The modern world has a kind of hyperventilating quality that is not conducive to peace.
I don't pay any attention at all to mainstream media news, because it's disappointingly propagandist, and information worth having can't be derived from that source.
I do listen to some informed and intelligent voices, to try and get some kind of map-bearing, a perspective of sorts, to help establish an appropriate direction of travel and see what's coming towards me. It makes everything less bewildering and gives me a chance to ready my own life and circumstances — always useful.
It seems fairly clear that the global patterns are moving at two levels — the one we're all supposed to be occupied watching, with its polarities and tribal antagonisms, and the orchestration behind the scenes that looks to be powerful, large and purposeful, the machinations of the Powers That were. For instance the strange coincidence of oil refineries around the world all being attacked or exploding or otherwise coming to grief at the same time. We ordinary people have no means of joining the dots, but we can be fairly sure it's not intended for our good.
Still, I've come to the conclusion that — large and powerful and heartless though the political machinery may be — it almost, from our point of view, doesn't matter. I don't mean it won't affect us, because it certainly will, but if we have no means of influencing it then it's in effect a distraction.
The last two books in the Hawk & Dove series, the ones I wrote this year, were set in 1326. That was one heck of a year in England. The king and his queen had fallen out. Edward II was a disappointing and unpopular monarch, and most of the country — church, aristocracy, people — backed the queen. Having been out of the country, she invaded and took over. Edward III was only a teenager at the time, but he was eventually set on the throne in place of his father at the beginning of 1327 — and he was an improvement, I gather.
But in reading about all this, what struck me was how bloody and barbaric the whole thing was. The King had various homosexual love affairs, which the queen was happy to ignore until it adversely affected her own interests. Then, after she'd seized power, she had one of his lovers — Henry Despenser — executed. Not beheaded as the man's father was, but raised up on a ladder that they tied him to after the initial partial hanging of being hanged drawn and quartered, and first castrated then disembowelled. The queen sat and had her lunch, watching his sex organs being tossed into a fire and his guts pulled out. After that they cut him up into pieces. King Edward meanwhile was held in captivity and died in mysterious circumstances around the turn of the year. It was rumoured that his death was brought about by having a red hot poker thrust into his rectum.
A similar fate to Henry Despenser's was visited upon the Carthusian monks during Henry VIII's dissolution of the monasteries. The Church of England's inception rests upon those bloody tortures. And those who were not so dispatched were kept in prison, chained upright to the walls, left there to starve. Carthusians. Gentle, good men whose crime was keeping faith with the Roman church and not changing their allegiance.
And further back than that, in Roman times, there was the death of Jesus — and he was one of thousands, the crosses lined the roadway. What a grisly and horrific, cruel way to die.
But going back to the 1300s, that was a long season of wet summers during which the harvest failed year after year, and in consequence many people died. In the 14th century, the development of root vegetables hadn't happened yet. There was grain, and fruit, and animal products (meat, fish, poultry, eggs, cheese, butter, milk). The animals ate grass, and the vegetable part of the human diet was fruit, spices, herbs and some greens. They ate things like rocket and chervil, onions and garlic. But the garlic and onions weren't as we think of them now — they were more like scallions (salad onions). The leeks were like the three-cornered leek we still have. So the human population and the animal population both relied on grain to see them through the winter — augmented by hay for the cattle, but in the wet summers the hay harvests would also have failed.
I am saying all this because I think it helps us avoid having a doom-ridden disaster mentality about modern times. Yes, there is much to dismay us. Yes, there are global elites who do not wish us well. Yes, the elites want all the power and all the blessings of life for themselves and themselves alone. But the thing is, they always did. Wars are terrifying and destructive and bring no good outcome, but it was always so.
We have deceitful leaders and society riven into factions, but that was always so too. Somehow we have to find a way to thread a pathway of kindness and quietness and practical love through all this violence and antagonism. if we don't, we'll go mad.
At the same time as all the strife and division, the oppression and domination and hardship, in every century there have been good and quiet folk, caring for the land and for their families, developing skills and making music and writing poetry, worshipping God and taking delight in the seasons of the light as the year turns in the natural world. People who spin and sew, who know how to build a fire on the hearth, who know how to birth a lamb and hoe a garden.
In modern times, that maybe means there are people who can drive a car and manage the online banking and household accounts, people who can cook a Sunday lunch and know which shops have the best bargains. I hope also that, as part of our worship of God and reverence for his Spirit in creation, we are paying attention to getting our groceries from farm shops or box schemes that re-use packaging, and sell us food that has been kindly and organically and regeneratively produced. None of this glyphosate and factory farming.
And I hope that we still find ways to sew or knit our own clothes and create our own art and write our own poetry, that we still play instruments and sing together. Let's not relinquish it all to the machines.
The books I've written this year are intended to speak into the times we're living through, to help us remember the essentials of thriving as human beings even in daunting and challenging circumstances: and those essentials — in every age and place — are gentleness and understanding, the willingness to talk things through and forgive one another when something goes wrong, the grace to help each other and lift one another up. There isn't the world that we have to live in: we are made in the image of God so we each make our own world, we each have the power to create it and sustain it and redeem it. We bring it into being by our life choices, and we strengthen it by practice that deepens into habit; we redeem it by starting again when we go astray.
And it was always so.
I am a huge fan of the work of Thomas Cranmer, who was responsible for the Book of Common Prayer. Somehow his collects always put into words for me what my heart wants to pray. He, too, got tangled up in the power struggles of political elites, and despite desperate attempts to comply with their conflicting and antagonistic requirements, he spent two years in prison and in the end was burned at the stake in Oxford, holding first into the flames the hand with which he had signed his recantations.
Here is his collect for the fourth Sunday after Trinity, from the Book of Common Prayer:
O God, the protector of all that trust in thee, without whom nothing is strong, nothing is holy: Increase and multiply upon us thy mercy; that, thou being our ruler and guide, we may so pass through things temporal, that we finally lose not the things eternal. Grant this, O heavenly Father, for Jesus Christ’s sake our Lord. Amen.
So may it be.