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MCT PRAYERS week beginning 4th January

Hello Everyone

New year       Faith in an unknown future

As we look forward together for a better new year, we pray for God’s Holy Spirit to lead us into the unknown future that lies before us.


Matthew 6:31-34 gives us sound advice as we enter into 2021

So do not start worrying: ‘Where will my food come from? or my drink? or my clothes?’ (These are the things the pagans are always concerned about.) Your Father in heaven knows that you need all these things. Instead, be concerned above everything else with the Kingdom of God and with what he requires of you, and he will provide you with all these other things. So do not worry about tomorrow; it will have enough worries of its own. There is no need to add to the troubles each day brings.

Thoughts for this week are taken from a book of Christmas thoughts written by Eddie Askew. I know that a good number of you own several of his books. Christine and I have seventeen  of his books, written and illustrated throughout with his watercolours.  I was fortunate to spend three retreats with him, once at Scargill in the Dales and twice at Lee Abbey in Devon. Eddie and his wife Barbara worked for 15years for the Leprosy Mission in India and who on return became Its International Director.

Christmas thoughts – Eddie Askew

Over Christmas, a friend said something that made me look at the nativity story with new eyes. Usually, when we look at it, it’s with all the information we’ve inherited. All we know about Jesus’s life and death, and resurrection. We interpret it through nearly two thousand years of theology and church life. But Mary and Joseph had none of that. They knew their baby was special in some way.

The visits of the shepherds and wise men pointed to that, but it wasn’t very clear. The vision they’d had told them to name him Jesus. It meant “saviour”, but il was a common name. Even being told that he’d save people from their sins wasn’t very explicit, seen from where they were. It was made harder by other events.

Mary and Joseph weren’t in control of their lives.

They had been compelled to go to Bethlehem for a census, on Roman orders. Then, King Herod’s soldiers got in the way, and they had to run for safety to Egypt as refugees.
Looking at later events, I’m sure it was a blessing that they didn’t know in detail what life held for them all, especially about the baby’s call to preach and die. There are times when we wish we knew more about the future.   Moments when we’d like to feel in better control of life, but we can’t. Life’s not like that. Each day we walk into the unknown as Mary and Joseph did. And, like them, we find strength for that one day, and then the next. We have one advantage though, that they didn’t have. We do know who Jesus is, and what he’s done. And we have the confidence of walking into each day with him
Extract from No Strange Land, first published 1987.

It’s easy talking, Lord, about not being anxious. Taking each day as it comes ‘No point in worrying’ they say. I’m not so sure of that, the things I worry about don’t usually happen

I look at Joseph, and his responsibilities. A wife. New baby. Away from home and pushed further by forces he couldn’t control. Did he have the same moments of panic that I have? Bleak moments, when it seems that nothing I know will help me through the day. And I’m running scared, tail down, ready to jump in the nearest hole,

Sometimes, Lord, I wish you’d tell me more. Prepare me. Whisper in my ear a weather forecast of a sunnier day tomorrow. Or warn me of the storm to come, So I could grab a spiritual umbrella and stay dry,

But then I realise I know all I need to know. And that’s a fact, that you know all my needs. And, wet or dry, In calm or storm, you’re in it with me. And that’s enough. Just for today.

Extract from No Strange Land first published 1987

Thought  –  Hope  –  Psalm 62:5-6

 Yes, my soul, find rest in God; my hope comes from Him. Truly He is my rock and my salvation; He is my fortress,

I will not be shaken.

Keep Safe, keep praying

Peter