The recent storms have transformed
the shorelines. Myriad stones, rounded by the pounding of
the waves, have been thrown up onto the sand along with
multitudes of shells, the remains of countless creatures
that have lived and died in the life-giving waters of the
worlds seas and oceans. Stones like these have found
their way on to the Centres publicity material where
they conjure creativity in many who come across them. They
made a particular impact on me as I reflected on the mornings
sermon on Jeremiahs letter to the captives in Babylon
exhorting them to seek the welfare of the city.
Politics and economics have
conspired to bring many peoples to our shores down through
our history Vikings, Normans, English, Scots, Chinese,
Indian, and more recently, our European neighbours. We havent
always reacted well, nobody does. In ones and twos we can
cope, we welcome the stranger in our midst,
and its relatively easy to apply this principle from
Moses teaching. In larger numbers a threat is perceived
and therefore resisted, and the rest, as they say, is history.
Violence and war at worst, discrimination and alienation
at best, are often the immediate outcome of the confluence
of cultures.
But time tells a tale; who
now knows their Norman or Viking origins in the British
Isles? We might actively cultivate our Gaelic or Ulster-Scots
cultures but Chinese, Indian and Italian cuisine
are an undisputed ingredient in our national cuisine. Music,
film and television, all reflect a melting pot of cultures
that predates globalisation, global warming and our sense
of being in a global village.
And yet we feel threatened
by the stranger, we so easily see us and
them. What do we have that, in the long run, we couldnt
do without if we lost it or had it taken from us? Daniel
and his friends lost everything when they were taken as
prisoners to Babylon. Jeremiah told them to commit themselves
to life for generations to come in their new situation.
They could have let go of their faith but they deliberately,
prayerfully and sacrificially chose to hold on to it. And
the result? Babylon benefited from their involvement at
a very high level in government, and one of the kings, Nebuchadnezzar,
got to know God.
For us? On the one hand,
we can seek the welfare of our city, and for
city lets be generous and include all
the political entities from local to international level
which we have the opportunity to contribute to and influence.
On the other hand, when we feel threatened by the stranger,
loving God, our neighbour, ourselves and our enemies
knowing that nothing can separate us from Gods love
for us are familiar commandments. What have we to
lose? Jesus and Pauls teaching tell us clearly
what is of lasting value in the Kingdom.
And the stones and shells
on the shorelines? In the fullness of time they may become
rocks that form our landscape or the soil in which our crops
grow. Transformation is slow and painful, but fruitful,
if not to us, then to others.
Ethel White