This is the Way... The Ageless "Heart Steps" of a Pilgrim's Walk
by Robin Webber
Dateline: Dec. 21, 1620, The New World
Several men have just landed onto a thickly wooded shore line. The wintry
air is cold and blowing, but certainly less in this sheltered bay than the
howling winds of the open sea that had recently blown them off course. All
that they cherished in family and material goods lies bobbing up and down
in a vessel a mile off the coast.
While the thick woods in front of them appear to be a formidable wall protecting
an unknown world, nonetheless it appears to be a welcoming obstruction in
comparison to the 13 years of man-made roadblocks thrust upon this group of
people who are fleeing the religious strife of their native homeland.
As they prepare to disembark, there is no dock to nuzzle up to, no rope to
catch to pull them in, no dockhand to greet them. There is no quaint New England
inn to lodge them and offer them a bowl of steaming soup, warm crusty bread
and a good hot cup of coffee. There is nothing. They are alone. They are first.
They are the Pilgrims.
Often, people who make history don't even know they are doing it at
the time. They don't even realize they are the news event of the day
or a historical benchmark for future generations, because no one else is around.
Well, ultimately the footsteps of these brave men and women, self-described
as "the Saints," would walk into our history books and their example
still rings loud and clear if we allow it to do so.
This coming Thanksgiving in America, the exploits of the Pilgrims and the
lessons of pilgrimage can be lost in the holiday shuffle of preparing a fancy
turkey dinner, watching a football game and catching up with friends and relatives.
What can we as Christians learn from the lives of these brave and unique
people with their black and white garb, broad-brimmed hats, buckled shoes
and wide-rimmed muskets? What were the underpinnings that lined their spiritual
and emotional wardrobe?
Why should we devote space in the pages of World News and Prophecy
to names like Carver, Bradford, Brewster and Alden? Why should the lives of
eight families consisting of 50 people dominate our thinking for the next
few minutes? Let's come to understand that the term and lifestyle of
what we have come to call a "pilgrim" cannot simply be relegated
to the distant woods of New England, but will yet forge an indelible impression
on future world events and future prophecies that lie ahead.
But before we look ahead, let's go back for a moment and explore the
singular nature of this "band of Saints."
"Yet Lord, Thou canst save"
Before the men had ever touched shore, they and their families had already
endured 66 days at sea in a 128-foot craft named the Mayflower. Those
whom we now call Pilgrims shared the ship with seafarers and mercenaries they
called "the Strangers." The eight families of Pilgrims found it
impractical to change clothes in such tight quarters. They survived on a rationed
diet of salted meat, hard biscuits, fried peas and preserves. On the rough
and bumpy waters of the North Atlantic, "the Strangers" could often
hear the voices below raised in chorus, "Yet, Lord Thou canst save!"
as the Mayflower was tossed to and fro by the ocean waves.
They sought relief from a world that had grown foreign and perverted to
them. The year 1620 found much of Europe embroiled in late Reformation and
Counter-Reformation antagonisms. "The Saints" desired a new world
where their religious ways would not be lost upon their children, as they
had fled from England to the Netherlands and back again to England.
"It is not with us as other men"
So important was their religious way of life that they indentured themselves
as bondservants to go forth and create a "particular plantation."
In seeking a sponsor, they advertised, "It is not with us as other men,
whom small things can discourage, or small discontentments cause to wish themselves
at home again." Good thing, for they would have to prove their boast
all along the way.
These people were as poorly equipped in everything but courage as any group
that ever landed in America. They had guns but knew little about shooting.
They planned to become fishermen but knew little about fishing. They expected
to settle in Virginia, but landed in New England. In their first year of building
Plymouth Plantation the community of "Saints and Strangers" would
lose 15 of 18 wives, 5 of 28 children, 50 percent of the sailors, and only
five of the eight families of "the Saints" would survive the rigors
of the New England winter.
In April of 1621, with winter now past, the Mayflower set sail for
England. It was then that Elder Brewster would say, "We are now well-weaned
from the delicate milk of our mother country." There was no going back,
but only forward to the goal yet ahead.
They made it through the coming year and when autumn came, they had a feast
of Thanksgiving with Native Americans who had initiated them to the ways of
wilderness survival. They feasted for three days on deer, geese, wild turkey
and berries. They thanked God for their deliverance. In the course of time,
"the Saints" would become known as the "old comers" and
later would be called "the forefathers." Today we commonly call
them simply, "Pilgrims."
Dateline: November 2003—Your World Today
As Christians from all nations, we have a fascinating linkage to these early
Americans. Leaving old worlds behind and stepping onto new shores are steps
of the heart not lost to history, but renewed and rekindled every day. The
apostle Peter in 1 Peter 2:11 addressed the community of faith in his time,
and for that matter, all times, as "sojourners and pilgrims."
These terms are predicated upon Peter's description that the people
of God are a "chosen generation, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, His
own special people, that you may proclaim the praises of Him who called you
out of darkness into His marvelous light; who once were not a people but are
now the people of God, who had not obtained mercy but now have obtained mercy"
(1 Peter 2:9-10).
But just what is a pilgrim? Webster's Dictionary defines
a pilgrim as, "a wanderer, sojourner, a person who travels to a shrine
or holy place (i.e.—a destination)." Roget's Thesaurus
describes a pilgrim as one who is "a wayfarer, traveler, migrant, settler,
pioneer, newcomer, and devotee." Webster's defines a sojourner
as one who "lives somewhere temporarily as on a visit." We come
to a key observation that a pilgrim or sojourner is an individual who does
not have a permanent residence. These people do not put down roots in some
location of their own choosing. Why? They are on a quest towards a destination.
As soon as they put down roots in some location of their own choosing, they
are no longer pilgrims!
"Now they desire a better, that is, a heavenly country"
The faithful people of God have never placed their roots in this world alone.
They have always recognized that the kingdoms of this age are but pale comparisons
to the fullness of the ageless Kingdom. Let's notice how the term pilgrim
again echoes out of Hebrews 11, as its author offers some of the outstanding
attributes of a Christian pilgrim.
"These all died in faith, not having received the promises, but having
seen them afar off were assured of them, embraced them and confessed that
they were strangers and pilgrims on the earth. For those who say such things
declare plainly that they seek a homeland. And truly if they had called to
mind that country from which they had come out, they would have had opportunity
to return. But now they desire a better, that is, a heavenly country. Therefore
God is not ashamed to be called their God, for He has prepared a city for
them" (Hebrews 11:13-16).
Such spiritual pilgrims have a four-fold quality about them.
Number One: They are people of vision, for their "heart steps"
take them beyond what their eyes can plainly see for the moment. They have
not received the promises, "but having seen them afar off," they
are keenly aware of the goal and don't settle for temporary imitations
that promise much, but give little.
Number Two: They are people of faith, for they believe the promises of which
they "were assured." Like the Pilgrims of Plymouth Colony, they
claim God's promises even when their human premises look bleak.
Just like the "Saints" on board the Mayflower, they raise
their voice in assurance of "yet Lord, Thou canst save," as seemingly
overwhelming conditions batter their finite world.
Number Three: They are people who "embrace" the reality that their
spirit must be far different from the prevailing spirit of this age, in order
to maintain the integrity of their calling to pilgrimage. They echo the sentiments
of Elder Brewster: "We are now well-weaned from the delicate milk of
our mother country."
Number Four: They are people with astounding resolve who "confess"
by what they say and do that there is no return to the former world from which
God has called them. Just like the Pilgrim fathers of old, their life is mirrored
in the daily reality that "it is not with us as other men, whom small
things can discourage, or small discontentments cause to wish themselves at
home again."
"Come out of her my people"
The call to spiritual pilgrimage of "pulling up stakes" from a
familiar society and following the voice of God in your time and your place
and becoming a part of a bigger story, the story of the ages, is as old as
Abraham and as new as tomorrow. The prophetic call to the spiritual pilgrim
resonates from Revelation 18:4: "And I heard another voice from heaven
saying, 'Come out of her, my people, lest you share in her sins, and
lest you receive of her plagues.'"
As with every generation of spiritual pilgrims, God has never promised it
would be easy, but He did promise it would be worth it.
The pages of World News and Prophecy are designed to vividly illustrate
the contrast between the old world of man's ways and the new world that
God is preparing. Its articles are dedicated to encouraging you forward into
the new spiritual frontier to which your God has summoned you.
The timeless adage of Isaiah 30:21, "This is the way, walk in it,"
is best given renewed voice and purpose in the words of the Pilgrims from
England as they confidently proclaimed, "It is not with us as other men,
whom small things can discourage, or small discontentments cause to wish themselves
at home again."
Yes, as 21st-century pilgrims, it's time for us to step onto the sure shore
of God's promises that will guide our "heart steps" through the challenges
yet ahead in securing the promise of a brand-new world. —WNP
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