LivingLife - June 2021- Issue 31

Page 22

community

Contribution thanks to

A Guide For Your New Journeys

Rev. Bill Britt

As 21 June approaches, our hopes and prayers are that life can begin to return to normal again.

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or much of the past 14 months we have lived in a sort of exile from our old way of life. We haven’t been free to do as we please, to see friends, to meet up in a pub or a restaurant, to go shopping or to travel on an aeroplane for a foreign holiday or to visit family abroad. The pandemic has also caused deep pain: loved ones have died; funerals have been restricted; our physical and mental health have in many cases suffered and there has been some terrible impacts on jobs and education. However, this enforced exile within our own homes has been an opportunity to reflect on how we lived our lives before the lockdown. As we emerge from exile, we should reflect on the experiences we have had during lockdown and what we have learned from them. We might decide as a result we want to spend more time with friends and families, continue to help our isolated neighbours, to buy less stuff, and to reflect more carefully on how we travel. The Bible gives us a good example of a people returning from exile and stopping to think before they re-started life at home again. As the Old Testament records, Moses led the Israelites out of slavery under Pharaoh in Egypt. But he didn’t lead them directly into the Promised Land. Instead, they spent 40 years wandering in the wilderness to learn some lessons: those lessons were that God was always with them and that they were utterly dependent on God, rather than on Pharaoh, for the necessities of life such as water and bread from heaven. For us, too, this pandemic has been a reminder that we don’t have total control over our own lives. It was during this wilderness exile that God gave the people the Ten Commandments as a guide to living in harmony with God and with one another in the Promised Land. I believe the Ten Commandments, which can be found in Exodus Chapter 20 Verses 1–17, are still a good roadmap. Like the rest of Scripture, the Ten Commandments need to be interpreted. We do this by looking at other sections of the Bible, particularly the words Jesus said and the actions he took during his earthly ministry. Jesus taught that the greatest Commandment is to love: to love the Lord your God with all your heart and mind and soul and strength, and to love your neighbour as yourself. A good guide is Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount, which is found in Matthew Chapter 5 Verses 1-12. 22

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