Squashed between modern office blocks, advertising conference facilities, stating 'Welcome, open for prayer and services everyday', I walked through the open door. Out of the sunlight, half an hour set aside before picking the boys up from school, worrying that I had said I would bring a skateboard to the playground and hadn't got it, worrying that I had set myself this blog task and it seemed foolish. Worrying and somehow, this seems the overriding fear that to walk in through the door of a church in the middle of the day, with no obvious purpose, was to appear in need. To want something.
In the entrance, was a huge wooden altarpiece (I think) that looked like it had been taken from an earlier church and a memorial to a curate who had become the Bishop of Zanzibar. I carried on round expecting the interior of the church but couldn't find or reach it. Through locked doors and glass windows I could see metal grilles and an ornate altar piece- very Catholic looking, with that still, grey, dry-choking elegance - even hear the organ playing but I couldn't find an open way into the church. I tried doors, scaled stairs, there was only more locked doors.
My unease at having walked off the street, into an unknown building, with no one there was that I felt I could only be 'discovered' that even the logical question 'can I help you?' was a difficult one. I scarpered.
I don't know. I did it. But. I am doubting the whole project. I couldn't reach what I had wanted, discovered nothing, am not up to the task. I should have asked someone, should have slowed down, observed what I could see, not panicked about the expected outcome.
Back in the warm spring light with time to collect the skateboard and get to school on time, I sat in the playground, nursing a bump on my younger son's head with a coca cola ice pop.
Amen
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