taonga

It was my grandmother (my father’s mother) who gave me a love for John Baillie’s Diary of Private Prayer (see posts here and here). Grandma would read these prayers aloud to us and, even more significantly, include extracts from the prayers in letters to me. Somehow – let’s assume it happened honourably – I ended up with her personal copy of the prayer book. For me, it is a taonga (a beautiful Maori word, conveying the idea of a precious treasure).

After we were married, Barby acquired a taste for Baillie’s book and, over the decades, she has kinda fell into the habit of fleecing New Zealand’s second-hand bookshops for copies and then we give them to our friends, as the supply allows. On a recent visit home, Barby cleaned out the bookstores, as she customarily does, but it was only this week that I handled the copy she purchased. The nicest copy I’ve held since the one I slipped into Chris Wright’s bag many years ago. A leather cover (I think it is), the thread of an attached bookmark dangling out the bottom, and the gold-like edging on the pages. Just so lovely to hold in the hands (yes, yes, yes  – and lovely also to pray in the heart, lest you think I’ve gone completely bibliophilic).

But this copy had some faltering penmanship on the front page that caught my eye. I read it once. I read it twice. Surely not? Checked the dates. It is a birthday gift from a grandpa to a grandson 68 years ago – but actually it is a gift to my uncle (my mother’s brother) from my great-grandfather, James Arthur Penman.

James Arthur Penman, as portrayed by my uber-talented niece, Jasmine
– and the great-great granddaughter of ‘JA’. 

“Thy word is a lamp unto my feet, and a light unto my path.”
(KJV – what other translation could it have been?)

Here is what my great-grandfather wrote to my uncle – an uncle, I might add, who Barby and I love so dearly and whose health is declining. So poignant for us.

I posted something on facebook, expecting that someone among Uncle Murray’s offspring might notice – and sure enough, grandson Ben posted a comment.

Back and forth we messaged. Turns out we’d already given them a copy of Baillie … but grandson and great-great grandson must trump nephew and great grandson, don’t you think?

This copy will be on its way to Ben & Raille soon. What other option could I possibly have? Goodness me – their firstborn arrived the other week and they named him James (with great-great-great grandpa part of what was in the mind) – and little James’ mother’s name rhymes with Baillie!

[LATER: my mother confirms that this John Baillie prayerbook was a 21st birthday present to Murray from Grandpa – who died 12 months later].

But before you go – one more thing. Enough talk about my mother’s grandfather and his gift to a grandson. What about my mother’s father and his gift to a grandson?

Today, this exact day (can you believe it?!), is the 50th anniversary of the death of my mother’s father, my ‘Grandpa Tommie’. I hardly knew him but I remember exactly where I was when we received the news.  Sitting around the table in our little home, Bethany, in the Indian Himalayan town of Mussoorie. And his gift to me (via my mum and dad)? Another treasure to be prized. A taonga. I bear his name, ever so gratefully because he was a quiet, unassuming, godly Christian gentle-man whom I’d love to be like. For I am Paul Royston.

While there are a couple of cousins and a brother between us,
here I am with my namesake just a few months before he died.

nice chatting

Paul Royston

Archive

Receive new posts to your inbox

I’d love to keep you updated with my latest news and posts.

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

About Me

paul06.16

the art of unpacking

After a childhood in India, a theological training in the USA and a pastoral ministry in Southland (New Zealand), I spent twenty years in theological education in New Zealand — first at Laidlaw College and then at Carey Baptist College, where I served as principal. In 2009 I began working with Langham Partnership and since 2013 I have been the Programme Director (Langham Preaching). Through it all I've cherished the experience of the 'gracious hand of God upon me' and I've relished the opportunity to 'unpack', or exegete, all that I encounter in my walk through life with Jesus.

Posted in

1 Comment

  1. Paul on August 20, 2018 at 4:29 pm

    I am reliably informed that John Baillie's prayerbook is available as an e-book on Amazon's kindle site for NZD5.00. But I suspect no leather cover, gold-rimmed pages or dangling bookmark. But be in, if you do not have a copy. Paul

Leave a Comment





This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Recent Posts

a book project

March 19, 2026

Some of you may have noticed that I have not been posting to this blog for some months… This is because I was granted three months sabbatical leave and, after taking some advice, I decided to use the time to pull some of these posts together into a book. I spent 2025 working through all…

on being truly human

October 8, 2025

It was 1984. After finishing my classroom work for an MDiv from TEDS, Barby and I flew from Newark to London on People Express ($99pp). We were looking forward to a few weeks with my parents at All Nations Christian College in Ware (UK), where Dad was the principal. He met us at the airport…

missing and dismissing

September 17, 2025

I grew up with My Fair Lady—and for you younger ones, that is not a reference to my mother or one of my sisters. It is a movie, and like a number of movies from my childhood—Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines also comes to mind—they can be rather jarring to ear and eye…

on football—and preaching

September 9, 2025

Football helps me train preachers. See, when you speak to me about football—or, ‘footie’—I need to know where your feet are before I can understand what you mean. Are your feet in Ireland, or Brazil, or the USA, or NZ—or in crazy Australia? It must be the most fanatical sporting nation in the world. Within…

a silent patriarch

August 17, 2025

Having been born in 1959, I don’t remember much about the 1960s. But I have heard a lot. Hippies. Drugs. Rock ‘n Roll. Assassinations. Moon-walking. A quick trip across to ChatGPT informs me immediately that it was ‘a transformative decade across the world’—marked by the civil rights and feminist movements, Cold War tensions, consumerism and…

lyrics for living 26 (always)

August 6, 2025

Saturday was a rough ol’ day for our Amaliya. It was her birthday. She was sick—and sick enough for her birthday party to be postponed. Grandma and Grandpa popped-by later in the afternoon to give her a hug and some gifts … … and then she gave us a gift. Between taking our mouthfuls of…

four cities, twenty days, nine photos, one video

July 7, 2025

Abomey Calavi, Benin I’ve had three 50+ hour door-to-door trips by plane over the years. This was the fourth one. It was after midnight on the Saturday when I was finally able to put my head on a pillow—but not before our driver/host asked if I would preach the next morning. Yikes. Not for the…

bothwell & bethany

June 9, 2025

If saying that “Barby and I grew up together in India” is of interest to some people, then “We met before we can remember” tends to be of interest to most. The first time we met was probably in a church creche of some kind at Kellogg when I was about three and Barby was…