James’s Blog: Small Lies and Big Truth.

James’s Blog: Small Lies and Big Truth.

Recently, I’ve found myself dwelling on mistakes that I’ve made in my relationships, and not in a healthy way. It’s like I’m being aggressively confronted with the 10% that I got wrong rather than the 90% that I got right. I’ve spent a lot of time out of my depth with people, but the truth is that I have very few drowned relationships to my name. These thoughts don’t seem to care. They just seem to want me to feel guilty about something, anything. It’s odd to find yourself thinking about somebody with whom you have a good relationship, somebody who you know you have helped and has expressed gratitude for the help that you have given them, and yet immediately be thinking of the little ways in which you feel like you failed them, or things you wish you had or hadn’t said or done.

These thought patterns often crop up when I’m praying for people, and have the fingerprints of accusation all over them, so these days I file them under ‘spiritual warfare’ and try to deal with them appropriately. How I go with that depends on how well tuned in I am to what is true.

We all make mistakes in
the way that we relate to others, we might damage relationships and
make less than perfect decisions at times, but that’s rarely the
whole story. I want to remind myself, and you dear (and not-so-dear)
readers, that our relationships are not usually as bad as we think
they are, our mistakes not necessarily as damaging as we fear they
might be, our failures not the giant blots on our record that we
suspect they are, and that we have done more good than we know just
by being a friend to someone. We can’t necessarily stop those
accusing thoughts from coming, those regrets and should-haves, but we
don’t have to give our failures too much credit, and we don’t have to
give the enemy an easy victory.

James’s Blog: Lockdown and My Mental Health.

James’s Blog: Lockdown and My Mental Health.
Ho hum, I think it’s fair to say that lockdown has not been particularly good for my mental health. At first I was quite optimistic – I have been practising social distancing since I was a teenager, and I do quite enjoy the school holidays when wife and children are home with me. Read more

James’s Blog: Love is Idiot-Proof.

James’s Blog: Love is Idiot-Proof.

I once went to a church for the first time. It was a big church, well-attended, with a minister who was a fantastic, internationally-renowned preacher and author. This church had what I call ‘welcome cards’; a printed leaflet that was given to visitors for them to write down their name and address and so on. It’s a common practice in churches that I’ve attended. I filled in a welcome card.

Read more

James’s Blog: This is the Sort of Thing that God Does to Me.

James’s Blog:  This is the Sort of Thing that God Does to Me.

Sometimes the Holy Spirit says, “James is distracted and hasn’t got his guard up – let’s plant a bomb in his head.”

I was just on my way to the school to collect the children, and my phone pinged. It was a message from someone who works with me, Read more

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