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Today’s guest post comes courtesy of Alan Kearns of Scotland. Alan’s devotional posts have blessed my heart. I’m sure they will bless and encourage you too. They can be found at Devotional Treasures – Christian devotional reading. Bible discoveries. Gems from the Word of God for everyday life. (wordpress.com)
Look at the birds of the air,
that they do not sow,
nor reap nor gather into barns,
and yet your heavenly Father feeds them.
Are you not worth much more than they?
Matthew 6:26 (NASB)

A UK Wren, (Troglodytes)
In the 1970s, my dad introduced me to the life long delight of birdwatching. He had purchased me a RSPB (Royal Society for the Protection of Birds) pocket book about garden birdwatching from a newspaper advertisement. To me a bird was just a thing with feathers, but as I read about the many species and their intricacies I was hooked. I looked at our front and back gardens with new excitement; it was a haven for birds with trees and the many shrubs dad had planted. My first bird was the Blackbird that nested in the privet hedge in our front garden, but the Wren I saw in the back garden one morning was a new find. It wasn’t that Wrens are rare but rather I had never seen one before, I had never looked for them before.
The Wren was famously depicted on the back of the farthings that we had in old Marvel tins, mixed with old pennies and thruppences. The Wren is the most common UK breeding bird. It is a tiny brown bird. It is almost rounded, with a fine bill, quite long legs, very short round wings and a short, narrow tail which is sometimes cocked up vertically. For such a small bird it has a remarkably loud voice.
You might be asking, “Alan, why the ornithology lesson?” The reason is that I believe that there are things that we can learn from the humble Wren, that we can apply to our spiritual walk. The first thing is its relative obscurity. These birds are tiny fast moving brown specks in the undergrowth and usually go unnoticed by most folk. In this world obsessed with media and perception Christians are very much like Wrens. They go unnoticed in the ‘undergrowth’ of life. The second thing about Wrens is that for a tiny bird they have a very loud voice; it is a musical sequence in short sweet bursts. When I first heard a Wren on a wildlife television program, I realized I had heard them singing before I knew what they were. In this we have a challenge to our walk with God, we may be relatively obscure like the Wren but are we heard? Is our testimony like the Wren’s voice, attractive and impossible to ignore? Another thing about Wrens is their alertness, we too need to be forever alert to our surroundings. Our enemy, Satan stalks us every day, just as the neighbourhood moggy stalks the Wren.
Dear reader, we are called to be witnesses for Jesus in our homes and communities, (Mark 16:15). We have a duty to proclaim the gospel, in words and in good deeds. Let us sing like a Wren, our own beautiful melodies of our Saviour. While we do this, let us endeavour to be heard, staying constantly alert of danger from our Enemy just like the Wren.
Click on the link for a recording of a house wren’s call:
ML107408 House Wren (Northern) Macaulay Library
Thank you David for hosting this post, God bless you this Lord’s Day brother.
Thanks Alan for bringing back childhood memories of my visits to the nest of a house wren on our farm.
Note the addition of the recording of a house wren’s call.
Good guest post Alan!
Thank you Jim.
YW!
“I will sing of my Redeemer and His wondrous love for me’ – “My Redeemer”-P P Bliss (1876)
Amen. Let’s sing His praise!
Birds are so beautiful, graceful & joyful!
The wren is particularly joyful. Perky and a real spirit lifter!
I am taking online birding ID courses. It is good to get to know my neighbours’ names. God’s creation is amazing. So much variety. So much beauty. So much artistry. So much uniqueness. Living where I am, I have a good variety of bird habitats: forest behind me, river in front of me, with a shallow area and fields across the river. Some are impossible to see high in the treetops. but I get a great view of the returning ducks every spring. We often hear the loons all summer.
That birding identification course sounds wonderful, Liz. I’m pleased to know you are discovering your neighbours.