Pilgrimage to Iona: St Columba’s Bay

They say that Iona is a thin place–a spot in God’s creation where heaven is separated from earth by the thinnest of veils. If Iona is a thin place, St. Columba’s Bay, is the thinnest of thin places. It is the spot where a handful of Irish monks landed in 563 as pilgrims and became evangists who transformed Christianity forever. 

It takes being a pilgrim to get there today. 
You travel down a long road. 

Through a golf course. 

Climb a small mountain. 

Walk around a lake. 

Slosh through a bog. 

Climb down the mountain. 

Through the ferns. 

Across the crossroads. 

 

And you are there. 
Lord you have come to the seashore, neither searching for the rich nor the wise,
desiring only that I should follow 


O Jesus, with your eyes set upon me,
gently smiling, 
you have spoken my name. 
All I longed for I have found by the water, 
at your side I will see other shores. 

Translation of Pescador  de hombres by Cesareo Gabarain sung at the Abbey tonight

Pilgrimage to Iona: Another day to worship God

The world belongs to God,
     THE EARTH AND ALL ITS PEOPLE.

How good it is, how wonderful,
       TO LIVE TOGETHER IN UNITY.

Love and faith come together,
     JUSTICE AND PEACE JOIN HANDS.

If Christ’s disciples keep silent
     THESE STONES WOULD SHOUT ALOUD.

Open our lips, O God, 
     AND OUR MOUTHS SHALL PROCLAIM YOUR PRAISE. 
These are words that open morning worship each day at the Abbey, and yes, they are words we used at St. Mary’s for a season during Morning Prayer. I’m certain we will again. 
This trip to Iona has been full of changing weather. Yesterday it rained off and on, and the walk home from worship last evening was cold and rainy and very dark (because we’d forgotten our flashlights and couldn’t use the ones on our phones…….because it was raining so hard). 
Yesterday we discovered a new beach. It was described as a favorite with toddlers which made it seem like a good choice for these two grandmas on a rainy hiking day.  A bonus was that it is the best place to find cowries, tiny pink shells the size of a child’s fingernail.   They are very difficult to find until you find your first, and then, like so may things, they are easy to spot. 
The rain yesterday made the morning sunshine today extra full beyond the brim with grace. 
Since today appears to be the day with the least expectation of rain, we’re off for what we believe will be a challenging hike to a place we’ve longed to see–St. Columba’s Bay on the far south side of the island. It’s a particularly holy place because it’s where St. Columba landed with his small group of monks in their coracle from Ireland, and where Christianity was launched across Britain, Europe, and as far as Russia.  
We lit two candles at the close of worship with prayers for safe travel, and all who journey today. 

Pilgrimage to Iona: A Very Windy Day

When my camera blew out of my hand as I was taking a picture on the beach at Martyr’s Bay, I knew it was going to be a very windy day. My best friend and I decided to walk and be blown as we continued our hike, but picture taking was seriously limited.  

Hardy women that we are, we braved the wind, gusting up to fifty miles an hour, and rain to walk to the Abbey for the night Communion service.  It was a lovely, thoughtful service. 
One of the gifts of being on Iona is that pilgrims travel here from all over the world. Still, I was unprepared for the experience of true Communion when the woman next to me turned to serve me the bread, looked into my eyes, and said the words of institution, The Body of Christ given for you, in a language I did not know. We both were stopped in the holy moment in that holy place knowing that Christ was real and present and with us. Our eyes filled with tears. Once again, as she served me the cup with the hands of Christ, The Blood of Christ given for you, in words that I could only comprehend, though completely, in my Spirit, Christ was there.  

The words of blessing used at the end of Communion were words prayed at St. Mary’s in worship past.  Communion again. 
On our hearts and on our houses,  THE BLESSING OF GOD.

In our coming and our going, THE PEACE OF GOD.

In our life and our believing, THE LOVE OF GOD.

At our end and new beginning, THE ARMS OF GOD TO WELCOME US AND BRING US HOME.
AMEN.”