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Showing posts from June, 2023

Lessons from France Part 4/4: Nimes (Luke 2:1-2; Revelation 3:15-16)

                                Nimes – we found The Salvation Army right next to the Roman Arena and near the Temple to Augustus. I wish it was open when we went there. It would be great to see the kind of outreach that The Army does there. It did certainly strike me that the large cities we have seen in France, England, Scotland, Germany, Denmark, and Sweden do not have the same in-your-face homelessness and addiction that we have in Canada. I have my ideas why that is the case but we won’t go into that here today. Nimes is an ancient city. In Nimes we saw a temple dedicated to the sons of Caesar Augustus. Do we remember who he was in the Bible? Yes – he was the Roman Emperor when Jesus was born – ruler of Rome; Nimes, Gaul; Jerusalem, Judea; and many other places. We also read references to Herod who was responsible for Caesar’s navy. We know who that was? Herod the Great was ‘King of the Jews’ when Jesus was born. That was neat to see and read. Further we saw a Roman arena. A Roman

Lessons from France Part 3/4: Carcasson and Saint Emilion (Genesis 17:15-19)

                                    We walked around  Carcassone.  This is an amazing city in wine country. You can see the vineyards. It was beautiful. It was massive; It seemed impregnable. We also stopped in Saint Emilion, Bordeaux for lunch. It was a great lunch! There was wine sold everywhere in many of the shops. We obviously didn’t try any but we tried lots of great food. I believe I had shrimp here. I had lots of duck while we were visiting France. The exciting thing about Saint Emilion, Bordeaux, for me was the church there. Like many places it had been a pilgrimage stop. Like many places it had been attached by the revolutionaries during the French revolution – the French revolutionaries robbed, looted, destroyed, vandalized, attacked many churches. In this amazing church that was very old there were many remarkable things. One was a chair. We were all invited into the church and we gathered in a room and someone stood in front of this ancient chair. I don’t think anyone was

Lessons from France Part 2/4: La Rochelle (Exodus 12:24-28)

We visited La Rochelle on France. La Rochelle had a very nice harbour. We walked around the downtown. Their city hall was a castle in the middle of town – we thought about talking to Mayor Sharie Minions about maybe making something like that here! It would be great for tourism! La Rochelle: Do you know what the significance of La Rochelle is from a Canadian point-of-view? It the city from which Canada was founded! The Chamber of Commerce in La Rochelle funded the voyages of Cartier and Champlain. Cartier was the first person to map the St. Lawrence, including what would become Montreal and Quebec and he is the one who named Canada, Canada. We actually saw his house (from the outside) when we were in Saint-Malo in Brittany. It was neat because you could actually see Britain just across the water – I went swimming there – it was not swimming weather! But it was nice. Back to La Rochelle who funded Cartier and Champlain; we know who Champlain was? He established Quebec City in 1608, thre

Lessons from France Part 1/4: Mont Saint-Michel (Matthew 7:24-27, Luke 6:46-49)

We spent a couple of weeks this May in France. I wrote to you here last week about some of the things the Lord taught me in Lourdes, France. Today I am going to chat about some of the things He showed me through some of the other places we visited. We visited a lot of places! One place we visited was Mont Saint-Michel. This was an amazing place to visit. This is a city on a tidal island in Normandy that for years and years, if you did not know your tides well, you took your life in your hands to visit; if the tides came in while you were walking out, you would be swept away to sea; they come in so fast and so powerfully!! The city fills the entire island. Walls are around the outside. The city then goes straight up a hill – door to door – small roads, no spaces between the buildings up to a giant church, an Abbey. Mont Saint-Michel was one of the few places to remain unconquered in the 100 Years War. Louis XI of France founded the  Order of Saint Michael  in1469 and he intended that th

The Lourdes' Lessons (John 7, 4 & 5)

John 7:37-38: On the last and greatest day of the festival, Jesus stood and said in a loud voice, “Let anyone who is thirsty come to me and drink. Whoever believes in me, as Scripture has said, rivers of living water will flow from within them.” We went to  Sanctuaire de Notre-Dame de Lourdes . They have healing water in a spring there under the church that you can walk right up to. The story of the healing spring and the cathedral goes a little like this: Bernadette Soubirous, a 14-year-old peasant girl, on 11 February 1858 saw a vision of Mary, the mother of Jesus and was told to go and drink water from a spring which was to appear inside the grotto and wash herself with it. She did and she kept going there and by mid-July had seen Mary 18 times. She was also told to tell the priests to build a chapel at the grotto site. They did. The Cathedral was built over the spring and people – like us - still visit today.  God is a God of miracles even today. There is a whole community built up