
This morning the sea-front was cooler than yesterday. A steady breeze blew grey clouds across the sky; there was a hint of rain. Morning conversations about the weather are often a complaint – it’s too hot, too cold, too dry, too wet…
I said ‘Good morning,’ to a woman looking out to sea. ‘I like days like today,’ she replied. I reflected… At the end of yesterday, what would have made me say, ‘I like days like today?’

‘…Learning’ We visited the Longshed in Woodbridge where they’re reconstructing the 88-foot Saxon ship that was found buried in Sutton Hoo in 1939.
A knowledgeable volunteer told us about Raedwald, maker/owner of the original ship, king of the East of England… his Saxon palace at Rendlesham… his possible meeting with St Augustine and Ethelbert, king of Kent… his conversion to Christianity… his death c.624.
We learnt about Saxon tools and methods of boat construction as we watched skilled craftsmen re-constructing the ship…

‘Laughing…’ Beside the river Deben crabbing lines hung over the end of a jetty. I laughed at a group of boys, gathered round a bucket, excitedly discussing the size and ferocity of the crabs they’d caught.
I heard about Dave the dachshund visiting a family with a cat called Penguin. Dave doesn’t like cats. I laughed about pet names and the potential results of their encounter.
Reflecting on my reputation as a grumpy old man… thinking about particular older men I know who are happiest when they are grumpiest. I laughed.

‘Living…’ I’m reading ‘Life Sentence’. Charles Colson describes folks who find Christ ‘…in prisons, at deathbeds, in hospitals, in the gulags, in rat-infested ghettos. The richest spiritual experiences I have known have not been in vaulted cathedrals surrounded by stained-glass windows but in the filthiest prison cells…’
I like days like today because I’m learning, laughing and living in the real world. Colson continues: ‘Christians will miss the greatest blessings if they isolate themselves from the reality of the world in which God lives.’

I’ve never heard “Christians will miss the greatest blessings if they isolate themselves from the reality of the world in which God lives” until you shared it. That’s brilliant, and a truth I think many Christians on my side of the pond ought to take notice of, but that’s a discussion in itself.
Thank you for sharing your thoughts, Malcolm, and enjoy your weekend!
–Scott
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The quote comes from Colson, an American who, following his involvement with Watergate then was committed to US prison reform
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Your post made me think of Psalm 34:18. (God is ever near to the brokenhearted.) God is ever-close to us wherever we may be. We are called to spread God’s word and to go out into the world. Thank you for sharing this post with us!!!
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It’s a good, encouraging verse to think of, Linda.
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Richard Rohr calls contemplation a “long loving look at the real.” We find so many gifts when we are attentive to what is before us, don’t we? Thank you for your writing, Malcolm; you are an inspirational part of my learning, laughing, and living.
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Thanks for reminding me of Richard Rohr, Karen. He always has something wise to say.
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