08/01/2016
Spiritual reflection and prayer to start the day with the Rev Neil Gardner of Canongate Kirk, Edinburgh.
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Script
Good morning. Watching the skaters at Edinburghβs temporary ice rinks over the holiday season reminded me that one of my most famous predecessors as minister of Canongate Kirk here on the Royal Mile was the Revd Robert Walker. Whilst not necessarily a famous name he has certainly become a famous figure, literally, as the subject of Sir Henry Raeburnβs iconic painting βThe Skating Ministerβ. Cutting a dash in his top hat and frock coat as he skates sedately around a frozen Duddingston Loch some winterβs day over two hundred years ago, he looks every inch the sombre Presbyterian dressed in black from head to toe. Except thatβs not quite true. For if you look closely enough you will see that his buckled shoes are fixed to his skates with pink straps!Β
The devilβs in the detail, they say, but Iβm more inclined to see this as a sign of the Skating Ministerβs lighter side, perhaps a subtle hint even of that period known as the Scottish Enlightenment in which he lived. Raeburn painted plenty other leading figures of that distinctive era, distinguished professors of philosophy and theology among them. But he always depicted them in more conventional portraits, standing or sitting. The Skating Ministerβs the only one who has become famous not for what he said or what he thought, but for what he did.Β
Father forgive us for the times when we fail to match the noble things we think and say with our actions, those times when through all that we think and say and do we fall short of the standard you have set for us in the life and teaching, in the death and rising of your son Jesus Christ. And may what we do today be truly to your glory. Amen.ΒBroadcast
- Fri 8 Jan 2016 05:43ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4