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Ministers Letter - August 2007
My Dear Friends
One of the things I wanted to do
these last few months was some walking – God seems to find it easier to get
through to me when I’m away from it all and out in the countryside! As our
son, Paul, was planning to do the Coast to Coast walk with three friends to
raise money for two charities I arranged to join them for a couple of days in
the middle of it all. Before they even started Malcolm had to cry off on
Doctor’s orders, though it was invaluable when he came up for the second week
with his car and transported the bulk of our packs each day and met and
encouraged us at various points. It was with only three walkers, therefore,
that Joy and I set off on Sunday afternoon to drive up to Whitehaven, where we
had booked overnight accommodation for them.
The three started the walk
from St Bees in Cumbria on a beautiful Monday morning and I would join them on
Friday morning for two days – that was the plan. On Tuesday evening, however,
Paul phoned to say his two friends were struggling and neither felt they could
carry on. There were reasons why it was such a struggle for them and neither
had done any long distance walking like this before, whereas our Paul had – he
did the 192 miles of the Coast to Coast in 8 days 18 years ago! He also had
inherited from his dad and granddad a refusal to be beaten, stubbornness some
would call it! So plans changed and on Wednesday we responded to the SOS and
Thursday I went up to join him for the rest of the walk, though I didn’t walk
every day. You do what you can, though, to help them realise their dreams.
One of our anxieties was about
Paul walking on his own, so for the next 9 days he had me in tow and it was a
good time and a time when I learnt something. We set off from Shap on the
Friday morning and it wasn’t very long before we caught up with George, whom
Paul had walked with for some of the time on the previous two days. The
weather that day was appalling and lunchtime saw us sheltering in a café in
Orton, where Jeanette and Andy came in – Paul had seen them the day before as
well. In Reeth we met up with Dave from Huntington and we also kept seeing
this dad with his 13 year old son who were doing it the hard way, for they were
carrying tent and cooking equipment in huge backpacks. The last but one day we
walked from Clay Bank Top to Grosmont, some 23 miles, and the early part of the
day saw us striding out along the bed of the old railway that goes across the
moors. We were making good time and looking forward to meeting Malcolm at the
Lion Inn on Blakey Ridge when we saw writing scratched in the pathway – “HI
THERE, PAUL AND HIS DAD!” It was a real boost and when we reached the Lion
Inn, there was Dave from Huntington asking if we’d got his message. We walked
for a bit after that with Dave and later on we caught up with Jeanette and Andy,
and before we parted I had taken a photo of these four who had been strangers
when they began the walk but had become friends on it. I couldn’t help but
think of that verse from the song
“Brother, sister, let me serve
you”:
“We are pilgrims on a journey,
fellow travellers on the road, We are here to help each other walk the mile and
bear the load.”
I thank God for all the companions
I’ve met in my life’s journey, for all who’ve walked with me for a while. We
get help on the journey and we have the chance perhaps to help others along in
their journeys.
With much love from a fellow
traveller,
Your Minister and friend
Ray

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