Category: Camino de Santiago

Footwear, Fading Villages, a Falcon & Foncebadon’–Day 31 (Saturday 10-8-2016)

Camino de Santiago

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(Murias de Rechivaldo to Foncebadon’: 20.8 km, 7 hours, with 1 hour & 50 minutes breaks; 29,800 steps, plus 2435 later)

Ephesians 2:11-22
v. 12b-13 …without hope and without God in the world. But now in Christ Jesus you who once were far away have been brought near by the blood of Christ.

We don’t ask everyone we meet why they are walking the Camino; I’ve started to perceive that people’s motivations are somewhat private. But almost none of the people we’ve asked have been able to elucidate a clear reason. They have an amorphous call, or they have issues to think through; they seem to be looking for something. The pilgrim graffiti in various places bears this out. There is a yearning, a search for meaning, a desire for something more. I’ve heard very little talk of God, which seems a bit odd on a Christian pilgrimage route. No one but us (that we’ve noticed) prays before dinner. My guess is that few of the pilgrims are committed to the Christian faith. They are, as Paul writes, “without hope and without God in the world”–as we all once were. I don’t think I say enough to offer the answer they are looking for, that “now in Christ Jesus [we all] who once were far away” and searching for our heart’s desire can be “brought near by the blood of Christ.” Dear Lord, please touch the heart of every person making this pilgrimage. Draw each one closer to the gospel of hope and salvation in Jesus.

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We got up and ready for the day by flashlight and the light of the bathroom and were outside in the dark by 7:10, but that was only because we had no breakfast. No breakfast is never a good thing but Maurice had a plan. Last night he had asked at Las Aguedas, another albergue, if we could come for breakfast and the hospitalero agreed. So we paid our 7 euros and ate in their cozy little wood-paneled dining room. There were cartons of juice to pour yourself, and tubs of margarine and jars of marmelade so you could pile as much as you wanted onto your hard toast–so much better than the teaspoon-sized pre-packaged condiments of a bar breakfast. Keep reading

Pilgrims, Maryland & Touching the Sky–Day 30 (Friday 10-7-2016)

Camino de Santiago

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Pilgrims

(Santibanez de Valdeiglesia to Murias de Rechivaldo: 16.7 km, 6 3/4 hours with 3 hrs stopping; 25,990 steps, plus 1940 later)

2Corinthians 4:1-18
v. 7 But we have this treasure in jars of clay to show that this all-surpassing power is from God and not from us.

Jars of clay. Earthen vessels. Cracked pots. We are fragile beings, not made to long survive in this world. Yet God has given us precious treasure. Paul is referring to the gospel of salvation given to mankind, but there are other treasures too that we cherish in our jars of clay: love for family and friends, beauty we have beheld, wisdom hard acquired, dreams for the future. How could such riches disappear when our bodies return to dust? They don’t have to. The same all-surpassing power of God who gives the gifts is able to preserve them for eternity if only we grasp the best treasure, the salvation Jesus won for us on the cross. Our jars of clay will crumble but by Jesus’ sacrifice his own gifts to us will display his grace forever. Thank you, Lord, for the wonderful gifts you give us to enjoy even in our jars of clay.

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The mattresses were thin but once I fell asleep I stayed asleep until morning. Not so with Maurice. He was awakened by a commotion when the mother of the twins jumped up and dashed outside with her sleeping bag. “Bedbugs!” thought Maurice. Fortunately for us all, no, but not so fortunate for them, for one of the boys was sick. Keep reading

Talking & Walking Across the Meseta–Day 29 (Thursday 10-6-2016)

Camino de Santiago

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Santiago patiently waiting for us to get going in Villar de Mazarife

(Villar de Mazarife to Santibanez de Valdeiglesia: 19.5 km, 5 3/4 hours, with 1 hr & 30 min breaks; 27,271 steps, plus some more later)

1Corinthians 10:1-13
v. 13 No temptation or testing has overtaken you except what is common to mankind. And God is faithful; he will not let you be tempted beyond what you can bear. But when you are tempted, he will also provide a way out so that you can endure it.

Today’s passage is talking about suffering again. But God always comes to the rescue, stepping in just when we think we can’t bear any more. He does this in little ways too: a bar with a loo when I’m about to burst, real beds without a lot of searching, Maurice’s phone with our music for the hard walks, fuentes flowing with cool water. These are little things mostly, things pilgrims a thousand years ago wouldn’t have needed but we 21st-century American weaklings do. In his tenderness God stoops to meet us where we are. Thank you, Lord, for all the ways you step in to meet us on this pilgrimage and in all of life.

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It was cold during the night in our sea green room in the Albergue de Jesus and we were thankful for the new-looking horse blankets at the foot of our beds. In the tiny bar we ate toasted crusts for breakfast. Keep reading

Leaving Leon–Day 28 (Wednesday 10-5-2016)

Camino de Santiago

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Leaving Leon at dawn

(Leon to Villar de Mazarife: 21.8 km, 5 1/2 hours, with 1 hr in breaks; 29,500 steps, plus 2520 later)

Romans 8:18, 31-39
v. 18 I consider that our present sufferings are not worth comparing with the glory that will be revealed in us.

This Camino is hard, and it hurts, but this is a journey of our choosing, a gentle yet persistent call freely accepted. In the big picture our misery is trifling. In the Leon museums I was confronted with depictions of faithful martyrs for the gospel dying gruesome deaths. Even their suffering, writes Paul, “is not worth comparing with the glory that will be revealed in us.” It’s another hint of the inexpressibly wonderful kingdom God has prepared for his children. Thank you, Lord, for your grace to endure suffering and for your promises for the future.

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The workers in the streets labored all night setting up for festivities to begin anew the following night; we heard them whenever they hammered or shouted loud enough to wake us up. When we we left the hotel at 7:50 am, carrying our packs again, it wasn’t as cold as we had expected, probably only in the low fifties. The streets were dark and empty. As we walked traffic was sparse and some streets had none at all–at a time it would be rush hour in any city in the US. We decided the upcoming evening’s fest was to be such a big event that everyone was resting up for it. Keep reading

Still Lingering in Leon–Day 27 (Tuesday 10-4-2016)

Camino de Santiago

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Tympanum at San Isidoro:  Abraham and Isaac and the ram caught in the bush

(Leon, Spain: 3721 walking-around steps)

Romans 8:5-13
v. 10 But if Christ is in you, then even though your body is subject to death because of sin, the Spirit gives life because of righteousness.  And if the Spirit of him who raised Jesus from the dead is living in you, he who raised Christ from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies because of his Spirit who lives in you.

Subject to death, indeed. Death by thousands of steps each day, soon adding to millions, and the trauma they inflict on the body. Toes, arches, bunions, heels, all the rest of the feet, calves, shins, knees, thighs, hips, glutes, back, shoulders–it all hurts, just hopefully not all at the same time. Does the body ever get used to this? It is easier than it was the first week but we still ache at the end of the day. It’s probably harder on those of us at the far end of the age spectrum; we’ve had more decades to operate all our parts and start to wear them out. Yet the Spirit of Christ Jesus, perfect in righteousness and rich in love toward all he has created, continues to give us life by his grace. He renews us day by day and will do so until the moment he enlivens our dying flesh with immortality. Thank you, Lord Jesus, for your life-giving Spirit at work even now, and forever, in those who trust in you.

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When we finally got up we had pastry and orange juice in our room before going for pastry and hot drinks at the chocolateria. In front of the cathedral we wandered around a vegetable market bursting with huge red peppers and fat onions.

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At our little San Isidoro plaza a stage was being set up and decorative banners have been strung across the street we walk down. Keep reading

Lying Low in Leon–Day 26 (Monday 10-3-2016)

Camino de Santiago

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(Leon, Spain: 8250 walking-around steps)

Acts 9:1-19a
v. 5 “Who are you, Lord?” Saul asked. “I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting,” he replied.

Today I went in the cathedral, wrapped in stained glass and bathed in rich afternoon light. An adjacent museum contained treasure after ecclesiastical treasure–paintings, statues carved from wood and stone, manuscripts, gold and silver items, stone from the cathedral, jewelry, a piece of fabric from the seventh century, a delicately written and decorated thousand-year-old enigmatic hymnbook full of notes without a key signature. Common themes in all the art, of course, were the birth and death of Jesus. I passed a display of crucifixes–Jesus’ death again and again. Betrayed in the altarpieces, tortured in the paintings, crucified in the statues, over and over, here in Leon and all around the world–there must be enough representations for every person who ever believed, and every trespass we have all committed. On the cross he felt the sting of every sin as he suffered the righteous wrath of God on our behalf. Thank you, Jesus, for the cross!
….See all your sins on Jesus laid: The Lamb of God was slain,
….His soul was once an offering made for every soul of man. (Charles Wesley)

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Enough of the albergue culture–the enforced bedtime business and getting kicked out the door in the dark of the morning. Keep reading

Music and Dancing–Day 25 (Sunday 10-2-2016)

Camino de Santiago

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View of Leon as we came down from the hills

(Reliegos to Leon: 24.3 km, 7 hours [not counting festivities] with 1 hr & 40 min breaks; 33,786 steps, plus 1500 later)

Luke 24:13-33

v. 15-16 As they talked and discussed these things with each other, Jesus himself came up and walked along with them; but they were kept from recognizing him.

Does Jesus walk along with us? I hoped he would. I ask him to. Sometimes I imagine him right next to me but when I look I only see the blue sky. Lord Jesus, open our eyes so we might see you better, in whatever way you appear to us.

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No breakfast was available, as the bar that ran the albergue didn’t open this early. A sign on our door warned against eating in the room (as well as informed us we needed to practice good hygiene) so we took our juice boxes, yogurt and bananas out into the dark morning chill of the patio. A bowl of figs sat on the table for hungry pilgrims, so I rinsed some off and packed them for later. Keep reading

A Slight Miscalculation–Day 24 (Saturday 10-1-2016)

Camino de Santiago

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(Sahagun to Reliegos: 30.8 km, 8 hours with 1 hr & 55 min breaks; 40,530 steps, plus 2240 later)

Luke 15:11-31
v. 20b “But while he was still a long way off, his father saw him and was filled with compassion for him; he ran to his son, threw his arms around him and kissed him.”

Shortly into our walk today we discovered we had miscalculated the milage. Instead of 23.9 kilometers to our planned stop it was closer to 31, a distance we never intended to walk in one day. And it wasn’t like we could stop sooner because we’d already sent our packs ahead to the selected town. Whoops. This would be a long walk, and on still-blistered feet. “We can do this,” we said to each other confidently. “We can do this.” Like prodigals returning from a far country we set off, praying that the Father would see us from “a long way off” and with compassion strengthen us all the way in. And he did.  With his gifts of grapes, potato chips, a perfect picnic spot, a ripe peach, we walked through all those kilometers and were home before we knew it. Thank you, Lord, for your great compassion for your wandering children. Thank you for meeting us right where we need it.

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We ate breakfast in our room, yogurt and juice boxes from the grocery store and delicious pastries I bought yesterday made by the bakery lady’s sister–pastry squares with the sides folded in to contain the custard and fruit. At 8:10 we posed by yet another sign saying it was the center of the Camino.

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Keep reading

Bodegas & Monastic Hospitality–Day 23 (Friday 9-30-2016)

Camino de Santiago

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Morning in Calzadilla

(Calzadilla de la Cueza to Sahagun: 22.5 km, 6 3/4 hours with 1.7 hours breaks; 32,179 steps, plus 5260 later)

Luke 10:1-12
v. 4 Do not take a purse or bag or sandals; and do not greet anyone on the road.

Jesus had a mission for his disciples and instructions for how to go about it. Two things he said were: Travel light. Don’t get distracted by other offers along the way. These are good rules for us too. Everything you put in your pack weighs something and you have to carry it. Are you sure you need it? Even now we have a few more things we might send to Chris. And the artistic treasures along the way are a distraction to me. If we just stayed until this opens again, if we walked another kilometer or two over that way…. Maurice wisely tells me that if we look at everything we will never get to Santiago. Maybe that’s one reason Jesus sent his disciples two by two (v. 1): When one was tempted to go off track, the other could bring him back. This is wisdom for the rest of life too. Lord, show us what it means to travel light in life. Keep us from distractions that would compromise our mission.

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We were up by six, ate the tiny breakfast we had bought at a grocery store and left town by eight, last except for the South Korean men, one of whose poles were missing. I was back to wearing my old left shoe again; it’s a little tighter on the toes but the heel seems to be a better fit. The shoes are so dusty it is not immediately apparent they don’t match. The German guy from last night who didn’t approve of pack transport was just ahead of us; he had stayed in a private room above the restaurant. Pack transport, private room–we all have our own rules (and we’ll take some of each from time to time). It was 46 degrees but we were cozy in our gloves and new fleece pullovers. My knees were cold, though, taking me back to junior high days of miniskirts and knee-highs when we worried that extra insulation would develop around our exposed joints and we would have fat knees. We were on a nice path through a little gap; the surrounding horizon of purple, pink and yellow faded by the minute. Keep reading