This post by Steve and Ruth Lancaster was originally published at Life in the Lancs Lane
2022 Short Summary: Away from the pulpit and the desk we’ve also had a busy year. Having
hankered after the wintry slopes of the Swiss Alps for a few years, we were able to head out to the Eiger area on an Oak Hall skiing trip. This time round it was role-reversal, with Ruth leading the trip and me tagging along as a guest! Great skiing and great weather and, whilst we didn’t return with any injuries, we did return with the much-mentioned virus, which laid us low for a week or so.
We then headed back to Scotland in August to spend time with family, and to run the Nairn half-marathon, with Ruth getting a PB on her birthday! She also had to dodge the pipe-band on the approach to the finish line! Towards the end of September we were able to jet-off to Majorca for a week of birding, cycling, running & reading. And then during the month of November, Ruth made a return to Africa with a small team from our church, to help out with the youth work at an AIM Conference in Nairobi, Kenya. She was delighted to use her Swahili tongue again and, whilst on the subject of tongues, she jumped at the opportunity for a return visit to the Giraffe sanctuary where she was greeted with a not-so-holy kiss by one of the inmates!
As we head into the Christmas season, it’s good to try and imagine what life was actually like for a couple of very ordinary God-fearing people, whose obedience changed history; Mary & Joseph. They lived under the occupation of the Romans; they were a peasant couple from the backwater town of Nazareth, and donkey-riding journeys were often dangerous – just ask the good Samaritan! I imagine therefore that life was somewhat tough for Mary and Joseph. Due to our romanticised and sanitised view of that first Christmas, I think we often forget how tough it must have been for this ‘ordinary’ couple.
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Birds of the Year: we were chuffed to see a Wryneck in Majorca |
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Dartford Warbler, Poole Harbour |