Going Deeper - Monday 24th February

Serving

It happened at the end of one of the ten day trips that Kay and I lead to the Holy Land. We’d all had a wonderful time. We don’t take a ‘Moses had a cappuccino on this spot, people, so be very, very amazed’, but nevertheless there is something special about being in the place where the big story of God unfolded. When you stop by Jesus’ adopted home town, Capernaum, or pause to pray in the twisted, gnarled trees of Gethsemane, you know that you will never read the Bible in the same way again. We ended our tour exhilarated and inspired. Visiting with Palestinian Christians in Bethlehem had caused our hearts to ache and pray for peace and justice for all.

And now, we were back in the sobering arrivals area of Heathrow. Somehow Kay and I passed through immigration ahead of the group, and so we decided to go ahead and start unloading our group’s bags onto trolleys in baggage claim. It was then that a stern faced lady approached me, urgency in her voice. She was not from our group.

‘You! That’s my bag, coming around now. Get it for me’.

I realised that she had mistaken me for a porter. Despite her terseness - there was no kindness in her command - I decided to comply.

‘Put it on there’, she barked, and then, ‘Here comes another one. The red one. Get that’.

I obliged, but then found myself on the receiving end of a stinging rebuke as I loaded the heavy cases on her trolly.

‘Not like that!’, she hissed. ‘Put the bags on their sides’. And so I did, and without a further word, she grabbed the trolly and scurried off to the customs area, likely on a mission to give the border officials there an opportunity for grief. I’d loved to tell you that I bowed my head and gave thanks for the wondrous blessing of being able to be of assistance. Instead, I felt indignant. How dare she treat me like that. And it wasn’t that I’d been mistaken for a porter - if I had chosen that career pathway, she still had no right to treat me like that.

Resisting the temptation to pray for an infusion of boils to inflict every part of her body, (it seemed like a slightly extreme response) I broke into a smile. During our tour, that included a trip to the alleged sites of the Upper Room in Jerusalem (there are two places that make the claim), I had spent some time teaching about how Jesus stunned his disciples when He wrapped a towel around his waist and washed their filthy, sweaty feet.

‘You know if you’re truly a servant by the way you act when people treat you like one’ I declared. But theory is so much easier than practice.

Perhaps your loins are currently girded with a towel, to borrow the King James language that describes what Jesus did. You’ve come up with a brilliant idea at work, and someone else has taken or been given the credit. Or you’re a consummate juggler as you live a flurry of activity with your young family, and apart from a card on Mother’s or Father’s Day, you don’t feel overwhelmingly appreciated. In times when churches could gather - we will see them again - you show up early, week after week, to put out chairs, be the welcoming committee at the door, or wash up after the obligatory post-service cuppa. You brave the cold on Saturday nights to wander around town in the yellow tabard uniform of a Street Pastor, and last week you got blasted with a torrent of expletives from a drunken chap you were trying to help.

If you’re one of that vast army of largely unnoticed servant types, thank you. May you know the smile of the God who certainly does notice.

And if by some faint chance you happen to be that lady who snapped at me in the baggage claim area of Heathrow terminal three, then have a nice day.

You forgot to give me a tip. Fifty pounds should do it, or else look out for a plague of boils.

Ooops. My towel just slipped.

 

 

 

 

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