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15/11/2017

A spiritual comment and prayer to begin the day with the Reverend Andrew Martlew, former Army Chaplain.

2 minutes

Last on

Wed 15 Nov 2017 05:43

Script

Good morning.
There are two sorts of occasion when it seems very easy to be brave.
The first sort is The Crisis:  adrenaline pumping, people shouting, the danger is looming and there’s no time to think.  And afterwards the hero interviewed by the media saying, “The training kicked in and I just got on with it.â€
And then there’s the sort of occasion when I myself have been incredibly brave.  At two o’clock in the morning when I can’t sleep and I’m thinking about how heroic I’d be if I got involved in A Terrorist Incident.  And in those situations my bravery would be the stuff of legend.  And then I fall asleep.

But experience tells us it’s more difficult to show courage in the cold light of day when there’s no adrenaline and you’ve got plenty of time to think.
Like when your city has been flattened in air raids, your friends and neighbours – and their friends and neighbours right out to the suburbs – have been killed or damaged.  And your cathedral has been left as a blackened ruin.  It takes real courage then to preach peace when every human instinct calls for retribution – or even revenge.  And perhaps even more courage to build links with a city where the bombs that destroyed homes and people were dropped by us.
Or when you decide you’re going to try and broker peace in a complex situation where enmity runs deep between communities, and you know you’re going to be criticized for compromise.  And that success may at best be only partial.  It takes courage to act when you know you’re unlikely to emerge to universal acclaim.
Father God,
in the difficult situations we meet today, large or trivial,
may we have the courage to do what we what believe is right,
to do what would please you.
Amen

Broadcast

  • Wed 15 Nov 2017 05:43

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