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Jim McCrory

How Then shall We Comfort Ourselves?

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How Then shall We Comfort Ourselves?

I am on a train feeling lulled by the steady rhythm of the rails. All is well as I quietly read my book when my attention settles on a young mother not far from me. She has two little girls with her. They whisper to each other, swing their legs, exist without self-consciousness. There is something quietly holy about that; innocence unbroken, trust still intact.

At the next stop four men get on and they have loud voices and swaggering bodies. The Swearing makes me cringe as they laugh hard. They are performing in a macho circus for no one in particular. I watch the mother’s shoulders freeze at the expletives. The men are not extraordinary and that is, perhaps, the point. Nothing here would make the news. Nothing here rises to the level of crisis.

And yet, the peaceful spirit of the carriage has changed.

I notice the mother shift in her seat, barely visible, instinctive. I wonder whether she ever pauses to think about the kind of world her daughters are inheriting. I’m sure she does. I think the same for my grandchildren. The question unsettles me as it often does.  Shame follows close behind. Shame that I feel embarrassed by these men; my fellow countrymen. Shame that I recognise them as familiar. Shame that this, in some small way, feels like a reflection of “us.”

Later, walking up Buchanan Street, the pattern repeats itself. Raised voices. Public aggression. Behaviour that once might have been checked by embarrassment now worn openly, even proudly. Again, nothing extreme. No single moment worth recording. Just variations of a theme all too ordinary. And yet people notice. Especially the elderly and wise.

It is not that society collapses in grand, cinematic gestures. It loosens first. Edges fray. Standards slip. Courtesy erodes quietly. The greater moral decline—the abandonment of truth, of responsibility, of meaning itself—does not arrive announced. It seeps in through a thousand ordinary scenes like these.

I do not believe the UK is sliding morally. That would imply momentum still undecided. I think the collapse has already happened, and what we are living through now is the long aftermath—the strange sensation of being locked into a wild fairground ride. Once it begins, you cannot get off. Some scream. Some laugh. Some pretend the motion is freedom.

The descent continues, not because no one sees it, but because seeing is no longer enough to stop it.

The next morning, I wake at six. The early hour feels tranquil as migrating geese make their presence known in a dark sky. Why do they reflect their makers will; their instinctive wisdom still intact? I prepare for my daily Bible reading as I crave the stillness, craving something solid. The previous day’s thoughts linger, unresolved. Before opening the pages, I pray—not eloquently, not confidently—simply asking for comfort, for clarity, for truth that does not shift with the noise.

I turn to Isaiah, chapter one.

As I read, a question surfaces, not abstract but deeply personal: Can moral and social decline repeat itself? Can a society convince itself it is advancing while replaying the same ancient failures under modern banners? Can people remain religious, informed, articulate—yet hollowed out?

Isaiah speaks to a culture rich in ritual and poor in conscience, loud in self-justification and deaf to correction. It feels uncomfortably familiar. And yet, threaded through the warning, there remains an invitation—not to nostalgia, not to despair, but to return. To remember. To choose differently, even after collapse.

I close the book slowly.

The small signs matter because they point to something much larger.
The larger thing matters because, somehow, God is still addressing it.
And I am left wondering—not how far the ride will go, but whether anyone, anywhere, will finally decide within themselves to step off…

 

“Ah, sinful nation…
They have forsaken the Lord…”

—Isaiah 1:4

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Jim McCrory

What Could a Child Possible Know About Life?

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Sunday 28 December 2025 at 19:26

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What Could a Child Possible Know About Life?

It must have been late summer. I was spending my days on a small, idyllic island off Scotland’s west coast. We have a cabin—or perhaps it was more of a hut—with no running water and no electricity. Each day my task was to carry water from the communal well. Cows would edge closer, cautious yet curious. The larger ones stood and stared; the smaller shuffled forward for a better view. Under their unblinking gaze, I grew oddly self-conscious.

At dusk we lit paraffin lamps, their warm glow pushing back the darkness. My father would read aloud from children’s books, and we listened, utterly absorbed, as he carried us through Heidi, Tales from the Thousand and One Nights, and Chinese folk tales. We ate freshly made pancakes with home made jam, and washed down with  small glasses of sweet stout.

The lamp hissed softly as it burned the kerosene, its flicker inviting drowsiness. Eventually it surrendered to the night, and we went to bed.

Lying there, I watched the stars pour through the window—countless, unmistakable, alive. I wondered whether the Chinese farmer boys and the Bedouin shepherd boys and milkmaids high in the Swiss mountains were seeing the same stars and feeling the same quiet awe at God’s creation that filled my heart as the universe seemed to draw near.

“Be still, and know that I am God.”
— Psalm 46:10

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Jim McCrory

How Deep Is Our Love?

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Sunday 28 December 2025 at 19:04

“Love in action is a harsh and dreadful thing compared with love in dreams.”
— Fyodor Dostoevsky

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How Deep Is Our Love?

Fyodor Dostoevsky draws a sharp distinction between imagined love and lived love. Love “in dreams” is attractive and flattering; it costs nothing and never disrupts our comfort. We admire ourselves for feeling it. But it is not yet real. It is a Lake Wobegon delusion.

This is why I find Dostoevsky so compelling. His words are not cynical, but moral. He is warning that if our love never feels harsh, never interrupts our comfort, never demands sacrifice, it may not yet have become real.

“But someone will say, ‘You have faith and I have deeds.’
Show me your faith without deeds,
and I will show you my faith by my deeds.”
—James 2:18 (BSB)

That insight becomes particularly sharp when applied to religious certainty. When certainty is fortified, questions sound like threats. Facts bounce off sealed doors. Even Scripture can be turned into a fortress rather than a window.

Yet there is one question that still carries a quiet, unsettling power because it does not argue doctrine at all. It simply asks for love made visible:

What did you do for the widow, the poor, and the fatherless child?

It is a probing question because it does not attack belief; it examines fruit. Faith loves to speak in absolutes, but Scripture repeatedly insists that love must be embodied. Faith without works is described as a corpse—present in form, absent in life. Words that bless the hungry while leaving them unfed are exposed as empty air. Belief that never stoops, never serves, and never costs is not belief at all—it is performance.

The biblical vision of faith is relentlessly practical. Divine expectation is distilled into a simple demand: to do justice, to love mercy, and to walk humbly.  Justice and mercy are not abstractions; they are actions directed toward real human need, often inconvenient need.

This is why the question lands so heavily. It bypasses hierarchy and goes straight to practice; it is personal. Not what do you preach, but who did you help.

Those who cannot answer often reach for a familiar deflection: “the poor you will always have with you.” But this was never a permission slip for neglect. It was spoken in the shadow of sacrifice, not as an excuse for indifference. 

Throughout the prophetic tradition, care for the vulnerable is not a side issue—it is the measure of faithfulness. Worship without justice is described as noise God refuses to hear.  

And yet, there are quiet testimonies that never make it into sermons: a woman who opens her home to a child with nowhere safe to sleep; a church that funds recovery work for addiction; volunteers who sail ships of medical care to forgotten places; a man who spends his weekends delivering meals rather than pamphlets.

Jesus offered the simplest definition of discipleship imaginable: Apart from preaching and making disciples, he highlighted  feeding the hungry, welcoming the stranger, clothing the naked, visiting the sick and imprisoned. He did not ask about affiliation, authority structures, or correct language. He asked one thing only—did you love where it hurt? And then he shocked everyone by identifying himself with the least powerful in society.

This is why works matter. Not because they earn faith, but because they reveal it. Faith is the root; works are the fruit. If nothing grows, the soil must be questioned.

So, when words fail, ask the question gently and without accusation. 

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Jim McCrory

O Holy Night: Hope For a Tired World

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Saturday 27 December 2025 at 13:24

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O Holy Night: Hope For a Tired World

You would need to have lived in a cave not to have heard O Holy Night these past few weeks. It seeps into December everywhere—through radios, supermarket speakers, and half-open church doors—moving like a gentle air: uninvited, but welcome; familiar rather than demanding. Often, we don’t listen closely. It plays while we shop and drive, while our minds drift toward the ordinary and the heavy. I’ve heard it all my life, and much of it tells a story I already know.

“O holy night! The stars are brightly shining…
Long lay the world in sin and error pining.”

A tired world. A waiting world. None of that surprises me.

But then comes the line that always stops me, as though a loving hand has been placed quietly on my shoulder:

“Till He appeared, and the soul felt its worth.”

That is the moment when appreciation gives way to feeling—when the song no longer plays in the background and I stop half-listening. There are times in life when we feel the ache of being less than we should be. Some people carry that ache for years. Some carry it so quietly that even those closest to them never see it.

Yesterday, my wife and I visited Glasgow, including the carnival at Glasgow Green. It carried me back to childhood in Govan: hard winters, cold streets, dark tenement closes. Winter could feel unforgiving then. But every year the lorries would roll into town, and with them the circus, clowns, elephants and the carnival at the Kelvin Hall. They arrived like sunlight breaking into the gloom. For us Glasgow children, it mattered more than we could ever explain.

On the walk back, we met a man sitting alone and asked what he was doing that day. He told us he’d been to the Scottish Exhibition Centre for the carnival. “But it had no ghost train,” he added quickly. Then, with sudden urgency, he asked, “Did yours have a ghost train?”

As we spoke, I realised he had learning difficulties. The question returned again and again, unchanged. And in that repetition, I sensed something fragile and like us all, desiring connection.

I found myself wondering, unsteadily, about his sense of worth. About how often he might be overlooked. We told him we were Christians, though he never quite grasped what we meant. “I’ll need to go to the ghost train at Glasgow Green,” he said, returning to the one thing that mattered. He was kind, loving and he shook both our hands on departing. Afterwards, I said to my wife, “We should have taken him for a coffee and some snacks.” She agreed. But the owl of Minerva flies at dusk as the saying goes. Wisdom takes flight only after the day is nearly over.

“Till He appeared, and the soul felt its worth.” The song proclaims.

Christ did not die selectively. He died for every human being. There is no stronger declaration of worth than that. The thought unsettles me, and still does. But this much I know: a soul remembering its worth is no small thing.

People will devalue you. As the years pass, it becomes easier to be overlooked, bullied, slandered, undermined and so on. Some are avoided for their differences; others simply fade because the world is in a hurry. Modern life persuades us that we don’t have time for one another. But God never rushes past a dear soul.

And now, returning to the song. Without warning, the song changes tone. It stops describing and starts commanding:

“Fall on your knees!”

It lands suddenly. Personally. There is no easing into it.

This is not a gentle invitation. It does not ask if I am ready. It assumes something about me—that I am standing when I should be kneeling. Not physically, but inwardly. It is a call to honesty, to recognition of need.

The music understands this. That line stretches the singer to the edge of breath, asking for more than feels comfortable or safe. As I listen, my body responds before my thoughts do. My chest tightens. My eyes sting. Something in me recognises the truth being spoken.

This isn’t reverence in a polished sense; it is exposure. The song does not ask me to admire the stars or contemplate theology from a distance. It speaks as though it knows me—knows how much I am holding, how long I have been standing, how practiced I am at not collapsing.

Four words, and standing begins to feel like pretence.

What moves me most is this: kneeling comes after worth, not before. The song insists that I am seen first—named first, valued first. Only then does it call me to my knees. Not because I am small, but because I no longer need to prove that I am strong.

It is about honesty.

Kneeling is what happens when defences fail—A weary world does not need clever words.
It needs permission to yield.

For God expressed His love for the world in this way:

He gave His only Son so that whoever believes in Him

will not face everlasting destruction,

but will have everlasting life.

John 3:16 (The Voice).

 

O Holy Night: The Story

“O Holy Night” began far from concert halls in 1847, in the small French town of Roquemaure. A local priest commissioned a poem to celebrate the repair of the church organ, and a townsman—poet and wine merchant Placide Cappeau—wrote it while traveling by carriage. Titled “Minuit, chrétiens,” the poem reflected on Christ’s birth as hope for a weary, longing world.

Cappeau later asked composer Adolphe Adam to set the words to music. Adam’s melody was tender and dramatic, perfectly matching the poem’s weight. The carol debuted on Christmas Eve at midnight Mass and moved listeners immediately.

Its path was not smooth. Church authorities later rejected the song because of its creators—Cappeau had distanced himself from the church, and Adam was Jewish. Still, people kept singing it, and affection carried it forward where approval did not.

Translated into English in 1855, the carol found new meaning in America. The line “Chains shall He break, for the slave is our brother” resonated deeply with abolitionists, proclaiming that Christ’s birth demanded justice and human dignity.

A final story—part history, part legend—comes from the Franco-Prussian War, when a soldier’s singing on Christmas Eve reportedly brought a brief ceasefire. For a moment, the song spoke louder than weapons.

The carol endures because it does not deny weariness or suffering. Instead, it insists that hope enters the world quietly, through humility and love—a truth that still finds its way into tired and longing hearts each year.

 

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Jim McCrory

“Silent night, holy night… all is calm, all is bright.”

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Monday 22 December 2025 at 09:49

The race is not to the swift…  For time and chance happen to all.”

Ecclesiastes 9:11 (BSB).

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“Silent night, holy night… all is calm, all is bright.”

 

It was winter, 2010; close to the end of a very difficult year. I was returning from Oban, on Scotland’s west coast, weary from a speaking engagement. I am watching white darkness slide past the train windows. Snow had been falling heavily across the Highlands, thick and unrelenting, the kind that bends time and progress. Somewhere near Crianlarich the journey faltered and stopped for hours. Snow piled up on the rails and the time that passed was measured in patience. By the time we reached Glasgow it was close to midnight.

The station was hushed in that peculiar way only large places become when the crowds have gone—vast, echoing, half-asleep. Footsteps sounded louder than they should. Breath steamed in the cold air. And then, tucked away in a shadowed corner, I heard it.

A lone piper.

He stood almost hidden, the lamplight catching the curve of the pipes, the notes rising softly into the cavernous dark. He was playing Silent Night. Not loudly. Not for applause. Just letting the melody breathe into the space, as if the night itself had asked for it.

It was one of those moments that cannot be planned—only received. A gift given by delay, by snow, by circumstances that refused to hurry. The world slowed enough for wonder to slip in.

Silent Night itself began like that—quietly, almost unnoticed.

A century earlier, in a small village called Oberndorf, near Salzburg, peace was something people longed for but scarcely trusted. In that fragile stillness, a young priest named Joseph Mohr walked his parish with a poem in his pocket—a simple meditation he had written years earlier about the birth of Christ. No triumph. No thunder. Just calm. Just trust.

That evening he carried the poem to Franz Xaver Gruber, the village schoolteacher and organist. There was a problem: the church organ was broken. Silent. Useless. Whether mice or damp winter air were to blame hardly mattered. The grand instrument had failed.

So they turned to something smaller.

Gruber set the words to a gentle melody for guitar—an instrument of kitchens and firesides, not sanctuaries. And that night, by candlelight, the song was born. Two voices. One guitar. No choir. No ceremony. Just a fragile offering of peace.

“Silent night, holy night… all is calm, all is bright.”

I cannot help think that God moved these two men to bring comfort to these weary souls during that difficult time in human history. And to the world; for no one there imagined the song would travel far. And yet it did.

It passed from village to village on the lips of wandering singers. It crossed borders and languages, found its way into palaces and barns, into churches and prison camps. It was sung in times of joy and in the long shadows of suffering.

Once, on a frozen Christmas Eve during the First World War, it drifted across trenches—enemy voices meeting in the darkness, a brief and holy ceasefire born of melody.

And still, it comes to us like that.

In stations at midnight. In broken journeys. In unexpected corners of the world where the noise recedes and something gentler dares to speak.

The power of Silent Night has never been in its volume. It does not shout. It does not rush. It reminds us that Christ, the Saviour,  entered the world the same way the song entered history—not with spectacle, but with a child, a mother, and a night heavy with promise.

It began in silence.

And sometimes, if the snow is deep enough, and the train runs late enough, and the heart is quiet enough, we can still hear it.

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Jim McCrory

Surprised By Joy at Glasgow Armadillo

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Sunday 21 December 2025 at 13:49

“The wind blows where it wishes.

You hear its sound, but you do not know

 where it comes from or where it is going.

 So it is with everyone born of the Spirit.”

John 3:8

BSB

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Surprised By Joy

I was at a concert in Glasgow this week, and it was pleasant to hear Alistair Begg back in his hometown to say a few words. Apart from the stunning performance of the singers and musicians, Irish dancers and the generous spirit of the audience, I found myself travelling home on the train preoccupied with what Alistair had said. The city, the big wheel at Glasgow Green, the Gorbals and Lochwinnoch slipped past the windows, his words remained.

I had read them before, but this time they struck me with greater force, as though they had been waiting for a different moment in my life to be heard.

They were taken from Surprised by Joy: The Shape of My Early Life, C. S. Lewis’s account of his reluctant and often resistant journey toward Christian faith. Lewis describes a moment that is remarkable not for its drama, but for its ordinariness:

“I was driven to Whipsnade one sunny morning. When we set out, I did not believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God, and when we reached the zoo, I did.”

Lewis is careful to insist that this was not the result of an argument won or an emotion stirred. There was no thunderclap, no surge of feeling. He writes that it was more like the quiet realization of wakefulness after sleep — the sudden, unmistakable awareness that one is awake, though nothing outward has changed. Faith, for Lewis, arrived not as a spectacle but as a recognition.

The context matters. Lewis had spent years thinking, reading, resisting. He was a scholar, suspicious of sentimentality, wary of religious experience. And yet, belief did not finally come to him through effort or reasoning alone. It came, almost unnoticed, in the middle of an ordinary journey, as if something long at work had at last reached its moment.

What struck me most profoundly this time was how this quiet awakening echoes the testimonies of believers in places where Christianity cannot be preached openly — in North Korea, Afghanistan, China, and elsewhere. I have read accounts of people who had never held a Bible, never attended a church, never heard a sermon — and yet who speak of Christ appearing to them in dreams. They wake, like Lewis, to a reality they did not possess the night before.

There is no zoo, no concert hall, no public witness. And yet, there is awakening.

I find myself marvelling at the way the Holy Spirit works — not bound by geography, permission, or circumstance. Sometimes through long reflection, sometimes through a dream, sometimes on a train journey home. Not always loudly. Not always dramatically. But unmistakably.

And perhaps that is the most unsettling and hopeful truth of all: that faith may come upon us not when we are searching for it, but when, at last, we are awake enough to recognize it.

“The wind blows where it wishes. You hear its sound, but you do not know where it comes from or where it is going. So it is with everyone born of the Spirit.”

John 3:8

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Jim McCrory

Our Shared Cosmos

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Wednesday 17 December 2025 at 23:02

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Our Shared Cosmos

This winter morning in Scotland is cold and unforgiving in this deep quiet of darkness; I noticed the crescent moon. It was sharp and bold in its fullness of light; faithful to this winter day. In that narrow curve was a reminder that light does not disappear when it diminishes—it waits.

What stirred gratitude was knowing that this was the same moon seen across Europe. People in France, Germany, Spain, and Norway were under the same phase, even if they saw it at contrasting times, from different angles, or not at all because of cloud or shadow. The moon did not change; only our vantage did.

There is something spiritual in that constancy. We are separate, bounded by place and circumstance, yet quietly connected. I thought of Norwegian children heading to school and collecting a skolerboller on the way and rapped in layers against the cold. I thought  of Icelandic farmers waking to frost-laden fields and wondering about their career choice. And there is the poets in Ireland finding, in that thin light, a line worth keeping. None of us marked the moment together, yet we shared it all the same.

In a mysterious world, the crescent moon offers a grand answer. That in the Creator’s eternal purpose we are reminded of his presence. And sometimes, that shared, unnoticed presence is reason enough to give thanks.

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Jim McCrory

Justice at Our Core, Happiness in Our Wake

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Justice at Our Core, Happiness in Our Wake

When I was young—long before I had the language for it—I carried an instinct for justice. Not the sharp-edged kind that demands punishment, but something quieter and more ancient. A justice that seeks to mend rather than break, that restores balance instead of exacting revenge. It was the kind of justice that lifts the bowed head, that says you matter even while naming what is wrong. I could feel it before I could explain it, as though it had been placed in me prior to thought, prior even to belief. Something existing objectively.

It was around that time that I encountered a passage from the English jurist William Blackstone, a voice that still echoes with calm authority in the foundations of law. He wrote:

“The Creator has so inseparably interwoven the laws of eternal justice with the happiness of each individual, that the latter cannot be attained but by observing the former.”

I did not fully grasp his meaning then, but the words struck something deep and I wrote it in my notebook. They felt less like instruction and more like recognition—an articulation of something already known but unnamed. Blackstone was not describing justice as a cold external system, enforced from above by threat or fear. He was describing justice as woven stitched into the human condition itself. To violate it was not merely to break a rule, but to fracture something within one’s own soul.

Over time, that idea grew with me. Justice revealed itself not as a detached moral abstraction, but as a thread running through conscience, joy, and suffering alike. Like a loom working quietly beneath the surface of our lives, justice binds together who we are and what we become. When we live against it, the fabric frays. When we honour it—even imperfectly—the pattern holds.

Life, of course, tests this belief. I have seen injustice enacted casually and cruelly: in small indignities and in acts that scar entire communities. I have also been unjust myself—silent when I should have spoken, self-protective when I should have been fair. And I have known mercy: moments when kindness arrived unearned, when someone chose restoration over condemnation, and the scales tipped—not because the world demanded it, but because love did.

Existentially, justice poses an unavoidable question: What kind of beings are we, if we can neither escape justice nor fully embody it? We sense it, long for it, resist it, and yet cannot eradicate it. Even when denied outwardly, it persists inwardly, unsettling us. We are haunted not only by what is done to us, but by what we do—and fail to do. In this way, justice is not merely societal; it is deeply personal. It follows us into silence and into sleep.

The scripture at Micah 6:8 captures this unsettling certainty with stark simplicity:

“He has told you, mortals, what is good in His sight

What else does the Eternal ask of you

But to live justly and love kindness

And to walk with your True God in all humility.”

This is not a threat so much as a truth about the moral structure of reality and what God expects from us. But we are free moral agents and it leaves us with a choice. But remember, justice is patient, but it is not forgetful. From the man who cuts the queue at the airport, to the quiet violence of gossip and slander, to acts so grievous they wound history itself—each life is lived within this moral field. We may evade human systems. We may rationalise, excuse, or deny. But justice, woven as it is into creation, remains.

In the end, I believe justice is like gravity: unseen, often ignored, yet always at work. We can pretend it does not exist, but we cannot step outside its pull. And submitting to it wholeheartedly brings a great sense of happiness.

Verse taken from The Voice Bible

The Voice Bible Copyright © 2012 Thomas Nelson, Inc. The Voice™ translation © 2012 Ecclesia Bible Society All rights reserved.

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Toys Dressed in Darkness

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Sunday 21 December 2025 at 13:32

“Of all tyrannies, that of the majority is the worst.

The real danger is the gradual acceptance of evil.”

C. S. Lewis

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Toys Dressed in Darkness

I know I return to this subject now and again, but at this time of year my unease returns with force. My wife said as I dropped her off to work, "Pick up a few platters to take with us tomorow evening." So, as I iwalked through the supermarket, I found myself pausing—not over prices or products, but over a display of children’s toys. There, among what should have been symbols of joy and imagination, were skulls, hollow-eyed figures, and characters edging towards evil in their posture.  I remember thinking: why are these  here, and why is it meant for children?

Once noticed, the images lodged themselves in my mind and became impossible to ignore. They are no longer confined to a single toy rack or seasonal novelty. Children’s books, cartoons, and video games increasingly feature skeletons, occult-looking figures, and skeletal creatures resembling the walking dead. They stare out from glossy covers and glowing screens, stripped of context and presented as harmless fun. Yet something about them feels profoundly wrong.

I find myself asking why we, as adults, so readily place such imagery into the hands of children. Childhood is a time of trust, curiosity, and moral formation—a period when the imagination is especially open and unguarded.

There is a story about two young fish who meet an older fish. The older fish asks, “How’s the water?” After swimming on, one of the younger fish turns to the other and asks, “What’s water?”
And so it is with socialisation. What surrounds us becomes invisible. What we introduce in these early years quietly shapes a child’s sense of what is normal, acceptable, and even desirable—often without notice or question. When skulls and symbols of death are turned into toys, darkness is no longer something to be approached with caution; it becomes something to be played with.

Some will say I am overthinking it. They will argue that children understand the difference between fantasy and reality. But I am not convinced it is that simple. Repetition has power. What is constantly seen loses its shock. What loses its shock soon loses its moral weight. When sinister imagery becomes familiar, it stops troubling the conscience.

Standing in those aisles, I cannot help but wonder whether our fascination with the macabre reveals something deeper about our culture. Why are we so drawn to what is dark, grotesque, and unsettling? Why does evil—or at least the appearance of it—sell so well?

Scripture gives language to the unease I feel but struggle to articulate. In Ephesians 6:12 we are reminded that our struggle is not merely with visible forces, but with powers of darkness that operate beyond human sight:
“For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this world’s darkness…”

This verse does not invite paranoia, but a sober, pragmatic awareness. Evil rarely announces itself loudly. More often it enters quietly—softened, disguised, and normalised.

I find myself wondering whether such influences are at work when darkness is packaged as entertainment for the young. Why else would we be so eager to dress death in bright colours and market it as play? If there are forces that benefit from moral confusion and spiritual dullness, then turning sinister imagery into something cute and collectible makes a troubling kind of sense.

This is not a call to ban imagination or deny children adventure. There is a vital difference between storytelling that acknowledges darkness and an industry that glamorises it. Children can learn courage, goodness, and hope without being steeped in images that empty death of its seriousness and evil of its consequence.

What troubles me most is not a single toy or book, but the quiet acceptance of it all. No one seems to question it anymore—and perhaps that is the greatest concern of all. When darkness no longer shocks us, we stop guarding against it.

As I leave the supermarket and carry on with my day, the images stay with me. They raise a question I cannot easily dismiss: if we do not protect the hearts and imaginations of our children, who will? And if we fail to notice what is shaping them, what kind of world are we silently preparing them to inherit?

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Jim McCrory

Thoughts on Eternity

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Saturday 13 December 2025 at 22:27

Many young people today have been fed two great lies. First, there is no objective morality. And two, because society deny the existance of God, the young grow up with a concept of oblivion.

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“He has made everything beautiful in its time.

 He has also set eternity in the hearts of men words "

 Ecclesiastes 3:12.

I was born and raised in the maritime city of Glasgow. Inevitably, it looks outward. And yet, where we travel shapes who we are inwardly. Now, I am crossing over to the Island of Bute on the MV Bute, reading about the fascinating philosophical thought experiment known as the Ship of Theseus, first proposed by Plutarch.

Theseus, the  mythological hero, sailed from Greece to slay the Minotaur. After completing his task, he returned to Athens and left his ship to decay. Over time, carpenters gradually replaced each plank of the ship. This raises a question: which ship is the Ship of Theseus—the newly restored one or the old parts rotting on the beach?

Our bodies are not unlike that paradox. Red blood cells form, embark on an arduous journey through the grand rapids of our arteries, veins, and capillaries—facing proportionally life-threatening obstacles—only to sail into oblivion after their two-month voyage. Skin cells decay, leading to weakening avalanches and shifting continental plates. They fall from their plateaus, aided by cascading water, gravitating toward terminal, anticlockwise whirlpools before their second day ends. Estimates vary, but the body replaces itself every seven to ten years. Like Plutarch’s thought experiment, this raises questions of identity and thoughts of eternity as I ponder the body’s self-renewal mechanism.

But here lies the paradox: neurons, those cells that drive the brain, remain with us, in some cases, for life. Though I am advancing in years, there’s still a young man living inside me. I can call him up at any time to visit the places he once visited, meet the people he met, and relive the joys he experienced. This convinces me of an action God took before I was born: setting eternity in my heart.

There is something profoundly beautiful in understanding that while our physical form undergoes continuous change, the essence of who we are remains anchored in something eternal. As I stand on the deck of the MV Bute, the wind tousling my hair and the vast expanse of the sea stretching out before me, I am reminded of the eternal nature that God has set within us. The same sense of eternity that inspired the ancient philosophers to ponder the Ship of Theseus and the same eternal truth that we find in the Scriptures.

In this ever-changing world, the constancy of God’s creation and His eternal purpose for our lives offer a reassuring anchor. Our journeys, much like those of Theseus and his ship, involve renewal and transformation. Yet, in each phase, there is a beauty that God has ordained, a purpose that transcends time.

Reflecting on these thoughts, I find peace in the knowledge that while the external may change, the core of our being is eternally held by God. This realization brings a profound sense of wonder and gratitude for the life I have been given, and for the eternal journey that lies ahead.

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Jim McCrory

A Letter to the Grandchildren

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Friday 19 December 2025 at 17:44

 

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A Letter to the Grandchildren

By the time you are grown, your grandad may have quietly closed his eyes. My blood pressure rises more easily now, my legs weaken, and at tall heights I tremble. Cells in my body that have served me faithfully have created a rebellion and delivered cancer to my vital organs. Sometimes I open the fridge and forget why I am there. So, before the inevitable comes, allow me to leave you a few pieces of grandfatherly advice, offered with love. 

Be kind to small and living things. Don't cut up  worms or swat wasps and bees, or catch butterfies—they need our care more than we realise. Without them, life and beauty would quietly disappear. Without them, Wordsworth may never have written Daffodils, Jack might never have climbed a beanstalk, and Matsuo Bashō may have followed his father’s path, wielding death with a samurai sword rather than bringing pleasure to many with poetry.

Worms return what has died back into the soil, feeding trees, flowers, and fields in a grand, mysterious dance of death and renewal. Wasps and bees labour hour after hour, pollinating plants and flowers, bringing nourishment and beauty to the human family. Think of these small workhorses the next time you see a rainbow eucalyptus or a bleeding-heart flower. Let them remind you that even the smallest lives matter, and that usefulness often wears humble clothing.

You are being born into a strange and difficult world. There is much good in it—but also much evil. Be careful with internet sites that mislead you, stir anger, or trade in lies. Rage is profitable now, and truth is often buried beneath noise. People, too, can be deceitful. Everyone has an agenda, even those close to you. Learn to pause, to question, and to think clearly. Wisdom rarely shouts; it usually whispers.

Do not confuse popularity with goodness, or confidence with truth. Many people speak loudly and know extraordinarily little. Some of the wisest souls you will meet speak softly and listen well.

Put your trust in God and follow Jesus—He will show you the way. The world will offer you countless paths, many of them attractive, many of them destructive. Christ’s path is narrow, but it leads to life. Read God’s Word daily. Begin with the books of Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, and Acts. Take careful note of Matthew chapters five to seven; this is where Jesus gives us guides for life. Seek Him honestly. If you reach out for Him, even clumsily, He will be there.

Guard your heart. C.S. Lewis wrote, “God whispers to us in our pleasures, speaks to us in our conscience and shouts to us in our pains.” So listen for the whispers. People wander through life seeking pleasure in materialism and self-fulfilment and then wonder why God has not come into their life. Often it is because they never listen. When you read the Bible in your own private space, that is when you hear the whispers and know God is there. Go against your conscience and you will soon learn what it means for God to shout through pain. I have broken my femur, had part of a metal drainpipe embedded in my skull, and had a tooth removed without anaesthetic—but nothing is more painful than disappointing God by ignoring the conscience.

Be careful what you allow into your mind, because what you dwell on quietly shapes who you become. Avoid the traps of pornography,  and pleasures that promise freedom but slowly enslave. Discipline may feel old-fashioned, but it is one of love’s strongest forms. Just ask those who have followed such pathways.

Learn to suffer well. You will lose people you love. Dreams will fail. Your heart will break. Do not let suffering make you cruel or hard. Let it deepen you. Pain can either shrink the soul or enlarge it. Choose enlargement.

Read the books. They teach us how to be human.

Read stories that show courage, sacrifice, and redemption. Read poetry—it will teach you how to see. Read the old books; they have outlived centuries for a reason. Shakespeare will teach you about ambition, jealousy, mercy, and grace. Dostoevsky will wrestle with evil and faith. Austen will show you pride and humility. Dickens will awaken your compassion for the poor. J.B. Priestley’s An Inspector Calls will teach you how your decisions can have deep impact on others. The Psalms will give words to your grief and joy when your own words fail.

Books train the moral imagination. They remind us that human beings are not problems to be solved, but mysteries to be loved.

Take time for silence. The world is loud and impatient, but God often speaks in stillness. Walk outside. Look at the sky. Pay attention. Wonder is the beginning of wisdom.

Be grateful. Gratitude guards the soul against bitterness. Say thank you often—to God, to others and tell those deserving that you appreciate them. 

Finally, remember this: you are deeply loved. Not because of what you achieve, earn, or impress others with—but because you exist, and do so in God’s image. You were known before you were born. You matter more than you will ever fully understand.

And in God’s grand purpose of paradise, we will meet if we are all faithful. As God’s word says: “Truly I tell you, today you will be with Me in Paradise.”

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Why Do People Join Cults?

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Friday 12 December 2025 at 19:41

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Why Do People Join Cults?

People do not join cults because of darkness, but because of what first feels like warmth otherwise, no one would join them. That insight explains a great deal. Many are drawn in by friendship, belonging, purpose, and meaning in a world that often feels confusing and cold. Over time, however, the reality changes. The warmth proves conditional, the truth is carefully constructed, and what once felt like light slowly gives way to fear, guilt, and control.

If a family member is caught in such a group, you are not alone, and you are not without influence. Still, the way forward is rarely straightforward.

Not All Cults Look Obvious

The word cult often suggests dramatic images of secret rituals or apocalyptic predictions. Most cults are far more subtle. Many hide behind the appearance of organized religion, tightly controlled ministries, or magnetic teachers who initially seem sincere and compassionate. They may appear moral, loving, and active in good works. This is precisely what makes them difficult to recognize, both for outsiders and for those already involved. These groups often meet real emotional or spiritual needs at first.

Yet beneath the surface, troubling patterns frequently emerge. Members are isolated from family, pressured into absolute loyalty, and manipulated through fear and guilt. Human leaders are elevated beyond question. Any disagreement is treated as rebellion or apostacy and met with warnings or punishment, both social and spiritual.

This is not the pattern we see in Jesus.

Christ Alone Is the Way

In John 14:6, Jesus said, “I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.”

He did not point people to an institution, a hierarchy, or a governing authority. He pointed them to Himself. As Paul wrote in 1 Timothy 2:5, there is one God and one mediator between God and humanity, Christ Jesus.

When a group claims exclusive access to God through its leaders, or demands loyalty to them as proof of loyalty to God, caution is necessary. In doing so, they replace Christ with human authority. They blur the distinction between the body of Christ and a branded organization. Jesus never required His followers to abandon their families, police one another’s thoughts, or silence their conscience for the sake of conformity.

What You Can Do

Keep the door open

Your loved one may not be receptive right now. They may see you as misguided or spiritually opposed. Even so, your steady and gentle presence may be the only unconditional love they experience. Keep the door open. High-control groups work hard to shut every other door, especially those leading back to family. Do not let that happen. Avoid arguing over doctrine unless they ask. Focus instead on the relationship. Let them know they are loved without conditions.

Do not imitate the control

Anger and ultimatums are understandable, but they rarely help. Responding with patience and kindness shows the contrast between conditional acceptance and genuine love. Jesus invited people to follow Him. He did not coerce them. Let your manner reflect that same spirit.

Ask thoughtful, gentle questions

Cults discourage questioning. You can help revive that freedom by asking sincere, non-threatening questions such as:
Can truth really be threatened by honest examination?
Why is Jesus called the mediator, yet others stand between you and God?
Would Jesus ever ask someone to abandon their family?

Let these questions rest quietly. Seeds often take time to grow.

Learn to recognize common signs

High-control groups often share recognizable traits:

  • Leaders who cannot be questioned

  • A strong us-versus-them mentality

  • Restricted access to information

  • Fear-based motivation and threats of punishment

  • Shunning or social exile as discipline

  • Claims that salvation exists only within the group

If your loved one is experiencing pressure to conform at the cost of relationships or conscience, they may be trapped in such a system.

When Awakening Begins

Many people leave cults not because of a single argument or fact, but because something deep within them feels wrong. They notice hypocrisy. They see compassionate people cast aside. They watch leaders prosper while members suffer. Leaving often comes with heavy loss, including community, identity, and spiritual certainty.

That is when your presence matters most.

You can be the one who does not say, “I warned you,” but instead says, “I am glad you are here.”
You can help them rediscover Jesus, not as a set of rigid rules imposed by others, but as the source of grace, truth, and freedom.

Contrast the behaviour of cults with that of Jesus parable of the Prodigal Son and the father and the resentful brother.

Hope Remains

Cults claim sole ownership of truth, yet the real Jesus has always been accessible. He walked among ordinary people, touched those cast aside, and welcomed honest doubt. He told His followers not to place their trust in human authority, but to follow Him. He did not create a closed system with hidden rules. He began a movement rooted in freedom and love.

Your loved one may still be in darkness, but light does not rush or force its way. It remains steady and patient.

Take time to read John 6:25–59 and ask yourself, what does God, and what does Jesus, truly require of me?

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If I Can Stop One Heart from Breaking

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Friday 12 December 2025 at 08:32

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If I Can Stop One Heart from Breaking

If I can stop one heart from breaking,
I shall not live in vain;
If I can ease one life the aching,
Or cool one pain

Emily Dickinson 1886

 

 

Forgive my indulgence in sharing one of my favourite poems, but the poem acts as a apt epigraph for what I am writing  There is a quiet terror in realizing how far the sacred sometimes feels from ordinary life. We build temples and churches—structures meant to summon heaven to earth—yet the ache of existence still greets us in kitchens, hospital rooms, alleyways, and crowded sidewalks. Faith, for many, becomes a pilgrimage always postponed, a distance always just out of reach.

Emily Dickinson does something radical in seven short lines: she collapses that distance. No sanctuary is named. No ritual is required. The measure of a life is reduced to a single trembling question—Did you ease one pain? Did you stop one heart from breaking? Meaning is no longer hidden in grandeur. It is hidden in mercy.

This is not sentimental comfort. It is existential realism. The world does not wait for our theology to mature. Pain arrives before certainty. Hunger speaks louder than doctrine. Loneliness outpaces liturgy. And Dickinson dares to suggest that a life need not solve the mystery of the universe to be meaningful—it need only lessen suffering somewhere along the way.

Christianity, at its most dangerous and beautiful, agrees.

The Book of Acts describes a community that treated property as temporary and people as eternal. Believers sold what they owned and laid the proceeds at the apostles’ feet—not for spectacle, not for piety—but so that “there were no needy persons among them” (Acts 4:35). This is not polite charity. It is economic rebellion driven by love. It is the renunciation of security for the sake of solidarity. It is faith made visible and therefore vulnerable.

This thread runs far deeper into Scripture. In Exodus, God’s voice thunders not on behalf of kings or institutions but for widows and orphans:

“You shall not take advantage of any widow

or fatherless child.

If you take advantage of them at all,

and they cry at all to me…”

These words struck me with a profound poignancy when I left the supermarket tonight and had a few words with a family from Syria, a mother and two children and I wondered about their missing father. God leans forward at the sound of suffering. A God's compassion over broken people.

Philosophically, this confronts us with a frightening truth: meaning is not something we merely believe—it is something we enact. Faith that remains internal is indistinguishable from illusion. The early Christians understood this with terrifying clarity. To follow Christ was not primarily to agree with a creed, but to reorder one’s life around the vulnerable.

Even now, this ancient moral gravity still bends history. We see it in churches that run food banks for those trapped in addiction and poverty. In Christian medical missions that enter forgotten places where profit would never go. In orphanages, shelters, prison ministries, soup kitchens, and in the quiet acts of mercy that never make headlines. These are not accessories to the gospel. They are its spine.

And yet, we must confess the other truth: religion often feels far away. The church too entangled. The institution too slow. The language too abstract. For many, faith has become conceptual while suffering remains brutally concrete. Dogma can feel louder than compassion. Moral certainty can feel colder than love.

This is why Dickinson’s poem still burns. When the sacred feels inaccessible, holiness becomes portable. It must travel light. It must take the form of a cooled pain, a mended heart, a small rescue that no one else applauds. A single life steadied. A single burden lifted. A single trembling soul helped back to its nest.

Jesus himself lived this answer. He did not build institutions; he disrupted them. He healed outside sanctioned spaces. He touched what was declared unclean. The sacred, in his life, was never confined. It spilled into streets, homes, and sickrooms. It moved wherever pain lived.

This gives faith its unbearable weight. If God is found among the broken, then indifference becomes blasphemy. To ignore the suffering neighbour is not merely a social failure—it is a theological one. As Christ himself said, what we do to “the least of these,” we do to him.

This is why the Epistle of James sounds almost violent in its honesty:

If a brother or sister lacks food and clothing,
and we offer only words without action,
what kind of faith is that?

The answer is uncomfortably clear. It is dead.

So, we should be careful when someone claims the name “Christian.” The test is not vocabulary but visibility. Not how loudly faith is confessed, but how tangibly it is lived. Not what we believe about God, but what our neighbour experiences because of us.

In the end, the most authentic act of worship available to us is not only performed in rows of pews or beneath vaulted ceilings. Maybe it is performed on sidewalks, in shelters, in hospital wards, in kitchens where the last loaf of bread is broken in half.

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Living a Life Others Can Trust

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We are more often betrayed by our weaknesses than by the malice of others.

La Rochefoucauld

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Living a Life Others Can Trust

Imagine if the person who knows you best—a spouse, a dear friend, or a family member—were asked to measure your trustworthiness on a scale from one to ten. What number do you think they would choose? And if that person were known for speaking plainly, without flattery or softening the truth, how would their honest answer settle in your spirit?

It’s not a comfortable thought. It’s a question that engenders growth to maturity.

In a world where confidence in others is fragile and easily lost, trust has become one of the rarest treasures. To be called trustworthy is not mere kindness—it is a declaration about the kind of person you are. Every deep relationship rests on this foundation, and when it crumbles, what often remains is ache, separation, and quiet grief. The psalmist understood the power of what we say when he prayed, “Set a guard over my mouth, Lord; keep watch over the door of my lips.” (Psalm 141:3) Words, especially those spoken in secrecy or in anger, can either protect or devastate a soul.

Across cultures, betrayal has many names, but the Japanese word uragiri carries haunting clarity. It means “to cut from behind.” The picture is striking; you walk forward, unguarded, because you believe the one behind you is keeping watch. Yet instead of protecting you, they wound you. This kind of harm shows up everywhere—in families, churches, friendships, and workplaces. It appears in whispered conversations, in twisted truths, in confidences exposed for the sake of power or attention.

Often, what hurts most is not only the betrayal itself, but the silence that surrounds it—the absence of any chance to explain or defend. There is a unique cruelty in being misrepresented when you are not present to speak. Psalm 41 gives words to that ache:

“My enemies speak with malice…
My visitor utters lies;
then goes out and spreads them…
They say, ‘He will never rise again.’” (Psalm 41:5–8)

These ancient sorrows feel remarkably close to home.

Still, betrayal is not the end of the story. Healing remains possible. Hope still stands.

One of the most powerful choices we can make is to become the very person on whom we long to rely. A person who treats another’s secrets as sacred ground. Someone whose integrity does not depend on being warned, “Don’t tell anyone.” Someone who chooses restraint over rumour, kindness over curiosity, faithfulness over attention.

There are people in my own past who never truly came to know me—not because I withdrew, but because trust had not yet been earned. And that is a quiet truth of wisdom: not every heart is safe to hold your story. We are not called to close ourselves off to love, but neither are we called to offer our deepest parts to those who would not protect them. Love requires both courage and discernment.

Trustworthiness is not weakness. It is strength—built through honesty, humility, and the discipline to guard what does not belong to us. Those who live this way earn more than admiration from others; they earn peace within themselves. They rest without secrets. They speak without double meaning. They love without fear of being false because betrayal is not in their nature.

So, if that question unsettles you—What number would they give me? —do not turn away from the discomfort. Let it refine you, not shame you. Let it draw you deeper into grace, into growth, and into the steady shaping of a trustworthy life less you become lonely and without companions.

Because a life built on trust is gentler. It is truer. And it looks a great deal like Christ.

All verses from the BSB Bible.

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Once Upon a Time, There Was a Man From the Land of Uz.

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"For the creation was subjected to futility, not by its own will,

 but because of the One who subjected it, in hope

Romans 8:20 (BSB).

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Once Upon a Time, There Was a Man From the Land of Uz.

“Once upon a time, there was a man from the land of Uz.” With an opening like that, you already sense you are in for a good ride.

The story of Job doesn’t just begin with suffering—it begins with mystery, depth, and a kind of ancient holiness that still feels startling today. It raises the question, can a person be faithful to God despite suffering? 

One question has always stayed with me: How did Job know so much about God? He lived long before Scripture was written as we know it. Yet the Bible calls him “blameless and upright” (Job 1:1)—a man who feared God, rejected evil, and clung to his integrity even when everything was stripped away. Where did that kind of faith come from?

Job likely lived during the age of the patriarchs, when God’s truth travelled by word of mouth instead of printed page. Long before the Law was given, stories of creation, the flood, and God’s dealings with humanity would have been told around fires and passed through generations. Perhaps Job heard of Adam and the fall, of Noah and the ark, maybe even whispers of Abraham and his covenant. Scripture doesn’t connect their lives directly—but it’s compelling to imagine that news of God’s promises moved farther and wider than we often realize.

Still, Job’s knowledge of God feels deeper than second-hand tradition. When he speaks, his words carry the weight of personal encounter. This is not borrowed faith—it is lived faith. I imagine Job gazing into the same night sky we see today, sensing that the stars themselves declared the glory of a Creator far greater than human understanding. Romans 1:20 tells us that God’s invisible qualities are clearly seen in what He has made. I believe Job saw that clearly too.

There’s another thought I keep returning to: what if God revealed Himself to Job in ways that were never recorded for us? Scripture hints at others—like Melchizedek—who served the one true God outside Abraham’s family line. Job may have belonged to a quiet, faithful remnant who walked with God simply because they sought Him. Even without written commandments, Job somehow knew what righteousness looked like. That alone is humbling.

Yet what makes Job’s faith so powerful is not just its depth—it’s how practical it was. This wasn’t an abstract belief system. Job rose early to offer sacrifices for his children, just in case their hearts had wandered. He understood sin, intercession, and the seriousness of standing before a holy God. How did he know to do that? Perhaps his awareness didn’t come from rules, but from reverence.

And then, of course, there is the suffering.

If faith is ever tested, it is tested in pain. Job lost everything, his children, his wealth, his health, and eventually even the support of those closest to him. He asked the hardest questions any human can ask. He grieved, he protested, he trembled before God. And yet, somehow, he never severed the relationship. “Though He slay me, yet will I hope in Him” (Job 13:15). Those words could only come from someone who truly knew God, not just as an idea, but as a presence.

Job’s suffering didn’t destroy his faith; it refined it. It stripped away easy answers and forced him to cling to God alone. And in the end, when God finally spoke, Job didn’t receive explanations. He received revelation. That was enough.

When I step back and look at Job’s life, I can’t help but think about how much we’ve been given today. We have the full story of Scripture, centuries of teaching, and the living example of Jesus Christ. And still, Job’s faith sometimes feels stronger than ours. His trust was built with fewer tools—and yet it stood firm under unimaginable pressure.

His life asks a piercing question: Do I truly know God, or do I simply know about Him?

Job reminds us that God has always been making Himself known—through creation, conscience, suffering, and divine encounter. Written Scripture is a priceless gift, but it was never the only way God spoke. Job found God because he sought Him with everything he had.

His story still whispers to us today:
Seek. Trust. Hold fast.
The God who met Job in the land of Uz is the same God who meets us now.

 

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Life Out of Balance

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Monday 8 December 2025 at 09:41

"There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death.

Proverbs 14:12

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Life Out of Balance

There’s a word on which I was pondering. You may have never heard it. It’s Koyaanisqatsi, Hopi word meaning “life out of balance.” A way of living so misaligned that it demands a reassessment of life.

That word names the quiet ache that trails you into every room. The hollow echo after the laughter fades. The strange loneliness that settles in even when you’re surrounded by noise and bodies and motion. It’s the feeling that you’ve wandered off the road yet keep insisting you know exactly where you’re going.

You tell yourself this is freedom. You call it youth. You dress it up as exploration. But be honest—why does it still feel empty? Why the constant need to prove you’re alive? Why does approval feel heavier than rejection?

There is an older story that mirrors your own. A son once asked his father for his inheritance early. In doing so, he didn’t just want the money—he wanted the life without the Father. He left home and found a distant country filled with bright lights and easy pleasure. And for a while, it worked. Until it didn’t.

However, like the modern world, many turn to drugs, alcohol and the pursuit of pleasures that works for a while, until they don't. 

Returning to our story,

A famine came. It always does. And the son found himself feeding pigs, aching with hunger, realizing that what once felt like freedom had slowly turned into chains.

That, too, is koyaanisqatsi.

But the moment that changes everything is quiet and small: “He came to his senses.” Not a collapse, not a miracle, just clarity. A realization that the road he chose did not lead where he hoped. And that home was still home.

You are not beyond return. Not even close. That restlessness inside you is not proof that you’re broken, it’s proof that you’re still alive. It is the Spirit stirring beneath all your noise, calling you back to what is real. You are not suffering because you love freedom; you are suffering because you were made for more than endless escape.

I know the ache you carry. You want to be seen without being shamed. You want arms that open instead of eyes that accuse. You want to hear that it’s not too late.

And it isn’t.

The Father is already watching the horizon. Long before you reach the gate. Long before you clean yourself up. He recognizes you even at a distance—and He runs.

Come home.

Stop spending your energy assigning blame. That only keeps you stuck in the mud, rehearsing the past instead of choosing the future. Your parents failed you in ways. So did your friends. So did life. But only you can turn your feet toward the road that leads back.

There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death.” 

You don’t have to wait for everything to collapse before you change. You can turn now—before the marriages crack, before the bitterness hardens, before regret sets like concrete. Before your story becomes something you no longer recognize.

There is a robe with your name on it. A ring that says you belong. A table already set with joy and music.

Come home while your heart is still soft. While your strength is still in you. Before you wake up one day as a stranger to your own younger hopes.

You were never meant to drag your shame through endless nights, calling it independence. You were never meant to do life without a Father.

Turn around.

—Your older self,
who finally learned what it means to be found.

Read the full account at,

https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=luke%2015:11-32&version=ESV

 

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What a Magnesium Atom Taught a World-Class Chemist?

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Sunday 7 December 2025 at 14:17

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What a Magnesium Atom Taught a World-Class Chemist

James Tour, a professor of chemistry, computer science, and nanotechnology and the author of countless scientific papers, once shared a quiet but powerful insight. As he looks at something as ordinary as a leaf, he sees far more than green and veins. He is aware of the magnesium atom sitting at the core of a molecular ring, the flash of light that dislodges an electron, and the cascading reactions that begin the process of photosynthesis.

He knows that most people pass by without awareness of any of this hidden activity. Yet that deeper knowledge does not drain the moment of meaning. Instead, it intensifies his sense of God’s nearness. Understanding the science, for him, does not replace wonder—it multiplies it.

A gentle invitation to stop, look, and reflect.

Evolution vs. Faith: Insights from Dr. James Tour with Dinesh D'Souza #science #chemistry

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How Far Have You Wandered?: On the Death of a Child

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Saturday 6 December 2025 at 09:21

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How Far Have You Wandered?: On the Death of a Child

The 18th-century Japanese poet Fukuda Chiyo-ni once wrote a simple, aching haiku:

My dragonfly catcher,
How far have you wandered—
Have you gone?

There are moments in life when a person finds themselves in a place so dark that words can hardly reach it. Losing someone we love—especially a child—creates a depth of pain most of us can scarcely imagine. It is a shadowed valley that feels impossible to comprehend from the outside, and unbearable to inhabit from within.

Chiyo-ni eventually became a nun, perhaps searching for meaning, perhaps seeking a way to live alongside the grief that reshaped her life. Death is something we struggle to understand because it feels so wrong, so unnatural to the heart. And so we spend our remaining days wondering, reaching, hoping, praying—trying to make sense of what has been taken, and trying to hold on to whatever light we can find.


“For since death came through a man, the resurrection of the dead comes also through a man.”

1 Corinthians 15:21 (BSB)

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Dealing With Death: The Wabi-Sabi Paradox

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Thursday 4 December 2025 at 19:26

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Dealing With Death: The Wabi-Sabi Paradox

The Japanese concept of wabi-sabi invites us to embrace the transience of life: the bonsai that struggles to root itself, only to shed its leaves, wither, and die. Such cycles of aging and passing are meant to be witnessed with a quiet joy—but we are not bonsai trees. Kobayashi Issa, the Japanese poet, wrote:

The world of dew
Is the world of dew—
And yet, and yet—

He penned these lines after the death of his child. In that trailing repetition—And yet, and yet—we sense his reluctance to fully submit to wabi-sabi. Something in him still longed for continuity.

We are born with the capacity to live a thousand lives. Our bodies are younger than our years; something within us remains youthful despite the passage of time. And throughout this journey we are accompanied by cells that hardly age. Deep in their sheltered chamber, the hippocampus, neurons hold our memories—ready to rise at a moment’s need. This black box is our soul, our identity, the essence of what makes us human.

Why would what society calls blind  "nature" grant us such gifts? Memories of laughter shared with family and friends, of children growing beneath our watchful eyes, of skills hard-earned and deeply woven into who we are. What is this memory, this faculty of innner life  that rests in the soul of humankind? It is difficult not to wonder whether we were made for an eternal purpose, something beyond the turning of natural forces, something in the great plan of the Creator.

Do not be amazed at this, for the hour is coming when all who are in their graves will hear His voice and come out—those who have done good to the resurrection of life…

John 5:28,29 (BSB).

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Jim McCrory

The Throb of Solastalgia at Sycamore Gap

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“I took a walk in the woods and came out taller than the trees.”

Henry David Thoreau

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The Throb of Solastalgia at Sycamore Gap

There’s a place on The Island of Bute where I often find a quiet contemplative place of solace. It is the ancient St Blane’s Chapel in the Kingarth area of the island. So, when the Sycamore Gap tree was felled, something far deeper than timber fell with it. The news spread with the force of a collective gasp, as if the nation, and many beyond it, felt a sudden hollowness at the centre of a landscape they had trusted to remain unchanged. The grief that followed was not simply about losing a tree. It was a moment of solastalgia—that particular sorrow that arises when a beloved environment is altered against our will, leaving us homesick while still standing at home.

For decades, the Sycamore Gap tree had been a solitary sentinel along Hadrian’s Wall, a guardian of windswept hills and open skies. Its silhouette was so familiar that even those who had never walked the path felt they somehow knew it. It stood in postcards, photography books, engagement albums, and in the memories of hikers who traced their steps across Northumberland’s rugged beauty. The tree belonged to everyone and to no one—a quiet companion in the world’s noisy turning.

Countless stories were rooted in its presence. Young couples made their promises beneath its branches, the tree’s canopy framing the beginning of their shared lives. To them, it was not only a picturesque place but a witness—steady, ancient, dignified—against which they marked their own fleeting joys. For others, the walk to the Gap was a pilgrimage of the heart. People struggling with anxiety, loss, or hardship found a strange therapy in the way the land opened around the tree, offering both solitude and reassurance. Its very shape felt like a pause—an invitation to breathe in the same way I feel about my space on Bute.

Photographers adored it, not just for its beauty but for its humility. No matter the hour or the angle, the tree never demanded attention; it quietly offered it. Morning light turned it into a dark brushstroke on a silver horizon. Twilight wrapped it in softness. In snowfall, it became a sculpture. For walkers, reaching the Gap felt like meeting an old friend. They would rest there, leaning against stone or sitting in the grass, letting the world collect into calm around them.

So, when the tree was cut down, the grief that erupted was startling in scale yet deeply human. People mourned as though a part of their own histories had been severed. The empty Gap looked raw, almost wounded. The landscape felt wrong, as if a chapter had been torn from a book mid-sentence. This was solastalgia made visible—a sense of displacement created not by distance but by damage. A beloved place had changed, and in that change, we felt something of ourselves altered too.

What astonished many was how quickly the world rallied around this absence. Flowers, notes, drawings, and carvings appeared. Stories poured out—first kisses shared beneath its branches, moments of clarity found during long solitary walks, first photographs that inspired lifelong passions. The tree’s fall revealed how much life had grown around it.

Solastalgia often carries despair, but at Sycamore Gap it also revealed connection. In grieving the tree, people discovered each other. The collective sorrow became a tribute: a reminder that landscapes shape us, that we rely on certain places to stay steady, and that the destruction of beauty is never a small thing.

What remains now is not only loss but a strange tenderness. Even in its absence, the Sycamore Gap tree continues its quiet work—calling us to remember what endures, what deserves protection, and what binds us to the earth and to one another. Its trunk may no longer rise against the sky, but the stories rooted in its shade still stand, refusing to fall.

Image by Copilot

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Jim McCrory

The World Speaks—Are We Listening?

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Tuesday 2 December 2025 at 09:19

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The World Speaks—Are We Listening?

When I was a child, I would go to the beach on the Island of Bute. I would see a heart or a little house or a car etched in the sand. Rough, childlike, but evidence that it never just happened. But modern science treats the universe differently: fascinated by its design and order, yet refusing to acknowledge the possibility of a mind behind it.

Science, at its best, is a wonderful gift. It has helped us understand nature, heal diseases, and explore worlds beyond our own. But a mindset has taken hold in many scientific circles: as long as God is left out of the explanation, any theory—no matter how stretched—will do. It’s as if science has become so determined to stand on its own that it refuses to admit even the possibility of a Creator.

A key part of this mindset is the rule that only natural explanations are allowed. That rule can be useful, but when it hardens into an unquestioned belief, it becomes a blindfold. It’s like trying to solve a mystery after banning yourself from considering one of the most obvious suspects. You can still discover many things, but you’ve limited yourself before the search has even begun.

Because of this, science answers “how” questions very well but struggles with the “why.” It can describe how stars ignite or how cells divide, but it can’t tell us why anything exists in the first place or why the universe is so astonishingly fit for life. Our world is set up with such delicate precision that even tiny changes in the basic forces of nature would make life impossible. Yet instead of considering design, some scientists prefer to imagine endless unobservable universes just to avoid that conclusion. It feels less like solving the puzzle and more like brushing the uncomfortable pieces aside.

This aversion to design is not always about evidence; sometimes it’s about commitment to an idea. Certain scientists have even admitted that they reject any explanation involving God before the investigation starts. That’s not an open search for truth—it’s a verdict declared in advance. It also leads to strained explanations, such as the belief that life, with all its intricate molecular “coding,” simply assembled itself out of random chemicals. Even people who aren’t religious can see how unlikely that sounds.

At the heart of this resistance is a very human problem. Acknowledging a Creator means admitting that we are not self-made and not the ultimate point of reference. That can be hard to accept. But when pride takes over, it blinds us to what may be right in front of us, like someone ignoring a compass while complaining that the map makes no sense.

The irony is that science itself hints at something beyond pure chance. The world behaves with astonishing consistency, almost like a perfectly conducted piece of music. And like a symphony, the harmony we observe seems to point to an intelligent guide behind it. Einstein once marvelled that the universe is understandable at all—that our minds are able to grasp its laws. Why should that be true if everything is the product of blind accident?

Science does not become stronger when it shuts the door on God. In fact, it risks becoming smaller and less honest, because it leaves out the very explanation that could make sense of the bigger questions. It is like trying to assemble a puzzle while refusing to use the centre piece.

The universe is not silent. It points beyond itself. Scripture says that the heavens declare God’s glory, and creation speaks of His handiwork. When science is practiced with humility, it can help us appreciate that beauty even more deeply. But when it refuses to consider the One who made it, it loses sight of the full picture.

Job’s ancient words remind us that creation itself teaches us about the One who formed it: the animals, the birds, the earth, the sea—everything around us bears witness that life is in God’s hands. Every breath we take is from Him. Real wisdom begins when we are willing to listen.

But ask the animals, and they will instruct you;

ask the birds of the air, and they will tell you.

Or speak to the earth, and it will teach you;

let the fish of the sea inform you.

Which of all these does not know

that the hand of the LORD has done this?

The life of every living thing is in His hand,

as well as the breath of all mankind.

Does not the ear test words

as the tongue tastes its food?

Wisdom is found with the elderly,

and understanding comes with long life.

Job 12:7-10 (BSB).

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Jim McCrory

The Existential Cadence of Runrig Songs

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Monday 1 December 2025 at 09:29

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The Existential Cadence of Runrig Songs

While most of Troon stayed tucked inside their warm homes as the temperature slipped toward two degrees last night, the Town Hall was slowly filling. Coats were shrugged off, wool scarves hung on the backs of chairs. On stage, the soundcheck trembled through the floorboards as Beat the Drum tuned up for The Runrig Experience.

I’ve been circling the same question since I was twenty, listening to Runrig’s music and lyrics: what draws people from so far to hear this music? Why do Germans, Danes, Americans, Highlanders, Lowlanders, urban Scots and homesick expats all arrange winter drives, ferries, flights—just to gather under these songs?

Tonight, in Troon, with my breath still thawing in the hall’s warm air, the question returned with its familiar ache.

Perhaps it begins with awe; the sweep of geese over the glens, the unspoiled landscapes, the tactile pull of refrains like “S na horo eile, horo bho” in Skye. It may be the call to the wild, to a time when life felt simpler, or at least more spacious. For me as a Christian, there is something more: the glimpse of another believer writing of hope, of dawn breaking again, of faith’s quiet mystery in Every River. Some hear only the theme of homecoming, and that is there, unmistakably. But I also sense a deeper return—something spiritual, a home approached with the heart rather than the body.

In Life Is Hard, the lyrics brush against the idea of deliverance, of being washed clean. Yet as with any good poem, once a song enters open territory it becomes shared property. Each listener carries away their own meaning, even when those meanings diverge, or falter, or contradict the writer’s intent. That is part of the intimacy of it.

In an age when so much popular music leans on familiar tropes—desire, breakups, the small mechanics of daily life—Runrig’s songs feel like crafted stories in miniature. They hold the existential pull of being caught between worlds, like in The Cutter, where a cultural border becomes an emotional one. Even the Gaelic itself, opaque to many of us, doesn’t exclude; it deepens the experience. We don’t always understand the words, but we feel the cadence, the gravity.

So why are we drawn to these songs of longing? Perhaps because they reach into questions of identity, because they name our hunger for a better life, or for a place that seems half-remembered even when we have never stood there. The Germans call it Fernweh: a longing for a place we have not yet known.

And so, I sit there, returning to the same existential questions that haunted me at twenty: Where is home now that life has moved on? Who am I when the old certainties have shifted? Is there still room for my language, my memories, my faith, my people? Am I the only one who feels both lost and hopeful, suspended somewhere in-between? Some answers come; others recede. But that’s the way it is meant to be.

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The Question No One Want's To Answer

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Monday 1 December 2025 at 07:16

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The Question No One Want's To Answer

I have a whole constellation of words flickering through my mind—dancing like the Northern Lights: dystopia-anxiety, eco-anxiety, Weltschmerz, mal du siècle, prolepse hystérique. And perhaps they can all be gathered under one new word: Anthropoklysis—the fear of humanity steering itself toward collapse.

I once lived in what was openly a Christian nation—the United Kingdom. Now it feels as though the day is coming when simply being a Christian will be treated as a crime. Brick by brick, the cultural foundations are shifting, and each shift seems to lean away from anything that affirms Christianity. The devil, as always, is in the details.

Let me frame a paradox.

There’s a moment in the Gospel—Matthew 19:15-18—where a young man approaches Jesus:

Young Man: “Teacher, what good deed can I do to assure myself eternal life?”

Jesus: “Strange that you ask Me about what is good. There is only One who is good. If you want to share in His life, obey the Commandments.”

Young Man: “Which commandments in particular?”

Jesus: “To begin with—do not murder, do not commit adultery, do not steal, do not bear false witness. Honour your father and mother. And love your neighbour as yourself.”

Now pause and look at your own life. Has anyone in your family ever been the victim of violence—murder, assault, rape, grooming? Have you ever felt the quiet violation of knowing other men imagine your wife or daughter in ways they never should, or other women looking at your husband in a similar way? Has your phone been stolen, your wallet taken, your home broken into? victimised by slander? As a parent, have your adult children lost their respect for you—maybe they never call, or perhaps you haven’t heard from them for years?

Go back and read Jesus’ conversation with that young man who simply wanted to be better.

Then ask the paradoxical question:

Why would governments, lawmakers, and the public ever want to oppose the very people who cherish these commands—people who long to live by laws that forbid murder, theft, adultery, lies, and dishonour?

Go ponder.

 

 

Scripture courtesy of The Voice Bible

The Voice Bible Copyright © 2012 Thomas Nelson, Inc. The Voice™ translation © 2012 Ecclesia Bible Society All rights reserved.

 Image by Copilot

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Compassion For the Overlooked and Broken

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Saturday 29 November 2025 at 18:30

 

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Compassion For the Overlooked

 

There’s a verse in the Psalms that carries considerable weight for me. It’s in Psalm 68.

It speaks of God being,

“A father of the fatherless,

and a defender of the widows,

is God in His holy habitation.

God settles the lonely in families.”

 

Many people know what it feels like to live on the edges of society. I experienced this when I walked away from a high control religion. However, reasons for exclusion vary—disability, being a stranger in a new place, having a mind that works differently, simply being misunderstood or failure to analyse our flaws. These experiences can create isolation, confusion, and a sense of being unseen. Scripture acknowledges this reality and goes even further, promising that God gathers the alien and the lonely into a true family, giving fathers, mothers, sisters, and brothers to those who once stood alone.

One of the clearest biblical portraits of compassion toward the marginalized appears in the story of Mephibosheth. As a small child, he suffered a devastating injury when his caregiver fled in panic after hearing of Saul and Jonathan’s death. The fall left him permanently disabled and he grew up far from the centre of power, carrying both physical limitations and the fear that the new king might view him as a threat (2 Samuel 4:4).

Years later, in 2 Samuel 9, King David asks whether anyone remains from Saul’s household to whom he might show compassionate loyalty. Ziba, Saul’s former servant, answers with a brief and almost dismissive phrase: Jonathan’s son is still alive— “but he is lame.” No name, no honour, just a fact that marked Mephibosheth as someone of little importance.

When Mephibosheth is brought before David, he bows low and calls himself a “dead dog,” revealing how deeply his sense of worth had been eroded. But David’s response overturns everything he fears. The king speaks gently, assures him of safety, restores his family’s land, and seats him permanently at the royal table—treated as one of David’s own sons. In a moment, the forgotten outsider becomes a cherished guest.

David’s mercy offers more than a story of personal kindness. It foreshadows the heart of Jesus Himself. Just as Mephibosheth was carried into David’s presence unable to make himself worthy, we are carried by grace into the presence of Christ. David gives a place at his table; Jesus goes further and gives us a place in His family. David restores land; Jesus restores identity, dignity, and hope. David’s compassion becomes a faint echo of the greater King who welcomes all who come to Him with their wounds, fears, and losses.

Jesus’ invitation still stands: “Come to me.” He does not wait for strength or perfection—He receives those who feel broken, overlooked, or unworthy. Have you ever placed your own pain in His hands? He is ready for it.

Because we belong to this compassionate King, we are called to reflect His heart. Marginalization can take many shapes—ignoring someone’s presence, mocking what makes them different, or treating them as a problem rather than a person. But followers of Jesus are invited to move in the opposite direction: to notice, to honour, to restore, and to create spaces of belonging. The table of God is wide enough for all, and He invites us to carry that welcome into the world.

May we learn to see others the way David saw Mephibosheth—and even more, the way Jesus sees us all.

Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, and today, and to the ages Hebrews 13: 8 (BSB).

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Sounds from Heaven: A Book Review

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Saturday 29 November 2025 at 07:35

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Sounds from Heaven: A Book Review

Sounds from Heaven reads like a doorway into a moment when an entire community found itself swept into prayer, surrender, and unexpected awakening. Colin and Mary Peckham don’t treat the Lewis revival as a distant historical curiosity; they let the reader hear the heartbeat beneath it. The book draws together the voices of those who lived through those years, and through their stories the island feels alive with a kind of spiritual electricity; ordinary people suddenly caught up in something far larger than themselves. I am reading it for the second time.

Chapter twelve lingers most strongly for me; how central prayer was to everything that unfolded. Again, and again the testimonies return to kitchens, barns, and small gatherings where a handful of believers prayed with a depth that carried both desperation and confidence. There was the memorable young man who would swear at the sheep and sheep dog and then felt an overwhelming sense of guilt and the need to repent.

Their prayers were not polished or formal; they were cries of people who felt the weight of their communities and believed God still listened. It's a feeling that is sweeping across Europe amidst Christians wondering where society is heading. 

The authors of Sounds from Heaven show how this persistent intercession became the quiet engine behind the movement. Meetings didn’t begin with strategy or spectacle; they rose out of worn knees and burdened hearts. In many ways, the revival began long before the first sermon, born in the hidden places where people grappled with God for their neighbours.

Through these accounts, the island itself becomes almost a character. People speak of walking across the moor or through a village and feeling an inescapable awareness of God, an atmosphere thick with conviction, hope, and a strange sense of expectancy. The revival seemed to seep into daily life: crofters praying while mending tools, young people weeping on roadsides, families awakened in the night with an irresistible urge to seek God. The effect was communal rather than individualistic. The transformation wasn’t simply a list of conversions; it was a shared reawakening, reshaping how neighbours spoke to one another, how churches worked together, and how people understood their own lives.

The authors don’t pretend the story was simple. They acknowledge resistance, misunderstandings, and the unevenness that always accompanies powerful movements. But they let the testimonies speak with a sincerity that gives the book its weight. There is something strikingly honest about hearing elderly islanders describe, decades later, the moment they felt the presence of God break into their ordinary routines. These voices give the book its warmth and its authority; they make it clear that this was not a manufactured phenomenon but an encounter that left permanent marks on real lives.

What makes the book memorable for me  is not only the events themselves but the longing they stir. It leaves me with a sense that revival is not a relic but a possibility, something that grows wherever prayer is taken seriously and humility replaces self-reliance. The story of Lewis is not framed as a formula to copy but as a reminder that God moves in places that feel forgotten and among people who simply refuse to stop seeking Him.

Image by Copilot

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