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10/02/2017

Spiritual reflection and prayer to start the day with the Rev Richard Frazer of Greyfriars Kirk, Edinburgh.

2 minutes

Last on

Fri 10 Feb 2017 05:43

Script

Good morning.

One of the great classics of early English literature is the Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer. Some of us can probably still recite chunks of it if we studied it a school. It can be a bit of a bawdy romp.Β  But it didn’t occur to me until quite recently that Canterbury only really gets a mention in the title.

It’s as though what’s more important to pilgrim people is not the destination but the journey. Along the way, people whose lives might never have intersected find themselves sharing stories, friendship and the journey of life.

The longer I am involved with organised religion, the more I feel that it needs to be on the move, not settled.Β  The writer of the letter to the Hebrews said, β€œhere we have no abiding city”, an invitation to embrace the new and go outside the safety of familiar institutions.

A wonderful English bishop told once how the Anglican cathedral in Kolkata looked more like a bank or some Imperial palace than a place of sanctuary and worship. Until the outbreak of the war in Bangladesh, when the place was transformed into a refugee centre. Suddenly it came alive as the congregation responded to need and busied themselves in offering relief and sanctuary.

ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ is the journey, and along the way we’ll meet circumstances that challenge our settled thinking – but that’s the pilgrimage of faith.

Journeying Christ, you promise to meet us when we go outside the camp, offering kindness, friendship, and being willing to learn from others – being alongside the β€œleast of these”.Β  Give us the courage to make the journey our home – knowing that we have no abiding city, save the one that our pilgrim journey on this earth prepares us for. Amen.Β 

Broadcast

  • Fri 10 Feb 2017 05:43

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