faith (the priests needed to step into the flooding river before a path appeared) before the way ahead becomes completely clear.

Vs 6, 17 - leaders need to be willing to take such steps,of faith, and also willing to hang in there and see the task through to completion.

These four lessons from Joshua chapter three are insights that I have built my life around when it comes to hearing God's voice and taking steps of faith? What are some of your life lessons, either from Bible stories or from the stories and events of your own life?

Sunday, 18 June 2017

An inseparable pair?

For some weeks now, I've been meditating daily in the Old Testament book of Deuteronomy and, as I near the end of the book, the final chapters continue to re-emphasise a major theme that has emerged throughout the book: obedience is the fruit of love.  In the second half of chapter 30, for example, the people are being given a choice between life and death, and are urged to "choose life." Verse 20 unpacks how they can make this choice in practice: by loving the Lord your God, obeying Him, and committing yourself firmly to Him.

The pairing of these two words - love and obedience - has raised some questions throughout centuries of Jewish and Christian history: Is it possible to obey God without loving Him? Is it possible to love God without obeying Him? Or are these two an inseparable pair?

From my perspective, the first is more possible than the second. It is possible to obey God without loving Him... but it results in cold and joyless legalism.

I'm not so convinced that it's possible to love God without obeying Him, because that kind of warm sentimentality doesn't seem to measure up to the Biblical definition of love. Jesus Himself said (in John 14: 15): If you love me, you will obey my commandments.  The apostle John unpacks this even further (1 John 5: 3) by writing, This is what loving God looks like: it means keeping His commandments, and His commands are not burdensome for us.

The New Testament seems to be picking up a truth that was a major theme of the book of Deuteronomy: that authentic love for God goes hand in hand with a genuine desire to do what He says. The proof of love is our joyful, willing obedience to our Creator.

Friday, 16 June 2017

Exploring some pueblos blancos


It's already two weeks since the leadership development course finished but, for a variety of reasons, I didn't manage to get a break after the end of the school. Unexpected things cropped up that meant the past two weeks turned out to be busier than I had planned. So a friend and I made a radical plan to get away for a "real break" and to have an overnight stay in one of southern Spain's "pueblos blancos" - those picturesque white villages that are scattered across the mountains in this part of the country. We chose Vejer de la Frontera as our destination, deciding to drive there by an inland, over-the-mountains route and return home by the coastal route.

My little car had just passed its annual ITV inspection (like the British MOT) at the beginning of the week and, small as it is, we felt confident it could cope with the 500 kilometres we would cover. From my home in Alhaurín de la Torre, we began by heading north (the grey route on the map) until, for the first time since living here, I crossed the boundary from Málaga province into the neighbouring Cádiz province. Our first stop was in the quaint little town of Olvera, in the heart of the olive growing region. We enjoyed a picnic lunch on the little square between its old church and Moorish castle.

Then we kept driving westwards, past olive groves and fields of sunflowers, until we came to Arcos de la Frontera, another pueblo blanco perched high on a sandstone cliff. There we also explored the old part of town, with its castle, churches and narrow winding streets, before taking refuge from the sweltering heat by going into a tapas bar to have an afternoon snack and a refreshing glass of ice-cold, home-made lemonade. Our thirst quenched, our journey took us southward again, towards our overnight destination: Vejer de la Frontera.

The uphill drive to the mountain top setting of the old town of Vejer was the steepest part of the trip and my little car (which only has a 1.1 litre engine) went very slowly for that last couple of kilometres. Soon we arrived, though, and found the "hostal" (cheap hotel) where we would spend the night. After a welcome shower, we were ready for action again and headed out to visit the old, historic part of Vejer. It's a walled town, still with the watchtowers and ramparts that formed the fortifications of these old settlements during the centuries that Spain was occupied by the Moors. The landscape is also dotted with windmills - some of them the enormous modern kind that produce electricity for southern Spain, and some of them the really old wood and plaster kind that made for great photos as the sun was beginning to set.  (This sunset photo was taken by my friend, Lisa, of a windmill that was just fifty metres from our hostal.)

We wandered around the old town, with its narrow cobbled streets, picturesque plazas and rundown old castle. We climbed on the ramparts, looked out from the towers and took photos of quaint corners and archways. We chatted with the locals, watched children in a flamenco dancing class in the castle, and then (as Spanish dinner time finally came around) we decided to eat fresh, locally caught fish in a little restaurant. Lisa had tuna steaks and I had swordfish, and both were delicious. In fact, my piece of swordfish was so large that I couldn't eat it all, so I took half of it home with me and today I ate the leftovers as we enjoyed our picnic lunch at a roadside stop that had such a amazing view of nearby Morocco that you almost felt you could reach out and touch it.
This morning, after a cup of coffee in Vejer, we started our homeward journey along the coastal route. (That's the blue route on the map at the top of this post.) First we drove downhill to the seaside town of Barbate, where the Atlantic Ocean was a deep shade of blue, and I had to dip my feet in it to check the temperature. Onwards to Tarifa, the main ferry port for ships to North Africa, and the southernmost point of Spain, the part where the Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean sea meet. We had planned to eat lunch there, but couldn't find parking, so we simply drove around the town a bit, past the port and the old fortifications, before heading further east to our roadside stop with the stunning view of Morocco.

From there, we started driving northeast again, past the rock of Gibraltar, and all the way up the coastline of the Costa del Sol, until we were finally back in Alhaurín again - which seemed the best place to stop for a delicious ice cream. We had driven 500 kilometres and walked another 10 kilometres on foot, but we had thoroughly enjoyed our short break visiting some "white towns" of southern Spain.