Sunday 18 March 2007

Serbia, allow Me to give you the future

When the Lord interrupted my wedding plans and asked me to allow Him to set the agenda, it was a lesson with a wider application. As I have told before, the wedding became more creative, more enjoyable, more memorable more enriching than the event we planned for ourselves. Yet it was not unlike it either! It was more a case of being all we had wished for and more, because the Lord is so much more positive than anything we can be when we stand alone.


So with Serbia and so with us all: keep an open mind, be ready for the creatively unexpected:
"Allow Me to give you the future
I want you to have"
Hear the Lord in this, and you surely will not regret it!

"All roads lead to where we stand"

Corrie ten Boom, the author of "The Hiding place" hid Jews from their Nazi persecutors during the war. She was arrrested and sent to concentration-camp. Commenting on her life experiences she said that the events of your past are a preparation for your future.
The relevance of the past is the wisdom it gives for the future. All your past has brought you to where you are now, but it is over; you owe it nothing. The road ahead is your true business, and the agenda belongs to God.

It's all about You, Jesus
And all this is for You
For Your glory and Your fame
It's not about me
As if You should do things my way
You alone are God and I surrender
To Your ways

(Paul Oakley 1995)

Sunday 11 March 2007

"No, - I will not!" (buy you a Mercedes Benz)


Janis Joplin called her song "Mercedes-Benz" a "profound social comment on America", although I'm sure the cap fits a lot more places than just the US of A. Another commentator(Ern Baxter)said:
"Imagine if you could see all the things people pray for: all the deep freezes, television sets, bicycles and so on floating down from heaven each night as people say their bedside prayers. That's not what prayer is about, -- we've turned Him into Santa Claus; that's who!"

God set the agenda, not us. To pray effectively you need to learn what God is like, grasp His heart, and ask for things that please Him. Sometimes, (not always,) this can be the reason why we get instant answers to our prayers; other times we have to persist. This has a two-fold effect: it trains us up in patience, and it sorts out the desires that have their origin in the Spirit of God who is prompting us to pray and sifts away the things we have come up with ourself.
As I have said earlier, its an on-going process, but that doesn't mean that God's will is something negative for us, not in the long-run, at least. For example, when I was planning my own wedding, I budgeted on a shoe-string. Then the Lord interrupted me (quite unexpectedly, as usual,) and said: "Allow Me to give you the wedding I want you to have!" My whole perspective changed, (and my wife is very grateful that it did). More than that, our wedding was happy, bountiful, joyous and positive in a way I could never have devised out of my own resources; -truly a day to remember.
So what God wants for us, is normally better than anything we can wish for ourselves, but it may not seem so at the time. What is good to know is that if I get it wrong, God is going to veto my requests. -What exactly am I going to do with a Mercedes-Benz anyway?

What have I prayed for Serbia recently?
1) That there would be a big enough turn-out for the Constitutional elections to decide the matter one way or another.
2) That there be a proper turn out for the January elections, so that whoever won would truly have a mandate, and not just win by default.
3) That Serbia will have a true Statesman for a leader.

As to Kosovo, - that God dispenses true justice, and a resolution that serves Serbia's true interests (what ever they may be).

Saturday 10 March 2007

God is NOT Santa Claus!

That time I was so concerned about South Africa, one of the things I did one day was to pray:

LORD, what do you want me to pray for South Africa?

--“That Vorster will resign,” came the reply.

What! Did I really hear that, or was it just my imagination?

So I prayed that Prime Minister Vorster would resign.

The next day Vorster resigned, and was replaced by Piet Botha.

Once I’d recovered from the shock, I naturally felt very encouraged. But let’s get a few things into perspective now: It’s hardly the case that I was the only one praying for South Africa at the time, and probably not even the only one praying for that particular thing. Nor did I receive some kind of “3 wishes” guaranteed to alter the cou

Friday 2 March 2007

Technorati Profile

Getting my Act Together

If God has good things in store for the Serbs, why tell me, a Brit living in a completely different part of Europe and having no previous special interest in Serbia? The Serbs need to know it, not me!
Surprisingly enough, in time I found several good reasons! To mention some:
  1. Because I asked
  2. Because somebody has to believe in Serbia, if Serbs themselves cannot
  3. Because I have some experience
  4. Because I can intercede (=pray) for Serbia
I will now explain these points. I cannot avoid religious considerations when I do. So if, honourable reader you are not religious, please bear with me: there may be method in my madness; maybe something to profit by all the same.

  • "Because I asked"
does not imply that nobody else has asked. I see indications that others have too, but not much information on what they have to say. e.g. Stig
  • Because somebody has to believe in Serbia, if Serbs cannot do it for themselves.
I say this because Serbian sources seem dominated by a deep lack of self- confidence. It emerges as either a paralysing cynicism or a pseudo optimism; the one cannot quite believe in or be glad about positive signs ("there must be a catch somewhere"); the other assertively defends Serbian symbols, Serbian rights, and argues Serbia's potential, but it often has a hollow ring to it, as if the bloggers and commentators are not quite convinced; as if they are flying in the face of experience and avoiding the uncomfortable. In short an optimism born of defensiveness rather than security.
(These are, of course, purely subjective impressions).
However, there truly is hope for Serbia, I have seen it and I am glad I have, because after reading some of the comments. and following blog "flames" between intransigent Albanian and Serb bloggers it sometimes feels easiest to be a pessimist.

But, in the words of "Les Miserables":

Can you hear the people sing
Singing the song of angry men?
It is the music of the people who won't be slaves again
When the beating of your heart
Matches the beating of the drums
There is a life about to start
When tomorrow comes!


Visions apart, I detect a people who feel that they have been duped in the past, and have no intention of being duped again. I detect a people with a healthy potential for self-irony, and often bleakly aware of past failings. I read a new Constitution that may have many limitations (-that can be changed if the will is present-) but many laudable guarantees also. I see an economy with major growth potential , and a people coming out of isolation slowly in a world that has already forgotten last week's headlines. (Anti-Serb feeling there may be, but it is not as prevalent as Serbian people seem to imagine).
  • Because I have experience.
Serbia is not top of the agenda for the people round me and until recently few knew of or understood my concern, which wilted for lack of response. However that is not good enough reason to drop the matter: They have their job to do. I have mine.

Just like when I was young and it raised eyebrows when I took an interest in vikings. What was there to know about vikings except that they were savage plunderers? (A great deal, in fact, and now the English have grown to understand why, and are even proud of their Scandinavian roots.) In the end this interest took me to Norway, and I have no reason to regret it or believe I was wrong.

Later I became interested in the situation of South Africa. I met white South-Africans who were nothing like their media stereotype, anything but racists, but sometimes not aware enough of the true consequences of their Government's policies.
In the following years I prayed for that country off and on and discovered that a number of others were doing it too. As we prayed, we saw some very specific answers in the midst of an apparantly doomed situation.
  • Because I can pray for Serbia
I am amazed how slow I have been grasping this! Despite my experience from praying for South-Africa, the penny never truly dropped until I began to trawl the blogs and internet sources seriously. Having begun, I also see a number of similarities between Serbia and Norway, which (hopefully) helps to give my prayers more pertinance. Now that I am getting my act together at last, I try to be more consistent regular and systematic than I was last time round.

ship of dreams

ship of dreams