Holy Island, or Lindisfarne,
(http://www.lindisfarne.org.uk/)
holds a special peaceful attraction for us and, as the angel was on holiday this last week, we promised ourselves a day there for peace and quiet if the weather held. Some find it is a “thin place” where the gap between the physical and the spiritual is especially narrow - hence its Celtic Christian heritage. Flat dunes, vast views and wide open spaces, wild birds, tides that ebb and flow and dictate the pace of life – all these go together to make it an especially peaceful place to be at times.
As planned, we arrived at 0945 to watch the tide recede before the tidal causeway became open and easily passable again (due to open at 10.30). There were 40-60mph off-shore winds and a queue of cars and vans with occupants seemingly desperate to get across the still submerged, narrow track of causeway – long before the water fell to safer levels. Risking spoiled engines and wet interiors, there seemed to be no peace in some peoples’ lives as they inched their wheels into the deep water (that was visibly receding) before they rushed to make it to the other side and off to the village centre a few minutes quicker.
We watched the water retreat as expected and, at 10.30, drove across the lonely, sandy, wet, tar strip of road past the empty, brown dunes while, around us, flocks of duck and wading birds wheeled in the high wind and flying spray and spume. Walking round the Priory in the gale, we found the sun was shining through the windows onto the chancel and pews of St Mary’s church and so sat inside for while in the warm light, reading and thinking of the past of this island and its faith – through times of violence from the Vikings, through change and peace - from 635AD until now. All the while the wind whistled round the heavy stone walls and roof hewn by long dead artisans – it was built around 1200.
And then we thought of the church elsewhere in Britain and abroad, of the communities we are part of and the way they are changing and evolving. The pressures from social change due to national and international economics, politics, climate, AIDS, war and human nature drive a spiritual evolution that affects us all. How our communities (secular and Christian) handle the responsibilities the evolution brings will be so important for us and our children’s’ children. It is at present hard to see the evidence of the clear thinking and foresight that is needed to provide the signposts for a clear way ahead. There are some fragile shoots of fresh thought in the secular and Christian press but not a lot of it is joined together enough to make it generate its own momentum yet.
Food for thought and another day away.....
The delay of chemotherapy by 2 weeks seems to have highlighted how much it was working before the break, as a new left liver ache has appeared in the interval – presumably due to a new lump growing near one that shrank in response to the first course. I was able to restart chemotherapy this week (while the angel went shopping) and we shall see how the next few weeks progress with treatment every Thursday on 2 weeks out three. The abdominal wound has healed; I am eating well and getting out for walks.
The evening before, friends kindly specially prayed for my health and healing. There seems to me to be no conflict to have faith in chemicals working and in God directly answering prayer as two valid modes of working on a tumour. Perhaps we tend as individuals to come from one end or the other of the spiritual or mechanistic/scientific spectrum and probably feel least comfortable if we are trying to hold both modalities in our heads at once........ or occupy the centre the ground.
I expect the pain to improve again.