W&S – Wait and See

When we were children, if we asked Mum ‘What’s for tea?’ ‘What’s for pudding?’ ‘Are you making chocolate cake or coffee cake?’ the answer was always ‘W&S’.  

When Mum ‘W&S’ it meant ‘Wait and See’. Although Mum wouldn’t give us the answer that we wanted, eventually we’d find out. Waiting came first – then seeing… then tasting

Sport continues to ever-present on the news. After the tennis at Wimbledon, the football Euros in Germany – and golf and cricket – we’re now looking forward to the Olympic Games in Paris.

There’s speculation regarding our medal hopes in athletics, swimming, gymnastics… as well as less publicised sports. Last night a reporter was asking whether we could win our first ever medal at table-tennis. The answer? W&S – Wait and See.

Yesterday’s King’s Speech outlined Britain’s new Labour government’s plans, and its first package of proposed legislation. We heard about building new homes, the railways, illegal immigration, private schools, climate and energy, conversion therapy, smoking…

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has promised to rebuild the country. Will he will deliver on his promises? Will Britain change for the better? The answer? W&S.

Church attendance across the country is diminishing. It seems that if we continue as we are, eventually the church will die. In ‘The Church of Tomorrow’. John McGinley says:

 ‘Like Jesus we have to learn how to bring the love, truth and power of God creatively to connect with the lives of those around us. To challenge oppressive and restrictive systems. To offer his re-creating power into every situation of brokenness in people’s lives around us. And then to see how this spreads from one person to another and transforms them and their relationships…’

I’m encouraged by, and share in, McGinley’s optimism. There’s no doubt that we must change. But what will that change look like nationally, or in our little church in Lowestoft? The answer? W&S.

Now I’m waiting hopefully. I pray that the seeing and the tasting will be in my lifetime. If it isn’t that’s OK.

12 thoughts on “W&S – Wait and See

  1. My grandmother always answered ‘if it’ when I asked what was to eat – ‘if it goes round, you get a bit’. Luckily, my mom didn’t pick up that habit from her🤣

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