Thoughts from Kim…

Many of you have kindly kept my two churches in your prayers as they go through the transition of uniting into one new church. Thank you! By the time you read this, the Service of Union on the 24th of April will have taken place. It has been a long journey for Blairdaff and Chapel of Garioch Churches, and if you had asked me two years ago if I thought they would unite, I would have said no! Over 112 years ago they were both part of the same parish, covering a vast amount of square miles. But after that time their relationship shifted and changed during the following decades. The two churches linked in 1982 (meaning they shared a minister), but the linkage was not always harmonious. The decision to unite, which was taken last year, was a bold and surprising proposal made by two churches determined to prove that together they could have a more secure future than if they stayed separate. It was a step of faith and courage, and I am extremely proud of them.

They and we will have to take many more steps in the weeks ahead. We had our last communion services together today, and tears were shed. There will be a few baptisms and weddings prior to my saying goodbye to these people that I’ve come to love. But before that last goodbye on 27 May, Shore Porters Movers (who have been in business since 1498) will be here to gather all our things, so I’d better start sorting and packing!

And then before we know it, the 3rd of June will be here, and we will gather together that Sunday morning to celebrate the beginning of our ministry together. The bread will be broken and the cup shared, and that wonderful, exciting time of getting to know each other will continue – in person! While back in Scotland, Blairdaff and Chapel of Garioch Parish Church will be going through a process you know and understand only too well – letting go and opening up to what God has in store for them in the future.

We just never know what is going to happen in the future. In 1999 I never dreamed that I’d move to Scotland. And friends from my college days recently reminded me that I once vowed, as young people often do, that I’d never move back “home”. You just never know what might be around the next corner, and that is half the fun of the Christian life – it is never boring! Some theologians call being open to whatever God might do being willing to be “surprised by grace,” and I think it is one of the primary ways God likes to work. Unfortunately, we can often miss excellent opportunities or not see what God is doing, because our expectations of how things “should” be blind us to how they “might” be, if we allow grace to surprise us. We humans have a hard time letting go of our need to control and allow the Spirit to work openly and creatively in our lives. When the Spirit is free, the results can be stunning. Often surprising! But always enveloped in God love, compassion, mercy, and care.

May we open our hearts, let go of our need to control, and allow God to surprise us by grace – both individually, and in our life together as a faith family.

With love and prayers,

Kim

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