Main content
Sorry, this episode is not currently available

30/12/2017

A reflection and prayer with Rev Dr Bert Tosh.

2 minutes

Last on

Sat 30 Dec 2017 05:43

Script - Saturday 30th December 2017

Good Morning! When I was a boy, it was often the day before New Year’s Eve when my mother encouraged me to give serious thought to making a few New Year Resolutions. I still recall some of the things I wrote and very often repeated the following year. Like β€œI will get out of bed in the morning as soon as I’m called”. Well over sixty years later that one still gives me a considerable amount of bother.

One year I concluded the only safe way to carry out the exercise was to resolve not to do things I had little or no chance of doing anyway. So I resolved I would not attempt to to break the four minute barrier for running the mile- actually in my case eight or nine minutes might just have been a much more realistic target. And then I resolved to make no more New Year Resolutions.

Except…except that every year after Christmas, the thought does come to me that it wouldn’t be the worst thing I could do if I made up my mind to make a few changes in my life.. It’s a time when, there’s a tendency to look back, sometimes with regret and a tendency to look forward with a mixture of anticipation and apprehension. So I almost I inevitably think there must be things I could do to make me easier to get on with, or more generous in my assessments and opinions, or more ready to listen to others,. I don’t write these out but I would like to think they’re not just thoughts that will disappear once we’re into January.

What is required then? I suppose I could go to no better place than the book of the prophet Micah, where the question is asked β€œWhat does the Lord require of you?

So we pray: Help us to do justly, to love mercy and to walk humbly with you, our God. Amen

Broadcast

  • Sat 30 Dec 2017 05:43

"Time is passing strangely these days..."

"Time is passing strangely these days..."

Uplifting thoughts and hopes for the coronavirus era from Salma El-Wardany.