Friday 30 October 2015

Gerald Coates - Pioneer: The Story of a Book







‘Should I? I mean, really, should I?’


It’s early in 2011 and I’m considering a radical step. Leaving
my job as Pensions Director for the Mars Group- and starting a Masters in Theology
at Mattersey Bible College.


Roh, my wife, looks on as I pontificate. She knows she doesn’t
need to say anything. I’ve made my mind up. I’m just trying to rationalise it!


It was a bold step, but out of it came much more than a Masters.
My final dissertation was on the house church movement. It was 57 years since
Arthur Wallis wrote his ground-breaking In
the Day of Thy Power.
My dissertation title seemed quite clever at the
time: 57 Years of Restorationism in the
UK: Ongoing Legacy or 57 Varieties?


The dissertation gave me access to a number of the house
church pioneers- Peter Lyne, Terry Virgo, David Matthew…. And Gerald Coates.


I was grateful for the day spent with Gerald. I left him a
copy of my last biography, Cheating
Death, Living Life – Linda’s Story,
a story of God’s miracles in what could
have so easily been a tragic life. And I said that if ever he wanted a biography
done, to let me know.


I heard nothing.


We corresponded on something else via Facebook. I suggested
the book again. Nope.


Then Anona, Gerald’s wife, steps in. The book should be
written.


And so it was.


Starting with reams of wallpaper to plan out the timeline,
two further days spent with Gerald and Anona, a lot of recording, a glass or
two of wine, a contract with Malcolm Down Publishing, rewrites, rewrites and
rewrites… and finally a book.


Gerald’s is an important story. It tells of God’s goodness
and the work of the Holy Spirit in our generation. I’m grateful to have had the
privilege of writing it.




 




Tuesday 6 October 2015

He also made the stars.....


If the Bible has a throwaway line, it has to be this:



'He also made the stars.'



It's in Genesis chapter one, amidst verses that describe God's creation. There's a lot about light and sun and sea and land and trees and birds... and in the middle, in verse sixteen.... he also made the stars.



What does this actually mean? When I travel to New York from London, it takes me seven hours at 500 miles per hour. If I travelled at the same speed to the moon, it would take me three weeks. At the same speed to the sun? Twenty-one years. The edge of the Solar System? 900 years. The furthest reaches of space.... That would take me, travelling at 500 miles per hour, around twenty quadrillion years. (That's a 20 with 15 noughts after it!)



How amazing that a God that does 'big', also does 'small' and cares for me!



Here's a video that gives you some idea of the immensity of space- and how small we are in comparison.







He also made the stars.



(There's more on this in my book God-Life: chapter 4)



 

Friday 25 September 2015

Résumé Virtues or Eulogy Virtues?


David Brooks wrote a beautiful article in the New York Times. His proposition is a simple one. Do we want to build our virtues as reflected in a career résumé, or do we want to build virtues in our life that might be remembered after we are gone - what Brooks calls a Eulogy Virtue.



Here's a quote from the article:



"Many of us are clearer on how to build an external career than on how to build inner character."



And again:



"You (can) live with an unconscious boredom, separated from the deepest meaning of life and the highest moral joys. Gradually, a humiliating gap opens between your actual self and your desired self, between you and those incandescent souls you sometimes meet."



I appreciate my résumé. My success in the world of work has taken me a long way. But if I want to go further - beyond this life - I need to add the kind of virtues that may be talked of at a funeral.



I don't expect for a moment that anything I do to build my inner life will be of the least use when one day I stand before God's throne. The only passport to eternal life is one stamped with the words 'Paid in full by Jesus Christ'. Nevertheless, to live well in this life requires me to build a set of Eulogy Virtues. Anything less will be less than satisfying. Anything less will be less than worthwhile.

Saturday 12 September 2015

How to Destroy a Political Party


1.      
Allow the Unions to vote in the inexperienced
younger brother Ed Milliband instead of the electable brother David




2.      
Allow Ed Milliband to change the rules of
membership to allow extreme views to be represented in future leadership
elections




3.      
Allow Ed Milliband to lead a lacklustre campaign
showing why he is not a leader and giving the Tories a full majority




4.      
Allow a shambles of a leadership election with non-Labour
members voting and resulting in an unelectable leader




5.      
Allow the once great policies of an electable
Labour Party to be destroyed by unelectable rhetoric




Such a shame.




Thursday 6 August 2015

Property of J S Hepple


It was printed sometime after what it calls ‘The Great War’.
Maybe the 1920s. Not much of the stamp album is left now. Over the years, since
my Dad got it me second hand as a kid, I’ve moved most of the stamps out. Once
the pages were full. Many stamps glued in. Some with massive stamp hinges.




Here’s a page though. Look at the names of the countries.
Lost and gone now: Danish West Indies, Danzig, Slesvig.  Danzig was a semi-autonomous state from 1920 onwards,
so that helps date the album. Some of the stamps are later. One on this page is
dated 1944.




At the back it says ‘Property
of J S Hepple’. I wonder who he was? When he lived? Pretty obviously collecting
through the Second World War. I guess he’s maybe no longer alive? And possibly
this is all that’s left of his life?




Just for a while I share that life. And so do you as you
read this. J S Hepple never knew us. I trust he lived well.




What will we leave for future generations? More than a stamp
album?




We build on others foundations. And lay the foundations for
others. Build well.





Friday 3 July 2015

Sometimes the Mountains are Real






I started this blog nearly 10 years ago. Having reached the
age of 50 then (60 now!), and having seen my first child married, I wanted to
put into words the ‘meaning of life’ as I saw it, woven from stories, pictures,
faith and news items. And that’s what I’ve done.


Once in a while, a mountain climbing clothes store or a
mountain climbing club comes along and asks if they can advertise on my site. I’m
flattered that anyone would want to advertise on my blog, but clearly all they
have done is read the headlines!


But now and again, the philosophical meets the literal. I’m
just back from a delightful week in Wales with friends. Fitter than me, they
liked the idea of climbing mountains, so there I was one day, at the top of
Cadair Idris, Wales’ second highest mountain.


Literal or metaphorical, physical or philosophical, may I
continue to encourage my readers to reach the heights!


Monday 1 June 2015

What Do You Want From Life?


This is a letter sent to the Daily Telegraph, recorded in The Week Magazine:



Dear Sirs



I was assisting my 16-year-old daughter with her homework when she received a text from Mum, which read "What do you want from life?"



This was an unexpected and profound question for an exam-sitting teenager. We debated various answers - wealth, fulfilment, love, all three.



Five minutes later, she received a second message, blaming predictive text for correcting the word "Lidl".

Friday 8 May 2015

REPOST: How to Fail as a Political Party: 26/09/10


This is my post at the time Ed beat David. It gives me no great pleasure to note I was right. Sad day for Labour.



1. Ignore what the public want: look to keep the peace in your own party at the cost of becoming unelectable
2. Make sure the election process is long enough for the unions to form around a candidate that is weak enough not to take them on
3. Make sure the Unions have a vote that outweighs their true influence in the country
4. Elect someone that is young and untried
5. Ignore the older brother who has a welcome reformist approach and is obviously the more able communicator
6. Go back to the old party ways, following the policies of the last failed Prime Minister rather than the new approach from the earlier successful and long lasting Prime Minister
7. Look forward to a number of years of debating failed left wing election proposals
8. Look forward to a long time as an opposition party.

Tuesday 5 May 2015

VOTE!


When you drive to the polling station on Thursday, your way
will not be blocked. Your children will not be kidnapped whilst you are out.
There will be no indiscriminate gunfire as you queue. No one will take you into
the booth and force you to put a cross by a certain name.




We live in a free democracy. But we need to keep it that way.
Don’t assume for a moment that your vote doesn’t matter. No vote is wasted. It’s
a statement that we’re free. Free to vote. Free to choose.




Far beyond our own political views, beyond the choice of
a candidate or the success of a candidate, is the fact that we are free to vote
in the first place. A privilege many in the world today do not have.




Don’t squander the chance. Don’t throw away your right to
vote. Don’t stay home. Go to the polling station. Put your cross on the ballot
paper.




Vote on Thursday.




Monday 6 April 2015

REPOST: Starting to Climb


As I approach my 60th birthday this week, I was thinking back to the reason I started writing a blog, in my early 50's. Here's the very first entry on this blog all that time ago.



The daughter I make note of is happily married with our first two granddaughters.



Well, time flies, as they say.....



“Yesterday is gone. Tomorrow has not yet come. We have only today. Let us begin.”
― Mother Teresa




Well this is it. I've got there. Started a blog that is. It's taken a while but I got there in the end.

It's not really about mountain climbing. It's more to do with continuing to climb in life after the age of 50. I'm 51. I feel like i'm 31! How did I get this old?! But there is so much more to do. Many more mountains to climb in this life.

I'm not sure whether anyone will ever read this stuff. Not sure at this moment it will be worth reading! But i'll give it a go. I've kept a daily diary for over 30 years so it shouldn't be too hard to keep this up.

The first of my children got married this weekend. That's a bit of a watershed in itself. Managed that mountain ok. The speech went well enough, the weather was good, and she looked beautiful. Onwards and upwards....

Sunday 15 March 2015

Living in a 'Both/And' Country


There was a bit of a scary documentary on TV the other
night. Robert Peston was looking at what might happen to France after their
next election. There is a real possibility of the far right getting in. 




This is reflected in many other nations, including the UK
with the rise of UKIP. Not as far right as the Front National in France, but a
definite leaning in that direction.




It’s clear that there is a concern amongst ‘locals’ with
regard to ‘newcomers’. But if we go back into history, pretty much all of
Europe can be classed as ‘newcomers’. Most of us have relations who have
travelled beyond old borders and taken up residence in another country.




Marine Le Pen, the leader of the French Front National, sets
out the issue as countries needing to decide if they are ‘globalists’ or ‘nationals’.
It sounds almost convincing. Until you consider the fact that she is demanding
a choice. Either you support your country, or you are a ‘globalist’ and want to
do away with borders.




But it’s not either/or. It can be both/and. I’m rightly
proud of the country I’m born in. And if people move to my country, I want them
to be proud of it too.




But I also love the variety and colour of the nations. I
love it that the city I live in is 50% ‘other than British white’. I love the
different viewpoints on life. I love the different foods. The different
costumes. It adds to my nation. New colour and variety on top of the colour and
variety already brought to my nation by previous generations.




So, yes, I’m nationalist in the sense of being proud of my
country. But I can be a globalist too.




The choice we are being faced with by extremist right wing
parties is a false choice. I want to live in a both/and country.





Friday 6 February 2015

Two Tough Questions


My thanks to our good friend Ros Turner for this one....



Two tough questions...


 

Question 1:



If you knew a woman was pregnant,
Who had 8 kids already,
Three who were deaf,
Two who were blind,
One mentally retarded,
And she had syphilis,
Would you recommend that she undergoes an abortion?



Read the next question before looking at the response for this one.


Question 2:


It is time to elect a new world leader, and only your vote counts.
Here are the facts about the three candidates.



Candidate A: 


Associates with crooked politicians, and consults with astrologists.
He's had two mistresses.
He also chain smokes
And drinks 8 to 10 Martinis a day.



Candidate B:  


 He was kicked out of office twice,
Sleeps until noon,
Used opium in college
And drinks a quart of whiskey every evening.



Candidate C: 


He is a decorated war hero,
He's a vegetarian,
Doesn't smoke,
Drinks an occasional beer
And never committed adultery.



Which of these candidates would be your choice?


Decide first ... No peeking, and then scroll down for the response.












Candidate A is Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Candidate B is Winston Churchill.
Candidate C is Adolph Hitler.



And, by the way, on your answer to the abortion question:


If you said YES, you just killed Beethoven.


Pretty interesting isn't it?
Makes a person think before judging someone.



Remember:


Amateurs ... Built the ark.
Professionals ... Built the Titanic


Saturday 31 January 2015

Splendid Grief


Splendid grief. Two words that don’t go together? I heard
them used by Sir Nicholas Soames MP in relation to his grandfather Sir Winston
Churchill, and specifically to the full State Funeral given him in 1965. Fifty
years on, there’s been a lot of reflection this week as to what Churchill
achieved.




It was unusual for a ‘commoner’ to be given such recognition
with a State Funeral, and the occasion was both solemn and a celebration of a
man who led a nation to victory against the Nazi’s. Grief. But splendid too. It
would have be a very different world without him.




As I reflect on the loss of two dear friends from cancer,
one at quite a young age, the words come back to me. As we celebrated their
lives, there was genuineness about the celebration. But grief too. Lives taken
too soon.




It would have been a very different world without them. Splendid
grief.





Friday 23 January 2015

Towards the Sunrise


Often we
embark on a journey with no end in sight. We're not sure how long it will be,
or even if we will end up where we want to be. Or at least where we thought
we'd be. Such is the journey of life. Twists and turns. Unexpected moments. Some
pleasant. Some not so.




But
there are always blessings along the way.




The Children
of Israel trekked through the wilderness with Moses for 40 years. Quite a journey.
But they got there. And near the end of the journey there were unexpected blessings.
One of them  is simply recorded- they
camped just outside the Promised Land with their faces 'towards the sunrise'. They
were travelling north, but as they looked east, they saw the sun rise.




It was
a new day for them. They were at the start of something. A few verses later
in the bible, we read that they found a well of water and sang a song of declaration
over it- 'spring up o well!'




Wherever
you are on your journey, take time to state your purposes. Declare them. Write them
down.




And take
time to look around. You've got this far! Enjoy the scenery. Look towards the sunrise.




(You can read the story in the bible- Numbers 21, v 10 onwards)




Tuesday 13 January 2015

Between The Bookends






‘I’m here between the bookends of everything that was and what will be’
It’s a quote from an Amy Grant song.


Every one of us is on a journey. We have no idea of where we
are in the journey between those two bookends. In a sense, there is little or nothing
we can do about that.


But what we can do is ensure that where we are right now is
as effective and life affirming as it’s possible to be. To give our all. To live
to the full.


The Apostle Paul said ‘God’s Spirit beckons. There are things to
do and places to go!’
That’s true for every one of us. There’s a life
worth living, a life worth giving.


If I’m between the bookends with no idea at what particular point,
I want to make my life count. So for me, with apologies to Amy Grant for
changing the lyrics, it’s not ‘what will be’ but what, with God’s help, CAN be.


 


All men dream, but not
equally. Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds, wake in
the day to find that it was vanity: but the dreamers of the day are dangerous
men, for they may act on their dreams with open eyes, to make them possible.


T. E. Lawrence