A hymn we sang at morning worship at the Abbey began, No wind at the window….Well, not really. Winds were 65 miles per hour in the night, and I awoke to the wettest, windiest day yet. Bicycles, a wheelbarrow, and leaves strewn, the paths were full of water. The photo above is blurry because of the rain through the window. Outside, my camera would have blown away!
When I walked out of worship, there it was: a patch of blue peeked from the grey, and the winds were gone. What a difference a stop for worship and prayer makes.
This second trip to Iona, I’m struck by the people I’ve met, and with whom I’ve had conversation, and how they have enriched my trip.
May, from Inverness, whom we met on the beach at St. Columbia Bay, and who was full of tales. She was on her own and needed companionahip. My friend walked the beach labyrinth with her.
Two men from Scotland met while walking. One man’s grandfather, an ordinary fellow, had brought George Carey to Christ. Yes, that George Carey, who would be Archbishop of Canterbury, an evangelist who would touch so many lives. There are no little acts for God.
Kathleen and her elderly mother traveling from Virginia, Episcopalians. The mother is quite a chatterer, and Kathleen was infinitely patient. The mother’s many stops for conversation were a constant reminder of Christ in all persons. And reminded me to be patient, too.
Lynne, a pastor from Canada, who amidst a conversation about the hymns in the Abbey, introduced me to a treasure trove of new music.
Gretchen, a priest on Sabbatical, who joined us for dinner last evening.
And so it goes.
So many prayers for traveling mercies especially in these storms. God has given me a cozy chair, a warm, dry room, and a cappuccino. I have a friend with which to travel, and all is well.
Pilgrimage to Iona: A windy, blustery, rainy day
Yesterday my fitbit registered just under 25000 steps. Today not so much.
The wind blew all day at 30-50 miles per hour, and it rained off and on. The big hikes planned for today had to be cancelled.
My best friend and I still walked to the Abbey for Coomunion this morning and for the quiet service tonight that included centering prayer followed by Taize in the apse by candlelight. In the silence of worship the wind howled and moaned. Yet there was peace and safety in those stone walls, and a sure sense of Christ’s protection in care.
It turned out to be a true Sabbath for this lady priest.
Leisurely breakfast on the sun porch
(minus the sun).
Cappacinos and flapjack after worship.
An afternoon writing postcards and knitting with yarn from local sheep while drinking tea and sitting in front of the fire.
And I still got 10,000+ steps!
Pilgrimage to Iona: An afternoon at St. Columba’s Bay
At St. Columba’s Bay, you can walk a labyrinth created by women on a pilgrimage years ago and lovingly tended by a woman who lives in Iona.
Look for rock treasures.
Eat a picnic of local bread and cheese while looking at the sea.
Pray. Sing.
Read Scripture and devotionals.
Paint.
Be full of joy for the journey.
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.
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
























