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Saturday 15 August 2020

A Nightmare for Students

One morning this week I was staring at an e-pigeonhole on my laptop screen, which included a frame of me arranged in a neat set of rows containing anywhere between six to twelve others. The silence became obvious as no one actually prayed - that momentary interlude which usually occurs in prayer meetings when each one of us is stuck in not knowing what to say or to ask for.



I guess Zoom is that one opportunity when anyone in the virtual meeting can look into the privacy of another's home to see whether some idiosyncratic feature or possession would give a clue to the owner's personality, such as a skylight in view covered in dead insects. Indeed, this owner loves to keep dead insects trapped between the two panes of his skylight. Another has a large map of the world hanging on the wall behind him, and so, it looks as if this guy is into cartography. Or he may simply like wall maps. Another may have a fully-stocked bookshelf behind him. Ah! So this guy is very clever, having a well-developed intellect. Unfortunately, some of the prayer meeting participants had wised up to this and now ensures that only a blank wall is seen behind them. 

At least with me, I love the idea of other Zoomers to see the display of travel pictures hanging on the wall behind me, although pity about the panoramic scene of the Grand Canyon which dominates the wall (which incidentally, was purchased at Poole, Dorset, some eight years after visiting the Grand Canyon in 1995.) To focus the camera on that would mean that the frame would shoot over the top of my head. Not very helpful in prayer meetings.

Suddenly the silence was broken by one of the participants asking God to help those students who weren't able to take their A-Level exams this year due to Covid-19. Trying to stir some empathy here, I imagined putting myself in their shoes. How bitterly frustrating it must be, studying hard at school for many months, including homework and revision in readiness to sit the most important exam which will determine the direction for the rest of life, only for all sittings to be cancelled due to a wretched virus. Then the excitement of "the fresher's party" or other social activity at their commencement of University in celebration of flying the parent's nest for the first time. That too, so I heard or read about, is now cancelled due to the pandemic.

During my lifetime, years come and years go, so I see annually, graduates on the top of the pile line up for a group photograph and then throw their mortarboards high into the air, perhaps symbolising the end of all education and the beginning of a new chapter of life - the real world of work. Or is it a gap-year first before the business suit? That narrow slice of opportunity to see the world and even work abroad such as teaching English to students overseas. A little later in the same year, another group of new entrants, or freshers, enter the institution, a dream world which I have longed to partake in but such an opportunity hadn't so far knocked on my door. 

The Internet has indeed opened a new world for many graduates. Here I'm referring to YouTubers, nearly all-male grads who either threw off their business suits for a life of professional video-making or had managed to establish a channel on Google soon after graduating. Last week I highlighted three atheistic YouTube channels - Alex O'Connor, Drew McCoy and SciManDan, with more than 133,700,000 views between them. Then other male YouTubers specialise in travel, and both Alex and I watched them. Again I can pick out three: Jason Billam Travel who at 16.00 hours on August 15th, 2020, had 32,786,603 views; Gabriel Morris, who has 88,004,930 views; and finally, Explore with Josh, with 438,183,555 views - a statistic which is greater than all three atheist YouTubers added together, although Josh specialises in derelict houses, prisons, asylums, hospitals, hotels, and schools all around the globe, and, unlike the others who work on their own, Josh also has a team of two or three accompanies to help shoot each video.

All three earn their living by fulfilling their dreams - to travel the world and making videos, with fame thrown in for good measure. These shoots have to be thoroughly professional to meet Google's rigorous standards, and all appear to be graduates. Jason Billam is typical. He delivers his narration in a plum Surrey accent, whilst Gabriel Morris admitted his past graduation in a typical American drawl.

Indeed, with fame-inducing lifestyles like these three, no wonder that they have shed their faceless business suits (or never wore them in the first place) to pursue such a profession! Yet I could pick any of the hundreds of YouTubers and I'll be very hard-pressed to find any of them wearing a tie - an item of honour here in the UK as I perceive it to distinguish the well-educated professional from the boiler-suit-clad worker whose vocation involves dirty hands, and thus, the tie can have a snobby ring to it. Just look at Eton and Oxford-educated Tory MP Jacob Rees-Mogg who would never appear in public without a suit and tie - regardless of hot weather and being on holiday.

Jacob Rees-Mogg on holiday in New York, Summer 2018.


And so prayer was delivered up to God on Zoom on behalf of these students, the majority unbelievers. With the news that their estimated A-Level results of 40% of students had been downgraded by a computer has infuriated them to the point of seeking legal action. To them, it's a time of desperation, a moment of frustration that a worldwide pandemic had arrived at our shores at the worst possible time of their lives. If only they had been born just three or four years earlier. By now they would have sailed through all higher education and now pursuing the career of their dreams. And that could include world travelling YouTubing.

Perhaps I feel nonplussed by it all. Especially if the Media seem to concentrate on the plight of female students. Like that in today's Daily Mail national newspaper where the grieving snapshots of three young women were featured together with their testimonies along with the absence of male participants. To me, they give the impression that their world is about to end, the prospect of glittering careers under threat, the possibility of facing a gloomy life without any direction, nothing to build any hope upon. If only their grandmothers had told these girls that two of their regular school subjects were housecraft (cooking) and needlework as part of preparing for the home as adults while their future husbands were trained to be the breadwinner, taking up vocational jobs in the industrial world, construction, mechanical engineering, and a variety of skilful crafts and trades.

And so, when I left school in 1968 without any qualifications to show, my first task in my new job was to sweep the factory floor. Small fry. A mere iota in this big, dirty, family-owned furniture-making firm where my hands were covered in oil-based wood stain and need to be washed thoroughly in inflammable spirits before soaping and holding under the running tap. Yet I thought no more of it, it was the day-to-day life of a school-leaver without any qualifications, nothing more, nothing less. Really, it does make me think about how can an average school-leaver with ambitions for University cope in such a situation. Could it be, yes, could it be that their perception of a successful career is far way too high and lofty to even consider sweeping the floor?

It doesn't seem to occur to these students that if their car was to break down in the middle of a long journey, the mechanic with grease-smeared hands would be far more useful and helpful than one videoing a gelateria at a street in a southern Italian city. It can also be said that the cheerful grave digger whistles merrily as he shovels the earth back in to cover the coffin which holds the corpse of the company executive.

Yes, I started working life as a small fry, an insignificant cog in a large machine which has constantly kept me in my place with a weekly pay of just £4.00. But if this is as low one can get, then the only way is up.

And this began with my conversion from atheism to faith in Jesus Christ as Saviour in December 1972. Tremendous changes came after that. As I started to read the Bible, I felt both intelligence and wisdom began to grow, and I began to acquire knowledge. Like many other newly-converted Christians, there were parts of the Bible which I found difficult to connect, especially about the lives of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob and particularly with Joseph. It was a few years later while I was at someone's home when I came across a series of a comic book version of the Bible, and the owner was pleased to lend them to me. That is the whole Bible in the form of a comic strip. Suddenly everything fell into place and my understanding of Holy Scripture grew.

Including the prominence of Jerusalem in both the Old and New Testaments which inspired me to visit the Holy Land in 1976. And this was how I responded to the prayer. Although it sounds as if I was unsympathetic to the student's cause, actually I was right not to show too much pity. As one who left school without any qualifications and started working by sweeping the floor, not only had I survived for half a century by dirtying my hands, I also added how knowing God is the ultimate fulfilment in life, including growth in knowledge and wisdom, my visits to the Holy Land, our strong, loving marriage, and my denial of high education and careers being the be-all-and-end-all for our existence. Then I prayed for them to know God to be their purpose, as we are all going to die one day. Indeed, our lives are about the afterlife and are centred on it.

And the whole virtual group was in agreement. And my name was even quoted in prayers which followed.

Western Wall, Jerusalem, taken 1994.


Now I wished that I was more specific. Such as how I felt God be glorified when he allowed me to visit great locations such as the Great Barrier Reef, the thundering roar of Niagara Falls and the immense Grand Canyon. Not to mention a hike through a rainforest and waterfalls at Blue Mountains N.P. along with the admiration of tropical trees and vegetation not found in the UK. Furthermore, I can boast on God allowing me to look up at the night sky Down Under and see the Southern Cross directly above my head - a bane to my graduate friends whose hobby happens to be stargazing.

Therefore, may these students find their satisfaction in God through faith in the Crucified, Buried and Resurrected Jesus Christ of Nazareth. 

3 comments:

  1. Hi Frank, I absolutely agree with what you have said, and my life has been similar. I went to a girls grammar school, which sadly separated me from many of my friends. I did not sit my A levels as my mum needed financial help due to my dad dying when I was eleven. So she had to buy me out, I think it cost her ten pounds. I enjoyed every job I had, the first one working in a market garden, growing the best tasting tomatoes I have ever had. My husband and I started off with a ten pound assisted passage trip to Australia on a beautiful ship, eventually going to live in Australia three times, New Zealand once and Canada once. We had the most wonderful experiences and jobs, and there is no way I would have wanted to go to university. I became born again of God's Spirit in Adelaide and we have lived in many properties everywhere, buying five and renting many more. What comes to my mind is 'First seek the Kingdom of God and His righteousness and all else will be added. God bless you and Alex with all He has for you in Jesus.

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  2. Dear Frank,
    Amen! These surely are trying times. One of my daily prayers is that God will use this pandemic, and all its associated heartache, to bring others closer to Himself.
    Clearly I am not a Buddhist, but shortly after I was saved, I came across a Buddhist saying: "Before enlightenment, carry water. After enlightenment, carry water." This was fitting for me at the time, as we had a rural home where one of my daily chores was to gather rainwater from a barrel and carry it to the garden to water the vegetable plants. Scripture says to do all things to His glory, and sometimes it is in the menial tasks, like sweeping the floor or carrying water, that we find the time and the servant's heart to be closest to Him.
    Thank you as always for the excellent blog. God bless you and Alex,
    Laurie

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  3. all your blogs are excellent and interesting keep it up

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