
There’s a path close to the edge of a cliff. What’s required? A fence at the top to prevent people from falling, or an ambulance at the bottom to treat those who fall? Joseph Malins’ poem ‘A Fence or an Ambulance’ starts:
‘Twas a dangerous cliff, as they freely confessed,
though to walk near its crest was so pleasant;
but over its terrible edge there had slipped
a duke and full many a peasant.
So the people said something would have to be done,
but their projects did not at all tally;
some said, ‘Put a fence ’round the edge of the cliff, ‘
some, ‘An ambulance down in the valley.’

I’ve heard this question asked in many contexts – education, health-care, social-care, church… Malins was a temperance activist so he may have had the evils of alcohol in mind…
Yesterday a group of us walked round The Seagull Theatre doing a ‘Health and Safety Walkabout’… checking on emergency exit signage, reporting on trip hazards, trailing extension electricity cables, accessibility to dangerous cleaning liquids or workshop tools… Risk assessments – the cliff-top fence.

We can avoid dangerous cliff-tops… but then we would never play sport because we might get hurt, never get into our cars because roads are dangerous, and avoid people, because they might carry a contagious disease.
Sometimes the cliff-path walk may have dangers that we can mitigate against… but life’s pathway may take us over unavoidable dangerous cliffs; sometimes the cliff-top walk is enjoyable and we can appreciate the breath-taking views.

Musing…
…Jesus, the good shepherd, leads his flock, keeping them together safely along cliff-tops, providing the safety fence of the sheep-fold, searching for the lost sheep who has fallen down the cliff.
…Some of my friends are close to the edge… Sometimes I need to walk with them – watchfully standing between them and the drop; sometimes I need to ensure there is strong reliable fencing; all the time I’m aware that they may fall, and the rapid-response ambulance must be available…
Thanks for the beautiful analogy comparing those who walk along the edge of a cliff and Jesus, the Good Shepherd. 🙂
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I think we all have our cliff edges that we walk along sometimes, Nancy.
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