September 6, 2006
This morning we grabbed another hotel continental breakfast and hit the pavement. After a rather circuitous route up, down, around, and through Hyde Park, Dad and I finally found our way and headed toward Buckingham Palace.
Outside the Palace we purchased a special pass that afforded us access to The Queen’s Gallery, the Royal Mews, and the State Rooms of Buckingham Palace. Our first stop was the Queen’s Gallery. The Gallery consisted of artwork, antique furniture, china, etc., and was a relatively small exhibit for the ticket cost (the price of royalty, I suppose). Our Queen’s Gallery visit was brief, and we soon moved to the Royal Mews.
The Royal Mews is where the traditional royal carriages are housed, as well as the more modern royal motor "carriages." The royal horses are also stabled here, and a still-active riding school is also located on the grounds. Each carriage---there are seven, I believe---has its own significance and use. Their ornate qualities vary, but each is highly decorated for the singular state occasions in which they take part. By far the most ornately decorated coach we saw was the Gold State Coach, in use for more than 200 years. This carriage was the vehicle of choice for transporting Queen Elizabeth II during her 1953 coronation ceremony.
Departing the Royal Mews, we exited onto the street sidewalk and walked the few hundred yards to the queue outside the State Rooms of Buckingham Palace. We soon passed through security and began the State Rooms’ tour. What a tour.
All manner of elegance and royalty emanated from within the State Rooms of Buckingham Palace. Numerous works of art masqueraded as furniture. Paintings by Rembrandt, Rubens, Benjamin West, Vermeer, and other masters hung from the walls. Intricate designs covered the ceilings, often in gilded silver.
Walking through the palace we enjoyed a pleasant Summer breezed wafting through the many open windows. I know not what measure of modern air conditioning is required in time of great heat, but on this day the fresh air ventilation more than sufficed (of course, air conditioning could have been simultaneously pumping in on the sly).
Of the three venues we toured, overall I was most impressed by Buckingham Palace. Its grandeur was all I had ever imagined and more; truly a dwelling place fit for royalty (and one which I was most pleased to visit and not inhabit).
Departing Buckingham Palace we headed toward Westminster Abbey. Visiting the Abbey gave much pause for contemplation as we observed a real-life example of form over substance. Westminster Abbey has all the ostentatious, "Christian" grandeur one could imagine (much of it crossing the line of idolatry), yet it possesses no "soul." The Abbey appears nearer linked to man than to God, and its selection of men to honor is at times blasphemous (e.g. Charles Darwin). England’s state church long ago compromised its integrity, and a step-back examination of the many vile, God-hating sovereigns and others memorialized within this supposed "house of God" makes laughable the very thought of such a title.
Some of the placards/floor stones/etc., I did enjoy seeing included Sir Isaac Newton, John and Charles Wesley, Isaac Watts, William Wilberforce, and Oliver Cromwell (Cromwell’s body remained in Westminster Abbey for only three years, at which time it was exhumed and destroyed by vengeful enemies).
After lunch our next stop was the Imperial War Museum, perhaps the most interesting and informative site we had yet visited since arriving in Britain. Although I had expected to focus on primarily World War II history within this museum, much of my perusing instead majored upon post-World War II happenings: the Soviets; Iran; Iraq; Israel; Egypt; Ireland; the U.S.; Vietnam; China; South Africa; India; etc., and their relations with the U.K. I learned quite a bit about the Cold War era, as well as non-U.S. vs. USSR international military actions during that time.
Although we spent a good three hours touring the museum, I doubt we saw more than 1/3 of its contents, this despite skipping many of the "artifacts" displays in favor of the excellent placard commentaries accompanying more interesting (to us) fare. Most of our time was spent in the museum’s basement, and about 30 minutes on the first floor. We never reached floors two or three.
Among the memorabilia housed in the Imperial War Museum were several World War II airplanes and tanks, together with old mortars, bombs, missiles, an ambulance, a piece of the old Berlin wall, and a 14-foot civilian fishing boat used to evacuate British and French soldiers from Dunkirk—the smallest civilian vessel used in that great rescue. Many, many additional historical items were to found in the museum’s halls, but doors closed at 6:00 p.m. and we sadly had to depart.
We killed time for the next hour or so, waiting for the Wednesday evening service at the London Metropolitan Tabernacle to begin. At a little after 7:00 p.m. we entered the church through its right-side glass doors and walked downstairs. There we were greeted at the doors of a large classroom, the older man who greeted us inquiring whether Dad and I were brothers. (Dad responded, "I like you!") Taking our seats, we waited for the 7:30 p.m. service to begin. By service’s start the entire room was filled, containing approximately 200-300 people.
The service commenced with a hymn, a welcome, another hymn, Scripture reading, another hymn, prayer, and an introduction of the evening’s speaker, an elderly pastor from a local Ridley Hall assembly. His message was entitled, "An Unchanging God in a Changing World." Our text was Jeremiah 47:1-28. An excellent exhortation ensued as the pastor urged us to compare our present world and daily challenges to Jeremiah’s time and the struggles he then faced. The pastor clearly stated that, though our world may minimize, excuse, and reject the very concept of sin, God never does, never did, and never will. He does not change, nor does His Law. After a week of observing gross physical immodesty and hollow declarations of "Christianity" throughout Britain, it was most encouraging to hear a different British perspective—a biblical perspective—on life and culture.
Following the service, Dad and I grabbed some light refreshments from the fellowship hall and headed for the church’s Tabernacle Bookshop. There I purchased The Five Points of Calvinism by Dabney and Dickinson, a Sprinkle Publications title which had found its way across "the pond." I look forward to a good read.
We finished making our purchases and departed for the Tube. The remainder of our evening consisted of shower, journal, reading, and bed.
Outside the Palace we purchased a special pass that afforded us access to The Queen’s Gallery, the Royal Mews, and the State Rooms of Buckingham Palace. Our first stop was the Queen’s Gallery. The Gallery consisted of artwork, antique furniture, china, etc., and was a relatively small exhibit for the ticket cost (the price of royalty, I suppose). Our Queen’s Gallery visit was brief, and we soon moved to the Royal Mews.
The Royal Mews is where the traditional royal carriages are housed, as well as the more modern royal motor "carriages." The royal horses are also stabled here, and a still-active riding school is also located on the grounds. Each carriage---there are seven, I believe---has its own significance and use. Their ornate qualities vary, but each is highly decorated for the singular state occasions in which they take part. By far the most ornately decorated coach we saw was the Gold State Coach, in use for more than 200 years. This carriage was the vehicle of choice for transporting Queen Elizabeth II during her 1953 coronation ceremony.
Departing the Royal Mews, we exited onto the street sidewalk and walked the few hundred yards to the queue outside the State Rooms of Buckingham Palace. We soon passed through security and began the State Rooms’ tour. What a tour.
All manner of elegance and royalty emanated from within the State Rooms of Buckingham Palace. Numerous works of art masqueraded as furniture. Paintings by Rembrandt, Rubens, Benjamin West, Vermeer, and other masters hung from the walls. Intricate designs covered the ceilings, often in gilded silver.
Walking through the palace we enjoyed a pleasant Summer breezed wafting through the many open windows. I know not what measure of modern air conditioning is required in time of great heat, but on this day the fresh air ventilation more than sufficed (of course, air conditioning could have been simultaneously pumping in on the sly).
Of the three venues we toured, overall I was most impressed by Buckingham Palace. Its grandeur was all I had ever imagined and more; truly a dwelling place fit for royalty (and one which I was most pleased to visit and not inhabit).
Departing Buckingham Palace we headed toward Westminster Abbey. Visiting the Abbey gave much pause for contemplation as we observed a real-life example of form over substance. Westminster Abbey has all the ostentatious, "Christian" grandeur one could imagine (much of it crossing the line of idolatry), yet it possesses no "soul." The Abbey appears nearer linked to man than to God, and its selection of men to honor is at times blasphemous (e.g. Charles Darwin). England’s state church long ago compromised its integrity, and a step-back examination of the many vile, God-hating sovereigns and others memorialized within this supposed "house of God" makes laughable the very thought of such a title.
Some of the placards/floor stones/etc., I did enjoy seeing included Sir Isaac Newton, John and Charles Wesley, Isaac Watts, William Wilberforce, and Oliver Cromwell (Cromwell’s body remained in Westminster Abbey for only three years, at which time it was exhumed and destroyed by vengeful enemies).
After lunch our next stop was the Imperial War Museum, perhaps the most interesting and informative site we had yet visited since arriving in Britain. Although I had expected to focus on primarily World War II history within this museum, much of my perusing instead majored upon post-World War II happenings: the Soviets; Iran; Iraq; Israel; Egypt; Ireland; the U.S.; Vietnam; China; South Africa; India; etc., and their relations with the U.K. I learned quite a bit about the Cold War era, as well as non-U.S. vs. USSR international military actions during that time.
Although we spent a good three hours touring the museum, I doubt we saw more than 1/3 of its contents, this despite skipping many of the "artifacts" displays in favor of the excellent placard commentaries accompanying more interesting (to us) fare. Most of our time was spent in the museum’s basement, and about 30 minutes on the first floor. We never reached floors two or three.
Among the memorabilia housed in the Imperial War Museum were several World War II airplanes and tanks, together with old mortars, bombs, missiles, an ambulance, a piece of the old Berlin wall, and a 14-foot civilian fishing boat used to evacuate British and French soldiers from Dunkirk—the smallest civilian vessel used in that great rescue. Many, many additional historical items were to found in the museum’s halls, but doors closed at 6:00 p.m. and we sadly had to depart.
We killed time for the next hour or so, waiting for the Wednesday evening service at the London Metropolitan Tabernacle to begin. At a little after 7:00 p.m. we entered the church through its right-side glass doors and walked downstairs. There we were greeted at the doors of a large classroom, the older man who greeted us inquiring whether Dad and I were brothers. (Dad responded, "I like you!") Taking our seats, we waited for the 7:30 p.m. service to begin. By service’s start the entire room was filled, containing approximately 200-300 people.
The service commenced with a hymn, a welcome, another hymn, Scripture reading, another hymn, prayer, and an introduction of the evening’s speaker, an elderly pastor from a local Ridley Hall assembly. His message was entitled, "An Unchanging God in a Changing World." Our text was Jeremiah 47:1-28. An excellent exhortation ensued as the pastor urged us to compare our present world and daily challenges to Jeremiah’s time and the struggles he then faced. The pastor clearly stated that, though our world may minimize, excuse, and reject the very concept of sin, God never does, never did, and never will. He does not change, nor does His Law. After a week of observing gross physical immodesty and hollow declarations of "Christianity" throughout Britain, it was most encouraging to hear a different British perspective—a biblical perspective—on life and culture.
Following the service, Dad and I grabbed some light refreshments from the fellowship hall and headed for the church’s Tabernacle Bookshop. There I purchased The Five Points of Calvinism by Dabney and Dickinson, a Sprinkle Publications title which had found its way across "the pond." I look forward to a good read.
We finished making our purchases and departed for the Tube. The remainder of our evening consisted of shower, journal, reading, and bed.

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