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Thoughts for the Journey of Faith

Do we have any idea what it means to travel the way of Jesus? ‘I’m not sure. But I will not stop trying to re-imagine what it means. Never. Something draws me to the path. Gently. Beautifully.’ Brian Draper sets off

     

Vertigo

35,000 feet above the patchwork iceblanket of Hudson Bay, the sun came flooding back from the frozen sea. I was embarking on a ‘journey of faith’, heading to Colorado for a spiritual retreat way up in the snow-blessed mountains. 

I tried to imagine the voyagers who had gone before me, over land and sea, in the centuries previous. I thought of the snow and ice, rain and wind; of the lost lives of women and children; of the pioneers who ran out of food or luck, a long way from home. Of the gold-rush and the Wild West and the making of the New World. 

My headphones buzzed and I felt cross. You can’t enjoy a film with this kind of sound quality. The stewardess brought a gin and tonic. I pulled the blind and settled into stupefied resignation. What do I know about journey?


Cowboys and Indians

Perhaps today we face different challenges. Like starting the day on one continent, and ending it in another. Your humanity can sometimes be mislaid somewhere in between, like baggage. Disorientation. Immediacy. Cultural meltdown. The world’s a theme park, and we are players.

Getting off the plane at Denver, you’re greeted by the evocatively piped sounds of the Native Americans, who were shot like buffalo and chased off the plains that shimmer into view through the smoky glass panes. Huge pictures hang proud of tribal elders as you bounce along the travelator towards Homeland Security. The jet lag, like a drug, almost helps you miss the irony. But somewhere deep inside, a compass twitches towards true north.


Uprooted

Last year, our family moved house. We’d lived in the same place for a few years.It was a modest, ex-council place in Suburbia, Herts. Didn’t look special, but despite my cultural misgivings, it was special to me.

It was where my boy and girl were conceived and born. It was where we partied hard the day they were christened. It was where we heard all sorts of good news and bad. It was where we welcomed strangers and slowly became their friends. I guess it was home.

A few months before we moved, we decided to plant a little privet hedge between us and the neighbours (it’s what you do in Suburbia). They politely objected (touché), suggesting that their son was allergic to this particular species of privet. OK, we said, but as these were just young shoots, could we leave them in the ground until we moved, and then take them with us, rather than kill them? Fine, they said.

As the day drew nearer to go, I found myself walking every inch of our little town. I sat at the swings where I’d always played with my kids; I walked the lakes around which I had ran relentlessly to lose weight; I sidled past the barber’s, the travel agent, the toyshop; up side alleys and through car parks. I shed tears in the skate park among broken glass and empty coke cans, and in the coffee shop where we had stolen romantic moments amid the pallid. Place becomes sacred if you stop watching Location Location Location and start living where you are.

But believe it or not, I had heard a divine call to a new work in a lovely city, 60 miles down the road. Hardly an Old Testament wilderness.

My God. What on earth did Abraham feel like?

Come moving day, each privet plant offered little resistance, save one. It doggedly refused to surrender its grasp on the soil. I pulled with all my might on its stem, fighting back more tears.

B-l-o-o-d-y t-h-i-n-g w-i-l-l n-o-t b-u-d-g-e.

Finally it relinquished and I stumbled back on the pebbledash and sat down. ‘I will plant your roots in better soil’, I heard a voice say.

Excess baggage

I remember one of the local Christians being surprised, when we arrived at our destination, that we could fit all of our worldly goods into just one removal lorry. It’s not always easy to declare the Joneses the winners in the battle to keep up, but this time I surrendered without a fight. How many removal lorries can fit through the eye of a needle, anyway?

Faith in Transit

St Augustine once suggested that ‘faith is to believe what you do not see; the reward of this faith is to see what you believe.’ Several hundred years later, the rock star Bono, of U2, put it another way, in the song ‘Walk On’: ‘I’m packing a suitcase for a place none of us has been – a place that has to be believed to be seen.’

If you had to pack a suitcase for the journey of faith ahead, what couldn’t you do without, for your new life on the road?

Start with the end in mind 

And what about the destination? What must we believe, before we get to see it? A promised land? Where is it that we are going? I’ve always imagined that it’s a place. But if it’s not, then where is the journey taking us? (And is the journey taking us, or are we taking the journey?)

Faith is not a journey into the past or future

We spend so much time indulging in the guilt or shame or sorrow of our past, as well as living in the expectation of ‘making it’ in the future (or receiving salvation or gaining fulfilment), that we forget about living in the here and now. Perhaps we need to reimagine the journey of faith as one that is outside of time. It takes time, for sure. But that’s different from waiting for life to kick in around the next corner, on the next holiday, with the next job, when I meet someone special, and so on and on and on and on. The kingdom of God is at hand, is it not? I love the Christian Aid slogan, ‘We believe in life before death’. I think Jesus did, as well. It’s life, Jim, but not as we know it.

The only way is...

Most of us picture life as a ladder to be climbed. Imagine reaching the top of the ladder, only to find it had been leaning against the wrong wall all along.

Perhaps there are other ways of seeing the journey. I’m not sure whether we should think about climbing or descending, though. Do we wish to go higher or deeper? Jesus seemed to think that the riches were to be found at the bottom of the pile. Among the poor, the mourners, the outcasts, the meek. The first will be last and the last will be first. Deep stuff.

Narrow path

So Jesus once said, the road to life is narrow, and few find it. Weird. I used to think that was because only a few of us chosen souls were walking it. It never occurred to me that I hadn’t found the path myself yet.

But if the journey is along a narrow path, I guess sometimes it’s a hard one to spot; I guess there will be low branches and brambles encroaching; I guess it will sometimes, somehow, squeeze us thin.

And I guess sometimes it will take us to places we don’t wish to go. You can’t just tell the road to change direction, after all. Are you prepared for where it might end up? In an untrendy post-code? Or a warzone?

Wherever it takes us, we have to remember: it is the road to life. So we must have eyes to see and ears to hear what real life looks and sounds like – and tastes and feels and smells like. The aroma of Christ is death to some, and life to others. This is no senseless journey.


Go slow

Speed is of the essence in a culture stuck on fast-forward. Makes me want to go slow. When did you last stop to savour the journey for its own sake? It’s the journey that makes or breaks us, after all; so could it be less about where we end up, and more about the Way we get there? You can trample your way right up to the gates of heaven, after all. But who have you become, in the process? Who have you pushed past, clambered over?

Eckhart Tolle suggests that if you keep straining into the future instead of ‘being’ in the Now, ‘your life’s journey is no longer an adventure, just an obsessive need to arrive, to attain, to “make it”.’ He continues, ‘You no longer see or smell the flowers by the wayside, nor are you aware of the beauty and the miracle of life that unfolds around you when you are present in the now’.

I resolve to savour the episodes I live through AS THEY HAPPEN, as well as the people I meet and travel with, the moments of transition and triumph, the thin places I pass through, the sorrowful times of departure, the mouth-watering hints of arrival. I reject air travel for the soul.

Information or Transformation?

The older I get, the less I know, despite the wealth of information I receive from the paperbacks and DVDs and teaching tapes and God channels and festivals and … When will I learn?

Strange

I was sitting in a coffee shop the other day wondering what life was all about, when a song gate-crashed my consciousness. It was Mike Scott’s scarily beautiful ‘Strange Boat’ said it all.

We're sailing in a strange boat, heading for a strange shore
We're sailing in a strange boat, heading for a strange shore
We're carrying the strangest cargo
that was ever hauled aboard.

We're sailing on a strange sea, blown by a strange wind
We're sailing on a strange sea, blown by a strange wind
We're carrying the strangest crew
that ever sinned.

We're riding in a strange car
We're following a strange star
We're climbing on the strangest ladder
that was ever there to climb.

We're living in a strange time, working for a strange goal
We're living in a strange time, working for a strange goal
We're turning flesh and body
into Soul.


Way to go

Jesus said that He was the Way. Look where it got Him, they cried, as He hung there on the Cross. It got Him all the way to us.

That’s quite some journey of life and faith. Do we have any idea what it means to travel His way? I’m not sure. But I will not stop trying to re-imagine what it means. Never. Something draws me to the path. Gently. Beautifully. As the hymn writer mused, ‘I trace the rainbow through the rain; the promise is not vain…’

One step at a time. That’s enough to be going on with. Wondering, increasingly, how – and decreasingly where – I am headed. For there,but for the grace of God, go I.

Brian Draper is creative director of MCA, a consultancy which seeks to nurture spiritual intelligence among business leaders. He is an associate lecturer at the London Institute for Contemporary Christianity, where he worked for the last seven years as lecturer in contemporary culture. He was also editor of Third Way in a former life. Brian has written Searching 4 Faith, a contemplative exploration of faith within today’s postmodern culture, and he regularly ‘thinks for the day’ on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.