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Michael
Henderson |
GPS – or Sat Nav – as we call it in England is all
the rage. When my wife and I rented a car in Los Angeles we found to our
surprise that it had GPS already installed. We got to our destination
before we had figured out how to make it work.
What an extraordinary innovation. GPS
knows where we are the whole time and gives precise instructions in what
is close to our language and corrects us automatically and loudly if we
fail to follow the spoken instructions. It is not infallible. Horror
stories and even newspaper pictures testify to large trucks being stuck
in country lanes, or cars trying to take a road that has been closed or
going the wrong way up a one-way street which has changed its
directional flow. It may if relied on too long make us nations of
drivers incapable of following maps.
New technology can remind us of old
wisdom.
Frank Buchman, an American to whom I owe
much of my knowledge of spiritual ways, was always seizing on the latest
developments to underline spiritual truth and particular if it could
illuminate the availability to all of divine guidance. In the 1930s he
used as a mnemonic for PRAY, the words Powerful Radiograms Always
Yours. On the occasion of a Scandinavia-wide broadcast he said, ‘We
accept as commonplace a man’s voice can be carried by radio to the
uttermost parts of the earth. Why not the voice of the living God as an
active, creative force in every home,. Every business, every parliament?
Miracles of science have been the wonder of the age. But they have not
brought peace and happiness to the nations. A miracle of the Spirit is
what we need.’
Remembering
the first electric light and his friendship with Edison, Buchman said in
the 1950s, ‘It revolutionised our living. It altered men’s thinking
about the future. Is there today a discovery that can go into every home
in every nation and unexpectedly bring an answer to our darkest
problems?’ I heard him give a speech in in which he talked of ‘The
electronics of the spirit.’ I think he would have had great fun with the
possibilities of GPS.
In that
speech he said, ‘Now electronics is a new science. Spirit has been known
for a long time. But linked with electronics, it hitches the world to a
new dimension of life and thought. Millions can speedily, automatically,
yield to this new practice, the Electronics of the Spirit. Think of the
veritable instantaneous reaction whereby a thought can travel across
America in less than a fiftieth of a second. And now with electronics,
in a flash you not only hear the voice but the time you speak is
registered and you get the bill at the end of the month, all without any
human aid.’ Think what Buchman would have made of email and the
internet. And the instantaneous billing.
He
introduced me and my family to the idea of seeking God’s guidance as a
realistic practice. He believed that God had a plan in which we had a
part, a contrast to the approach of some Christians who felt that they
had a plan in which God had a part.’ He was much challenged early on by
a friend who sent him a postcard with a man’s head on it. Underneath
were the words, ‘God gave a man two ears and one mouth, why doesn’t he
listen twice as much as he talks.’ Many a time he would say, ‘When man
listens God speaks, when man obeys God acts. When men change, nations
change.’ He meant women, too.
As a
teenager I was handed a ‘listener’s notebook’, in which to record the
thoughts that came in an early morning time of listening. I was taught
that one should the test the authenticity of thoughts by comparing them
with the teaching of my church and also by the measuring rods of
absolute honesty, purity, unselfishness and love. I found that I could
get thoughts of correction and direction. More than sixty years on I
still practice that earlier rising, less formulaically perhaps, and some
friends might say in a less disciplined way than I did in my first
enthusiasm.
Thinking
about technology I am reminded of a notice we used to have pinned up in
our kitchen when we lived in the United States. I don’t know if this
still happens but in those days when we listened to the radio there
would sometimes be a loud piercing sound followed by an announcement
that it was just a practice of the emergency broadcast system and that
it if were a real emergency we would have been given relevant
instructions. A friend in Oregon penned a parody: ‘This life is just a
practice. If it is was a real life you would be told where to go and
what to do.’
I wonder if Buchman would have talked of
a spiritual GPS which would tell us how to get to where we wanted to go
and would correct us when we had gone wrong.. I may still find dead ends
and disappointments and am sometimes lost but I know that adequate
instructions in my own language are out there if I am attuned. Once I
mastered the basics I didn’t want to leave home without it.
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Michael Henderson is the
Author
of
"No Enemy To Conquer - Forgiveness in An Unforgiving World". |
Articles Archive of
Michael Henderson
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