Old Hills Malvern Churches
Vicar’s Pastoral Letter - July/August 2023
Dear Friends,
Three reasons to be happy:
1. The sun is shining but rain is on the horizon that should dispel the mugginess
2. For those of you into your sport - armchair or by spectating, we are still (at time of writing) in with a chance with the Ashes (both Men’s and Women’s) and Wimbledon is just around the corner. If you are not into Sport, Glasto has been a blast on the TV – and Cindy & Lauren have returned to Eastenders!
3. School holidays are soon to begin. Lifepath was a success at The Great Malvern Priory and our Collective Worship Assembles for parents were well received. Leaver’s Bibles all bought and signed - thanks to those of you that donated.
It’s all looking good!
Three reasons to be apprehensive:
1. There are record temperatures being recorded across the world. Then I heard this at a wedding rehearsal - “Can you have a word with the big guy so that it doesn’t rain on the Big Day?” To which my response was inevitably something like, “well, God’s in a tough spot here, because while you’re praying for it to not rain, the farmers and gardeners might be praying that it will rain!”
2. There is still war in The Ukraine and other troubles in Russia are rearing their ugly head.
3. The cost-of-living crisis means that many families will be looking at the summer holidays with trepidation – how to feed the kids this summer time and keep them entertained. Mortgage rates (and rents too) are going up (may be some of us with some modest savings will benefit from increases in savings rates).
However you choose your own three highs and lows, I am sure your neighbour or friends will have a different set or a different way in interpreting them - even if they are the same three things. We all have different ways of interpreting what is happening. And we do that regularly with the Bible too.
But isn’t that often the way?
Things are getting better for some, but others might be facing new struggles. Life carries with it complexities, and we find ourselves wandering through the thick of it.
As we go about our daily lives never know what the people around us are going through. The man in the café staring at his cup of tea while it goes cold. The couple embracing in tears by the bus stop. The child sniffling at the back of the class. The family laughing at the pub. Even just the person we pass in the street.
We can be sure that however our days are going the people around us will be experiencing a range of different emotions: joy, delight, worry, fear, grief, anger. The whole gamut of human experience plays itself out on our villages and in our community every day of the year.
In the midst of the rich tapestry of life and experience it wouldn’t do us harm to be kind. Nothing more radical than that. To be prepared to ask, “are you okay?” To be a sign to others that they are not alone.
Throughout it all, the good and the bad, one thing we can take comfort in, is that God journeys with us through it all. God is never on holiday. That’s not to say that we should just stop moaning and get on with things, but that as we do go about our lives, we can know that we’re not alone.
While that doesn’t mean the hardships will always pass, there is solace to be found in knowing that we don’t walk the road alone.
Enjoy the coming Summer - as we journey through these coming summer months, whatever the weather or opportunities or hardships – be blessed, and as you are blessed, seek to be a blessing to others too.
Rev Gary