©iStockphoto.com/Jaap Hart
At last I am home from travel for
a couple of months. I had a marvelous time, first at the
Surrey International Writers’ Conference in British
Columbia, Canada, in late October. It is one of the many
best writers’ conferences because it concentrates
seriously on teaching rather than everyone trying to teach
others — and often you learn most yourself.
It is attended by writers of all sorts,
published and unpublished: romance, historical, mystery,
science fiction, fantasy, western, fact, biography, film
script, pretty well any category you like. There are also
editors and agents present, several hundred people altogether.
We always meet old friends, and make new ones.
From Surrey (near Vancouver) I went
to Utah to spend time with a great friend of many years,
and we both get a lot of writing done, as well as exploring
and generally enjoying. Actually in the three and a half
weeks I was away, I wrote a whole novella for Christmas
next year — first draft. Sometimes while traveling
there are so many more thoughts pouring into the mind
that work can go more easily than one would expect, even
if it takes a little smoothing out later.
From Utah I flew to Los Angelos for
the twentieth anniversary of Sisters in Crime, a professional
organization for women writers of mystery. It was a terrific
few days in which we all learned a great deal more about
how to present our work with the best chance of getting
it into film, or television.
It was all organized superbly and
was extremely interesting. I have never met a nicer group
of people. Because of the specialized interest, and the
very tight schedule, there was room for only one hundred
of us. For me it was one of those rare, perfect times
when everything conspired together to make it excellent.
The accommodation was good; the weather was in the high
80s, sunny and not in the least oppressive. Everything
ran without a hitch, it was all interesting and appropriate,
and above all, the company was superb. Even the food was
delicious.
I believe I learned a great deal,
and the future will tell what may come of it, but I feel
abundantly richer already in both experience and friendship.
On the way east again I stopped in
Kansas because I owed a debt of gratitude and friendship.
Then of course I arrived home in Scotland to find nearly
a month’s letters, emails, bills, etc., waiting
for me, and owing letters of thanks to so many people.
While I was away there were some fearful
storms, especially winds of over a hundred miles an hour,
and up to four inches of rain in one day. It did quite
a lot of damage to trees, and caused the worst floods
in living memory in some of the villages. Since I have
been back it has been very nice, last week sunny nearly
all the time, although of course the days are very short.
I love the long, low light across
the fields, the eerie golden glow of the light over the
dark colours in the land. Many days last week were almost
cloudless, and as far as I know, no frost yet here as
close to the sea as we are. That can’t last, but
there are still a few roses out in the garden, and one
or two other late flowers. It will have to get a lot colder
if we are going to have snow for Christmas — but
that could happen!
We have had a change in the Branch
Presidency, with the excitement, resolutions and new hope
that that always brings. We badly need to bring our numbers
up because in an area like this we lose a lot as young
ones grow up and leave the north looking for work, further
education, or on missions. We have lost three to missions
lately who afterwards settled in other places, even other
countries. I can hardly criticize; I wanted to travel
and see the world, why shouldn’t they too, even
though we miss them and their strength and support.
One of our other problems is that
much of the work around here is at sea, to do with oil
rigs and their maintenance, so the men can be at sea half
the time, often one month away, one month ashore.
All the same, a change gives us all
new opportunities and new chances to assess our needs
and our talents. Today was our last meeting at the old
village hall. Next Sunday we meet in a new temporary place,
and we hope and trust that in a year we will have our
own building, for the first time in this area. It will
be a great day for us, and has every possibility of heralding
a burst of growth, because it will be a building dedicated
to the Lord. It will enable us to have a greater reverence,
and hold meetings not only on Sundays, but also through
the week, and on special events, in a more suitable way,
and without risk of cancellation because of untoward circumstances.
The town will feel our presence as a proper, recognizable
church, which can only be good.
November 30th was St. Andrew’s
Day, the patron saint of Scotland, so we held a party
on the 1st December, using the hall of my house, which
is about twenty-five by forty feet, and has a marble floor,
which is quite good for dancing. I didn’t have to
do anything; food, music etc. were all brought, and cleaned
up again afterwards. I just benefited from some delicious
stew the next day!
In Sunday School we are nearly at
the end of the Old Testament, which I love, but I shall
not regret leaving it, because next year it is the New
Testament, which I love even more. Because of the changeover
in callings, I even have the privilege of teaching Sunday
School for three weeks, mostly the Book of Ezekiel, and
next week Daniel and Esther.
I was struck last Sunday by the tremendous
amount of material and the depth and importance of it
in the lesson on Shepherds in Israel. It is a subject
we are all familiar with because it runs throughout the
scriptures, but the story of the dry bones that the Lord
can clothe again with flesh is powerful, showing how illusory
our perceptions can be, compared with the ability of God
to create and to restore.
But one of the sections that moved
me most, because I think we can interpret it otherwise,
is the reminder that judgment comes not as a matter of
weighing up our lives — the more good or the more
bad — but it is who we are at the end that counts.
We may have been struggling all through, and then suddenly
seen wisdom and honour and turned from that which was
ugly and learned to love, to forgive, to walk in the light
of humility and trust, to fight for everything brave and
lovely, to be grateful for time and the chance to try
harder.
Or we may have been good all the way
through, and at the last little space have given up, have
yielded to hate, blame, self-pity and despair. It takes
intense courage to endure to the end. It can be a long
road, and a hard one. It can give loneliness, many wounds,
disillusionment and pain. But it is still who you are
at the end, brave or cowardly, generous or mean of spirit,
forgiving or resentful, honest or tainted that counts.
It is that spirit with which we face our Father that matters,
so He can give us all that we have made ourselves able
to hold, every blessing we have fitted ourselves to receive
and to treasure and use and give thanks for.
Of course illness and injury, have
to be taken into account, and the erosion of our abilities
that sometimes age can bring. We are judged according
to the light we have, anything else would be hideously
unfair. And it is not only the light we have, which matters,
but also the light we are willing to share with others.
We may judge others, and ourselves,
too harshly, or too leniently. God will be fair. Sometimes
we forget He is the perfect Father, longing to give us
everything. It is we who will not hold out our hands to
accept, we who sometimes snatch before we are ready, and
cannot retain because we do not understand the beauty
and the value of the gift. How much do we throw away without
seeing its worth, or remembering whom to thank?
It is not mine to judge others, thank
heaven, because I know far too little. But it could be
mine to heal! Or if not heal, then at least to ease pain
or fear, unravel confusion, offer hope, learn enough that
I can shed some light on other people’s shadows,
and on my own.
The lesson today was on the pure water
that the temple of Ezekiel poured into the desert, and
into the Dead Sea, to heal its waters and make them bring
forth nourishment for life, for trees whose fruit would
be meat for man, and whose leaves would be medicine.
We spoke of the great truths that
form this water: the Plan of Salvation, the knowledge
of who we are, children of God who loves us as only a
parent loves, protectively, with power and blessing, understanding
and wisdom. If we know these things deeply enough, and
live as if we do, then we can carry this water to the
people of the world, bearing it in our hands, to give
life where there is sterility, fruit where there is hunger,
and cleanliness where there is pollution. It is a great
and beautiful opportunity, and how could we not wish,
above all things, to carry it with us?
To be bearers of the water of life
is surely a holy calling. And now in the month when we
celebrate the birth of Christ, the coming of hope into
the world strong enough, bright enough, with the courage
to go forth and conquer the darkness, surely after the
rejoicing, with the new year ahead, we can resolve to
drink more deeply of the water ourselves, and then carry
it to others.
May the joy and the hope of the season
be yours, water to nourish and to heal, faith to guide
the way towards the light.
Have a meaningful Christmas.