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To the home of Simon and Andrew (1:21) 

In early October 1940, Philip Schneidau parachuted into France, carrying with him two pigeons stuffed into a pair of toe-less socks. Ten days later, when a Lysander plane that was supposed to pick him up didn’t appear, Schneidau encoded a message and attached it to the leg of one of the pigeons, releasing the bird from Fontainebleau at 8.20am on Sunday. By 3pm the same day, the pigeon had arrived home in Kenley, just south of London, with news of his plight. 

The idea of home is ingrained in us, just like a pigeon. It acts as an anchor in a confusing world. In today's mobile society it can be less secure, but we still feel it. It is unsurprising then that Peter and Andrew invite Jesus home. For them it was a safe place. For him I wonder. Was he pining for a heavenly home? It is central to Christian thinking that we have an eternal home, a place of absolute safety and complete welcome. Do we feel its pull or is it a rather frightening thought? As we face a killer disease, maybe it's a question worth asking.



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