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Monday, 16 March 2026

Up from the wilderness

 


Don pointed out the deer skull lying on the verge. All traces of skin and flesh gone, it lay bleached white beside the road. I remembered that deer. Mary and I had come across it months ago, killed by a car, and we had lifted it to the side of the road so it wouldn’t be mangled and mauled by other road users. Now all that was left was this stark-white skull.

The hill on which Jesus died was nicknamed, the Bible says, ‘the place of the skull’. Visiting one of the two possible crucifixion sites with Mom several years ago, the depressions in the rock rising on the hill did resemble the hollows of a skull.

I am not thinking of death this morning, despite this beginning. Instead, I am thinking of life, the real life we find in Jesus. ‘When all is stripped away, I simply come.’

Life on earth is vulnerable. Plans can change due to things out of our control. We are affected by things happening half-way across the world. ‘When a butterfly flaps its wings, it causes a hurricane on the other side of the world.’ The butterfly effect.

True? I’m not sure about the detail, but certainly, the globe is a community which affects and is affected by things which start in a local pinprick of a place and spread like a rash.

This morning I am using the ‘zine’ I fashioned at the art journalling group I go to. I am using it to raise my eyes to the majesty of the Most High God. I am using it to restore my song to rise to give God glory. I am using it to remind myself of the extravagant love and grace of God.

Up from the wilderness, leaning on her beloved…

How does this relate to the imagery of the bleached skull? Rather than just focus my eyes on the heavens to regain a right perspective on things, I am focusing them on the place of the skull: the stark shock of what Jesus did for me at Calvary, and a depth of gratitude for his love for me. And the assurance of life everlasting, where every tear is wiped away.

‘In this world you will have trouble,’ Jesus told his friends. Tells us. ‘Take heart, for I have overcome the world.’

So although disappointment has catapulted me into a wilderness, today I am stronger than yesterday as ‘up from the wilderness’ I come, ‘leaning on my beloved’.

Thank you, Jesus.

Wednesday, 11 March 2026

Tigers in my life

 

I’ve got in mind a picture of an elaborately carved wooden ceiling, like one you might find in a cathedral or a castle. Those gifted craftsmen (and women?) who carved such works of art may have done it as an expression of their love for the creator God. I hope that their relationship with Him was enhanced as they worked.

As beings made in His image, we all have the creative urge, and how he must love our efforts, whether professional or untaught.

Yesterday we saw a picture of one of our eight-year-old grandsons proudly displaying a paint-by-number depiction of a tiger. It looks amazing, and I’m smiling as I think of his pleasure in creating this work of art showing one of the most splendid of animals. I hope that as he painted, his appreciation for creation and the loving God who made the tiger will have swelled.

As finite beings, our vision of the glories of God will always be limited unless God himself enables us to see from his eternal perspective. I think he is always ready to give us glimpses or experiences of the beautiful majesty of his infinite presence.

May the Lord help me to expand my expectations of Him today, looking for his generosity and beauty in the trivial and routine, in the dailiness of my life, prepared to receive glimpses of glory even in the mundane.

Thursday, 5 March 2026

On Wings

 

I strode along the Platties, trying to get a good walk between engagements today. A duck and a drake - beautiful in his midnight blue and deep green feathers - swam out from the shoreline below the concrete path that runs along the Dee in Banchory. They seemed intent on crossing the river, which was flowing fast towards the sea. They tried to stay together, first one and then the other striking out cross-current but then being swept further downstream.

My mind wasn’t fully engaged, but I saw their struggle and wondered how they would return to the nest they may be building. Would they just be swept all the way to the river’s mouth in Aberdeen harbour?

The next moment, they both lifted out of the water and flew to the other side.

Of course. They had a built-in escape mechanism: flight. They would get back to their nest when they wanted.

Life is turbulent and the current is strong. Home and family relationships, environmental concerns, injustices, global wars and strife. We are in the river. We are all in the river of life, and the current is turbulent and strong. We live in the world – the river, and these currents affect us all.

But take heart, Jesus cries. ‘I have overcome the world!’ He has triumphed over death and given us his Holy Spirit to strengthen and guide us, to lift us above the world’s frenetic and dangerous currents and afford us His perspective on things.

We have the wings of the Spirit to help us rise above, to take us into His presence, experience His peace, and rest in His love. Then, refreshed, we are better able to navigate the turbulent waters of life.

So grateful.

Tuesday, 3 March 2026

Out of the wilderness of winter

 

The wilderness of winter is segueing to the voluptuous excesses of spring, and it can’t do it fast enough for me! The bulbs are up, some are out but most continue to grow and form in response to the warming welcome of sunlight.

The field stretching out beyond the bird feeders has been ploughed and lies exposed, awaiting whatever seed the farmer will plant. Birds scavenge among the clods of dirt for bugs and worms, eager for change from a winter diet (I imagine!).

To be honest, the winter’s hibernation offers me a break from the sense of drivenness which comes as an untidy garden begins to awaken and display its need for the hand of a gardener. I struggle each year to know how much to do in a big garden largely untamed, and how much to release to nature. As my efforts at husbandry often go unrewarded (my leeks are still in the ground, about the size of spring onions…), I wonder why I bother, but something in me drives me on, hoping this will be the year…

Oh Lord, help me to keep time with you today. Help me to walk to the beat of your drum, to allocate my time well and to keep my priorities clear. May I never unseat you as King of my heart, the one who knows what is best for me and who calls me to Spirit-filled acts of service, and to divine times of rest and refreshment.

This is the day that the Lord has made. Let me rejoice and be glad in it!

Monday, 2 March 2026

Out of the Picture

 

Mhairi suggested we look at our wedding albums from over fifty years ago. Pictures were few compared to the chronicling of today’s weddings, but we enjoyed the professional pictures on the day, and the snapshots popped into the albums, taken by various friends and relatives.

One such snap was of Don’s aunt and cousins and their families. We identified each person for Mhairi, and in the next picture there was an additional middle-aged man, not in the previous shot. ‘Who’s he?’ she asked.

The father of Don’s cousin’s wife, Cindi. He must have been the photographer of the previous picture. In the days before selfies, someone had to take the camera and remove themselves from the picture. Someone had to choose to be left out of a ‘forever’ memory.

I’ve been thinking about humility, a fundamental quality in a follower of Jesus but one which is challenging to really live in. How hard it is to choose to be left out of any accolades which we might feel we have ‘earned’. How difficult to not just accept but actively step into a position of invisibility.

This day, Lord Jesus, help me to truly take myself out of any picture in which I feel I merit praise. May all of my words and attitudes spring from my relationship with you, reflect your glory, and be attributed to you. I can only do this with your help; fill me with your Holy Spirit again and strengthen me to walk humbly before God, living to pursue justice and mercy in these days. Amen.

Friday, 27 February 2026

Out of the Trash

 

The morning was a glorious one. Purple and gold crocus are vibrant against the spring green of the leaves and grass. Delicate white and green snowdrops continue to flower in the beds.

I wanted to finish what Don had begun while I was away: plant the sweet peas. He’d gathered the toilet roll tubes I’d been saving over winter, and started filling them with compost. I finished the job, burying one seed in each tube of compost and watering them after I’d positioned them on the window ledge of the conservatory.

I’m expecting to see new growth at just the right time, pushing through the dirt.

Nothing is wasted in God’s kingdom economy. A cardboard toilet roll tube is the perfect plant-pot for the deep roots of the sweet peas. When the time comes to set them out, it’s easy to plop each tube into the appropriate holes and watch them flourish.

Things which I may consider a waste of time in my life may in fact provide the perfect container for my next spurt of growth, a spurt of growth which might bloom and exude the fragrance of Jesus, which attracts those whose noses have been more accustomed to smelling the rot and decay of some of the stuff that goes on in the world. May the beauty of our Lord be revealed.

I offer up all of my experiences, Lord, good and bad, for you to use to your glory. ‘Behold, I make all things new,’ you promise, and I declare that promise now over all those trashy decisions and experiences I’ve made and had. As I surrender all to you, I thank you for all that you are growing as a result of the richness in the compost of my life.

Tuesday, 24 February 2026

it is good

Dressed in the drab colours of winter, the fields outside lie apparently dormant, awaiting the tingling warmth of a returning spring sun.  After two weeks in the sunshine of California (and the rain), the contrast is noticeable. Also noticeable is the chorus of birdsong lilting through the air. Along the coast where I was, the only birds I saw were pelicans returning to their nests each evening. I never heard their ‘song’.

It’s good to be back. Two places geographically very different, but each displays its own beauty, its own charm.

After six days, God looked at what he had created, and he saw that it was good. Better than that.