About this blog and the blogger

HI, I'm Mark and I'm a Middle-Aged, Middlesaxon male. I'm proud of my origins here in the South East of England, and am a historian by academic training and inclination, as well as a specialist in Christian writing and pastoral work. 'Anyway' is where you'll find my occasional thoughts on a wide variety of topics. Please dip into my large archive. I hope you enjoy reading, and please make use of the comments facility. Radio FarFar is really a dormant blog at present, but I may from time to time add thoughts my other main passions, audio broadcasting. You can also join the debate, keep up to date with my activities and learn more about me in my Facebook profile- see link on this page. I'm very much a friendly, WYSIWYG type, if you've not visited this blog before, do introduce yourself -I'd love to get to know you. Carry on reading, and God Bless

Saturday 25 February 2006

Who is my neighbour

No question mark in my posting title: it's a statement. It could be what the Dalek said to his fellow warring wheely bins when asked who owned the strange blue "Police" box about the size of an average human male which had just pitched up next to him.

It is not good for man to be alone; even 900-year old time travellers need their companions on the journey. So why does neighbourliness in 21st century Britain so often appear to be regarded as a quaint phenomenon destined for the dustbin?

It should be the most natural thing in the world to want to know those who breathe the same air as us under the same sky during this all too brief sojourn we call life. Neighbours should indeed be there for one another, both in their troubles and their joys. Something in the human condition cries out for it and we are naturally social creatures.

It's a bizarre paradox then that in 21st century Britain, too many people get to know their neighbours in fiction rather than in person. EastEnders, getting the key to the Queen Vic at 21 this week, challenges Emmerdale and Corrie as the TV ratings hits week after week. And once student life has introduced you to the Neighbours of Ramsay Street, it's very hard to leave- as I've found getting back into the Aussie favourite after seven months working away from Erinsborough.

Why TV soaps should be such a hit is in some ways a mystery to me. You get the most unlikely hatches, matches and despatches and some of the most disreputable characters around prove to be the biggest hit. But maybe the scriptwriters are tuned into a truth which the writers of the Bible knew twenty centuries ago, before even the(fictional) Dr Who was a lad.

People love a good story and they love to meet intriguing characters within the story. We little understand ourselves, yet by another paradox we perhaps wipe a little of the mist from our vanity mirrors every time we get to know somebody else or help them in some practical way. Jesus used this to great effect not so much in paradox as parable, and perhaps one of the best known is that of the "good Samaritan", otherwise known as the "good neighbour".
I've had fun this week helping out a neighbour who's lived across the street for over thirty years. First I got asked to sort out a problem with her phones, while on Thursday I was challenged with some Latin proof-reading of a Christian message delivered before I was born. In return, my brother and I got a very tasty curry, and I found my mouth had more of a fireproof lining than I'd thought!

Thought of reward should never be our motivation for doing some kindly act and indeed it will never get you into heaven, even in a tardis. Love your neighbour, as you love yourself.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Oh, too true!

There have been some very disturbing stories here in Australia over the last couple of weeks where people have died in their homes and not been discovered for weeks, if not months after.

Sadly, most of them had few friends, even fewer family contacts and rarely spoke to their neighbours.

It just makes me more determined to be sure that I do my best to not let it happen around me.

I hope your mouth has recovered from the burning curry!! {:->

Galant said...

Life eh...what's it all about?

These days I wonder if the answer to that isn't - sinking into a big, comfortable armchair and slowly disappearing into oblivion.

Comfort and distraction. If I am conmfortable and if I am distracted, entertained, then all is well with the world. And a few things into the mix to provide the odd high now and then and all's wonderful.

Good post.

I don't know if you do requests but I'd love to here your thoughts on living life and following God.

How much of the time do we just get up and go with our desires and ambitions, that is, just be ourselves, and how much of the time do we prepare to deny ourselves and seek to find God's plan for our lives? Where do the two meet?

God bless.

Mark A Savage said...

Thanks, Lara for your thoughts. I guess what you describe was summed up well in the sixties by Lennon and McCartney in Eleanor Rigby. Loneliness may be something we all experience from time to time; it's a part of our humanity even in a crowd and is probably one of the consequences of "the Fall". But it need not always be so and it should never be so when it comes to finding practical help at hand in our times of most distress. People need people!
Yes, my mouth has recovered from the curry; I must be a glutton for punishment as I had another one on Saturday, though this time somewhat cooler and at a restaurant.
God Bless, and hope you continue to enjoy this blog. Keep visiting, as I'd hate to be alone!

Mark A Savage said...

Hi Galant, nice to hear from you again. Hope all's well in Arizona which I think is your location, and that it's a little warmer than it is here in Middlesex this morning.

Life gives us two choices: we can let it live us, or we can live it as our maker intended for us. That intention was for life in all its fullness, not all its dullness- but sometimes it takes a little waiting and a little searching to find that fullness.
After years of inertia, partly caused by external circumstances, I've come to the conclusion that this is the time for me to really get up off the couch and do something, and the passion for writing this blog reflects is just a part of it.
I'm touched to be asked to do a request and I will certainly give your suggestion some thought. This week, however, I'm not sitting by a fire but fanning the one God has lit within me, and catching up with a firelighter friend, who knows who he is.
To God be the glory, great things he has done!