If ANZAC Day underscores anything, especially into a post-Christian nation, it is that suffering for whom you love is really not so foreign, intimately and personally confirmed in the full expression of this true human demonstration, into when it was most required and into where it proved extremely costly, objectively reflective of the supreme earthly mission ever witnessed on this planet, with it is finished, the ultimate first and last post.
Friday April 24th, 2020 23:02 Words Worth Resounding – ANZAC Day 2020
Friday April 24th, 2020 05:50 Lest We Forget 2020
As you do consider, and as you do compare, reflecting on another generation’s sacrifices, help to properly situate our own present challenge.
When someone seeks your best, proven at the expense of their own life, that kind of love does something wonderful inside.
Reminds me of Another.
And where the best way of remembering their costly gallop for liberty’s shore, becomes about positively honouring the celebration of well-lived life, and in the light of a greater dawn!
Anzac Day 2020
We cannot forget!
JWK
Friday April 24th, 2020 05:26 “What Are You A Master Of?”
I thought it was about time I hit post again on a platform celebrating the colours of an open world.
In this lockdown sporting-less period, I have been making the most of some other creative angles of watching, and one I appreciate follows the travel-adventures of chef and all-round, gastro-guy—Rick Stein
In a series entitled, Rick Stein’s Secret France, in the second episode, he visits a wine-making family in the village of Auxey-Duresses, which I believe is in Burgundy country.
As we become introduced to a family, we are informed the French daughter has married an ex-pat Englishman. Merci. As they begin to sample the various benefits of wine and food country, something spoken caught my attention, and is worth highlighting. It arrived as they were discussing the French parents mastery of the grape-growing-into-liquid process, where the subject matter came to a descriptive point, and onto something like the following contrast.
In England, people say, “What do you do?” But in France, they say, “What are you a master of?”
BOOM!
I love both the nuance and emphasis, which infuses so much greater worth and purpose, into any daily pursuit. This changes the thinking about any destination, which now demands much more of a process when locating this intention.
The encouragement toward excellence also reflects the call of the cultural mandate, and positively romancing the very best of any job or vocation.
Is this how you think about your daily activities? Or are you just filling-in time or working space? We are too-often entirely motivated by what surrounds, instead of this stimulation arriving through our internals being positively aroused, and for the glory of God.
Can you imagine how this french twist could positively challenge or inform your world—even in a season of less, which could become more?
How could this transform your time and talent?
“What are you a master of?”
Maybe give it some thought—you’ve potentially now got the time!
Until Next Time
JWK
Friday July 13th, 2018 11:44 Darkness into a Night like Dawn on a New Day.
The better Half took this image tonight, as the winter chill took effect, into middle New Zealand.
Home.
This evocatively captures the flight, plight, and delight of the life.
Never give up.
Always hold on.
And look up!
iamjonnyking
Wednesday July 11th, 2018 22:41 England’s Three Li… out in the Semi that was Final
England’s Three Lions, of course.
The dream has ended for the Old Dart, at the hands of the reasonably new Croatia, at the 2018 Football World Cup.
It has not been long since the final whistle ended the extended battle, which must have been a roller-coaster for either set of fans.
As I watched the English performance, my thinking has been taken to the painful reality when something exposes our own sense of a future self. This then presently proves we are not what we genuinely thought. Gutted. Then what?! At such times, our expectations can easily asphyxiate. A little like when perched on a plane, with the elevation and altitude making any thoughts of leaping without a parachute, more like an overly dramatic ending you would rather avoid.
But daily we will jump.
If you are still wondering about my headline, it ties into a social media line I offered at the end of the contest. Before my very eyes, England’s attacking intent seemed to drain from their play post their goal after 5 minutes, like a sink was attached to any future forward intent. The vibrant colours on the screen that started the contest slowly washed like water; their strength evaporating toward the unexpected, but looming, catastrophe. In the end, the English journey to the Title, epitomised by the Three Lions, ended limply. Another Semi would have to be enough. I would irk some ire, changing the “ons” for “iars,” as if to underscore the loss of playing identity.
I am sure you can spell that out.
Sport as life, and I can be just as guilty of confusing present satisfaction and rest, with a loss of vision for the future, which idealises a present, instead of refocusing for what is next.
In the period when England should have put this contest to an early rest, they lost their edge. Maybe a sense of destiny mitigated against a still genuine reality of losing. It is only when that final whistle blows that this animal inside grows and growls, becoming hungry like a wolf. It seemed like England believed one goal would be enough. As if this early lead inoculated against the real effects of what can take place over 90, then 120 minutes, where the result can easily turn.
And it did.
Much like England, we each tend to over-rate our present space, and under-rate the challenges before us. If so, we won’t easily engage in the moments that pre-date a time when we do become exposed at the end. Then we are left with what-ifs? Too late we each cry. We each assume a next time.
Today is the day.
We must each failingly plod this hustle. The failingly part means we will have umpteenth times where we must pick ourselves up, dust ourselves off, and get back on it.
This is England now.
This will be each of us very soon.
But how you may ask?
I have on my wall words by Seth Godin (from memory): “Successful people are successful for one simple reason: they think of failure differently.” And let me add, it is the Gospel that can only do this. The only viable way this can never fail is if, who you are, is never based on, what you do.
While England’s loss of playing identity proved fatal in their performance, and toward their Final goal, the Gospel claims that because a Christian’s is in Another, this identity can never be lost, which means those who live in light, are free to think about failure differently because that overwhelming fear is really now over.
Now to really believe this like we should.
This should be practically revolutionary!
And for you!
iamjonnyking