Archive for the ‘Grace’ Tag
The Rubbish Lord’s Prayer
I love prayer, don’t you? I could watch people doing it all day long. Well, that’s perhaps an exaggeration; I like to think I like to pray. It goes something like this: -
Our Father, who art in Heaven
Hallowed be thy name
(must remember to concentrate)
Thy Kingdom come
(yep, in the swing of it)
Thy will be done
(what was the next line? I can’t remember, better go back a bit to jog the memory)
Thy Kingdom come
(Doh, gone too far back)
Thy will be done
(Oh good, now I’m in the swing of it)
…but forgive us our….
(Oh, I’ve missed a bit, said it whilst thinking about what I should be saying. Go back again….do not pass go….do not collect….hang on, I’ve lost my thread)
on Earth as it is in Heaven
(good)
Give us this day our daily bread
(I wonder why we’re not supposed to say’ please’? Oh now then, what’s the next line?)
and forgive us our debts
(I live in Scotland remember)
as we forgive our debtors
(I’ve lost my thread now. Must concentrate)
and lead us not into temptation
(But I quite like being led into temptation. Stop it, it’s not good, you’re supposed to shun temptation…..but it is quite tempting isn’t it? I remember that time when…..STOP IT!)
and deliver us from evil
(not long to go now, nearly finished, if I can just remember the last few lines)
for thine is the power
(no, that’s not it)
for thine is the Kingdom
(Geddin!)
The power and the glory forever
(I’m sure I used to say ‘for ever and ever’, that’s two ‘forevers’ ‘cos one’s not enough obviously)
Amen
(Result! I got there, that’s it done for today…..why do I feel however, that it’s not meant to be like that? Start again? No, I’ve got to get up and put on my ‘Rubbish Christian’ t-shirt).
Alternatively, you start with ‘Our Father’……and suddenly, you’re at ‘Amen’ and you can’t remember having done the stuff in between!
Personally, I get a bit anxious when leading the Lord’s Prayer in public because I’m a fast speaker (I am a Geordie after all) and o t h e r p e o p l e g o s o slooooooowwwwwly. I have to slow right down but of course, being a Rubbish Christian saying the Lord’s prayer (and I suspect dyslexic – I must get that checked) I forget the lines (see above) and so I have to ensure I’ve got it written down in front of me. On the occasions I get up to lead prayers and I realise I’ve forgotten it, there’s only one thing for it; say it quietly, lip-read the rest of the congregation and copy them! That’s how the Rubbish Christian leads in corporate prayer!
The Rubbish Grace
In my Royal Navy days I heard of a Christian sailor so pious (and in my view astoundingly naive and self-defeating) that he would pray ponderously for what seemed like an eternity before every meal in the mess onboard his ship. There he’d be, at the table, hands clasped, eyes closed, praying as if his life depended upon it (mind you, with some food those days, it possibly did!)Now, sailors can be funny, they can be rough, rude and amoral, they can be the best mates you ever had but they can also be, very typically, merciless in the face of pretension. They will zero in on it and torment brutally. This situation was no different. As he sat engrossed in his ‘can everyone see me being very holy?’ mantle, surrounding sailors, helpless with almost silent laughter, would lace his dinner with everything from hot pepper to tab ends (‘tabs’ = Geordie word for ‘cigarettes’). Rising from his pious ministrations he’d then rescue what was left of his dinner with a look, which said that he was ‘suffering this for Christ and that the pain now endured was a small price to pay for his reward in glory.’ All he actually achieved was to make Christianity the laughing stock of the mess (Royal Navy word for where sailors live on the ship/submarine). It’s one thing to be thrown into the fiery furnace, quite another to jump in willingly to prove how religious you are.
I think he got a somewhat masochistic kick out of being seen as persecuted. I do wonder however, whether it was entirely his own fault. The military has always been a rich hunting ground for the evangelical right and my early experience of the Naval Christian Fellowship….but that’s another chapter! Stay tuned folks, more rubbish in the not-too-distant-future.
Welcome to How to be Rubbish
Suffering is all relative and we should not compare through ‘hierarchies of suffering’. However, I do think there are exceptions. Welcome to the latest entry to: -
How To Be A Rubbish Christian!
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