Tuesday, 20 September 2011

An overview of our life-story between student days & today

 
Recently we swopped life-stories with friends with whom, by circumstance, we’ve had no contact for 40 years.

One the real joys and fun of face-book is getting in touch with old friends. Having crossed the 6th decade birthdays, our friends come from each of the last 5 decades – years and experiences that are part of our history. If you are still at the spring chicken stage, you may very well think we are history!

For most of us, meeting again on Facebook, the questions are something along these lines: “What are you up to these days?” And if appropriate, “How many children do you have?” – and so on.

I’m more than often stumped by this last question, not because my long- or short-term memory is completely shot, but because I don’t want to necessarily make it a shaggy-dog story. I can hardly say: at first we had 3 children, then we had 5 children and then we had 4 children, and all the while ONE marriage - without a few explanations.

So when a dear student-friend who appeared on face-book out of the mists of the far distant past, shared their lives and asked after ours, I thought: “let me, once and for all, try to set it out in ‘at-a-glance’-format.”
So here goes, Michelle and those who might be interested.

Our post-marriage-story in bullet-form
Geographical/jobs
  • June 1973 Gordon and I got married near Johannesburg on a winter’s day end of June and went back to Bible College, Kalk Bay near Cape Town, to finish our last 6 months.
  • January 1974 –April 1977 – Johannesburg (Gordon starts B.Th. and is back in his pre-college job in accountancy.)
  • April 1977 – to April 1985 (Presbyterian ministry: 3 years Monte Vista Cape Town and 5 years Tarkastad Eastern Cape). Gordon completes B.Th. (through University of South Africa)
  • April 1985 – October 1999 – Port Elizabeth. Gordon completes B.Comt through UNISA (University of South Africa) and works in accountancy.
  • October 1999 – the present. We emigrate to the United Kingdom – ancestral visa – Gordon’s grandparents were born in Edinburgh. Gordon works in IT Auditing up to the present.
Our children:
  • Isabelle born 10 November 1974 – Johannesburg.
  • Liesl Rene born 16 July 1976 – Johannesburg.
  • Michael Ian born 17 November 1978 – Cape Town.
(Gordon’s sister, Joy, sadly had a stroke at age 36 and 8 years later Dan, passed away, after kidney problems.) At that stage their daughters, Stephanie and Naomi came from Cape Town and we became one family in Port Elizabeth, at the end of 1989:
  • Stephanie 15 years and 8 months
  • Isabelle 15 years and 1 month
  • Liesl 13 years and 4 months
  • Naomi 12 years and 6 months
  • Michael 11 years and 2 months
The sum: 5 children 4 and half years apart.
  • Liesl married Jason Sanders, July 1999 (they have two sons) – New Zealand
  • Isabelle married Michael Schmidt January 2000 (they have two daughters) - Germany
  • Stephanie is married to Charles (one daughter), Eastern Cape, South Africa and Naomi is unmarried, & when not working all over the world on ocean cruisers, based in Cape Town.
Our Michael was diagnosed with inoperable Ewing's Sarcoma of the spine in October 2004 – in South Africa. He went through 14 sessions of chemo therapy (5 hospitalised days every 3rd week) and 35 rounds of Radio Therapy. At the end of October 2005 the Port Elizabeth oncologists concluded there was nothing more they could do for our son.

Michael came to Royal Marsden Hospital in London for 3 appointments, resulting in the same prognosis. Gordon and I, Michael and Isabelle and Jason and Liesl (with hospice guidance) nursed Michael in his flat in Port Elizabeth until he – to use bible-language – fell asleep in Jesus – on 23 January 2006, 2 months after his 27th birthday.

It might sound a bit strange – but it's true: Michael first passed from death to life – then from life to death, to start real forever life. And all because of God’s amazing amazing grace. This grace was made known when He gave His only Son Jesus. And so it came to be on old year’s eve 2005, Michael called Gordon and I into his room, he prayed and repented of all that stood between him and peace with God and rested by his own faith in Jesus’ death and resurrection. That night our son passed from death to life was made alive with Christ – he was forgiven and such a visible peace came over him.

For now we can just sum up and say we love/d Michael very much and long for him – like crazy. At the same time we feel and are safe and secure in the plans of our Father, our Rock Whose compassionate nearness and sustaining power are all ours at every stage of this journey.

Our Lord’s ultimate plans outshine the highest ideals any parent can have for a dearly, dearly loved child and we are proving daily that to rest in His faithfulness and love is enough.
In His grace, He gives us space to hurt, to ask questions even to reason with Him – but who can “win the debate” against His wisdom, His love and the most brilliant future Jesus has won for every single forgiven one?

To keep the account trimmed, I’ve tried to type the hard facts without elaborate personal responses. Very little has been said about our girls and their hubbies – but that is no measure of our love for them and our grand-kiddo’s – they know that!

Zephaniah 3:17 is true of everyone in Christ:
“The LORD your God is with you,
the Mighty Warrior who saves.
He will take great delight in you;
in his love he will no longer rebuke you,
but will rejoice over you with singing.”

We wonder what the Lord’s singing sounds like in heaven? Such grace, such a future, such a salvation, such a Saviour, such pure exuberant and lasting joy!

Looking back over our days and decades, our marriage, our children, our children’s children – “Who like us His praise should sing!”

Heaven – a brilliant unlimited durable future

Right now I’m plagued by a debilitating headache, therefore I will use minimum words and hope the bullet-thoughts will bless.
John Martin's painting before restoration. Photograph: Tate Photography
John Martin's The Destruction of Pompeii and Herculaneum unrestored.
Here’s something about the painting’s journey:
After getting soaked in the Tate's worst ever flood, the work had been considered a write-off. Not only was it flaking and dirty, it was in two parts, with a large part of the canvas, showing the volcano, missing completely.
But there was some good news when tissue was pulled away from the painting in 2010, recalled Tate's head of conservation, Patricia Smithen. "Amazingly, the surface was really intact and the figures in the foreground particularly were in really great condition. Shockingly so. It was at that point we started asking if we could undertake a restoration."
What an outstanding result! (Click on image for enhanced viewing)
John-Martins-The-Destruct-001
Here is another of John Martin’s paintings:  I think it is displayed in Tate Britain.  At first view, I was overcome by the force of the theme and the art. On later visits, I looked for it as for an old friend.  Last time it was not to be found, because it was on a temporary exhibition in another gallery.
Click on the image for enhanced viewing and pretend you are in the gallery, looking up and the rocks are falling on you.
  • Jesus Himself talks about an apocalyptic judgment awaiting mankind in the end.
wrath John Martin
If you think these works of art on the  apocalyptic theme is outrageously far-fetched, then have a peek at a NASA image.  Once again click on the image for a greater impact.
m42_vargas_1826
My joy, despite the headache, was reading about imagination, reason, Biblical revelation focusing on heaven.
"No eye has seen no ear has heard, no mind has conceived what God has prepared for those who love him - but God has revealed it to us by his Spirit" (1 Cor. 2:9,10
  • At our most creative moment, at our deepest thought, at our highest level, we still cannot fathom eternity.
  • Who says reality only exists within the limits of the discovered and measured? 
  • And He holds out  for His children a heaven beyond our imagination.
  • What motivation not to rate earth too highly, not to lose heart.
  • The certain prospect of heaven for each and every person in Christ,  propels us on to  love our God with all our hearts, souls, minds and strength and people like Jesus loved us:  love in action!

Sunday, 18 September 2011

What it took God to communicate with us



This is one of our favourite masterpieces in the National Gallery off Trafalgar Square in London.  What a privilege to visit and gaze and gape – for free!

gerritvanhonthorst_christbeforethehighpriest-detail

Gerrit van Honthorst.  "Christ before the High Priest."
(1617) National Gallery, London

Do double-click on the picture for an enhanced view.

Gerrit van Honthorst captures beautifully what it took for God to communicate with us.

See the contrast between the assumed authority of the High Priest and Jesus’ real authority.

What it took God to communicate with us?  One of the answers is:  meekness.

Meekness’ original meaning was something like ‘strength, harnessed’.

God’s power was all there, but He (graciously) chose not to expose us to its full force.

Jesus could have blasted the priest from here to kingdom come, but He knew why he was there: to display his love for everyone, including the man confronting him.

"Oh what a mystery, meekness and majesty
Bow down and worship for this is your God.
Meekness and majesty; manhood and deity
in perfect harmony
The man who is God, Lord of eternity, dwells in humanity
and washes our feet.
Father's pure radiance,
perfect in innocence, .......
conquering through sacrifice, and as they crucify prays Father forgive.
Wisdom unsearchable, God the invisible,
Love indestructible in frailty appears,
Lord of infinity, stooping so tenderly
lifts our humanity tot he heights of His throne
1986 Thankyou Music (Admin. by EMI Christian Music Publishing)


Thursday, 11 August 2011

Thursday’s Pickings

1280 hydepark5August2011-011

I hope you enjoy the picture I, on my knees, took in Hyde Park last week and hope that some of these nuggets lift up your spirit and bless your heart.

  • You are not whatshisname to God.
  • I enjoy being with God and can, miraculously, relate directly to my Lord through Jesus.
  • John Calvin’s secret to sanctification is the interaction of the knowledge of God and knowledge of self.

I was encouraged and spurred on by Paige Benton Brown's  Link  today – hope it’s the same for you.
  1. Can God be any less good to me on the average Tuesday morning than he was on that monumental Friday afternoon when he hung on a cross in my place?
  2. Christian growth mandates relational richness.
  3. His goodness is not the effect of his disposition but the essence of his person—not an attitude but an attribute.
  4. It is a cosmic impossibility for God to short-change any of his children.
  5. If He fluctuated one quark in his goodness, he would cease to be God.
I cannot remember where I read this about envy, which is shockingly true.
Envy is a very cruel sin, because ultimately it is not content with raising itself up. Others must also be cast down.  

And finally, from recipe book to Bible.........  my own jolting realization  and resulting prayer today:

“Even the recipes I will probably never make, I find beautifully photographed and fun to read.”
Thank you Father for Your gracious self-disclosure - ultimately in the Lord Jesus Christ.  Help me never again to read the Bible like I sometimes read recipe books.

Wednesday, 10 August 2011

Here goes - first time ever - Jane Eyre


Today,  10 August 2011, I’m starting to read Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë – at the age of 61, for the very first time.  Thank you for online books and thanks to my young loved  friend, Cherean Mayer.  We are geographically as far apart as the East Cape in South Africa and just North of London, but there are overlaps in life and approaches – bless her!

From her foreword to Jane Eyre, Brontë  writes:
Conventionality is not morality. Self-righteousness is not religion. To attack the first is not to assail the last. To pluck the mask from the face of the Pharisee, is not to lift an impious hand to the Crown of Thorns.
One thought:  the chances of self-righteousness in religion, I'm convinced, are sky-high.  Has it just got to do with the use of language in different era's?   Self-righteousness and trusting Jesus' righteous for our justification and acceptance and welcome with our Heavenly Father do not sit next to the same fire.

Self-righteousness is not the biblical, Christian gospel - not at all! To the contrary.  What a relief, what a way of escape, what a salvation and Hallelujah - what a Saviour!

The rest of the Brontë-quote opens up many a thought and view-point.
Link to free online Jane Eyre by Charlotte