features - Church Times
Transcription
features - Church Times
No. 7814 LoNDoN 21/28 DeCeMBeR 2012 £3.60 www.churchtimes.co.uk this thing which is come to pass Christmas confessions, royal broadcasts, an atheist celebrates, a need for mystery, a hard road for palestinians, folk religion, the cathedrallicker, 2012 in review PLUS: free 2013 wallplanner news contents the Christmas story in pictures 3233 folk religion works Alan Billings 34 Bruegel’s Census at Bethlehem George Pattison 35 the joys of Christmas morning Richard Coles 36 Christmas at Wakefield Cathedral Pamela Greener 37 revisiting the Queen’s broadcasts Anthony Cane 38 news Connecticut shooting, Whitby candidate withdraws, women bishops panel, Christmas knowledge, leadtheft gang, Harare celebrations 26, 811 real life 12 arts John Rutter in profile Roderic Dunnett Christmas and the friars Pamela Tudor-Craig with Nicholas Rogers 52 53 ‘I grasp any moment to contemplate’ Lord’s prayer celebrating Sir Ninian Comper comment Census fears allayed, cultural Christians, nuclear weapons, too organised, school massacre, royal baby, imagination at Christmas, religious symbols 1416 letters caption competition diary, gardening, questions cookery, wine faith Sunday’s readings prayer for the week 1718 19 20 21 22 23 23 23 features cribs and confessions 2425 the creeds and the incarnation Andrew Davison 2627 health and human rights in palestine Ed Thornton 2829 the nativity on YouTube Steve Tomkins 30 an atheist’s Christmas Robin Ince 31 review of 2012 what it means to be British David Reason 4344 reviews media books 45 4651 ‘Mary passes unnoticed’ 5256 3946 TV and radio press choice gazette 56 57 58 The editor and staff of the Church Times wish all their readers a merry Christmas and a happy New Year our cover The Annunciation to the Shepherds, School of Reichenau, early 11th century; illumination to the Book of pericopes of Henry ii, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, Munich, from A King James Christmas, edited by Catherin Schuon and Michael Fitzgerald, published by Wisdom Tales. image used by kind permission of Wisdom Tales word from Wormingford, crossword 63 peter Hennessy interview 64 PLUS: your FREE wallplanner ‘I wince when I see angels’ The Church Times next appears on Friday 4 January The perfect Christmas gift £10 off and a FREE book worth up to £12.99 Editor, paul Handley; Deputy editors, Rachel Boulding, Glyn paflin; News, Helen Saxbee; Features, Malcolm Doney, Christine Miles; Sub, Sue Chisholm; Advertising, Stephen Dutton; Production, Brian Minter; Marketing, Justine Burrows; Web editor, Dave Walker HURRY: offer ends 31 December 2012. each subscription will start with the issue dated 4 January 2013 The Church Times and Canterbury press have teamed up to create a special gift subscription this Christmas. 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For office use only CHURCH TIMES Ap news Ap DeMoTix Ap Newtown mourns: left to right: a policewoman, Maryhelen McCarthy, brings flowers to an RC church; a young boy places a candle at the base of a flagpole; families leave gifts by Christmas trees at the school; residents meet for an interfaith vigil at the High School Connecticut bishops speak out on guns after massacre by a staff reporter AS THE funerals of the 26 young children and teachers murdered in a school in the United States took place this week, the Bishop of Con necticut, the Rt Revd Ian Douglas, pledged himself to fighting for new guncontrol measures. Twenty children, aged six or seven, with six of their teachers, were shot and killed last Friday by Adam Lanza, who forced his way into Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut. He fired hundreds of bullets from a semiautomatic assault rifle, and carried two handguns. Bishop Douglas said on Tues day that he expected faith leaders to “engage at a significant level” in the debate about tougher gun laws which the massacre has sparked. The Episcopal Church in the US has advocated gun control for many years. The Dean of Washington National Cathedral, the Very Revd Gary Hall, received applause during a service on Sunday when he called on people of faith to take the lead on the issue. “As followers of Jesus, we have the moral obligation to stand for and with the victims of violence, and to work to end it,” he said. “We have tolerated school shootings, mall shootings, theatre shootings, sniper shootings, workplace shoot ings, temple and church shootings, urban neighbourhood shootings, for far too long.” President Barack Obama, speak ing at an interfaith service in New town on Sunday night, promised to use every power of his office to end such occurences. A spokesman said later that the President wanted to reinstate a ban on assault weapons, which lapsed in 2004. Bishop Douglas said that he and his two suffragans were “very clear” on the issue, and that now was the time to act. “Our country is crying out for commonsense gun legisla tion, including reinstituting the ban on assault weapons.” Bishop Douglas had travelled to Newtown last Friday, as soon as he heard of the shootings. The Revd Kathie AdamsShepherd has been Vicar of Trinity, Newtown, its largest parish, for 17 years. She first heard of the incident from her son, a firefighter, and joined the families of children as they waited for them to come out of school. The three Bishops opened Trinity for prayer, and organised a Taizé style service and eucharist in the evening. The church remained open, day and night, throughout the weekend. Bishop Douglas said: “Kathie is doing what any excellent priest should be doing. She is very present for her congregation and her immediate parishioners. Under Kathie’s leadership, it is as strong a Christian community as we have in the diocese.” Trinity is hosting its share of the children’s funerals. NeuSTADT CoLLeCTioN In a message on the church’s website, Mrs AdamsShepherd has written: “We are truly uplifted by the outpouring of prayers and support being offered from all over the world. We understand that the world is grieving for those we have lost and all are struggling to find ways to help.” Bishop Douglas said that prayers and messages of support had poured in from all over the Anglican Communion. Pope Benedict XVI sent a telegram to Newtown on Friday, and also prayed for the families on Sunday. He told a gathering in St Peter’s Square, Rome, of his deep sadness at the news. “I assure the families of the victims, especially those who lost a child, of my closeness in prayer. May the God of consolation touch their hearts and ease their pain.” The general secretary of the World Council of Churches, Dr Olav Tveit, said: “We commend all who stand in vigil with those in pain. . . And we support and pray for community and national leaders who are asking hard questions, hoping to prevent future tragedies.” Comment, page 15 Whitby see in review after priest withdraws by Ed Thornton THE Revd Philip North, Team Rector in the Old St Pancras Team Ministry, in London, this week with drew his acceptance of his nomina tion as Bishop of Whitby after pro tests at his opposition to women bishops. He would have been the third opponent in succession to hold the appointment. Fr North was nominated less than Glass jewel: Salve Regina (c.1910), a window by Frederick Wilson for Tiffany Studios, now in the show “Louis C. Tiffany and the Art of Devotion”, at the Museum of Biblical Art, New York, until 20 January. www.mobia.org two months ago to succeed Dr Martin Warner, after the latter was translated to Chichester (News, 26 October). Speaking in the General Synod debate on the womenbishops legislation last month (Synod, 30 November), Fr North said that he valued the ministry of women deeply, but stated: “I simply do not accept the authority of the Church of England to make this decision” (about women bishops). The Church of England was “not some small, independent state Church, but part of the wider Catholic Church with all its limitations and all the joys that that entails”. In a statement issued on Sunday night by the diocese of London, Fr Continued overleaf Unhappy Christmas Be the good news to the poorest children in England www.CUf.org.Uk/ChUrChes CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 3 news Whitby see Continued from previous page North said: “It was a great honour to be chosen for this role, and I had been very much looking forward to taking up the position. However, in the light of the recent vote in the General Synod, and having listened to the views of people in the Archdeaconry of Cleveland, I have concluded that it is not possible for me, at this difficult time for our Church, to be a focus for unity. I have therefore decided that it is better to step aside at this stage. “I have reached this decision after a time of deep reflection and feel sure that it is for the best. I now look forward to refocusing my energies on the pastoral needs of my parish.” A churchwarden of St Oswald’s, Lythe, in Whitby, John Secker, had written to the Archbishop of York, Dr Sentamu, in a letter dated 28 November, which gathered a num ber of signatories. The letter said: “We are puzzled, dismayed and very disappointed that for the third time running we have been assigned a Bishop of Whitby who does not accept the ordination of women priests. . . “We are aware that some par ishes, some clergy, and some of the laity in the Whitby bishopric do not accept the validity of women priests but, as in the rest of the country, a substantial majority of us do. So why should we have to have a bishop who does not accept them? We assume that there must be some sort of rationale behind the decision, but you should be aware that many of us feel aggrieved and overlooked.” In a reply, dated 6 December, Dr Sentamu wrote: “Whatever fears there may be about Revd North’s ability to work with all in the Archdeaconry [of Cleveland], I am confident that he will not only live up to Bishop Martin’s example, but also go beyond it in his valuing of the ministry of his female colleagues. “Clearly the appointment of Revd North has also been made as part of our accommodation for our petitioning parishes in this diocese. The fact is that the vast majority of our petitioning parishes are in the Cleveland Archdeaconry and so the see of Whitby is the obvious choice for such episcopal provision where the diocesan bishop is an outspoken advocate of women’s ministry.” York diocese has eight Resolution A parishes and 15 Resolution B parishes. It is understood that four of the A parishes, and four of the B 4 ST MARTIN’S/LIVABILITY parishes, are in the archdeaconry of Cleveland, in the Whitby episcopal area. A statement from the diocese of York, issued on Monday morning, said that Dr Sentamu wrote to all clergy and Readers in the arch deaconry of Cleveland, on Sunday, expressing his “sadness” and “disap pointment” at Fr North’s decision to withdraw. Dr Sentamu wrote: “Philip North is not a singleissue priest. As a gifted pastorteacher he is deeply committed to the flourishing of the diverse ministries of all God’s people — lay and ordained. His dynamic vision for making Christ visible in mission and ministry, as well as serving the poor, would have been a great asset to us all. . . “The question of the appointment of a new bishop will be first referred to the Dioceses Commission. As many of you may know, the Dioceses Commission will be reviewing our diocese, its structures, boundaries and delivery of mission. As to the timing of when this will happen, the Dioceses Commission will let us know.” Responding to the news of Fr North’s withdrawal, the Bishop of London, the Rt Revd Richard Chartres, said: “I can understand the reasons for Philip’s decision. He is a gifted and energetic priest and I am glad that he remains in this diocese to continue his outstanding work in Camden Town.” A statement from the Catholic Group in the General Synod, of which Fr North is a member, said that the decision to withdraw was his “personal decision”. Letters, page 17 DIOCESE OF YORK No longer leaving north London for Whitby: the Revd Philip North CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 Seasonal: Pam Rhodes hosts the annual Livability carol service, at St Martin-in-the-Fields, London, on Tuesday Synod taskforce announced by Ed Thornton THE membership of a working group given the task of helping the House of Bishops to resolve the deadlock on women bishops was announced on Wednesday. Two of its ten members — the Bishop of Chichester, Dr Martin Warner, and the Chair of the House of Laity, Dr Philip Giddings — voted against the legislation at the Synod last month (News, 23 November). The group, which is drawn from all three Houses of the Synod, is expected to have two initial meetings in January, a Church House state ment said. It will “arrange facilitated discussions in February with a wide range of people with a variety of views”, and will “assist the House [of Bishops] when it meets in February and in May to come to a decision on the new package of proposals it intends to bring to the Synod in July”. The working group’s members are: the Bishop of St Edmundsbury & Ipswich, the Rt Revd Nigel Stock (chair); the Bishop of Coventry, Dr Christopher Cocksworth; the Bishop of Rochester, the Rt Revd James Langstaff; the Bishop of Chichester, Dr Martin Warner; the Dean of York, the Very Revd Vivienne Faull; the Archdeacon of Lewisham & Green wich, the Ven. Christine Hardman; the Revd Dr Rosemarie Mallett (Southwark); Dr Philip Giddings (Oxford); Dr Paula Gooder (Birm ingham); and Margaret Swinson (Liverpool). The House of Bishops met at Lambeth Palace on Monday and Tuesday of last week (News, 14 December). After the meeting, the Bishops said that new legislative pro posals would need to offer “greater simplicity”, but also a “clear embodi ment of the principle articulated by the 1998 Lambeth Conference that those who dissent from, as well as those who assent to, the ordination of women to the priesthood and episcopate are both loyal Anglicans”. The Catholic Group in the General Synod has said that it is “fully ready to assist in the process of agreeing fresh legislation to provide for the religious convictions of all loyal Anglicans”. It has asked that women “who do not support the consecration of women bishops” contribute to the dis cussions. Laity meeting. Church House pub lished the agenda, on Monday, for the meeting of the House of Laity, on 18 January, at which Stephen Barney (Leicester) will move: “That this House have no confidence in Dr Philip Giddings as Chair of this House.” In an explanatory note accom panying the agenda, Mr Barney writes that Dr Giddings’s speech against the Measure had “followed directly” a speech in favour of the legislation by the Archbishopdesignate, the Rt Revd Justin Welby, and therefore “directly undermined” Bishop Welby. Dr Giddings’s intervention “did not support the views of the House of Bishops as a whole”, and “speaking as the Chair of our House, his speech was instrumental in convincing some of the undecided members of the House to vote against”. Mr Barney writes that Dr Giddings’s speech “was therefore a significant contributor to the reputational damage the Church of England is already suffering at the hands of the press”. Mr Barney concludes: “I have always been one of the first to say that individuals must vote according to their consciences; however, leaders have other responsibilities and ac countabilities. . . [The leader] must show wise and good judgement, and I do not believe that this has happened.” Should those opposed to women bishops have more representation on the group? Vote at www.churchtimes.co.uk ? SouTHWeLL MiNSTeR Poll: public knows Christmas story by Paul Wilkinson THE majority of people still have a good general knowledge of the nativity story, a poll commissioned by the Bible Society suggests. But there were some misunder standings about the details, includ ing the 60 per cent of respondents who believed that Mary and Joseph were married; the two per cent who thought that they were “on their first date” when the Angel Gabriel announced that Mary was with child; and the 37 people who said that Father Christmas was the first visitor to the manger. “Knowledge of the nativity story is remarkably good,” said the Bible Society’s Director of External Rela tions, Ann Holt. “Who’s the chubby bloke with the white beard and red suit who just jumped the queue?” The researchers ICM asked more than 1000 children under 12, and 1000 parents, ten questions about their knowledge of the Christmas story. Most scored six out of ten, and almost a quarter got eight or more answers correct. They also found that more than half of all the families who were polled were planning to attend, or had already attended, a school nativity play this year. Overall, 98 per cent of those polled correctly identified Bethlehem as Jesus’s birth place, although a few named Beirut. “This poll shows what an im portant part schools have to play in passing on the Christmas story from one generation to another, and, historically, what a good job they have done,” Ms Holt said. But, she said: “Nativity plays do sanitise the story, so many assume Mary and Joseph were married, and, in doing so, miss the genuine hint of scandal there was at the time.” The survey reports that the best known facts about the nativity were, in order: • that Jesus was born in Bethlehem, which was known by 98 per cent of those questioned; • that Mary put the baby Jesus in a manger, which was known by 89 per cent; • that the angel Gabriel told Mary that she would give birth (83 per cent knew this); • that Herod was king at the time (77 per cent knew this); • that the angels were the first to announce the news (63 per cent); • that Mary and Joseph were travelling because they had been ordered to register with the auth orities (52 per cent); • that the shepherds were the Kingmakers: children from Lowes Wong junior school, Southwell, in Southwell Minster on Monday, with models of the Magi that they made from wire, paper and fabric, for part of the minster crib scene first to visit Jesus (46 per cent); • that the word Immanuel means “God is with us” (32 per cent); • that Mary and Joseph were en gaged when she found out that she Bishops’ working costs grow again A MORE than doubling of legal costs, generated by clergy discipline cases, was the main cause of an increase of more than £1 million in the working costs of bishops in 2011, writes Madeleine Davies. Figures released by the Church Commissioners on Wednesday show that the office and working costs of the C of E’s 113 bishops increased from £15,983,479 in 2010 to £17,013,912 last year. The main reason for the increase was rising legal costs — from £533,600 to ‘Wonderful credit union’ THE encomium to socially respons ible banking in the classic Christmas film It’s A Wonderful Life found an echo in the House of Lords on Thursday of last week, when the Bishop of Durham, the Rt Revd Justin Welby, spoke about the “huge potential” of credit unions, writes Madeleine Davies. Bishop Welby described how credit unions in his “greviously underbanked” diocese had “made good finance and access to credit available in an extremely deprived area”, echoing the 1946 film’s warn ing that, without a mutual society, people from a small town would not have been able to take out mortgages. Credit unions were now neces sary “in a way that we have not seen since the 19th century”, Bishop Welby said, “keeping capital and profit local, beginning at the bottom of the tree rather than the top”. He warned that they were held back by a lack of good IT systems and the “profound expertise” of managers in other companies. He supported a recommendation from the Depart ment for Work and Pensions (DWP) that the Government invest in the sector. The Church of England and the Roman Catholic Church had branches in every community, the Bishop said, and were “used to handling money . . . and we are rather good at it. We have very low levels of fraud. We need to get involved and contribute to this in a powerful and effective way.” Bishop Welby also warned that credit unions must retain their “dis tinct purpose and nature”, unlike those building societies that, after demutualisation, “went up with the rocket and down with the stick”. There are 400 credit unions in Britain, holding £776 million in savings and with more than £602 million currently out on loan. They serve two per cent of the adult popu lation, compared with Ireland (75 per cent) and the US (44 per cent). £1,315,816. A spokesman said that legal costs were incurred by the consecration and enthronement of bishops, and the clergy Discipline Measure. “Exceptional staff costs”, which cover redundancy payments and payments towards the pension defi cit, also increased, from £246,033 to £462,745. The biggest cost was salaries for office and support staff, totalling £8.7 million, up from £8.5 million in the previous year, while office costs fell from £1.3 million to £1.1 million. The figures include a break down of expenditure by individual bishops. The office of the Arch bishop of Canterbury reported ex penditure of £1,989,862 in 2011, up from £1,882,346 in 2010, while the outlay of the office of the Arch bishop of York rose from £991,000 to £1,062,742. In 2011, the Church Commis sioners changed the way in which bishops’ ministry is funded, and gave diocesan bishops an annual block grant, known as a Ministry Grant, which is used to fund suf fragan, area, and assistant bishops in line with “locally determined priorities”. The Commissioners’ board of governors has agreed to increase funding for the Archbishops by two per cent, and the bishops’ funding by four per cent, year on year, for 201113. was going to have a baby (26 per cent); and • that the Wise Men travelled west, following the star to Bethlehem (14 per cent). news Big changes to Gift Aid donations A BILL that the Government has said will “reduce the burden on charities” passed through the House of Lords on Tuesday evening, writes Ed Thornton. The Small Charitable Donations Bill legislates for the Gift Aid Small Donations Scheme (GASDS), which was announced by the Chancellor, George Osborne, in last year’s Budget (News, 23 March 2011). It allows charities to claim “topup payments”, similar to Gift Aid, on donations of £20 or less, up to a total of £5000 a year per charity, without a need for donors to fill in forms. During the Bill’s Third Reading in the House of Commons last month, amendments that would have allowed the GASDS to apply to noncash payments, such as text messages, failed to get through. The Treasury did, however, agree to reduce the time a charity had to have made Gift Aid declarations to be eligible for GASDS, from four to two years; it also increased the matching ratio from 2:1 to 10:1, which means that a charity need have claimed only 10p in Gift Aid to claim £1 from GASDS. Gift Aid change. From April, churches and charities will be required to submit Gift Aid claims to HMRC using a new internet service, “Charities Online”. This will replace the current R68(i) Gift Aid and taxrepayments claims form. HMRC is intending to write to charities next month to explain the changes. The director of Data Develop ments, Shelagh Ibbs, said: “This is the most significant change to Gift Aid since it was introduced in 2000.” www.hmrc.gov.uk/charities/online/ Ecclesiastical Because home your door is insurance always open We offer home insurance tailormade for members of the clergy with cover that includes many additional features for your main residence to reflect the extra risks you may be exposed to due to your vocation. To find out more, call for a free no-obligation quote on 0800 917 3345 quoting ref CHTIMES 8am - 6pm, Mon - Fri (excl. bank holidays) or apply online at www.ecclesiastical.com/clergy Clergy save over 30% * Ecclesiastical Insurance Office plc. (EIO) is authorised and regulated by the Financial Services Authority registered in England at Beaufort House, Brunswick Road, Gloucester GL1 1JZ, UK. (Reg. No. 24869). * 30% discount applies when you buy contents and buildings insurance together online; terms and conditions and minimum premiums apply. CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 5 news Church calls for action on on emissions THE Government must make amendments to the Energy Bill currently being debated in the House of Commons, in order to protect the “fuel poor” and “de carbonise” the country’s energy supply, the Church of England’s environment campaign has said, writes Madeleine Davies. A briefing for MPs, produced by the C of E, the Methodist, Baptist, and United Reformed Churches, and the Quakers, argues that the proposal to delay, until 2016, the setting of a target for reducing the emission of carbon dioxide by 2030 “fails to reflect the urgency of the situation we face” (News, 30 November). It also warns that the complexity of Contracts for Difference — a mechanism designed to incentivise investments in lowcarbon energy — might deter small generators. It calls on the Government to include in the Bill a mechanism to en courage energy efficiency that could help households to reduce energy bills. The Department of Energy and Climate Change has estimated that fuel poverty will have affected almost four million people in 2012. “It is important that demand reduction measures . . . are central to the Energy Bill and the Govern ment’s overall energy strategy,” the briefing concludes. The Energy Bill, published in draft form on 29 November, sets out plans for radical reforms of the electricity market. MEETING THE FATHERS Institute for Orthodox Christian Studies, St Gregory Cambridge of Nyssa 19 January 2013 St Maximus St Ephrem the Syrian the Confessor 16 February 16 March St John of Damascus 20 April St Gregory Palamas 18 May Get to know five of the great Church Fathers of the Eastern Christian tradition. Distinguished lecturers will introduce their life, work, and teaching. All this with lunch, discussion sessions, and vespers. More details at www.iocs.cam.ac.uk or e-mail us at: info@iocs.cam.ac.uk or ring: +44 1223 741037 or write to: IOCS, Wesley House, Jesus Lane Cambridge CB5 8BJ, UK 6 Feeling the rough edge of his tongue pHoToS CATeRS Madeleine Davies talks to Lawrence edmonds, who, for a bet, has spent the year licking Anglican cathedrals in the uK AT THE time of going to press, one man’s story remained the most popular piece of news on the Church Times website. His name is not Justin, or Rowan, and he does not even proffer belief in a deity, let alone any thoughts on what God might think about women bishops. He is Lawrence Edmonds, and, by the beginning of this month, he had licked every Anglican cathedral in the UK (News, 29 June). “My favourite cathedral was prob ably Lincoln,” he says. “Just from the scale of it, and the west front was absolutely incredible. The carvings completely blew me away.” His blog reveals that Lincoln did, indeed, supersede previous amours — “the sumptuous Norwich Cathedral, the jawdropping Durham, and the frankly arousing Wells”. The Lincoln lick itself was “un eventful but very satisfying”, he recalls. “The stone was damp from the copious rain that had fallen that day, which probably gave it a very refreshing and mossy taste.” Lichfield, Mr Edmonds says, is the tastiest cathedral in the land. The sandstone was “beautifully warm on the tongue, without any hint of saltiness or other foul taste to ruin the experience”. That a cathedral official — “she really was a lovely lady, as are all of the cathedral attendants I’ve met on my travels” — was able to extract a £10 donation from Mr Edmonds, postlick, testi fies to its impact. In fact, what began as a joke bet with his best friend, Adam Drury, in January last year, inspired Mr Edmonds, who works in the heritage sector, to raise awareness of the UK’s houses of God, in addition to financial support. Fans of Parli ament TV will have noted Lord Stevenson of Balmacara making reference to Mr Edmonds’s endeav ours in a debate on the future of cathedrals in June this year. “IT DID start as a bit of fun, but, as I got around the places, I started to see that a lot of them were in dire need of financial support,” he says. “I found that quite surprising, but, as I learned more, I found out the reasons for it, and when I down loaded the debate in the House of Lords about it, I was really quite shocked by the situation that some of these places find themselves in.” Last month, he urged his blog followers to make a donation to the York Minster Fund (“It may come as a shock to learn that it costs about £20,000 a day to keep the Minster operating”). Mr Edmonds grew up in York, where he currently lives, after a spell in London, and he attributes his interest in cathedrals to living in the presence of the Minster, which CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 looked like churches. But even the very small ones have amazing things in them.” He speaks of the “incred ible Celtic sculptures” at Armagh, a former site of pagan worship. Close contact: from top: Lawrence edmonds at Gloucester, Salisbury, and ely Cathedrals “dominates the city”. Nevertheless, he estimates that he had never before visited 90 per cent of the 52 cathedrals on his list. This included Liverpool, “a must for all cathedral perverts”; Brecon, where it is the “aura of calm that was most striking”; and Exeter, where two “delightul” ladies at the gift shop “truly made my day” (and gave him a free sticker). Mr Edmonds’s bet took on a new stature when he was disabused of his “naïve” assumption that there were no Anglican cathedrals in Scotland, Wales, or Northern Ireland. “Some of the ones in Northern Ireland, and some in Scotland, were quite surprising, because some are on a much smaller scale and just NORTHERN IRELAND yielded also Down Cathedral’s “copious spiky stonework”, which prompted Mr Edmonds “once again [to] ponder the question of the world’s most dangerous cathedral. . . This had been on my mind ever since Silvio Berlusconi had been attacked with a reconstruction of the vi ciously pointy Milan Cathedral, in 2009. Had his assailant chosen to wield Down Cathedral, we agreed that the naughty Italian’s woe would have been far greater.” Mr Edmonds describes himself as an atheist, but his blog attests to the impact of spending time in the nation’s places of worship. At South well, he watched a performance by children, and “began to think how wonderful it was to see a place of worship so alive, not echoing with distant footsteps and stifled whis pers”. With his father, he was “swept up with it all as well, and began clapping and whooping with the rest of them. It was splendid stuff.” “I maybe have become more open, now that I have seen these places,” he says. “It’s difficult to describe, really; but obviously these places are churches, and not just about architecture. You go into these places, and you are struck by the majesty of places like Lincoln and York. I’m not sure whether it’s religion or the buildings themselves, but there is certainly something going on.” Mr Edmonds believes that, if cathedrals give people the oppor tunity to “go behind the scenes”, it will “awaken something within them, in the same way that it happened to me”. He plans to write a book about his licking tour. As for the bet with the newly married Mr Drury, it requires the loser to streak outside York Minster on a cold winter’s day. It remains unfulfilled. “I don’t know whether it will happen,” Mr Edmonds says. “I want to be respectful to the Minster, but Adam still thinks it is going to happen; so he’s quite worried. I’ll probably leave him to sweat over that for a bit.” cathedrallicking.wordpress.com Help make this Christmas a Season of Smiles Free cleft surgery which takes as little as 45 minutes and costs as little as £150, can give desperate children not just a new smile – but a new life. Donate online: www.smiletrain.org.uk Call: 0300 303 9630 I want to give a child a second chance at life. £150 towards surgery for one child £75 could cover half the cost of one surgery £30 towards an overnight hospital stay £ We’ll gratefully accept any amount Mr/Mrs/Ms Address Postcode Email Charge my gift to my: Telephone ■ Visa ■ MasterCard ■ Maestro Send this coupon with your donation to: Card No. Valid From Exp. Date The Smile Train UK, PO Box 909, Northampton NN3 0BF Issue No. Signature ■ My cheque is enclosed, made payable to The Smile Train UK Use Gift Aid to increase your donation by 25% ■ YES! I would like Smile Train to claim Gift Aid on any donations I have made within the last 4 tax years (6 April to 5 April) and on all donations I make in the future until further notice. I confirm that I have paid or will pay at least as much UK Income tax and/or Capital Gains tax for each tax year as Smile Train UK and all other charities and Community Amateur Sports Clubs (CASCs) that I donate to will reclaim on my gifts for that tax year. I understand that other taxes such as VAT and Council tax do not qualify. I understand that the charity will reclaim 25p of tax for every £1 that I have given/will give. ■ NO, I am not a UK taxpayer. These details, including your email address/telephone number, may be used to keep you informed about our future developments. If you do not want to receive such information please tick this box ■ N12121U126FCW2N Registered Charity No. 1114748 Registered Company No. 05738962 © 2012 The Smile Train UK A healthy diet during pregnancy can help prevent birth defects and clefts. Eat a healthy diet that contains lots of fruits and vegetables and foods fortified with folic acid. 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For more information, visit www.smiletrain.org.uk CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 7 news Welby: parishes are frontline of the Church THE Bishop of Durham, the Rt Revd Justin Welby, told BBC Tees, on Wednesday, that his short time in Durham had “reinforced in me that the real frontline of the Church is the local church, the parish church”. He said: “As I go around and work with clergy and lay leaders, and lay people in churches, you see just the incredible things that are going on, like the real daytoday work of people running fooddistribution centres and going into schools.” Bishop Welby expressed “a real sense of sadness” about leaving Durham, and “huge excitement” about becoming Archbishop of Canterbury. Bishop Allister to chair Council for Christian unity THE Bishop of Peterborough, the Rt Revd Donald Allister, has been appointed by the Archbishops of Canterbury and York to chair the Council for Christian Unity. Bishop Allister, who has been a member of the Council since 2006, will succeed the Bishop of Guildford, the Rt Revd Christopher Hill, when he steps down in June, after five years in the chair. New Dean of Brechin appointed THE Rector of St Mary’s, Broughty Ferry, the Revd Dr Francis Bridger, was appointed Dean of the diocese of Brechin, by the Bishop of Brechin, Dr Nigel Peyton, on Friday of last week. Dr Bridger will be installed as Dean of the diocese in St Paul’s Cathedral, Dundee, on 13 January. ST peTeR’S pARKSToNe Retired priests face abuse charges AT Norwich Crown Court on Monday, a priest, the Revd Haley Dossor, 71, admitted six counts of indecent assault, relating to boys as young as 13. The offences happened during the early 1990s. Chichester diocese confirmed last week that a priest formerly licensed in the diocese, the Revd Robert Coles, had been “committed for trial to face charges relating to allegations of sexual abuse”, in the 1970s and ’80s. “Symbol of hope”: a newly installed Advent star, built by the choir and youth group of St Peter’s, Parkstone, Poole Priest Idol church reopens after fire A CHURCH in South Yorkshire, which was the subject of the Channel 4 television series Priest Idol (News, 4 February 2005), has reopened after an arson attack in October 2007. St Mary Magdalene’s, Lundwood, near Barnsley, held a special carol service, on Saturday, to celebrate its reopening. Fund launched in memory of the Revd John Suddards A FUND has been launched at St Nicholas’s, Witham, Essex, in memory of the late Revd John Suddards, Vicar of Thornbury, in Gloucestershire, who was stabbed to death in his vicarage, in February (News, 17 February). Mr Suddards had been Team Rector of Witham for ten years, before he moved to Thornbury in July 2011. The fund will be distributed for educational purposes. The Bishop of Chelmsford, the Rt Revd Stephen Cottrell, is patron of the fund. Donations can be made online at www.justgiving.com/ JohnSuddards. “Thank You and Merry Christmas” priory Automotive would just like say a great big “Thank You” to the Church Times readers, who have been so supportive in this last year, and of course to those customers who have chosen priory for their new car. “We get so many kind words back from our customers, that we just wanted to let them know that it is greatly appreciated”, said Mike Stimely of priory. This is of course a very busy time for us all, and buying a motor car is probably well down your Christmas list, if it’s even on it at all, so priory don’t expect to be rushed off their feet right now, but can promise readers that they are ready, willing, and able to assist, when you decide that the time is right to change your car. All that is left to say is that the staff from priory would like wish every reader, a very Merry Christmas and a Happy and peaceful New Year. Priory Automotive: Tel: 0114 2559696 or visit www.prioryautomotive.com 8 CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 Fury at samesex exemption pa by Ed Thornton THE Government has insisted that it did consult church representatives about protections for the Church of England to be contained with in the Government’s samesex marriage legislation. The Minister for Women and Equalities, Maria Miller, announced on Tuesday of last week, that the Bill, to be published next year, would include a “quadruple lock” of measures that would “protect reli gious freedom” (News, 14 Decem ber). These would specify that it would be illegal for any Church of England minister to conduct a samesex marriage. At a meeting with parliamentar ians on Thursday of last week, the Bishop of Leicester, the Rt Revd Tim Stevens, said that this level of protection had not been mentioned in meetings with the Government. He regretted that no prior consul tation had been sought. But a blog post by Mrs Miller, published on the Department for Culture, Media and Sport website last Friday, said that it was “simply not correct” to suggest “that the Church of England didn’t know in advance about the legal protections we were proposing. . . We sat down and had detailed, private discus sions with them prior to my state ment in Parliament.” A letter was published in The Sunday Telegraph this week, expres sing “dismay” about the fourth “lock” in the legislation, which specifies that it would be illegal for C of E churches to marry samesex couples. The letter’s signatories in cluded the former Bishop of Oxford, the Rt Revd Lord Harries, and the director of Changing Attitude, the Revd Colin Coward. The letter called on the C of E “to relinquish its exemption” from the samesex marriage legislation, “and address the expectation of the majority in every parish that it will continue to offer pastoral care to every citizen, including gay married couples, and their children”. Two gay Christians indicated this week that they would sue the Gov ernment for discrimination, because they would not be able to marry Double blessing: Barrie (left) and Tony Drewit-Barlow, with their twin sons, after the babies’ christening at St John the Baptist, Danbury in their parish church. Tony and Barrie DrewittBarlow, who are in a civil partnership, told the gay news website, Pink News: “Like many couples, we look forward to being married in our local church . . . where our children were baptised. Now we are to be banned in law because we are gay, even if the vicar wanted to marry us.” A letter published in The Daily Telegraph on Monday, signed by 58 MPs and peers — the majority Conservative — indicated that the protections for religious groups in the Government’s samesex mar riage legislation had not reassured Conservative backbenchers. It said: “The proposed redefinition of marriage is unnecessary, given the legal rights established through civil partnerships.” Letters, page 17 New gay Bible seeks to counter homophobia A NEW edition of the Bible that “makes homophobic interpreta tions impossible” has been pro duced by an American priest, writes Madeleine Davies. The Queen James Bible is a revi sion of the King James Bible, and was named in reference to King James VI, said to have been called Queen James because of his relation ships with men, which some scholars believe were sexual. It is understood to be the work of the Revd Bertie Pearson, the parish priest of Holy Innocents’ Episcopal Church, San Francisco. Changes have been made to just eight verses, “to prevent homophobic interpretations”. Genesis 19.5, which refers to the siege of Lot’s house, has been revised so that the men of Sodom demand to “rape and humiliate” the angelic visitors rather than “know” them. There are amendments to two passages in Leviticus, a book de scribed as “outdated as a moral code”. The editors suggest that both Leviticus 18.22 and 20.13, which describe the “abomination” of man “lying with mankind”, were the subject of “translative error” and refer to lying with pagan male pros titutes as a form of pagan idolatry. Similarly, the editors says that Romans 1.2627 (“incredibly stretched to support homophobic agendas”) do not refer to gay or lesbian sex, but to worshipping pagan idols instead of God. 1 Corinthians 910, which refers to the “effeminate”, and “abusers of themselves with mankind”, is trans lated as condemning the “morally weak” and the “promiscuous”. “No Bible is perfect, including this one,” the editors said. “We wanted to make a book filled with the word of God that nobody could use to incorrectly condemn God’s LGBT children, and we succeeded.” Six men sentenced for £1million church leadthefts by Richard Vamplew MEMBERS of what is believed to be the most prolific church leadtheft gang in Britain were each sentenced to four years in prison, on Thursday of last week, after they left the Church of England with a £1 million repair bill across three counties (News, 9 March). The gang, based in Lincoln, struck at 20 churches across the East Midlands, and were caught only after police stopped a vehicle on the A46, near Lincoln, which was laden with stolen lead. An investigation led to the arrests of six men after they were linked to the offences through sales of stolen metal to recycling yards. Some of the metal had traces of SmartWater, which allowed officers to identify the lead. The gang, all from Lithuania, netted almost £70,000 from selling the stolen lead during a ninemonth period last year. Stephen Lowne, prosecuting, told Lincoln Crown Court that, although the majority of the churches tar geted by the gang were in Lin colnshire, others in Leicestershire and Nottinghamshire were also raided. “In some cases,” Mr Lowne said, “it was some time before the thefts were discovered, allowing the ingress of rainwater. Extensive in frastructure damage was caused to some of the churches.” He told the court that the crime became so prevalent that the Ec clesiastical Insurance Group re stricted claims to £5000 per church, and allowed only one claim per year. Andrius Cereska, Audrius Kved news © MeDiA LiNCS aras, and Tadas Andruska (pictured below, left to right), admitted con spiring to steal lead belonging to the the Church of England between exposed: St Laurence’s, Norwell (left), St Margaret’s, Quadring (far left), and St Nicholas’s, Fulbeck (below), all in Lincolnshire, were targeted for their lead January and September 2011, and were each sentenced to four years. Vidas Andruska (below, far right) was found guilty of the same charge after a trial, and was jailed for seven years. Vitalijus Vilkys (not pictured) admitted handling stolen lead, and was sentenced to six months’ imprisonment, suspended for two years, and 180 hours community punishment. Nerijus Razma was sentenced to 22 months. Judge Michael Heath told the men: “The overall costs to the 20 churches, I am told, is in the region of £1 million. It is a great deal of money. It is very important, and should not be underestimated, the distress felt by Christians at the desescration of their sacred places of divine worship. “You lot could not care less about those feelings. All you were inter ested in was stealing lead, weighing it in, and making money.” Det. Insp. Keith Blakey, of Lin colnshire Police, said: “The convic tions and jail terms represented the biggest success in the fight against heritage crime in Britain to date. . . Since the arrests of these men, there has been a massive drop in the number of church leadtheft cases in this area.” Heating system to take chill off Manchester Cathedral by Paul Wilkinson A LARGE part of Manchester Cathedral is to close for eight months, in a bid to remedy the building’s “unhealthy” chill. From next Easter, services will move to a temporary structure outside the cathedral, while a stateoftheart geothermal heating system is installed in the nave and the adjoin ing regimental chapel. The Dean, the Very Revd Rogers Govender, said: “We should be able to handle around half of our normal capacity congregation of 900.” The cathedral has increasingly been used as a concert venue, and for award ceremonies and formal dinners. “The heating in the nave is 40 years old,” Dean Govender said. “The pipes of the underfloor heating need replacing, but we have first to break up the 18 inches of concrete on top of them. “Then we are going green with this new, in novative groundsource heating system, using geothermal technology, which would supple ment the heat provided by the existing boilers.” Proposals for the work have been sent to the Cathedrals Fabric Commission, and the Chap ter has discussed planning requirements with Manchester City Council. The Dean hopes that the goahead will be given in January. He declined to give a price for the work. “We have a sum in mind, but are about to go out to tender. We will be appealing to the public for contributions, and applying for grants.” The socialenterprise company Create, which was operating the café in the cathedral’s Visitor Centre, has ceased trading. The cath edral is currently considering the options for the use of the space. Cathedral conservation. Grants of almost £1 million have been awarded for 21 projects at 17 English cathedrals. Ten payments, totalling £645,000, from the Cathedral Fabric Repair Fund, include £100,000 each to Gloucester, Hereford, and Worcester, and £90,000 to Lincoln, all for repairs to roofs and walls. The fund is a partnership between the Wolfson Foundation, the Pilgrim Trust, and the Cathedrals Fabric Commission for En gland, which, over the past three years, has awarded more than £1.8 million for essential works to keep cathedrals weatherproof. Frank Field MP, who chairs the Fabric Commission, said: “One of the most significant aspects of these grants is that we have included a number of cathedrals for which fundraising is less easy, and also several with innovative solutions to problems posed by 20thcentury materials and climate change.” The grants include £30,000 for work on the copper roofs at Guildford; and awards totalling £236,000 for work on Coventry Cathedral, Pershore Abbey, Southwell Minster, and Bradford Cathedral. A further six grants, totalling £71,000, are being offered by the fund for the conservation of artworks and historic furnishings to Derby, Coventry, Exeter, Salisbury, and Wakefield Cathedrals. They include £30,000 for the restoration of the organ at Exeter; and £30,000 for a feasibility study for the conservation of the 1962 Graham Sutherland tapestry, Christ in Glory, at Coventry. The full list of grants is: Cathedral Fabric Repair Fund Chester £40,000; Gloucester £100,000; Guild ford £30,000; Hereford £100,000; Leicester £16,000; Lincoln £90,000; Peterborough £28,000; St Edmundsbury £50,000; Southwark £91,000; and Worcester £100,000. Cathedral Amenities Fund Bradford £46,000; Coventry £80,000; Pershore Abbey £20,000; Southwell £80,000; Worcester £10,000. Conservation of Artworks and Historic Furnishings Coventry £30,000; Derby £3660; Exeter £30,000; Salisbury £5000; and Wakefield £2340. Church accounting, Gift aid & Membership Data Developments has been designing high quality software for churches and charities since 1985. Prices start at £129 Inc VAT. Accounts – Finance Co-ordinator is a fast, flexible and easy to use fund accounting program. It provides a framework to help you produce your accounts in accordance with the Charities Act and the SORP 2005. 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The indications after the first day of polling last Saturday were that about 57 per cent of voters had backed the new document. The final result is likely to provide further evidence of polarisation: just over half of all Egyptians will support the constitution, and just under half will reject it. The PresidentBishop in Jerusalem and the Middle East, the Most Revd Mouneer Anis, in a statement last Friday, described his country as “groaning and divided”. The main opposition grouping, the National Salvation Front, complained of electionrigging last Saturday. It alleged that at one polling station in Cairo, Christian women were not allowed to enter to cast their votes. But, in general, the fractured opposition, which most Copts support, is not as well organised as the Muslim Brotherhood and the Salafists, and seems out of touch with the millions of Egyptians living in rural areas. The opposition, however, notched in line: egyptian men queue at a polling station for the first part of the referendum on the new constitution, on Saturday up a victory of sorts on Monday, when pressure from judges forced the resignation of the public prosecutor, Talaat Ibrahim, who had recently been appointed by President Morsi to replace Abdel Maguid Mahmoud. The sacking of Mr Mahmoud had been seen as a move by the President and the Muslim Brotherhood to remove any threat from a judiciary associated with the Mubarak era, and therefore opposed to Islamist rule. After Mr Mahmoud had been removed, judges went on strike in protest, leaving an insufficient number to oversee voting on a single day, which necessitated a twostage referendum. The US Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, had earlier added her voice to those calling for the writing of a new draft constitution to replace one drawn up by an assembly dominated by Islamists. Large and oftenviolent demon strations for and against President Morsi have been continuing, despite his announcement earlier this month — under public pressure — that he had rescinded the decree granting him farreaching powers that could not be challenged, even by the judiciary. But, at the same time, he repeated his determination that the referendum on the draft constitution would take place as planned, prompting a fresh torrent of criticism from his opponents. The current draft and its progress are being criticised for several reasons that are unrelated to the content of the final document. First, most of the secular and Christian represent atives on the Constituent Assembly withdrew in protest at the way in which Islamists were seen to be push ing their own agenda. This meant that the draft was finally approved by a body that was far from representing the interests of all Egyptians. Second, the opportunity was missed to draw up a completely new constitution in the wake of the popular revolution that swept away the old dictatorial regime. Instead, hasty changes were made to an earlier document. Third, the speed with which the draft was approved, and the matter of days between this and the referendum, have prevented a national debate before the voting. As for the content, Bishop Anis says that there were several places where statements were imprecise and open to differen interpretations. People were afraid that this could “allow certain Islamic groups to restrict people’s freedom”, he said. uTV New patriarch of Antioch welcomed THE new Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch has been congratulated by the Archbishop of Canterbury. Youhanna X succeeds Ignatius IV, who died this month in Beirut at the age of 92 (News, 14 December). The Patriarch elect was born in Syria in 1955, and became a monk on Mount Athos, before being ordained. Since 2008, he has been the Bishop of the Patriarchate of Antioch’s diocese of Western and Central Europe. Global South support for Bishop Lawrence THE Steering Committee of the Primates of the Global South of the Angli can Communion has written a letter of support to the Bishop of South Carolina, the Rt Revd Mark Lawrence, after he announced that the diocese had disaffiliated itself from the Episcopal Church in the United States (News, 23 November). In a letter dated 14 December, the Primates assured Bishop Lawrence that “we recognise your Episcopal orders and your legiti mate Episcopal oversight of the Diocese of South Carolina within the Anglican Communion.” The Episcopal Church has said that individual dioceses cannot leave it, and in October, the Presiding Bishop, Dr Katharine Jefferts Schori, restricted Bishop Lawrence’s ministry, after the Disciplinary Board confirmed that he had abandoned the Church “by an open renuncia tion of the discipline of the Church”. There have been longrunning difficul ties in the relations of Bishop Lawrence and his diocese with the leadership of the Episcopal Church, over issues such as gay clergy and samesex unions. Bishop joins protest on Mount of olives army plans OPPOSITION to plans to build a military college on the Mount of Olives has won the backing of the Bishop of Swansea & Brecon, the Rt Revd John Davies. A 60day consultation on the proposal was opened by the Israeli authorities in October. Bishop Davies has signed a petition by a campaign group based in the UK that argues that the development on a site of importance to all three Abrahamic faiths, “could be seen as a provocative act, taking Jerusalem yet further away from becoming a city of peace”. Organist Available Hymnal Plus. The ultimate worship music solution. Thousands of hymns and worship songs, all in one box, ready to play. No musical or technical knowledge required. 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Leaders of all the main Churches in Ireland attended the service. Against a backdrop of renewed rioting in parts of Northern Ireland over the use of the Union flag at Belfast City Hall, Dr Clarke said that anger rather than courtesy was the prevalent behavioural pattern. “Indeed, many seem to find their only focus and meaning in life through constant rage. Salman Rushdie has coined a useful phrase, ‘outrage identity’, for those who can find any meaning for themselves only in their anger at others. True courtesy is the converse of spiteful anger. And courtesy is not simply good manners — desirable as they most certainly are — but goes a great deal further.” He said that the essence of courtesy was that it treated “the other” — whoever or whatever that “other” may be — as an individual who is always worthy of respect, whose individuality is to be allowed an integrity of its own. “This is how God treats us, accepting us as worthy of love, treating us as individuals deserving of respect, never intimidating or bullying us into abject submission, but listening with love and discern ment to what we are saying. “But courtesy — the word being used with care — goes further even than this. Courtesy goes beyond the strictly necessary or contractual, in giving to another. We can use the word quite casually in this sense — doing something ‘as a courtesy’, having the use of a ‘courtesy car’ — and, in fact, the meaning is not very different. “It means generously going fur ther than we actually have to go, in our service of another individual. It is the very reverse of manipulation, meanmindedness, and calculated malice, which, sadly, can so easily be cloaked as moral highmindedness. . . “And if you and I cannot, and will not, model the courtesy of God in our dealings — one with another within the Church, and in our relationships with those outside the walls of the Church who are also made in the image and likeness of God — we have indeed fallen at the first fence in Christian faithfulness.” Export-import: a Liverpool company, the Christmas Decorators, were responsible for dressing the 55-feethigh tree in Manger Square, Bethlehem, this year. The six-strong team said: “We are honoured to be here Israel’s Arabs alienated, says bishop by Ed Thornton THE Bishop of Exeter, the Rt Revd Michael Langrish, said last week that the Arab citizens of Israel were facing increasing “inequality and discrimination”. Introducing a debate on “the issues of equality and discrimination affecting Israel’s Arab citizens” in the House of Lords, on Thursday of last week, Bishop Langrish said that Israeli citizens who were Arabs in cluded “not only Muslim and Chris tian Palestinians, and Bedouin Arabs, but Arabicspeaking Druze, and a small number of Circassians as well”. There was “a widening gap in Israeli society between law and prac tice,” he said. “In law, Israeli Arabs enjoy full equality, and are endowed with the full spectrum of democratic rights. . . However, in practice there are many areas of life where Israeli Arabs are systematically disad vantaged.” Jewish and Arab Israelis had “different citizenship rights and constraints in relation to marriage and family reunification”, Bishop Langrish said. The Knesset, the Israeli legis lature, had “passed a raft of discrim inatory legislation” in recent years, he said, which had “helped further to alienate Israel’s nonJewish citizens”. There was also “an increasing desire among a majority of the Jewish public to see preference for Jews over Arabs in various areas of public life”. Bishop Langrish said that “ad dressing IsraeliArab discrimination needs now to be seen as a justice issue in its own right.” He called on the UK Government and the EU “to press Israeli governments for the realisation of Israel as a Jewish and democratic state, in which Jews and Arabs live together with full and equal human dignity and civil rights”. Responding to the debate, the Senior Minister of State at the Foreign Office, Baroness Warsi, said: “The promotion and protec tion of human rights is at the heart of UK foreign policy. How a country treats its minorities is an important test of a country’s democracy and respect for human rights and the rule of law. This is equally true for Israel.” news Harare’s day of thanksgiving: Gandiya looks to the future Brian Castle witnesses the exhilaration of the exiled Anglicans as they return to their cathedral IT WAS a new experience for the Anglicans of Harare. There were no police blocking the entrance to their cathedral. There was no tear gas from which they would have to flee. There were no padlocks on the doors to prevent their entering. The former bishop Nolbert Ku nonga had attempted to thwart and undermine the ruling of the Su preme Court of Zimbabwe, which declared the Rt Revd Chad Gandiya as the lawful Anglican Bishop of Harare, and the buildings, houses, and institutions from which Ang licans had been forcibly removed to be their rightful property (News, 7 December). But to no avail. The exiles were now returning home. The sound of the bells as the procession sang and danced towards the cathedral brought a great cheer. Then there was an electrifying moment: Bishop Gandiya banged on the doors with his pastoral staff, and, when the two doors swung open, there was a mighty roar from the gathering of 10,000 which might have been heard in the UK. The celebrations had begun in the centre of Harare, in Africa Unity Square, across the road from the cathedral and parliament buildings. This eucharist was attended by Ang licans from across the diocese, mem bers of government, and visitors from other parts of the Province of Central Africa, and from around the world — reminders of the encour agement and value of the world wide Anglican Communion. Those who could not find seats perched on statues, concrete ledges, or any available surface. In front of the platform that accommodated the altar party, four fountains rose 30 feet into the air, adding to the life and energy of the worship. “MuKristu usanete: namata urinde” Recognition: one of 12 teenage members of the Women’s Christian union of Angola holds an international Diana Award certificate, given to recognise the group’s HiV awareness project in Luanda, the capital of Angola (“Christians seek not yet repose: watch and pray”), a hymn that had been a great support in the people’s darkest moments, was sung with passion. In his sermon, Bishop Gan diya thanked those who had sup ported the diocese in its struggles, and he praised his people for their faithfulness to God, and their per severance over the past five years. He told them that, once they were back in their churches, they should not sit back and expect to draw their pension. Rather, they should be pressing on to whatever God was calling them to in the future. There would be challenges of forgiveness and reconciliation, and a great deal depended on the way they remem bered the past five years. They could remember in a way that would allow the pains of the past to dominate their lives, or they could remember in such a way that, like St Paul, they could “strain ahead for what is still to come”. He ended with an appeal: “Come, let us rebuild our diocese.” The Bishop then declared that 19 No vember, the day on which the Su preme Court Ruling was delivered, would be a day of thanksgiving for the diocese. Amid the celebrations, there were moments of stillness, and a minute’s silence was held in memory of Jessica Mandeya, who died as a re sult of the violence. There were messages of support and solidarity from the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Anglican Consultative Council, Harare’s partner diocese of Roches ter, the Prior of Taizé, the Arch bishop of Central Africa, and the general secretary of Us (formerly USPG). In his message, Dr Williams com mended the leadership of Bishop Gandiya, and Bishop Sebastian Bakare before him, and said that the faith of Anglicans in Harare had been a beacon of light to the rest of the Anglican Communion. Before the procession to the cath edral, water and incense were blessed for ceremonies of rededica tion and cleansing in every church in the diocese. Churches will need considerable restoration work. Some have been used for moneymaking enterprises, such as offices and accommodation; others were used for crèches; and it is said that one was used for a brothel and a drinking hall. In an action akin to the destruc tion of statues at the Reformation, Kunonga had removed from the cathedral cloisters burial plaques, carvings, and commemorative dis plays that honoured prominent colonialera citizens as well as black soldiers of the colonial African Rifles regiment. These have not been found. The exiles return: above, right: a procession streams through the doors of Harare Cathedral; below: out side, thousands throng Africa unity Square to hear Bishop Gandiya (above, left) deliver his sermon pHoToS iZZY TReDiNNiCK An early theologian, Tertullian, looking at the persecution of Chris tians in the Early Church, com mented that the blood of the martyrs was the seed of the Church. Many churches in Harare now have congregations that have grown so significantly that the buildings can no longer hold them. One lay person told me that they had to provide an extra service for the overflow. The challenges faced by the diocese of Harare are considerable, and our sisters and brothers there will need our prayers as much now as ever. Dr Brian Castle is the Bishop of Ton bridge. Could you be their Chaplain? Since the formation of the Royal Air Force Chaplains’ Branch in 1918, chaplains have been an integral part of the RAF ‘story’ and have taken the Church to where it’s needed most. As an RAF Chaplain you’ll be involved in the lives of our personnel, regardless of their rank or religious background. Your personal sacrifice may be considerable as you’ll serve with our people wherever they go, providing vital spiritual, pastoral and ethical support in places of conflict, including on the front-line. Your home-based duties will be equally important in support of personnel and their families on RAF stations. While exploring innovative ways of engaging with your community, you can also expect to fulfil the more traditional roles of leading worship and officiating at weddings, baptisms and funerals. A whole new congregation awaits you. Be part of the story. Contact us now. www.raf.mod.uk/chaplains The Royal Air Force values every individual’s unique contribution, irrespective of race, ethnic origin, religion, gender, sexual orientation or social background. Produced by Air Media Centre, HQ Air Command. 0357_11RD © UK MOD Crown Copyright, 2011 CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 11 real life margaret duggan looks around the dioceses Royal sympathy FEW things can be more devastating — particularly just before Christmas — than to have one’s home flooded: with the destruction of treasured possessions, the long months of drying out and repair, the worry of insurance, and the fear that it could happen again. The recent floods were particularly severe in St Asaph, when the River Elwy burst its banks. The torrential rains, together with the full moon bringing high tides had been too much for the flood defences, built after the floods of 50 years ago. Some 400 houses were affected, and, tragically, one elderly woman, who had been trying to get out of her flooded home, was found dead. The water was quickly pumped away, the diocesan com munications officer, Phil Topham, says, and the emergency and relief services worked enormously hard, as did all the clergy. And now the reality of the damage has hit home. There are people without insurance, or those who lost it when banks changed hands, and there are those who have nowhere to go and are living upstairs in their ruined houses. People were particularly appreciative when Prince Charles visited the city, and showed real concern. He spent time with people in their damp and devastated homes; he visited workers in the fire service who had worked so hard to pump away the filthy water; and in St Asaph Cathedral (above) he met victims of the flooding, and some of the many volunteers and mem bers of the relief organisations, including the lifeboat men of the RNLI, the Red Cross, and secondaryschool children. The Dean, the Very Revd Nigel Williams, said how pleased everyone was that the Prince had visited. “He was with us in our joy when we received city status, and now he has come alongside us in our sorrow — this has made a vast difference to people of this community. He’s got a deep sense of concern for the individuals who have been affected, especially the fact that these floods have gone through people’s homes. People are glad that he’s been to the affected areas and that has been very well received.” It is known that the Prince made a contribution to the Mayor’s relief fund, which the Church is also supporting. Chilly dip IT WAS only on the day before that the Revd Matthew Knox, Vicar of Spittal, Scremerston and Tweedmouth, in Newcastle diocese, was rung up by the staff of the Garden House care home and told that they were going to do a sponsored dip in the North Sea to raise funds for his parish. Mr Knox tells me that he was so taken aback that he felt the least he could do was join them. And that is how he came to be standing up to his waist in the icy waves, still wearing his clerical collar (above). The acting manager of Garden House, Jane Filer, said that, as he had started to provide services and pastoral care for the House, they thought it would be nice to give something back by raising money for the parish (which, Mr Knox tells me, is a very poor one). “When we told him about the dip, he was only too happy to join us; and, while it was very cold, it was a lot of fun.” But they were in for the shortest time possible, Mr Knox said, sounding as though he was still shivering. “It was a complete surprise when they said they were raising money for the parish, but I was only too glad to take part.” The staff had been spon sored by the residents and their families, and hope that they have raised more than £300. On their way THE new crib figures are steadily travelling to Leicester Cathedral, sometimes together, sometimes separately, to arrive in time for the crib service on Christmas Eve. Handcarved from oak by Charles Currey, from York, and half life size, they are a significant new art commission. So far, there is only one shepherd, and one king, but the cathedral hopes to have raised enough money for a full comple ment of both by next Christmas. They started their journey in a coffee shop in the city, then the king visited Leicester Grammar School while the Holy Family went on to Leicester City Football Club. They have since taken part in several carol services, “as silent witnesses to the coming love and peace of Advent”. The Chancellor of the cathedral, Canon David Monteith, says that “to have such a work of art for Leicester brings beauty to our austerity. The Christmas story will now be seen as well as heard.” Appointment on high From generation to generation THE family christening robe had been brought out and heavily starched. William Gibbins, the fourth genera tion of his farming family, wore it for his baptism in the font of St Andrew’s, Feniton, in Exeter diocese. All four generations of the Gibbins family were there when William was baptised by the Revd Cate Edmonds on Advent Sunday, and given a candle as a symbol of the light of Christ. His mother, Pauline, said: “Baptism is really important for us, as we feel it’s a way as parents to start our children on a good path towards God, and [it is] also a welcoming into his family.” 12 CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 Island sleep-out WE DO not often hear from the Channel Islands on this page, even though they are part of the diocese of Winchester. But the church adminis trator at St Brelade’s, on Jersey, Terri Bond, tells me that more than 80 people braved the weather to sleep out in a car park at the end of November, to raise funds and awareness for the homeless projects on the island. Among them were clergy, politicians, journalists, and fundraisers from a number of charities, all sustained by warm drinks and sandwiches (right). The Revd Mark Bond, Rector of St Brelade’s (he calls it the prettiest church on the island), says that “Jersey is often seen as an affluent island, but there are still the same prob lems of homelessness caused by family break down, unemployment, drugs, and alcoholism as anywhere else.” He, with two others, started a tenbed hostel for homeless men two years ago. It has now grown to 30 beds, and they have set up a formal trust. “We try to stop them hitting rock bottom,” he tells me. Homelessness tends to be hidden on the island, with men sleeping on floors and sofas rather than in doorways, but it is still important to keep them from a downward spiral. Mr Bond tells me that, so far, they have helped some 120 men “who have come out the other side”. The sleepout, he says, was about “changing hearts and minds, changing negative attitudes to those who have it tough”. They are still collecting the sponsorship money, but, judging by the pledges, the total should be substantial. NOT for him — or the Bishop — was it a nice conventional licensing in a church or bishop’s chapel. The Revd Rod Lee chose to go up higher, to identify himself with the North ampton Fire and Rescue Service in Peterborough diocese, whose chap lain he has become. The legal part of the ceremony, conducted by the Bishop of Brix worth, the Rt Revd John Holbrook, was held at ground level, so that the dozen firemen and others could hear what was being said, but Bishop Holbrook handed over his licence after they had both been lifted 100 feet in the air, in the cage of the aerialrescue pump. Mr Lee, a former Vicar of St Columba’s, Corby, now retired, is one of two chaplains to the 580 firefighters at the 22 stations in Northamptonshire. “They are invaluable,” the Chief Fire Officer, Martyn Emberson, says. “Fire fighters can talk to them about things they couldn’t discuss with others. They give spiritual support, and help firefighters to cope with situations they have to face in their work.” The Bishop expressed his gratitude to the Fire Service for the way they had dealt with a small fire at his home. Friday 19.00 Celebratory drinks before . . . 19.30 Church Times 150th-anniversary Gala Dinner Special guest Stephen Cottrell Supported by Bodegas Marques de Caceres 21.00 Speaker – to be confirmed. Please check website Saturday 10:00 Christ in Modern Art Richard Harries & Roger Wagner The image of Jesus Christ has inspired some of the greatest works of art in history over many centuries. But how have the artists of the modern era approached this subject? 10:00 Stories From the Heart: Telling the stories of our faith (1) Tony Price & Hilary Campbell Hear the story. Storytellers Tony Price and Hilary Campbell share some of their favourite stories from the Bible and Christian tradition. 10:00 Wilful Blindness Margaret Heffernan & John Pritchard Why do we turn a blind eye? In Wilful Blindness: Why We Ignore the Obvious at our Peril, Margaret Heffernan argues that the biggest threats and dangers we face are the ones we don’t see – not because they're secret or invisible, but because we’re wilfully blind. 11:30 Was it Murder at the Vicarage? James Runcie, Sara Thornton & Jane Williams In her book A Vicarage Family, much loved author Noel Streatfeild gives a fictionalised account of her childhood. Three people who know what it’s really like growing up a vicarage reflect on Streatfeild’s world and talk about their own experiences. 11:30 Christ in the Wilderness Stephen Cottrell Stanley Spencer's paintings of Christ in the Wilderness are among the most important and challenging images in the 20th century. Stephen Cottrell reflects upon some of these paintings and what they say to us. 11:30 Stories From The Heart: (2) Tony Price & Hilary Campbell Learn the Story: a workshop to encourage all who take part to begin learning biblical stories. 14:00 Stories From The Heart: (3) Tony Price & Hilary Campbell Tell the Story: a chance to practise the story-telling techniques from the workshop this morning. 14:00 Murder in the Dark: Crime as Entertainment Ian Blair, James Runcie & Jeany Spark How do we explain the enduring human fascination with crime fiction? And just how different is real crime from the world created by authors and screenwriters? Lord Blair, James Runcie and Jeany Spark from Wallander discuss our enduring love affair with crime as entertainment. 14:00 The Spider King’s Daughter Chibundu Onuzo & Jane Williams Chibundu Onuzo’ s debut novel is a dark story about love and divided loyalties in contemporary Lagos. She talks to Jane Williams about her writing, and her longing to see a more equal society in her home country of Nigeria. 15:30 The Limits of Forgiveness Marian Partington & Michael Lloyd Are there ever limits to forgiveness? Marian Partington talks to Michael Lloyd about coming to terms with the death of her sister, Lucy, at the hands of Fred and Rosemary West, and her own journey towards healing. 15:30 Value and Values: Ethics in the City Tony Baldry, Peter Selby, Anne Kiem & David Rouch While the row over the Occupy protest raged, St Paul’s Institute, based at the cathedral, published a report Value and Values that uncovered City attitudes to ethics – and to the Church. Fifteen months on, this panel discussion, looks at that report and its implications. 15:30 Horrid Heroes, Vicious Villains and Cruel Creatures! Julia Golding Not for the fainthearted! Good stories need great baddies. Come and spend the afternoon with some really vile villains. Prizes will be give for those who come up with the baddest baddy of them all. Suitable for accompanied children 8+ 17:00 Fetters, Liberty and the Devil’s Party Andrew Motion & Mark Oakley Is it true that the Devil always has the best lines in literature? Are virtuous characters dull and only evil of real interest in the novels and poems we read? If so, why? The former poet laureate Sir Andrew Motion and Canon Oakley discuss. 17:00 Devices and Desires in the Media Andrew Brown & Alan Wilson Church Times columnist Andrew Brown and Bishop Alan Wilson discuss the media – and you the users – post-Leverson. 18:30 Mirror, Mirror on the Wall: Reflections on Good and Evil in Snow White Jeany Spark & Ed Newell Snow White is one the world’s best known stories about good and evil. Jeany Spark and Ed Newell consider how the tale of Snow White has evolved, the Brothers Grimm to its retelling by others including Walt Disney and Philip Pullman. 18:30 Where Twilight Lingers Pádraig Ó Tuama How do we articulate faith when we are tugged in many directions? How do we pray when we do not know what good to pray for? How do we tell stories in a way that creates conversation rather than builds walls? This poetry and storytelling event will explore these questions. 20:00 Dancing the Unspeakable Rambert School of Ballet and Contemporary Dance Exploring good and evil and biblical images of ‘the unspeakable’, with dancers and musicians from one of the world’s leading dance schools and its director, Ross McKim. 20:00 ‘All we, like sheep, have gone astray’ Andrew Motion, Mark Oakley, and the North Cotswold Chamber Choir There is a fun side to good and evil. Sir Andrew Motion and Mark Oakley team up with members of the North Cotswold Chamber Choir for a light-hearted revue, looking at the themes of good and evil through songs and readings. Sunday 09:30 Parish Communion at St Mary’s, Bloxham 11:00 The Strange World of Thursday Next Jasper Fforde & Paul Handley Jasper Fforde spent twenty years in the film business before debuting on the New York Times Bestseller list with The Eyre Affair in 2001. He talks to Paul Handley about his unique blend of comedy-sci-fi-thrillerliterary-crime-satire. 11:00 The Philosopher and the Gospel Keith Ward What happens when a philosopher reads the Gospels? Keith Ward makes four claims: possible salvation for all; figurative teachings about ‘the end of the age’; a distinctive ethics of virtue; and foreshadowing ultimate union with God. 12:30 Unapologetic Francis Spufford In Unapologetic, Francis Spufford has written a witty, sharptongued personal defence of Christian belief, a remarkable account of what believing in God is actually like and a defence of Christian emotions – of their intelligibility, of their grownup dignity. 12:30 The Light Nicola Green & Paula Gooder Artist Nicola Green’s latest project celebrates the unsung global heroes of faith around the globe. She talks about her witnessing meetings between major religious leaders include the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Pope, the Chief Rabbi and the Dalai Lama. 14:00 In Good Faith Patrick Gale & Alex Preston How do novelists tackle the subject of goodness and faith? Authors Patrick Gale and Alex Preston have created characters struggling to live by faith in the modern world. They discuss the appeal and challenge of writing about faith in fiction. 14:00 Heaven and Hell in the Bible Paula Gooder Impressions of heaven and hell are heavily influenced by, among other things, Medieval Art work. So what are we meant to think about heaven and hell? 15:30 Tea at St Mary's Church, Bloxham A visit to this stunning Oxfordshire church is a must – even without the lure of a marvellous parish tea. 16:30 Songs of Praise at St Mary’s Choirs of St Mary’s Church & Bloxham School Free event - no need to buy a ticket, just come along and join us at St Mary's Church. The Bishop of Dorchester will speak. Tickets just £10! 21:15 Tenx9 Storytelling Pádraig Ó Tuama Especially for Bloxham, join Pádraig Ó Tuama for a unique experience of storytelling. Tenx9 is based on a monthly storytelling night in Belfast. Nine people have up to ten minutes to tell a story from their lives. The results are breathtaking. CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 13 comment An earlier Census THERE would have been no religious question in the census to which St Luke refers at the start of his Gospel. The question was asked by a higher authority, and involved a star, not a cross — not, at least, until later. Although the star could be seen by all, its meaning was revealed to only a few (we do not know how many Magi there were). From the time of Christ’s first ap pearance, therefore, the truth of God was hidden from the multitude. It is natural to be alarmed at the 13percent fall, from 2001 to 2011, in the number of people who marked the “Christianity” box on their Census form. It is encouraging to be part of a large, likeminded, or likehearted, group. Also, those who have received the gift of God’s love, as water to the thirsty, des perately wish it for others, too. One likely cause of the decline, from 71 to 59 per cent, is a greater honesty among nominal Christians. It may seem hard to understand how people can be halfhearted followers of Christ, when, even with diligence and application, regular churchgoers know that they remain far from perfect. But parents, or those who remember their childhood, will recall that even the most sublime forms of worship can meet with indifference. A relationship with God is a delicate, individual plant. In its early stages, it needs to be rescued from the biting scorn of the materialistic world, protected from the distractions of everyday life, and nurtured by kind mentors and formative reading. When so much of this has to be mediated through the ministry of fallible people, the 59 per cent can appear on the high side. It is a reminder of the necessity of God’s grace, which blesses the efforts of ministers, choirs, and congregations, especially at this time, to reveal Christ to those who most need his love. Creed battle in Hereford ing out their declaration that they would use the form in the Prayer Book prescribed, and none other. December THE great meeting at 20th, 1912. Hereford on Wednes day made it perfectly clear that by the appointment of Latitudinarians of various hues and affinities to the canonries as they successively fell vacant, the Bishop of Hereford has at last constituted a Chapter which is entirely out of touch with the city and the diocese. It is not every subject which, at the busiest moment of the year, will fill the Town Hall of a cathedral city with an absolutely unanimous audi ence. But the silencing of the Athanasian Creed in the Cathedral [100 Years Ago, 14 December] has caused so deep and widespread a feeling among the orthodox of the diocese that priests and laymen from all parts of the diocese gathered at a day or two’s notice. . . . The resolution was framed with all respect for the Dean and Chapter. It refrained from protest, it appealed earnestly to the Dean and Chapter to restore in their Cathedral the rubrical use of the Creed. Doubtless there were those present who would have desired a more combative resolution, but the terms in which it was proposed and carried without a single dis sentient voice at least affords to the Dean and Chapter an oppor tunity of reconsidering their re cent decision. . . It remains to be seen whether the Dean, who knows the city far better than his col leagues, and than whom, as we gather, there is probably no more popular citizen, will be able to prevail upon the Canons to set themselves right with the diocese by the simple expedient of carry 14 December THE Dean and Chap 27th, 1912. ter of Hereford have been compelled to give way, but it is impossible to congratulate them as heartily as we might on the manner of their retreat. They are unable to carry out their order to the Minor Canons “that the public saying or singing of the Athanasian Creed be discontinued.” Thus far the situation is satisfactory, but what follows is not equally ingenuous. They direct that the statutory recitation of Matins, for which the Minor Canons are responsible, shall be at eight o’clock and without music, and that there shall be choral Matins as an extra ser vice at eleven, without the Quicun que vult. In regard to this function, it may be observed that, as it is not a statutory service, the Minor Canons are under no compulsion to take part in it, and we trust that they will leave it to the Canons themselves to sing it as well as they can. Upon the latter should be thrown the responsibility of de priving the faithful of Hereford of their right to hear this great anthem sung in its appointed place. Still, the net result of the resistance to this arbitrary con duct on the part of the Canons is to make it difficult for Chapters elsewhere to make the same kind of attempt to override the plain directions of the Prayer Book and the law governing the clergy. If the Chapter at Hereford, wholly united and desperately bent on carrying their point, are unable to do so, it is tolerably certain that no other Cathedral Chapter will succeed. CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 The Church can serve cultural Christians There is an opportunity for fresh engagement with those who are now open to faith, argues Marie-Elsa Bragg IN A meeting I attended this month with other women clergy, it was noted how, since the General Synod had voted against the women bishops Measure, many priests had been contacted by “cultural Chris tians”, people who had until now at tended only christenings, weddings, and funerals, and possibly midnight mass with their families, but now either wished to be involved, or simply felt that they could make contact with the Church. Many of the priests felt inspired that, out of this difficult situation, we had been given a rare chance to become relevant to people’s lives again. A majority of these people prob ably form the 70 per cent in the 2011 Census carried out by YouGov to complement the ONS Census (News, 14 December). There they described themselves as having been brought up as Christian, but have sought spiritual sustenance else where, or not at all. Although generations of work have been dedicated to this min istry, if we are to grasp this op portunity, we need to reexamine why people have not been able to find what they are looking for in a tradition as rich as our own. THE most common reason that people now give for not attending church regularly is that they see religion as one of the main causes of destructive behaviour, both in his tory and around the world today. Religion is often in the news, if not as the cause of conflict, then pervading or appearing to condone unacceptable social or political situ ations. In the past decade or so, per haps since 9/11, many people seem to have become more concerned that, in attending church, they might align themselves with this record. Some have, therefore, searched for a God that is beyond organised religion, so that they can simplify their faith and begin to relate to a transpersonal divinity. When asked, many reply: “I am not religious, but I am spiritual.” They have searched through meditation, mindfulness, self examination, alternative healing, and westernised versions of Eastern traditions (the last of which appear to have left aside their political histories). Yet, in Western Christianity, we have a long heritage of exploring spirituality, vividly shown, for example, in the work of the Desert Fathers and the monastic orders. We have generations of teaching on spiritual experience, mindfulness, and a simple and yet profound unity with the divine: works from Gregory of Nazianzus to Ignatius of Loyola, and from Julian of Norwich to Bede Griffiths. So why is it that we struggle to reach people in this way? ONE person was asked whether he would attend a meditation class at a church in his lunch break. He replied: “No, because they would force their prayers on me at the same time, and I don’t trust them.” I wonder whether we have under estimated the trust that needs to be rebuilt for people to be able receive what is inherently their own tra dition. It can be hard for us to receive attacks and be blamed for corrup tion. But, if we are frightened to enter the conflict — if we feel accusations can be exaggerated, un informed, unjust, or that people are digging up the past, associating us with other religions, ignoring the terrible things done to us, or missing the positive contributions — then we are afraid to meet those who are wounded. Our fear is as strong as theirs, and we, too, are in need of remembering God, who is beyond conflict, and forgives. A remembering that sup ports us to step into ideas of betrayal and the desecration of the sacred will be painful for us. But, with the support of a loving God, this step could help both sides to listen to each other and to change. THE second most common reason that people give for not looking to the Church for spiritual guidance is the distance they feel from the life of Christ. One person who sought to reconnect with his church recently said: “I just couldn’t sit and listen about Jesus, who lived 2000 years ago with all the different people ‘I am not religious, but I am spiritual’ of that time, and find it relevant to my life. I found more meaning in spending time with my family.” Another said: “I was asked to be a godmother, and thought I would start going again with my niece, but when I had to say the vows, I couldn’t do it. The things we had to say were disturbing, and we were told we had to believe completely in it all.” Yet another said: “I didn’t get why the Old Testament readings could be so cruel, and why that was something they would want to read out and respect.” Our tradition has a vast body of teaching about the steps that can be taken before being able to encounter the life of Christ. For example, an Ignatian spiritual director has to assess people to see whether they are ready for a 30day silent retreat that prays through the life of Christ. The spiritual director looks for faith in a loving God — nothing more. Many, however, are sent away to prepare, and the preparation can take years, if not a lifetime, before they will be ready. Doubt is not something to fear. Neither is it something that has to be overcome in order to live with Christ: it is something to be com panioned. True companionship seeks to find two things: a language that those whom we accompany can relate to, and the willingness to watch for God at work in their lives. Perhaps if we were to talk more to people who express such doubts about the Church — asking them where or when they have felt a connection with something greater, and if we were then willing to find grace in the most unexpected an swers — then we would meet them where the Spirit was working in their lives, and support them towards finding a loving God. A FURTHER question is the rele vance of our church community to most people living in an area. A group of teenagers in one city were found laying candles and cards in a street, where a friend had fallen out of a window. They said that if the church could have done a memorial service in the way they would have believed in, “just spiritual”, they would Continued on page 27 comment There has to be an alternative Nuclear weapons, designed for mass destruction, should be abandoned, says David Atkinson Giles Fraser There is no organised religion IT WAS the looroll that finally did it for me. It was positioned just a few inches off the floor — within perfect reach for those sitting down, but in a ridiculous place for those standing up. I apologise for the graphic na ture of this image. But it was the loo roll position that made me realise what I hate about Brasilia — and also what I hate about atheistic rationalism. This is going to take some explaining. Everything in Brasilia has been planned. But the capital city of Brazil, a country known for its energy and dynamism, is anything but these things. It is Milton Keynes on steroids. Everything is set out rationally on a grid system, but bizarrely in the shape of an aero plane. There is a hotel quarter, a political quarter, a restaurant quar ter. Finding a café from my hotel was a tenminute taxi ride. This is the architect Oscar Niemeyer’s interpretation of the words “progress and order” that are emblazoned on the Brazilian flag. The 104yearold died this month, and the flags are flying at halfmast in his supposed masterpiece. Niemeyer’s signature buildings are great concrete saucers, set in a monochrome cream Legoland. Thank God for graffiti. Chaos is human. But mostly in Brasilia, you are told what to do and how to do it — even down to the way you go to the loo. To get from A to B, you need to drive. I want to walk, but that option isn’t rational, apparently: it doesn’t involve a machine, so it’s not part of the plan. I removed the loo paper from the holder, and placed it on the shelf in a small and petulant act of defiance. This is what I hate about rational istic atheism — or rationalistic theism, for that matter. I don’t mind atheism, although I’m not one. Live and let live, I say: Nietzsche was a genius. But the idea that my beliefs have to be rationally ordered is an instrument of control. The com munists did it; the military did it (both, in turns, very happy with the way that Brasilia was being built). But this type of rationalism does not have a human scale. What I love about faith, among many things, is that it won’t tell me that my absurd hopes and dreams are absurd. Some of the best parts of the Bible are the weirdest. A baby as God: it’s ridiculous. But it’s also fantastically generative and imagin ative. Even God exists on a human scale. I know that religion can be hi jacked by people who want to use it to tell others what to do — mostly about how they can and cannot have sex, and whom they can and cannot have it with. Those people also need to be ignored. But, fundamentally, there is no such thing as organised religion. All religion is intrinsically messy. It is the graffiti of the soul. TRIDENT is catching the headlines again. Sometimes, it is about the proposals to renew the nuclear weapons programme, on which a decision is expected in 2016, and the phenomenal costs involved — not only of procurement, but of continu ing service; or about the loss of jobs on the Clyde, should the SNP win the referendum on Scottish inde pendence and ask for the removal of Trident from its Scottish base. Sometimes, the discussion is about the strategic value, in a world of very different threats, of a nuclear deterrent developed during the Cold War. The Government says that it contemplates its use only for deter ring aggression in extreme circum stances of selfdefence. My concern is more basic: the use, and threat of use, of weapons of indiscriminate massdestruction is wrong. From the very beginning, Chris tians have come to different con scientious views about warfare. There was a dominant pacifist strand in the first three centuries, partly for political and social reasons, but also because of theo logy. “In disarming Peter,” Tertul lian said, “Christ unbelted every soldier.” That pacifist strand has continued throughout Christian history. Another strand developed, how ever. Under Constantine, the cross became a military emblem. Ambrose of Milan helped Christians to see that engagement in defensive war could be permissible in some cir cumstances, provided that it was just. Augustine further established the “justwar” tradition in the Chris tian conscience. Living during the barbarian invasions of the empire, Augustine argued that it was per missible to vindicate justice in the face of evil by the use of force, pro vided that the “spirit of the peace maker” was maintained. In the Middle Ages, Thomas Aquinas extended justwar thinking pA protest: a demonstration outside Faslane naval base in Scotland to include the permissibility of self defence, and set out some causes that define “justice” in war. It was the Dutch lawyer Hugo Grotius who systemised these into criteria for deciding whether any particular war has a just cause, and whether it is conducted justly. IN CHRISTIAN thinking, “just war” has not been about justifying war, which can only ever be a lesser evil, but it has meant limiting war by the requirements of justice. Justice has been understood as an expression of neighbourlove. We do not love our neighbours, or our enemies, it is ar gued, by allowing injustice to suc ceed. As the American Christian eth icist Paul Ramsey put it: “justwar theory arose . . . from a quite humble moral reason subjecting itself to the sovereignty of God and the lordship of Christ, as Christian men felt themselves impelled out of love to justify war, and by love severely to limit war.” Two of the “severe limits”, as the theory has developed, are the cri terion of proportion (use of only the minimum force needed to obtain the objective); and the criterion of dis crimination, sometimes called non combatant immunity (non combatants must not be directly and intentionally targeted). It was these criteria to which Bishop Bell fam ously appealed in 1944, challenging the Allies’ saturationbombing of Hamburg and Berlin: “That is not a justifiable act of war.” THE use of strategic nuclear weapons is outlawed on the criteria both of proportion and discrim ination. They involve a maximum not a minimum use of force. And such weapons are indiscriminate by design — that is what is so evil about them. The impact on innocent human beings and on the physical environment is horrendous. It is not enough to argue that the UK has been reducing its nuclear capability, which it has. It is not enough to argue that replacing Trident can be compatible with our obligations under nonproliferation agreements, which I think is very debatable. I cannot see how the use of strategic nuclear weapons could ever be justified, no matter by whom, or for whatever cause. But what of the threat of their use? They are kept not for use, but as a deterrent. If the deterrent effect implies a resolution to use these weapons, then they must be re nounced. But what if, as the German theologian Helmut Thielicke argued at the time of the Cold War, deter rence can be maintained without any essential intention to use the weapons, or any need for bluff? Possession of them, he argues, is suf ficient deterrent, because our opponent is sufficiently uncertain about whether we will use them or not. It is that uncertainty and am biguity that our various Govern ments have sought to maintain. My view is that the possession of such weapons would need much stronger moral justification; for what they say — and, presumably, what at least some in our Government may well mean — is “We are willing to be unbelievably cruel, if we are provoked far enough.” This is not proportionate, discriminate, or just. I realise that a moral direction and moral goal are one thing; political decision about timing and implementation is another. The political choice that we face seems to be either: “The risks of abandoning our nuclear weapons are at present too great;” or “Despite all risks, the only morally respons ible course is to abandon any reli ance on weapons designed for mass destruction.” It is the latter view that I find by far the most morally per suasive — which makes the search for alternatives to renewing a stra tegic nuclear deterrent very pressing. Dr David Atkinson is a former Bishop of Thetford, and is an Honorary Assistant Bishop in the diocese of Southwark. Don’t wallow in the sick details “IT MAKES it more poignant that this has happened at Christmas,” a radio reporter said to one of the parents at the school in the United States, where 20 infants and six adults were killed by a gunman last week. As banal remarks go, it outstripped the usual “So how do you feel?” question to the unhappy individuals in the vortex of the latest media tornado. It betrays, of course, something of the senti mental contemporary view of Christmas, which routinely forgets that the child in the manger is born to be crucified. The slaughter of the Holy Innocents is neatly elided in the secular calendar between Boxing Day and New Year’s Eve. But the remark speaks of something more disquiet ing. Perhaps I am out on a limb here, but I felt a curious sense of unease at the blanket media coverage of the events. There has been a melodrama about much of the writing which is otiose in a situation where the events are dramatic enough without prurient adornment. It feels at times like a selfindulgent paddling in a grief that is too profound for casual journalism to fathom. That kind of writing might be excusable in the United States, where heartbreaking detail might in some way influence the debate on the politics of The media should avoid dwelling on the latest slaughter, says Paul Vallely gun control. But what we write and read here will change nothing, just as the previous litany of names, such as Columbine, Virginia Tech, and the Batman shooting at Aurora changed nothing. They are just the mass shootings we remember: there were 13 other such attacks in 2012 alone, the Washington Post reports. Each produces the same howls of outrage and the same futile round of arguments as the previous massacre. In the United States, the House of Represent atives is currently controlled by a Republican party that is deeply in hock to the National Rifle Association (NRA), which vehemently opposes bans on guns with arguments about how this is “more of a mentalhealth problem than a guncontrol problem”. Many Democrat poli ticians acquiesce, fearful that the NRA could oust them. What makes things even more complex is that most gun legislation is set by states rather than the federal government — and gun shows and the internet are exempt from regulation. British people railing against this, forgetting Dunblane and Hungerford, do little more than assert their own rational and moral superiority over our purblind American cousins. In the wake of the death of Jacintha Saldanha, the nurse who took the hoax call about the pregnant Duchess of Cambridge, the Samaritans issued an interesting media briefing. Noting strong evidence that copycat suicides occur as a result of extensive press coverage, it counselled against giving too many explicit details — on the method of death, or the contents of any suicide note — and sensationalist reporting. Some of those cautions would be well applied to the horrors at Sandy Hook Elementary. Grief and bereavement should not be turned into the latest myth, as if they were some newly discovered fairy story by Hans Christian Anderson. Myth was a prereligious way of making sense of the world, telling stories that help us through adversity by convincing us that the world is not completely random, but has shape and purpose. The slaughter of the Holy Innocents is a revealing theological corollary to the joy of the Christmas story. But Herod’s story is a warning against the cruelty of power, whereas Sandy Hook plunges us only into the sick psychology of derangement. Stories of courage and love in that terrified school were reported, but the primary media fascination was with the lurid detail of the killing, the anguish of the bereaved, and the motivation of the gunman. This offers only a modern parable of existential futility. We should not hide from the truth, but nor should we wallow in it. Paul Vallely is associate editor of The Independent. CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 15 comment Bring on more of the mystery We should approach the birth narratives with greater imagination, says Nick Jowett Simon Parke Transfer window THE mother is with child, and we are told to rejoice, and again, rejoice; for one is promised who will be called “wonderful”, and will be third in line to the throne. Politicians fell over themselves to be “more pleased than thou” at the announcement that the Duchess of Cambridge was pregnant, and we were all told that the nation was rejoicing — but not the bit of it that I was sitting with. My friend had just returned from Afghanistan, and he was furious at the walltowall coverage. “This is why I don’t feel comfortable in the West,” he said. “It feels more real in Afghanistan. There was a bomb in Jalalabad yesterday. Why isn’t the news covering that?” But one man’s discomfort be came a global fury after 2Day FM radio set in motion the fickle law of unintended consequences. Prank phonecalls made to the King Edward VII hospital meant that a nurse, Jacintha Saldanha, took the call. She was not talking to the royal family as she imagined, but to a giggling commercial radio station in Australia. Tragically, it seems that it was a humiliation she was unable to cope with, and, as news of her death crisscrossed the world, there was a maelstrom of con dolence, confusion, and rage. Kate and Wills, as they are affec tionately known, are not to blame for any of this. One of the reasons for the extraordinary interest in their child is simply their popular ity. In national polls, they are the most popular royals, and therefore lightningrods for the nation’s transference — yes, it is time we talked about that. Transference is a process first de scribed by Freud, whereby atti tudes, feelings, and desires of very early significant relationships are transferred, unconsciously, on to the counsellor; but its reach stretches way beyond the therapy room. When Diana, Princess of Wales, died, the outpouring of grief was believed by many to be a transference of sadness on to Diana which people did not allow or acknowledge in themselves. In like manner, other people can sometimes draw happiness from us, vicarious happiness, in which we are happy on their behalf: “I’m so happy for you, even if I can’t experience it myself.” Transference is not dangerous, once people are conscious of it; and, in the hands of a good therapist, can be used to help people reengage with denied feelings in themselves. Kate and Wills are an ordinary couple who are not an ordinary couple, and, to that extent, rather like Mary and Joseph, who, along with their baby, were also under a pressure they did not create for themselves. “The hopes and fears of all the years Are met in thee tonight,” wrote the Revd Phillips Brooks, of Philadelphia, after a pil grimage to the Holy Land. Now that’s what I call transference. 16 YOU finally sit down to write that nativity play, or sermon on the incarnation, and the chances are that you will feel some pressure to present the birth of Jesus as something rele vant today. As a result, the people sitting on the school chairs, or in the pews, are highly likely to get variations on the “gritty realism” scenario. There will be: Jesus’s birth in poverty; his lack of a proper shelter; his welcome by outsiders, and foreigners; or his threatened murder by political power. Now, all these political and social themes are perfectly justifiable. But have we noticed what a strong this worldly emphasis they have? Chris tian tradition down the ages has often preferred to focus on the wonder and mystery of the theo logical paradox of God’s becoming human. For example: Hark, hark, the wise eternal Word, Like a weak infant cries! In form of servant is the Lord, And God in cradle lies. “Behold the Great Creator Makes” Thomas Pestel, 15841659 Or else we have: Welcome, all wonders in one sight! Eternity shut in a span. Summer in winter, day in night, Heaven in earth, and God in man. “A Hymn of the Nativity” Richard Crashaw, c.16131649 Such formulations take their cue from the theologically imaginative birthnarratives in Matthew and Luke, and, of course from John’s prologue, reflecting on the eternal Word’s becoming flesh and dwelling with us. But, for me, the question arises: are we still willing and able to explore, in narrative and symbol, the mystery of God becoming human? Are we seeking, in fact, to capture the numinosity of that moment? Surely we do not need to be limited to ever more literalistic or socio pA Follow the star: the actor Noel Clarke (Mickey Smith in Doctor Who) directs students at St Clement and St James C of e school in London logical versions of what originally were imaginative, theological narra tives, created by Luke and Matthew. NOW we know that the process of creating narrative around the birth and childhood of Jesus continued after the canonical gospels were written. We have the Protoevangelia of James and Thomas — both prob ably appearing in the second century, but always regarded as apocryphal. The Protoevangelium of James, which was clearly very popular, tells us about Mary’s miraculous birth to Anna and Joachim, Mary’s upbring ing in the Temple, and about her continuing virginity, which it repeat edly emphasises — even to the point of having a midwife examine her after Jesus’s birth. In this text, Joseph is explicitly an old man with grown sons of his own. His horror at finding that Mary is pregnant is increased, and both he and Mary have to undergo tests by drinking water in the Temple to prove that they have not had inter course. The gospel includes versions of the annunciation, and the visit of Mary to Elizabeth; it places the birth of Jesus in a cave, describes the visit of the astrologers, and has Jesus hid den in a cows’ feeding trough to escape the violence of Herod. Already, in these passages, there is material which could inform and expand modern presentations of the nativity. But, for me, the high point of this narrative comes in chapter 18, when we suddenly get a firstperson narrative by Joseph. He has left Mary, who has not yet given birth, in a cave near Beth lehem, with one of his sons guard ing her, and he is looking for a midwife. And then, in an extra ordinary way, time seems to stand still: Now I, Joseph, was walking along and yet not going anywhere. I looked up at the vault of the sky and saw it standing still, and then the clouds and saw them paused in amazement, and at the birds of the sky suspended in midair. As I looked on the earth, I saw a bowl lying there and workers reclining around it with their hands in the bowl; some were chewing and yet did not chew; some were picking up something to eat and yet did not pick it up; and some were putting food in their mouths and yet did not do so. Instead, they were all looking upward. I saw sheep being driven along and yet the sheep stood still; the shepherd was lifting his hand to strike them, and yet his hand remained raised. And I observed the current of the river and saw goats with their mouths in the water and yet they were not drinking. Then all of a sudden everything and everybody went on with what they had been doing. WHEN Joseph returns to the cave with the midwife, he finds the place overshadowed by a dark cloud. As the cloud withdraws, an intense light shines from inside the cave. They cannot bear to look at it. But when the light fades, they see the baby taking the breast of his mother, Mary. The Gospel of James gives us an astonishingly imaginative way of experiencing what T. S. Eliot calls “the point of intersection of the timeless with time”. At the moment when Jesus is born, time stands still. There may be, in this passage, a memory of Luke’s scene of the an nunciation to the shepherds, but it works entirely in its own right, subtly suggesting the unique moment when God stepped into the human story. A passage such as this could en courage us to write spiritually im aginative narratives around the char acters of Mary and Joseph, Elizabeth and Zechariah, and others who might be involved. They could reflect on, and sensitively present, the moment when the divine became human, when the eternal became bound by time and space. One such numinous moment Continued on page 27 No room for signs and symbols here MY CHURCH choir once did an elaborate choral evensong, followed by a reception, and invited the neighbours. We thought all had gone well, until, a few days later, we got an irate letter from a woman who lived across the street from the church. She had come, she said, to what our flyers suggested would be an innocuous secular concert — a per formance of evening songs —but was furious to discover that she had been lured into a “fullblown church service”. Her irritation was understandable. In the United States, Evangelical churches regularly advertise concerts that turn out to be evangelistic pro grammes, where “pastors” and choral ensembles, maintaining ecstatic glazed expressions, croon into microphones to the accompaniment of gooey Christian rock. And then there are the testimonies. It is a semisoftsell — like those invitations to tour resorts that turn out to be promotions for timeshare properties. If you get bamboozled into one, you soon realise that the programme is a hook to make you sit through the sales pitch. The idea that religious symbols, practices, or ceremonies, such as evensong, might be cultural goods that everyone can enjoy, regardless of their theological convictions, rather than promotions of religious belief, is alien in the US. Cultured CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 in the uS, public religious displays are regarded with suspicion, says Harriet Baber despisers, in particular, regard every public display of religiosity as a sales pitch: an attempt to “force religion down people’s throats”, or, even worse, to mark territory — to stick it to nonChristians that they are on sufferance in a Christian country. So, crusading secularists complain that religious displays in schools, parks, or other publicly owned properties are exclusionary, and violate a consti tutionally mandated separation of Church and State. And everyone sues. This holiday season, the epicentre of litigation is Santa Monica, a California town that, for the past 60 years, has hosted a display of Christmas dio ramas at its seaside park. Last year, atheists managed to win 11 out of the 14 available slots in the city’s auction, and erected displays ridiculing religious belief, including a large banner, sponsored by the organisation American Atheists, which featured pictures of Poseidon, Jesus, Santa Claus, and a leering devil in coat and tie, announcing that “37 million Americans know myths when they see them.” The displays were vandalised; so this year the city cancelled the programme in order to avoid a repeat. A Christian group has sued. There is no room in the US for the enjoyment of outward and visible forms of religiosity for their own sake rather than as means to some ulterior end: peace of mind, personal effectiveness, or good behaviour. Evangelicals want religious symbols in public space to promote their moral values; secularists, who want no part of their moral agenda, insist that religion be confined to the private sphere — ultimately, to the head, as dis embodied “spirituality”. But bare spirituality is a dull, meagre thing. It misses out art, music and architecture, ritual, poetry, and all the material expressions of spiritu ality that make religion fun, and that believers and atheists alike can enjoy. Christianity, in particular, needs incarnation. To survive, it must be embodied in material things and public ceremonies: in church buildings and their furnishings, choral evensong, and nativity scenes in parks. Our Puritan forebears and their Evangelical successors have destroyed religion: first, by sup pressing the material symbols and public cerem onies of folk religion, and now by poisoning what they could not suppress by linking every religious display to their moral agenda. This is the way that religion ends — shrunk into a moral programme, and sloughed off. Dr Harriet Baber is Professor of Philosophy at the University of San Diego, USA. letters See of Whitby: Fr North withdraws his acceptance Government’s gaymarriage legislation and the quadruple lock From the Revd Tim Jones Sir, — The Revd Philip North is one of those “traditionalist” Church of England priests who did not take the money and run, after the General Synod’s decision to ordain women to the priesthood, because they accepted assurances that their theological perspective would not be marginalised or victimised. I disagree with him; but his recent contribution on the floor of the General Synod a few weeks ago simply voiced an opinion concern ing women’s ministry which, just one generation ago, was wholly within the mainstream of church life. For Fr North subsequently to be made to feel unable to serve as a bishop in the diocese of York is a matter of deep sadness. Of course, there is acute dis appointment and raw pain that the majority view concerning women in the episcopate did not prevail, and I have a share in that. Any democratic process must take care not to be a vehicle for mob rule, however; hence the genuine need for certain farreaching decisions in the General Synod to be carried by a twothirds majority in all three Houses. I am proud to be in a Church that affords real systemic protection to those of minority viewpoint. If it is the will of God, then I hope Fr North is able to serve as a bishop, somewhere, soon. A Church that is healthy and broad needs voices like his to be heard and honoured, and gifts such as his to be given appro priate scope. If such people are not able to serve in the episcopate, then it turns out that synodical assur ances of “respect” were indeed wholly inadequate after all. TIM JONES The Vicarage, Tang Hall Lane York YO10 3SD From Canon Andrew Hawes Sir, — I have huge sympathy with the Revd Philip North. The atmos phere for traditionalists has become increasingly toxic in the aftermath of the womenbishops vote. The institutional hysteria en couraged by an ignorant and self righteous media emboldened the equality fundamentalists to unleash their pentup frustration at the enemy within. Even in this quiet southwestern corner of Lincoln shire, the emails and letters were let fly. Their disdain, held back by political expediency, has been given true vent. “Trust us,” they said before the vote. “Get out of way,” they said afterwards. What a pity, and what a tragedy, that these slaves to ideology should claim another scalp. Surely, if we are such a minority, why not give us a small and separate jurisdiction, where priests like Philip North could use their gifts to the full in the service of the gospel without the constant attrition of deliberate, wilful, and unchristian rejection. ANDREW HAWES The Vicarage, Church Lane Edenham, Bourne PE10 0LS From the Revd Paul Hutchinson Sir, — The Revd Philip North is a likeable and energetic priest with many skills, and a Catholic heart for mission. This has been evident since his earliest posts in Durham diocese; and the diocese of York has already valued some of his skills as preacher, ordinationretreat conductor, and mission planner. So it is sad for him that he has felt it necessary to with draw. But there are other voices to be heard. The Bishop of Whitby is not a flying bishop, but the suffragan with pastoral responsibility for the northern archdeaconry of Cleve land. The archdeaconry does have a concentration of parishes that do not accept the ordination of women, around Middlesbrough. The past two Bishops of Whitby have been wellknown conservatives. But the archdeaconry of Cleve land is by no means a majority “traditionalist” area. There are at least as many women priests here as priests opposed, and a much larger group of parishes (including my own, where Bishops of Whitby have lived since the 1960s) that are fully supportive of women’s ordination at all levels. Over the past 14 years, women clergy and their many sup porters have struggled with a situ ation where women’s orders are held in question by the local bishop. The October announcement of a third conservative, however able, has stirred a general sense among many, clergy and laity, that this situation is unacceptable. The vote at the General Synod, and Fr North’s speech there, released a groundswell of feeling that enough was enough. You have reported a letter of protest. I understand it was signed by many of the laity across the archdeaconry. Clergy also have expressed their feelings. The im minent consecration of a new Pro vincial Episcopal Visitor, well known in this diocese, has further fuelled the majority’s sense that a Bishop of Whitby who doubts the orders of some who serve under him is neither necessary nor desirable. Many here would wish Fr North well. But we hope that, in due course, the local episcopal oversight for the north of York diocese will be provided by a bishop who is both readily available and identifies fully and unequivocally with the ministry of all the clergy. It would be a re freshing change. PAUL HUTCHINSON The Rectory, Leven Close Stokesley, Nr Middlesbrough TS9 5AP From the Revd Stephen Cooper Sir, — So much then for inclusivity, tolerance, and respect among our different traditions! Those who have campaigned so dishonourably against the appointment of the Revd Philip North as the next Bishop of Whitby should hang their heads in shame. Many of us in the Cleveland arch deaconry are extremely saddened to have lost this opportunity to have such an able and gifted pastor and teacher as our Bishop. Our thoughts and prayers are with Fr North at this very painful and distressing time. STEPHEN COOPER 115 Cambridge Road Middlesbrough TS5 5HF Lectionary muddle From the Revd Martin Culverwell Sir, — There’s trouble ahead. I have been asked to take the services on 13 and 20 January, the Baptism of Jesus and Epiphany 3. Whoever prepared the Lectionary, how ever, has got it wrong; and I can see why. The Sunday after Epiphany is always the Baptism of Jesus. Next year, however, Epiphany falls on a Sunday; so the following Sunday is the Baptism of Jesus, but the following Sunday is Epiphany 3. In the C of E Lectionary, they have called this Sunday Epiphany 3, but got the readings for Epiphany 2, and so on all the way through Epiphany. It is wrong in Visual Liturgy as well. MARTIN CULVERWELL 8 Sandisplatt, Fareham PO14 3AG From Mr David Lamming Sir, — In reaffirming to the House of Commons the Government’s plans to introduce samesex mar riage, the Equalities Minister, Maria Miller, rightly acknowledged the concern of many MPs (and others who responded to or commented on the consultation paper) that Euro pean courts would force religious organisations to conduct such mar riages against their beliefs. While expressing confidence that the “quadruple lock of measures” that she announced would provide “ironclad protection in law”, she also said: “The Government’s legal position has confirmed that, with appropriate legislative drafting, the The ending of the Kunonga project From the Revd Melusi Sibanda Sir, — Just over a year ago, the Archbishop of Canterbury paid a weeklong visit to the Church of the Province of Central Africa (CPCA), which included not only a visit to Zimbabwe, but also a meeting with President Robert Mugabe. During the meeting, Dr Williams gave the President a dossier concerning the predicament of genuine CPCA Anglicans under the former Bishop of Harare, Nolbert Kunonga. Asserting that homosexuality was a foreign issue and, therefore, anathema to African culture, Ku nonga decided to leave the CPCA in 2007, when he formed his socalled Anglican Church of the Province of Zimbabwe (ACPZ). For five years, Kunonga held on to the properties belonging to the CPCA until very recently, when the situation was remedied through a judgment of the Supreme Court. All along, Kunonga unleashed fear on genuine Anglicans in the country and, often being backed by uniformed state security, seemed to enjoy the support of President Mugabe’s ZANU (PF) party. Ku nonga openly supported the party’s political culture of indigenisation, which he actively manipulated in his project for selfaggrandisement, turning CPCA churches, rectories, and mission stations into money making schemes. Dr Williams’s meeting with President Mugabe was a crucial point in the Anglican saga in con temporary Zimbabwe, as it strength ened the position and credibility of the CPCA and weakened Kunonga’s claim to legitimacy. Dr Williams may have taken a risk in being the highestranking British official to meet President Mugabe in a decade, but his visit led many to start ques tioning Kunonga’s venture. Together with the positive turn of events in recent weeks, that visit can be seen as one of Dr Williams’s successful engagements with tem poral authority and support for global Anglicanism. It is a cause for celebration as he comes towards the end of his tenure, and also under lines the fundamental nature of the office of the Archbishop of Canter bury as one of the Instruments of Communion. MELUSI SIBANDA St Stephen’s Vicarage Edgewood Road, Rednal Birmingham B45 8SG Church Times Letters 3rd floor, invicta House 108114 Golden Lane London eC1Y 0TG fax: 020 7490 7093 letters@churchtimes.co.uk chances of a successful legal chal lenge through domestic or Euro pean courts is negligible.” Negligible is not the same as nil. When, during later exchanges, Mrs Miller was asked by one MP to tell the House what the risk of challenge was in percentage terms, she failed to give a straight answer. Another MP, Andrew Brigden, expressing his scepticism on the “legal robustness” of Mrs Miller’s remarks, asked why she had not made public the Attorney General’s specific advice. Her answer was that “any advice the Government receives is privileged information.” This answer is not only unsatis factory, but it reveals a misunder standing of legal privilege. The privilege is that of the client, in this case the Government, not the AttorneyGeneral. Thus, if the Government wished, it could pub lish the advice. That Mrs Miller is unwilling to do so will only enhance the concerns of those who fear that the Prime Minister’s assurance, that no church, synagogue, or mosque that does not want to conduct a gay marriage will be forced to do so, cannot be guaranteed. DAVID LAMMING 20 Holbrook Barn Road, Boxford Suffolk CO10 5HU From Canon Paul Oestreicher Sir, — You have excellently ex plained (News, 14 December) a highly complex legal situation with regard to samesex marriages. Nevertheless, those Anglicans in England and Wales who believe that our clergy should be free to conduct such weddings need not feel totally frustrated by the unwise Downing StreetChurch House edict. There is a way out that is both legal and respectable. It is to learn from much of the rest of Europe. In Germany, for example, every Roman Catholic and every Lutheran couple are required to go through the legalities in a state register office. They then proceed to church, if that is their wish, for a nuptial mass or its Lutheran equivalent. There is nothing to stop a gay or lesbian couple in England or Wales going to their state registrar and then proceeding to a parish church for a blessing ceremony, provided, of course, that the parish priest agrees. A church wedding, spirit ually and theologically, is just that. Two people marry each other: they are the celebrants. The priest in the liturgy publicly declares God’s blessing on their intention to be a wedded couple. Given the conscientious division on this issue in the Church, and given the nature of Anglican pluralism, I cannot imagine that any priest who conducted such a cere mony would have canon law in voked against her or him. This decently sidesteps a situation created by the complexity of an establishment that looks like con tinuing well past its sellby date. PAUL OESTREICHER 97 Furze Croft, Furze Hill Brighton BN3 1PE were many Anglicans, including some bishops, who supported the Government’s decision on gay marriage, but could not say so publicly. How can we be taken seriously, either about our attitude to same sex relationships or women bishops, when we are so divided, confused, and silenced? The Gov ernment and many in the country have lost patience with us and taken the decision into their own hands without the consultation we ex pected. Surely, this is a time to repent our sins of exclusivity, in the hope that the decline and death of our Church, reflected in the 2011 Census, is in deed the herald of its resurrection? JOHN FOSKETT Victoria Cottage 8 Cornwall Road Dorchester DT1 1RT From Mr Trevor Cooper Sir, — When the General Synod failed to pass the recent proposal regarding women bishops, there was criticism that the voting pattern of the House of Laity was not repre sentative of lay men and women, and that the members of the House had not made their voting intentions clear at the time they were elected. When the House of Commons passes the forthcoming gay mar riage legislation, will it be similarly criticised? TREVOR COOPER 38 Rosebery Avenue New Malden, Surrey KT3 4JS more letters overleaf From Canon John Foskett Sir, — According to the Bishop of Leicester and a representative of the Church of England (News, 14 December), the Bishops were taken by surprise to hear that samesex marriages are not to be allowed in the Churches of England and Wales. The Archbishop of Wales called it a “great pity”, while the former Bishop of Oxford said that there LETTERS for the 4 January issue should reach the Church Times offices by noon on New Year’s Eve. CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 17 letters Future of the Community of St Mary the Virgin The part played by religion in Scouting Singing with the spirit From the Bishop of Oxford Sir, — The headline of your report on the departure of 11 Sisters of the Community of St Mary the Virgin (CSMV) for the Ordinariate (News, 14 December) suggests that they had lost their bid to stay at Wantage as an ecumenical com munity. The fact is that we were told by Roman Catholic canon lawyers that it would be impossible for an ecu menical community with an alter nating Anglican and Roman Catholic Superior to be recognised by Rome. As Visitor to CSMV, I have been in discussion with the Sisters for 18 months, as we have tried to honour their initial desire for an ecumenical community, then their wish to have a period of a few years living to gether while they worked out their future, and finally, in the past few weeks, their intention to move on as a separate community in the new year. There are important legal and financial issues yet to be resolved; but I hope to reach agreement in the next few weeks. I wish them well as they journey on. My ongoing concern is for the welfare of the Sisters who remain, and I am work ing with an Advisory Group to this end. JOHN PRITCHARD Diocesan Church House North Hinksey Oxford OX2 0NB From Mr Rob Marsh Sir, — It was interesting to read the letter from Ron Jefferies (Letters, 14 December). I regret to say that the attitude in Scouting is nothing new. I look back to the mid1980s, when I ran a Scout troop and was “told off” by my District Commissioner for encouraging the young people to visit with me the churches around us. As currently a Group Scout Leader, I am also disappointed by the lack of prayers at the end of section meetings. I have also been told that our County Commissioner has for the past three years not wanted to renew the warrant of our County Chaplain. I have also experienced the other side of faith in Scouting, when, From Mr John Puxty Sir, — I enjoyed reading the Revd Michael Counsell’s Prayer for the Week column (Faith, 14 December). I must, however, take exception to his comment that “when you are concentrating on singing well, you have no time to think about the God you are singing to.” Good singing is very much about being aware of the meaning and the object of what is being sung. When we sing to God, we sing as we might to an audience or indeed to a lover, being aware at some level both of what we are creating and also of what is being received, and by whom. JOHN PUXTY 32 Summerfields Way Ilkeston DE7 9HF From the Revd James Little Sir, — I warm to Mr Alan Bartley’s suggestion that women deans might take up some of the seats reserved for the Church of England in the House of Lords (Letters, 14 Decem ber); but I would like to look at this more in terms of reestablishing an ancient English constitutional practice than as innovation. Before the Dissolution of the Monasteries in the 16th century, the majority of church leaders in the Lords were not the bishops, but rather the mitred abbots, most of whom would have been in priest’s orders. It was not so much that the Crown ceased to summon the abbots to sit in the Lords as that, after the Dissolution, there was none left to summon. To develop Mr Bartley’s argu ment further: looking at some of our cathedrals that were once mitred abbeys (e.g. Peterborough or Women bishops in C of e: Lords and Commons Children as eucharistic ministers St Albans), could it not be argued that their deans (including women) might be considered the modern successors of the mitred abbots who once sat in the Lords? Since the revival of Anglican monasticism, is there not now also a case for summoning the heads of religious orders back to the Lords? Given that women can now serve there, why not include the modern equivalent of abbesses? Would it not be wonderful to have the Church of England represented in the Lords not only by the succes sors of St Augustine and St Cuth bert, and their like, but also by the successors of such people as St Etheldreda and St Hilda? JAMES LITTLE The Minster Rectory, Howden East Riding DN14 7BL From Mr Malcolm Coates Sir, — So, canon law is to be changed to allow any authorised regular communicant, including children, to distribute the holy sacrament (General Synod, 30 November). I share the same dis quiet as the Revd David Perry in his letter about children and the eucharistic ministry (Letters, 7 December). As a teacher of music and RE for many years, I see a parallel in the increasing number of schools that allow children a say in the appointment and assessment of teachers. There seems to be a cul ture of permitting children to do whatever they please, whenever they please, and that to discourage them is most unkind. More and more, they are being seen as small From the Revd Ben Phillips Sir, — If Members of Parliament proceed in removing equal opportunities exemption from the Church of England, all members of the Church, men and women, must campaign for disestablishment. The Church of England will have no integrity if it allows doctrinal decisions to be forced by a secular Parliament. The MPs who have proposed this should be ashamed of this suggestion, as there is no parallel outside of the Chinese government’s control of the Chinese state Church, and the worst of totalitarian regimes. BEN PHILLIPS The Vicarage R. Real Grandeza, 99 Botafogo, Rio de Janeiro, RJ Brazil, CEP 22281030 during 2011, I was part of the chaplaincy team at an international Scout and Guide camp. To have regularly more than a dozen young people joining us for morning prayer and compline; and to have many more visiting through the day, and being open in sharing their worries and joys — this was true chaplaincy and true joy. I do feel that the promise to do our duty to God is important, but I there needs to be a balance, as Scouting teaches young people some extremely important core values. Should we be turning them away? ROB MARSH 43 Chevin Avenue Leicester LE3 6PX adults with equal maturity and understanding to adults. But children do not know it all, and cannot be expected to. Quite simply, they are children, and not at the stage to do some of the things that adults are able to do. Administering the holy sacrament, I believe, is one of them. Those who supported the Synod motion are misguided in their view of children. This is one of many ex amples of our country’s obsession with youth. If you really want to involve more young people in church life, get them to join your choir. Here, indeed, is a real need nationwide, and some of them do it rather well. MALCOLM COATES 20 Farleigh Court Maidstone ME16 9BJ Dave Walker’s new cartoon collection Peculiar Goings On is now available from Canterbury press at £6.99 (CT Bookshop £6.29); 9781848252363. 18 CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 caption competition Have a go at our next captioncompetition picture (right). entries must reach us by Friday 4 January. by email to: captioncompetition@ churchtimes.co.uk by post (postcards only) to: Caption Competition Church Times 3rd floor invicta House 108114 Golden Lane London eC1Y 0TG Sadly, not even the car proved to be convertible. They had often wondered what a rev counter was for. The manufacturer’s warranty ordained that the annual service should be carried out religiously. Michael Foster by fax to: 020 7490 7093 “OK, Sharon, have the kids baptised as Roman Catholics. But when it comes to the car. . .” John Saxbee THeRe isn’t a caption photo in existence to which readers won’t apply a contemporary reference: “It says here: ‘Make sure you don’t put a woman in the driving seat.’ Oh, wait, this isn’t the manual, it’s the minutes of General Synod. . .” (Corin Child); and “It happened right after the General Synod vote. It just seemed to give up the ghost” (Allan palmer). in no particular order, and with no perceptible connections: “Top Gear investigates the latest Mass Transport System” (Richard Barnes); “It was the oddest emergency baptism that Fr Paul had ever been asked to do” (Valerie Budd); “When Bishop Welby announced a new liturgy for blessing the oil, this wasn’t what we were expecting” (John Middleditch); “He was trying to remember which eucharistic prayer had the word “Reassembly is a reverse of the above procedure” (Stephen Disley); “Well, that didn’t work. Let’s try phoning Holy Trinity, Brompton” (Bob Torrens); “The garage couldn’t explain the strange knocking in the engine, so they decided to try exorcism” (Christopher Wain). in similar vein, i.e. no vein at all: “The blessings of the oils usually took place inside the cathedral” (Andy Greenhough); “The owners soon realised that the phone number for the vicarage was only slightly different from the number of the local repair garage” (Richard Hough); “The man from Ecclesiastical Insurance prayed that this cup might be taken from them” (Sue Chick). We particularly liked: “And a voice came from heaven, ‘Nah, sorry, mate. We only do Fiats’” (Richard Martin); “The BCP commination service came into its own” (peter Ball); and “The problem seems to be caused by a failure of the catholic converter” (Allan palmer). in all these examples, we have omitted the most common play on words, which accounted for the bulk of the submissions. We have awarded a prize to Michael Foster for the best example of these. The other award goes to John Saxbee, for three of his entries. All prizes of Fairtrade chocolate have been kindly donated by Divine (divinechocolate. com). Continuing to make a difference We’ve been caring for the clergy and their families for 120 years and are noW expanding our provision of care. Our network of Honorary Consultants give their time to offer diagnosis, treatment and second opinions to the clergy and their immediate families on a range of physical and psychological health related issues. We know these issues don’t stop here and often cause great stress and disable the clergy from meeting the needs of their parishioners. For this reason, we are planning on paying for certain treatments that our Honorary Consultants recommend and that are not available through the NHS in a timely manner. find out more about how our network of honorary consultants continues to support the clergy and their immediate families: t: 020 7898 1700 e: admin@stlukeshealthcare.org.uk W: www.stlukeshealthcare.org.uk st luke’s healthcare for the clergy Room 201, Church House 27 Great Smith Street, London SW1P 3AZ CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 19 diary etc It has to be hazel gardening THE sight of a bowl of mixed nuts in their shells takes me back to family Christmases in the ’70s. It was the only time of year my mother would buy nuts, and, along with the decorations, out would come a wicker basket and a pair of heavy hinged nutcrackers. My small hands would be com pletely defeated by brazil nuts, and have only partial success with almonds. Walnuts tended to implode suddenly, leaving me to pick out edible morsels among the shards of shell. Hazelnuts, on the other hand, I was expert at. A clean break yielded a perfectly formed kernel in the palm of my hand, such that Julian of Norwich would be proud. These days, I am versatile with the nutcrackers, and aspire to a home harvest to inflict them on. Brazils are native to Brazil, and need tropical conditions. Almonds are a possibility, but, flowering a fortnight earlier than their close relative, the peach, would tend to be affected by frost in Staffordshire. I have not got the space for the eventual 45metre height of a walnut tree, and, in any case, they depend on a good sum mer to crop. The nut my adult self is most likely to succeed at growing is the hazel. The name comes from the Anglo Saxon haesel, meaning “cap”, which refers to the papery husk that envel opes the developing nut. Hazels are large shrubs or small manystemmed trees. They may, strictly, be filberts, with a long husk (full beard) com pletely enclosing the nut, or cobnuts with a husk shorter than the nut. Each belongs to the genus Corylus. All cobs are derived from our native Corylus avellana, promises spring with its soft yellow male catkins in February. Filberts are variants of Corylus maxima, introduced by the Romans from Greece, bearing cat kins ranging in colour from yellow green to deep red. Hazels are not delicate shrubs, but offer chromeyellow autumn colouring in addition to their spring show. They make a great compon ent to hedges that can be hacked back to provide pea sticks, and sprout freely again from old wood. The thicket of growth offers shelter to wildlife. A nuttery at the bottom of the garden could be a delight, with the spring show augmented by snow drops, scillas, English bluebells, and anemones. A mix of hazel varieties ensures good pollination and a bumper crop of nuts. I am going for “Cosford”, a cobnut noted for flavour, and a good pollinator, which should ensure a good harvest of my second choice, “Kentish Cob” a long, large nut. So, gardenworthy, and a potential snackprovider — two ticks. This still represents a demotion for the hazel, which once featured high in the countryside economy. Hazel poles tend to be straight. Think walking sticks and beanpoles. The wood is flexible, and can be split lengthways for hedgelaying, and thatching pegs that can be bent over on themselves without snap ping. And this is not to forget the annual nut harvest. I may fondly remember playing with nutcrackers, but, until the First World War, children enjoyed a whole day off school on 14 September (Holy Cross Day) to go nutting. Jamie Cable 20 Sister Rosemary diary Wise after the event IN THIS column in August 2010, I wrote, “When people ask me, “What will General Synod decide about women bishops?”, my answer is, “It depends on the people who are elected this time. If you have a vote, I beg you, take advantage of your opportunity to choose members who will help to carry the Church forward in the way you believe it should go.” Judging by the response in the wider Church to the vote in Novem ber, too many electors failed to heed my advice. (Can it be that they do not read this paper? Or that they do not take notice of what I tell them? Surely not.) If it is true that the Church’s elected representatives did not reflect the mind of the Church, then the electors have the remedy in their own hands next time there is an election. Until then, who knows what the remedy might be? Abbey, and was dazzled by the his tory and the splendour of it all. As always with the manifestations of establishment, the question arises: “Is this the Church exercising influ ence in the State, or the State con trolling the Church? And is either of those really desirable?” A large part of this first episode was concerned with the choristers and their school. I was torn between admiration for the boys’ ability and commitment, and the standard of their musical education, and dis quiet that this was available for so few — and, in this case, not for girls. The Master of the Choristers referred to the history of the Abbey as a monastic foundation, and re marked that the choir was carrying on the tradition of the monks with their sung office. We do our best with the music we sing, but I am afraid we do not sound much like the Westminster Abbey choir. God calling variety of individuals who are taking this path, and also to experience again the range of different com munities available for them to explore. The habits tell their own story, from the longestablished and voluminous to the more modern and streamlined, and some com munities have dispensed with the habit altogether. This is only one indication of the ways in which they differ in ethos and emphasis, and in the types of people who tend to be attracted to them; but there is also a sense of related purpose and com mon calling. Our visitors this time were repre sentatives of traditional communi ties like ours — those whose mem bers make vows, and live a life of celibacy in community. Fewer are now taking this path, but at the same time there are many others who do feel called to join with others in a deeper commitment. These belong to a movement, amor phous and illdefined, which has been termed “new monasticism”. These groups are drawn to go deeper into prayer and worship, and at the same time to relate to the presentday world and its needs and searchings. They are often attractive to people who have found conven tional churches harsh, cold, or unwelcoming. They could be simply a manifestation of the postmodern search for “something that suits me exactly”, but they could also be this century’s manifestation of the move I WATCHED the first programme in the BBC TV series Westminster OUR convent has just hosted a day for novices from many religious communities, together with some people who are considering entering them. In these days, it is heartening to meet those who are still feeling themselves called to this way of life, and are not discouraged by our declining numbers and increasing age. It is always fascinating to see the Write, if you have any answers to the questions listed at the end of this section, or would like to add to the answers below. What’s a ‘lay deacon’? No comparison Your answers I recently visited another diocese on holiday. At the Sunday eucharist, I was surprised to observe that the Gospel was read by a lay person. This same person prepared the altar at the offertory, assisted at the distribution, administering individual blessings, and then performed the ablutions. I was later informed that he was not in holy orders, but was a “lay deacon”. Am I mistaken in feeling that this is a contradiction in terms? Can anybody please enlighten me on this practice? Is it widespread, and what is its legality? The answer is on page 158 of the main Common Worship volume: “the deacon’s liturgical ministry provides an appropriate model for the ministry of an assisting priest, a Reader, or another episcopally authorized minister in a leadership ministry that complements that of the president.” My experience of praying the eucharist is certainly quite different when a competent liturgical deacon frees me to preside. Perhaps, un known to the questioner, creatively interdependent lay and ordained roles are features of that parish all week, and are simply being made visible in this way at the eucharist on Sunday. (Canon) Peter Mullins Grimsby All of the concerns raised are answered in the notes and rubrics of the communion services in the Common Worship service book. The notes on pages 15859 refer to a variety of traditions, but make it clear that only those actions an notated in the rubrics as “the President . . .” must be performed by a priest, and even those elements of the Gathering and Service of the Word may be led by a lay person in the absence of a priest. Note 21, on page 334, states explicitly that a lay person CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 out of the question authorised to distribute communion may pray for noncommunicants. (The Revd) Malcolm Garratt Dunchurch, Rugby The questioner might find it helpful to think in terms of function, not status. In our parish in Poole (Salis bury diocese), six of us are privileged to do this work. Two of us are Readers (known as LLMs in Salis bury); so we do other things, too: preaching, teaching, leading worship, home communions, etc. We do the job as described, except that we do not give blessings to non communicants; that is the clergy’s privilege and responsibility. But we do have the awesome privilege at our main Sunday service of helping in the fraction. This is because we do not use individual wafers, but large ones that are each broken into six pieces, so everyone has a piece of wafer consecrated and then broken. We have two teams administering, and, if no other clergy are present, then the lay deacon administers the consecrated bread for the second team. We also lead the acclamations, if any, in the Eucharistic Prayer, and the dismissal. We do each get prayed for, before reading the Gospel, that we may do it worthily. We had a stipendiary deacon four years ago, but he served his title, and left last summer for a parish of his own. We don’t get a new one till next year. (Mrs) Ann Johnson Poole, Dorset I have been a Reader for more than 15 years, and have served in five parishes in three dioceses. In each parish, my priest encouraged me to learn and then exercise the deacon’s ministry as far as is permitted by my Reader’s licence. This has included leading the Ministry of the Word, apart from giving the absolution, and reading the Gospel, preaching, and setting and clearing the altar for and after the eucharist. I have also admin istered the chalice, and on one occasion a second paten at a very large service. Where there is another Reader, we carry out these duties in our turn. We also have an ALM worship leader (accredited lay minister), who carries out the deacon’s duties apart from setting and clearing the altar, by her own choice. I have also acted as Bishop’s chaplain at two con firmation services, with different bishops, and presented my parish’s candidates at a third service. In my 15 years, I have never served in a church that included a deacon in the ministry team. Anne King (Reader of St Mary the Virgin, Willesborough) Willesborough, Ashford, Kent Without the “lay deacon” appellation, I’m on our readers’ rota, so read the Gospel at the first holy communion service of the month. As sacristan, I assist the Vicar in preparing the altar at the offertory, and with the ablutions at the close. As one of our lay ministers of communion, I assist at the distribution of the elements, and often pray with or for individuals who are not confirmed and do not receive communion. Willing volunteers are always welcome to join our readers’ rota. The work of the sacristan, appointed jointly by the Vicar and PCC, is essential for the smooth running of holy communion services. Our lay ministers of communion, licensed by our Area Bishop, deem it an honour to be able to minister in this way. If the requirement for any of these roles were being in holy orders, I am not sure we would have many volunteers at all; either that, or the church would be staffed by several members of the clergy (which the diocese wouldn’t be able to afford), or a Vicar run ragged doing everything. Nicholas Pond (Sacristan/Verger of St Paul’s, ClactononSea) ClactononSea, Essex ment of the Spirit that led to the foundation of communities such as ours, 150 years ago. Meanwhile, let them both grow together. use of force AT A recent clergy conference, I attended a session on army chap laincy — not, I hasten to say, be cause I am considering a career change, but because I hoped that it would be an opportunity to consider the ethics of war and peace. I was disappointed, because the speaker made it clear that the decision to go to war was one made by politicians, and was not the army’s business. The soldier’s responsibility was what was known in Just War theory as ius in bello — the behaviour of troops in conflict. He emphasised that killing, however necessary it was considered to be in the context of battle, always had a psychological impact on the one who killed, and that this impact was felt even by those who killed at a distance, for instance by firing drones. My father, who served in the First World War, always said that the only people enthusiastic about going to war were those who had no ex perience of it. All of us, as citizens and voters, still need to think about the ethics of war and peace. The Revd Sister Rosemary CHN is a member of the Community of the Holy Name in Derby. It has been the custom in some C of E churches, since the 19th century, for a layman, sometimes a parish clerk or Reader, to wear the vestment of a subdeacon (an order suppressed in the C of E at the Reformation) while acting as the epistoler, and fulfilling certain other liturgical functions, at a sung celebration of the eucharist. Reading or singing of the Gospel has, however, normally been re served to a person in deacon’s orders, following the mainstream tradition of the Catholic Church. Though our canon law now allows a lay person to read or sing the Gospel at holy communion, for him or her to do so does obscure the fact that the celebrant, or any other priest who is present, has also been ordained as a deacon, and that this character is indelible. I am sure many priests — despite the current emphasis on status, and ordination as a career path — are happy to be reminded by this that their ministry should remain true to the deacon’s vocation of humble service. Marjorie Grove London SW4 Your questions It is commonly known that, as things now are, the British monarch can not be a Roman Catholic; but what if a future monarch should be a Methodist, Baptist, Orthodox, or, for that matter, a Muslim or atheist? G. S. I wonder if anyone has come up with a suitable form of address, the equivalent of “Father”, which could be used when speaking to or of a lady priest. The titles “Mother” and “Sister” clearly have other connota tions, and yet using just the lady’s Christian name could seem an inadequate acknowledgement of her ministry. A. M. “As the bishop said to the actress.” Which bishop? Which actress? J. C. Address for answers and more questions: Out of the Question, Church Times, 3rd floor, Invicta House, 108114 Golden Lane, London EC1Y 0TG. questions@churchtimes.co.uk diary etc Optimistic wishlist wine I HAVE not yet posted my letter to Father Christmas, but here are some bottles I might ask for. (I rank wines I like into two classes: those I might buy myself, and those I would like someone else to give me. My Christ mas wishes include some of both.) I feel that some sparkle is neces sary at Christmas. Therefore, I would ask for a bottle of Chartogne Taillet Cuvée Sainte Anne NV (the Wine Society, £25). This comes from a dedicated small producer, whom I have known for a number of years, in the delightfully named village of Merfy. As a cheaper alternative, I would welcome some South African Graham Beck NV Brut (Waitrose, £13.99). Dry white wine is always wel come, and I would certainly enjoy both the Pernand Vergelesses les Combottes Domaine Rapet 2010 (Marks & Spencer, £26), and the Errazuriz Single Vineyard Sauv ignon Blanc 2011, from the newly officially recognised Chilean wine region of Aconcagua Costa (Wait rose, £11.99). My real love, however, is red wine, and here my favourite grape varieties are the Pinot Noir, the Cabernet Franc, and the Malbec. Starting with the last grape, I would like Father Christmas to find me some magnums of Loire producer JeanFranҫois Mériau’s Cent Vis ages 2009. Generally, in Touraine, this grape is known as the Cot, but, strangely, in this case it is given that name on the back label, and Malbec on the front. I know the wine is on sale in this country, but I do not know where, and there were no magnums available at the vineyard when I called in recently. Of course, it is the vineyards of Mendoza, in Argentina, that are the true homeland of the grape, and Majestic Wines have a true bargain at £7.99 per bottle (if you buy two bottles) in Gougenheim Malbec 2099. My sole representative of Cabernet Franc comes from Tanners of Shrewsbury; it is their Saumur Champigny Tuffe Ch. Du Hureau 2009 (£11.80). As for Pinot Noirs, I could quite easily choose not just a first XI, but will try to restrict myself. Chile must be strongly represented, and I would start with the Coop’s Pinot Noir from the Casablanca Valley (£9.99), and follow with Leyda Vineyards Las Brisas 2011 (Great Western Wines £13.25). From New Zealand, I would have any wine from Felton Road, in Central Otago: per haps their Block 3 is my first choice, or the incomparable Ata Rangi, from Martinborough. From Burgundy, I would try to find a Waitrose branch with stocks of Pommard les Petits Noizons Domaine de la Vougeraie 2009 (£35.99). For those with big chimneys, and purses, most wine merchants are offering intriguing mixed cases for Christmas. I particularly like the thought of receiving Tanner’s Christ mas Indulgence case (£290 for 12 bottles), or the Vintners’ Reserves case from Berry Bros. & Rudd (£545 for 12 bottles). A final suggestion for the true winebuff: Jancis Robinson’s Wine Grapes, a monumental work giving everything you might want to know about almost 1400 different grape varieties from around the world. Here’s wishing you a peaceful and fulfilled Christmas. Christopher Fielden it was a good year for holly WHAT are you cooking for Christ mas? It is interesting to listen to people’s plans, and compare them with — to my mind — the dreary inevitability and panic of “turkey and all the trimmings”. Jenny is looking forward to a redcabbage salad enriched with Stilton and walnuts. Owen is planning to cook duck for his family on their newly acquired Rayburn. Mary is making clementine cake — the one you make with stewed, pureéd clemen tines, and ground almonds. John is cooking mushrooms in a cream sauce. The vegetarian/fishy Christmas always seems to be less stressful than the carnivorous one, and I like beautiful dishes that can be made in advance, and do not require preci sion timing and 24hour kitchen work. John’s Mushrooms in cream could be a starter, or part of a main meal, but these are quantities for an hors d’oeuvre for 4. 140 ml (¼ pt) double cream 225g (8 oz) button mushrooms 112g (4 oz) wild mushrooms 2555g (12 oz) butter 2 teaspoons English mustard 1 tablespoons vinegar 4 tablespoons passata 4 teaspoons Worcestershire sauce a dash of Soy sauce 1 teaspoon honey a grating of fresh ginger to taste Fry the mushrooms gently in the butter. Add the rest of the in gredients, leaving the cream until you are just ready to serve, adding it and bringing the sauce up to heat again without boiling. Serve this with plenty of fine bread to soak up the sauce. Roasted stuffed vegetables is a benign version of the medieval affair of stuffing birds like swans and geese with ever smaller birds, down to tiny larks. It also looks much prettier. 1 red pepper per person half a fennel bulb per person passata mixed peppercorns coriander seeds olive oil garlic sea salt Slice the fennel into manageable wedges that will fit inside the peppers, reserving the tough stalks Turkey banished cookery for making soup or stock. Steam the fennel wedges until just tender. Cut the red peppers in half lengthways, keeping the stalk intact but getting rid of the seeds. Pour a little passata into each pepper, and then stuff them with a couple of fennel wedges, rootend fitting in at the stalk end of the pepper. Crush the garlic, salt, and spices, and sprinkle them on top. Drizzle oil over them, and bake them in a hot oven for about hour. A huge bird or joint of meat feeds our atavistic desire for sacrifice as well as our stomachs; so a vege tarian Christmas dinner should also have a centrepiece dish which everyone will share. Puff pastry can be wrapped around any number of things, and brushed with beaten egg to make an impressive, golden entrance. This Cheese, bean, and broccoli plait is not an expensive dish for four to six people, apart from the bought puffpastry. It looks beautiful, and can be prepared in advance and left, uncooked, in the fridge until about 45 minutes before you want to eat it. Experi ment with other vegetables, and perhaps chopped hazelnuts for the filling. 225g (8 oz) puff pastry 1 broccoli head 1 leek 1 tin butter beans 280ml (½ pt) milk 55g (2 oz) flour 55g (2 oz) butter 55g80g (23 oz) Cheddar cheese, grated 1 egg, beaten sheet. Make a series of parallel diagonal cuts into the two long sides of the rectangle, cutting about a quarter of the way into each side. Place your vegetable mixture along the centre of the pastry, and fold the pastry ends up and over. Then plait or weave the side diagonal strips to cover each other until the vegetables are completely covered by the pastry. Brush the plait with beaten egg. Keep this in the fridge if you make it in advance. Otherwise, bake it straight away in a hot oven (200°C/400°F/Gas 6) until the pastry is golden. You can do the same trick with salmon. This recipe for Salmon en croute sandwiches two fillets to gether with spinach; so the result is rather beautiful when sliced at the table. For 46 people you need: 1 block of puff pastry 2×450g (2×1 lb) pieces of skinned salmon fillet 225g (8 oz) fresh spinach 112g (4 oz) cream cheese 1 egg, beaten salt and pepper Steam the spinach until just wilted, chop it, and stir it into the cream cheese when it is cool. Roll out the pastry, and place it on a baking sheet. Place one fillet in the centre, and spread the spinach mixture on top. Cover this with the other piece of fillet. Season well, and seal up the pastry all round with beaten egg, brushing the outside well with beaten egg, too. Bake in a hot oven (200°C/400°F/Gas 6) for about 45 minutes. Serve hot with steamed winter vegetables, and eat any leftovers cold with salad. For vegetables, I will certainly be cooking Orange carrots — pre pared by frying carrot batons in butter and orange juice until just al dente, and finishing them with a little honey, salt, and pepper. I’ll also be cooking Spanish glazed onions. Peel and cut the onions into wedges, and simmer in water until tender. Drain them (reserving the water for stock) and add a generous amount of butter, and a teaspoon or so of honey. Toss them about over a high heat until they are sweet and golden. Season and serve Jenny’s redcabbage slaw with Stilton and walnuts can be adapted to make a Christmas potato salad that will feed a number of people, and is sustaining enough to be a good lunch dish with a green salad and/or a rich winter soup. 900g (2 lb) potato garlic cloves 225g (8 oz) walnuts, very lightly toasted 225g (8 oz) Stilton, diced celery, diced 8 tablespoons olive oil Wash and cut the potatoes into evensized chunks, or use new potatoes. Simmer them until tender. If you wish, cool and skin the pota toes. Blend together 112g (4 oz) wal nuts with 23 garlic cloves and olive oil to make a paste. Assemble the salad by tossing the potatoes with the paste, and the rest of the wal nuts, chopped, and the Stilton, celery, and plenty of sea salt and pepper. Garnish with the inner celery leaves. Terence Handley MacMath Cut the broccoli into florets, and wash and chop the leeks into small rounds. Steam them both until tender. Make a sauce with the flour, butter, and milk, and stir in the cheese, cooking it until thickened. Drain the butter beans, and add them and the green vegetables. Taste and season well. Roll out the pastry to a rectangle about 6mm (¼ in.) thick, or according to the directions on the packet, and place it on a baking CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 21 faith ELIZABETH appears to have a bit part in Mary’s story, but what happens if we put her centrestage? This descendant of Aaron the priest had an impeccable past, but no future, because she had no child. Childlessness was the woman’s fault: “they had no children because Elizabeth was barren” (Luke 1.7); and, worse, her husband was a priest; so her childlessness called his piety into doubt, since sons were a sign of God’s blessing. Every time he came home from a circum cision, every time there was a family gathering, the grief must have been there, the tears welling up in secret. Nevertheless, Luke emphasises their blameless living and righteous ness before God. Their lives were a perpetual paradox, because they had done everything that God com manded, and yet God had not blessed them in the way all faithful Jews expected. Instead, Elizabeth’s dreams had been chipped away, month by month, as she felt her blood flow, until hope was gone. But then something happened. An angel appeared, and told Zechariah: “Your prayer has been heard. Elizabeth will have a son” (Luke 1.13). When had that elderly couple last prayed that prayer? Realistically, it was years ago, and The celebrations begin readings for the days ahead Rosalind Brown 4th Sunday of Advent Micah 5.2-5a; Hebrews 10.5-10; Luke 1.39-45 [46-55] God our redeemer, who prepared the Blessed Virgin Mary to be the mother of your Son: grant that, as she looked for his coming as our saviour, so we may be ready to greet him when he comes again as our judge; who is alive and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen. God had indeed heard, yet had chosen not to answer until now. So pregnant Elizabeth hid herself, with telling words: “This is what the Lord has done for me when he looked favourably on me and took away the disgrace I have endured among my people” (Luke 1.25). We can hear the years of silent suffering and shame that she had borne. Six months later, on Mary’s unexpected arrival and news, her baby kicked off the celebrations, and Elizabeth broke her seclusion with a loud cry of praise. The neighbours heard! She, long disgraced for not being pregnant, strengthened Mary, newly disgraced for being pregnant, and facing the possibility of Joseph’s rejection, her father’s wrath, perhaps stoning. Elizabeth became a prophet filled with the Holy Spirit, telling Mary that her child was indeed the Lord. That may have been the assurance that Mary desperately needed that she had not dreamed it all. Elizabeth, who had experienced blessing from God in the conception of her child, was open to an excess of blessing, as the mother of her Lord came to her. Were her words THe BoDLeiAN LiBRARY, uNiVeRSiTY oF oxFoRD Christmas Day Isaiah 62.6end; Titus 3.47; Luke 2.[17] 820 Almighty God, you have given us your only begotten Son to take our nature upon him and as at this time to be born of a pure virgin: grant that we, who have been born again and made your children by adoption and grace, may daily be renewed by your Holy Spirit; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who is alive and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen. LUKE’s birth narratives have a cast of ordin ary people coping with occasional extraordin ary events. God had sent messages to Mary and Joseph through an angel and a dream; a baby was conceived, and then there was silence. They got on with doing what a peasant couple expecting a baby did until, with bad timing, the Emperor’s census forced a 90mile trip to Bethlehem. It would be tempting to wonder whether something was amiss; whether God could have fixed better arrangements for the birth. But no: silence. At Christmas, we rush too easily from the spare account of Jesus’s birth, without divine glamour, to the angels’ appearing. Mary and Joseph did not see those angels; they were left holding a newborn baby in a stable. God had been disturbingly active in their lives a while ago, but, in the mess and pain of birth away from home, God apparently was keeping quiet. God did send an angel eventually — but not FIVE days on, and normal life is partly restored. The sales are in full swing, public transport has restarted, and some offices have reopened. Meanwhile, in our readings, several years have passed. With a brief but telling glance at the way Jesus was raised — piously, as not all Jewish women were like Mary, who made the annual arduous trek to Jerusalem for the Passover, since only men were required to do, and many of them did not — now we meet Jesus nearing the age (13) of recognition as an adult who could be counted among the ten men needed for there to be a synagogue, and who could recite Torah, the Law. Theologically, in drawing parallels with Samuel and telling of his growth in wisdom and esteem as he stood on the cusp of manhood, Luke emphasises Jesus’s humanity. He illustrates this with a story of Jesus’s exploring his identity, testing his boundaries. This maturing boy was not entirely obedient to his parents, and went missing. 22 “Blessed is she who believed there would be a fulfilment of what was spoken to her by the Lord” spoken to Mary, or to herself? Was there a chuckle in her voice, a delighted realisation that, after all these years, God had kept his word? When John was born, “her neighbours and relatives heard that the Lord had shown his great mercy to her, and they rejoiced with her” (Luke 1.58). Was mercy the unexpected, deeper gift of God, after those years of tenacious, faithful living, in the face of silence? Indeed, what does it mean to receive the great mercy of God? Perhaps it was Elizabeth who taught Mary that “God’s mercy is for those who fear him from generation to generation.” As Advent draws to a close, we pray for readiness to greet our saviour when he comes. Elizabeth was open to receiving God’s mercy, after years of dashed hopes. Some times, as a survival mechanism, we are so defended against disillusion ment (“better not to ask than ask and be disappointed”) that God has to Mary and Joseph. Instead, on a hillside, God disturbed the night watch of a group of shepherds who were not particularly looking out for God. Their responsibilities in the fields, 24 hours a day, prevented their participation in Jewish worship, and made them religious outcasts. It was to this unlikely assembly, minding their own business with their sheep, that God’s angel appeared one dark night. Luke reports their understandable fear, their decision to abandon their sheep (risking their livelihood), and their hasty trip to Bethlehem, where they found the baby, and told his parents their bizarre story. This band of breathless shepherds became God’s messengers to Mary and Joseph, for whom their arrival was unexpected, but The description of the large cara van of people, walking in smaller groups, tells us how people travelled for safety, and of the trusting sense of wider community in which Jesus was raised. It also suggests that Mary and Joseph had not been on their own in Bethlehem, but could have had extended family with them. Come nightfall, there was panic; back in Jerusalem, the fact that Mary, not Joseph, told Jesus off gives a glimpse of a strong, nononsense, mother. How did Jesus respond? At one level, it was with typical adolescent insouciance. Why on earth were they bothered? At another level, it indicates that something had clicked for him in a new way in Jerusalem: he was growing into awareness that God was his Father. In Judaism, God was not normally addressed as “Father”, and yet Jesus called God his Father, and taught his disciples to do so. We do not know how Jesus came to know this relationship, and her esies have been built from specul CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 Joy breaks out: the shepherds’ dance, from a mid15th century Dutch Book of Hours (Bodleian MS 93 folio 28, detail) probably a comfort, since it assured them that God had not abandoned them after all. They, in turn, could reassure the shepherds — who would not expect them to believe weird stories of a sky full of angels — that they were not hallucinating, but were the first to hear that God really had sent a saviour. That was the only miraculous part of the actual birth of Jesus: otherwise, Mary and Joseph, plus any extended family with them, were on their own, dealing with a natural birth away from their own home. Perhaps through the shepherds they discovered, as we can today, that God’s silence is not God’s absence. Luke records that Mary treasured these words, and pondered them in her heart. Years later, she might have drawn strength from them, as she faced the seeming silence of God at Calvary. 1st Sunday of Christmas 1 Samuel 2.1820, 26; Colossians 3.1217; Luke 2.41end Almighty God, who wonderfully created us in your own image and yet more wonderfully re stored us through your Son Jesus Christ: grant that, as he came to share in our humanity, so we may share the life of his divinity; who is alive and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen. ation; Luke simply mentions his remarkably astute questioning and understanding, contrasting with his parents’ lack of understanding. Then Jesus got up, and went with his parents to Nazareth, and was obedi ent to them. Whatever being the Son of God meant, he expressed this in to prise or even wrench us open to his great mercy. Perhaps, in these last days of Advent, it is time to revisit, prayer fully, what we dare not voice or have given up praying for, and to risk that God will come with mercy, making a road in our wilderness, in the wilderness of our neighbourhood, and of our nation. Faithful Elizabeth, long have you waited for this sign. Now is your time of mercy — your time! — no longer sharer of another’s joy. Can you receive — in awe, yet without fear — not just this child, but mercy, in your hidden depths, and in that place of faithful, steady love let mercy purge and heal your pain, risk the disarming of the strength that kept you faithful through the years? Then, beloved and vulnerable, embrace the lover of your soul. Mercy, Elizabeth, mercy for you. Not just a son, but joy, great joy. Rosalind Brown What was the effect on the shepherds? Today’s readings tell of the goodness and lovingkindness of God our Saviour’s appearing; of the Lord’s proclaiming to the end of the earth that salvation comes; that God’s holy people are sought out, not forsaken. This is what the shepherds experienced that stunning night, and they returned, glorifying and praising God. One medieval artist envisaged their dancing. I have a picture on an old Christmas card from a Book of Hours (left), showing a group of stolid medieval peasant shepherds, concentrat ing intensely as they solemnly attempt a circle dance. It is a dancing disaster waiting to happen: some appear to have two left feet, and one is going in the opposite direction while still holding his neighbours’ hands. They have dropped their crooks on the ground because something has caused them to venture into this new territory of dancing. The clue lies with one who is outside the circle, on the right, pointing upwards — no doubt it was at the angels. Even hardened shepherds can dance when joy breaks out, when a saviour is born. We never know how God’s messengers may come to us, or what unlikely things God’s messengers — for that is what angels are — may cause us to do. We know that Mary treasured the shepherds’ words in her heart, and maybe, just maybe, the shepherds really did learn to dance. The Christmas collect prays for us to be daily renewed by the Holy Spirit. Expect an unexpected answer as joy breaks out: the goodness and lovingkindness of God has appeared. obedience to his parents, and, ul timately, learned obedience through what he suffered (Hebrews 5.8). Lest we forget, as normal life resumes, the collect takes us into the glorious mysteries of what God has done in Jesus Christ: first creating us, then restoring us in the image of God, sharing our humanity, so that we may share the life of his divinity. God’s salvation is so much more than paying off any debt arising from our sin, or meeting the demands of the law. It restores humanity to what was originally intended: communion with God. Salvation is about life in its fullness, sharing God’s life as he has shared ours in Jesus Christ. There are consequences to this wonder, and the readings bring us back to earth. God’s chosen ones, holy and beloved, are to live trans formed lives, clothing themselves with love (was it love that enabled the 12yearold, newly independent Jesus, who had discovered the in tellectual and theological thrills of Jerusalem, to be obedient to his parents in the backwater of Naza reth?), and doing everything with thanksgiving to God in the name of Jesus. Mary had already treasured what the shepherds told her in her heart; now she added to that treasurestore this more difficult experience of her son’s growing away from the family, and yet being obedient to them. Years later, Jesus said: “Where your treasure is, there your heart will be also” (Luke 12.34), and perhaps he learned that, in part, from Mary. Mary’s experience reminds us that it is in the normality of life that we add to the treasures in our heart, and live in the light of them. One practical suggestion for the New Year is to buy a book in which to record what you wish to treasure in your heart — pictures, words, stories, photos, memories — and, like Mary, like Jesus, to live obediently in ordinary life where such treasures are created. Books like that used to be called commonplace books, with good reason. SIR NINIAN COMPER (18641960) had his critics. Pevsner wrote that, although the rood screen, organ case, and pulpit in St Mary’s, Egmanton, Nottinghamshire (1897), were admirable as pastiche, “as pieces of contemporary art they are all of course valueless.” But Comper also had his admir ers. None was more fervent than Peter Anson, who, in his authorita tive Fashions in Church Furnishing 18401940, described Comper’s early work at St Cyprian’s, Clarence Gate (1902), with its white interior, graceful columns, delicate screen, and gorgeous textiles, as redolent of Edwardian luxury, putting him in mind of pèche Melba. Comper, more soberly, described it as a setting fit for the liturgy of the Book of Common Prayer. And much more than a mere setting: “A church is its own prayer,” he wrote, “and should bring you to your knees when you enter.” Later, he created an inclusive style influenced by his study of the fusion of classical Greek, Saracenic, and Gothic styles in Sicily and elsewhere, and of the English 17thcentury combination of classical with gothic. All styles, he wrote, even those of pagan antiquity, could contribute to “unity by inclusion”. In St Mary’s, Wellingborough (19041931, right), he designed Gothic arches to rest on fluted Greek columns headed by Corinthian capitals, and a classical baldacchino to surmount a freestanding altar. Photos of this and much of his other work is accessible in Google images. Betjeman wrote of Comper’s church designs: “I saw . . . propor tion, attention to detail, colour, texture and chiefly purpose — the tabernacle as the centre of it all.” It was Comper’s aim to draw attention to the altar, at first with his design of the gothic altar with riddel posts prayer for the week My Jesus, how good it is to love you. Let me be like your disciples on Mount Tabor, seeing nothing else but you. Let us be like two bosom friends, neither of whom can ever bear to offend the other. . . We can be satisfied only by setting our hearts, imperfect as they are, on you. We are made to love you; you created us as your lovers. St JeanBaptisteMarie Vianney, the Curé d’Ars (17861859) James Steven in the last in his series on the our Father JOHN BUNYAN was one of a good number of English Christians for whom the restoration of the mon archy in 1660 spelled trouble. The Dissenters of the mid17th century believed in a freedom of religious expression which inevitably brought them into conflict with the monarch and the Church of England. In Bun yan’s case, his repeated practice of preaching without a licence led to imprisonment. Writing in Bedford jail in the 1660s, Bunyan represented the voice of protest that was becoming in creasingly strong among the Dis senters. Among their concerns, Bunyan questioned the legitimacy of praying using a lawfully imposed book. The target for this criticism was the Book of Common Prayer, reestablished in 1662 as the single faith ‘Unity by inclusion’ man Adrian Leak considers the uplifting legacy of Sir Ninian Comper hung with richly embroidered cur tains and surmounted by gilded angels, and later by the introduction of a freestanding altar beneath a baldacchino, a majestic canopy in wood or stone supported by col umns (for example at St Philip’s, Cosham, 1937). In his 1912 reordering of the Grosvenor Chapel, in central Lon don, he brought the altar forward, and placed it under a baldacchino west of the screened chancel, there by creating the Lady chapel east of the screen. His chancel screens, surmounted The gate of heaven: St Mary’s, Wellingborough FOR 40 years, JeanBaptisteMarie Vianney served as the parish priest, or Curé, of the obscure country parish of Ars, near Lyons. People came from all over France to make their confessions in his hearing and to receive his spiritual guidance, from peasants to ministers of the government. His own devotion was to the mass and the real presence of Christ in the reserved sacrament. He had great compassion, insight, and skill in guiding penitents. More than 6000 people attended his funeral. “How good it is to love you,” begins his prayer. At the trans figuration on Mount Tabor, Peter, James, and John saw Jesus in all his glory, and could not take their eyes by the rood with accompanying figures, were designed with exuber ant élan. Whether in a large building such as St Mary’s, Egmanton, or a tiny Cornish church such as St Petroc’s, Little Petherick, these magnificent structures — with their open tracery, painted saints, and gilded seraphim — far from obscuring the sanctuary, serve as a portal, drawing the eye along a lengthened vista to the dazzling altar beyond. His painted glass is characterised by its lightness, the rich blues and reds enhanced by areas of clear glass, giving a translucent effect. His depiction of Christos Pantokrator, showing a youthful unbearded figure seated in majesty, recurs in a number of east windows (Downside Abbey, Pusey House in Oxford, and Southwark Cathedral are three). In these, you catch the serene glory that shines through all his work. Many of his commissions were from private patrons. Athelstan Riley (St Petroc), Lord Shaftesbury (Wimborne), the Childers family Sir Ninian Comper’s church architecture, woodwork and silver, textile designs and stained glass brought colour and elegance to many churches and cathedrals in the first half of the 20th century. His earlier work was strongly influenced by the lateperpendicular style of the 15th century; he was regarded as the last of the Gothic Revivalists. Later, he created an eclectic style of his own in which he mixed classical with medieval and renaissance forms. He was knighted in 1950. The anniversary of his death falls on 22 December. Michael Counsell prays with the Curé d’Ars off him. The Curé asks for a similar singlemindedness in his prayers. “We can be satisfied only by setting our hearts, imperfect as they are, on you,” he says. All the other things from which we seek for satisfaction sadly pall after a while; the only thing we never tire of is loving God and basking in his love for us. Fr Vianney says to his Creator: “Let us be like two bosom friends.” I ask you, the cheek of the man! Yet that is why God created us. He wanted creatures to love who would love him in return. To achieve this, he had to labour through all the millennia of evolution until he had produced beings with enough free will to reject him. Love cannot be compelled: it has to be a free choice . So God had to come down to earth, and make himself our equal. When we read this prayer, we feel as if we have been privileged to listen in to the intimate conversa tion of two people who are deeply in love with each other. Yet these are not two ordinary people: one is the humble priest of an insignificant parish, and the other is the Creator of the universe. Yet there is no fear in the words of the merely Pattern and prayer authorised book of services for the English Church and nation. Bunyan’s chief problem was that reciting prayer from a text was no guarantee that genuine prayer was taking place: Christian prayer needed to be offered with a sincere heart and right intention. Reading from a text could easily become a surrogate form of prayer, with little or no spiritual value, he ar gued. The Lord’s Prayer, which took pride of place in the services of the Book of Common Prayer, found itself at the centre of this debate. In his book I Will Pray with the Spirit and with Understanding Also, pub lished in 1663, Bunyan articulated a view that has remained popular in Free Church life, namely that the Lord’s Prayer was given by Jesus to his disciples to teach them a pattern for prayer, and not primarily, if at all, as a prayer to be recited. Thus the Lord’s Prayer became a test case in the correct manner of Christian prayer. Bunyan argued that if Christ had intended the prayer to be used for recitation, he would not have left disparate versions of it (referring to differences in the text of the prayer in the Gospels). He also drew attention to there being no record of the apostles’ using the prayer, or of their admonishing others to do so. These arguments, however, were supplementary to his main convic tions: authentic prayer comes from a sincere heart, enlightened by the Spirit, and the chief evidence of true prayer offered in the Holy Spirit is (Cantley), and Lord Halifax (Hickley) are a few of many. Had he been born a century later, it is unlikely that his work would have prospered without the benefit of private patronage. Comper was described as a “mys terious figure”, hard to categorise. “An aesthete who dressed with understated elegance,” according to his biographer, Fr Anthony Symondson SJ. He spoke “in an exquisitely modulated voice”; a raconteur of the fin de siècle who had known Aubrey Beardsley and his circle, and who had lived through the Second World War and its après la guerre barbarism. Betjeman recalled how Comper had winced at the corduroy breeches of the two beefy landgirls to whom they had given a lift near Marlbor ough: “Oh, that uniform!” groaned the survivor of the belle époque, “It shows a lack of reverence to our Lady.” But, for Comper, love of beauty was much more than the affectation of an aesthete: it was a doorway into the presence of God. His life’s work was to create church interiors that would evoke from the casual visitor and the regular worshipper alike the response: “This is none other but the house of God; this is the gate of heaven.” The Revd Adrian Leak is Priestin Charge of Withyham, in the diocese of Chichester. to be found in prayer’s spontaneous nature. Bunyan is in many respects a wise teacher of prayer. His pro phetic critique of public prayer echoes the warning of Jesus to avoid prayer of the hypocrites, which is thinly disguised religious showman ship, and that of the pagans, which is meaningless babbling (Matthew 6.57). He also stands securely in a long tradition of interpreters, such as St Augustine of Hippo, who understood the Lord’s Prayer as pattern for prayer. Bunyan’s legacy of is, however, questionable in some ways. In his rigorous condemnation of liturgical prayer, he sees only the dangers of recitation, and misses the wisdom of repetition in prayer. There is an alternative, less anxious, and more human member of this partnership. It is as though they have so much experience of each other’s trust worthiness that they know that their lover will never let them down, so grateful are they to be in love with someone who loves them. Because they love each other, neither “can ever bear to offend the other”. It is this which makes us good: not a struggle to attain selfrespect, but the realisation that when we do something selfish or unloving, we wound the most tender of all hearts, that of the God who loves us. The Revd Michael Counsell is the author of 2000 Years of Prayer (Canterbury Press 1999) and The Canterbury Preacher’s Companion 2013 (Canterbury Press 2012). generous approach, which recog nises public recitation of prayer as a way for it to be filled with meaning. The same prayer prayed in different places, at different times, and at different stages of life gains a multi layered texture. The Lord’s Prayer, like a rolling snowball that gets bigger as it descends a slope, accumulates mean ing for those praying it regularly. Moreover, like a prism that endlessly fascinates because of the different angles it splits light into its constituent spectral colours, the Lord’s Prayer can never be exhausted of meaning. We are right to question the thoughts of our hearts as we pray. But too much introspection can lead us from trusting the simple gift of recitation, whereby over time and through the help of God’s Spirit, we grow into the endlessly fascinating journey of finding God present in our world. The Revd Dr James Steven is Director of Liturgy and Worship at Sarum College. CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 23 features MARiA STeeLe De LoZADA peTeR BuTCHeR Christmas does not always go as smoothly as planned. We asked our readers to make informal confessions Jesus was in the holly MY VICARhusband was in his usual “I want to go to bed and not stay up for a midnight service” mode. This mood always lasted from 8 p.m. until 10 p.m., and it was better to send him upstairs for a sleep, before reviving him with a strong coffee and a mince pie before he went over to church just before 11. At five past 11, he was back, in a flap. I could hear him rummaging around in his study. “What have you lost this time?” I shouted down from the landing. “I’ve lost baby Jesus,” he replied. Hugging my red cloak over my 24 When Baby Jesus was a teddy nightie — I was nine months and one day pregnant — I plodded over to church to join in the search. Husband was sure he had put baby Jesus on the ledge in the pulpit. I glanced at the adjacent window sill. There, sleeping on a bed of prickly holly, was the Christ Child, moved earlier that evening by an overzealous cleaner. All was now well in church. Not so at the vicarage. Our children, who had been fast asleep when I left, were both wide awake on the land ing, looking on in amazement at their grandma. She was astride the new rocking horse, which had been meant as the Big Surprise. Santa’s glass of port had been drunk. Grandma looked rosy and was giggling. I giggled, too, but not for long. Sounds of a filing cabinet being CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 opened and slammed shut, and drawers pulled open, reached my ears. “What have you lost this time?” “The prayer for the blessing of the crib.” The clock showed that there was one minute to go before the mid night service was due to start. Grabbing my fountain pen, I shot an arrow prayer to the unknown patron saint of quickprayer writers, and wrote a fiveline bless ing on a piece of card and shoved it into my husband’s hand. Three minutes later, I hung my head out of the vicarage window, and heard the opening strains of “It came upon the midnight clear”. I caught the words: “And now for the traditional prayer for the blessing of the crib. . .” How long does it take for a prayer to become traditional? Five minutes? The importunate doll VICARAGE children have to be very patient on Christmas day, waiting for daddy to finish all his services and duties before the pres ent opening can begin. However, we did let them choose three presents to open before church. So it was that our threeyearold chose her new doll to sit with her in the pew. I was pleased she was play ing so nicely on Christmas morning; for she had a reputation as a wan derer. For a change, I could actually concentrate on the service, and rashly closed my eyes for the prayer of consecration. I had, therefore, no idea that she was by now undressing her doll, and finding a string to pull from the middle of its back. As her daddy lifted up the chalice, an automated voice pierced the holy stillness with a loud: “I want a weewee.” I wanted to crawl under the pew. My university colours CHRISTMAS morning started five hours after husband had crawled into bed after the midnight service. Husband went off to take the 8 a.m. communion, and I cooked bacon and eggs for when he returned at 8.45 a.m. It was nearly 9 a.m. before I remembered that he had said that, after the service, he would go up the tower with the lay Reader to put up features RoGeR HoLLAND ALexANDRA Le RoSSiGNoL JoANNA Jo MeRRY JuDi HATTAWAY the flag. Recent gales had whipped the rope from its moorings, and it would have to be posted through the metal loop at the top of the pole. In readiness for this operation, he had taken all my vacuumcleaner pipes, and those of a neighbour, and lashed them together with my university scarf. His idea was to post the new rope up through the length of tubing and thread it through the flagpole loop. His bacon was going cold, and the egg was hard, as I went to the lounge to look out at the church tower, expecting by now to see the St George’s flag billowing out. What I saw was two men clutch ing the parapet and laughing hys terically. They still had the flag in their hands. Instead, flying majestic ally was my green, yellow, and blue university scarf to the accompani ment of pipes. Vacuum cleaner pipes. Dingdong merrily on high! Only men allowed OUR church has a “Come as shep herds, angels, wise people, animals” invitation to our crib services. An animated tenyearold “wise man” was vociferous in his views. “There were only three Wise Men and they were all men. You cannot have wise girls.” A double blessing IT WAS the little ones’ nativity ser vice. At the back of the church, mums were fussing around shep herds, putting towels and rope circ lets on their heads. Angels in white party dresses looked like little fairies (one had even brought a wand). The Kings were getting clothes out of the dressing up box. The boy playing Joseph looked sullen, and the girl being Mary, in a blue robe with a white head scarf, sat serenely nursing the baby Jesus. We were about to begin. Then the door opened, and in came another little girl in blue and white, followed by her doting family. We now had two Marys. Well, you can’t disappoint young children; so for one year only we had an extra character at the Nativ ity. The second Mary became Jesus’s gran. She got to hold the baby Jesus, and her parents got the photos they wanted. Filed under ‘J’ EVERY year, the manger is retrieved from a local garage and placed in the church, filled with straw. In theory, the baby Jesus is not placed into the manger until Christmas Day. Except that the baby Jesus is required for various nativity and carol services, and the mangerplus baby is lent out for a townwide event. After Christmas, the various components are returned to storage, but they don’t always all arrive as and when expected. Here are some of the remarks we have had (all genuine): “We’ve lost Jesus again. Does anyone have any idea where he is? We need him for the playgroup nativity.” “Jesus was in the manger when he shouldn’t have been; so I popped him under the pulpit during the service, then moved him to the vestry. He’s on top of the filing cabinet.” “I didn’t realise you still needed Jesus after Christmas Day. I was going to put him back in the loft.” “If it’s my Jesus then he is actually a little boy. You need to check under his nightie.” Carnage at the crib I DID not drop the baby Jesus. I accidentally kicked him out of his crib, severing his head from his body, sending it rolling into the nether regions of the sanc tuary. This was at a family com munion service last Christmas Eve, when I was a eucharistic minister and following the vicar with the chalice. Our church is very proud of its Victorian nativity set, and I felt very embarrased. The communicants who saw the incident burst into fits of giggles. Thank goodness for superglue. The baby’s head got stuck back on in time for midnight mass, but he now has a hairline crack across the neck. Thank goodness for patient, longsuffering vicars, too. Little furry nose THE girl playing the part of Mary in the nativity play promised to provide a doll to be “baby Jesus”. She turned up half an hour before the service looking em barrassed. “I don’t actually play with dolls any more; so it turns out my mum has thrown them all out,” she confessed. “But I have brought my teddy. Will that do?” And so, that year, we had a very wellswaddled “teddy Jesus” as the central character of the play. Thanks to my dire warnings, none of the other kids dared to laugh at the baby’s unusually furry nose. Our thanks to all the readers who submitted stories and photos. CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 25 features God takes on the human family tree The creeds — particularly the one we rarely use any more — provide a challenging insight into the meaning of the incarnation, argues Andrew Davison “LOVE came down at Christmas,” we sing. To this, each of the three great creeds of the Church bears witness. This is the story of God born of God, and born of Mary, of the Son’s journey from the Father to the dereliction of the cross, while still remaining in the Father’s bosom. It also tells the story of cavemen, and the General Synod. The earliest of the three, the Apostles’ Creed, is the simplest. It covers the incarnation with the words “who was conceived by the Holy Spirit, [and] born of the Virgin Mary”. In the next one, the “Nicene” Creed, we find a fuller discussion. Most lavish of all is the longest and latest text, which we call the Athanasian Creed (although its at tribution to St Athanasius is cer tainly wrong). Each creed has the incarnation at its centre, set within the logic of a Trinitarian faith. This is clearest in the Athanasian Creed, where the section on the incarnation follows an extended and lyrical discussion of the doctrine of the Trinity. Even the short Apostles’ Creed follows a Trinitarian structure: Father, Son, and Spirit. If we wish to explore the creeds from a Christmas perspective, we might consider the Greek word ek, meaning “from”. With this word, the Nicene Creed spells out the divinity of Christ: he is begotten eternally “of [literally ‘from’ — ek] the Father”; he is “God from [ek] God, light from light, true God from true God.” The word ek is taken up again in the section on the incarnation, pointing, subtly, to the link between Christ’s birth in time and his eternal coming forth from the Father. Just as the Son is begotten “from” the Father, God from God, he comes “down from [ek] heaven”, and is conceived “of [again, literally ‘from’ — ek] the Holy Spirit and the Virgin Mary”. THE “mission” or “sending” of the Son in the incarnation rests on his “mission” (or eternal sending forth) in the Trinity. The Son is sent into the world because God is always, and already, concerned with “send ing” in the eternal sending of the Son from — ek — the Father. With the word ek, the creeds establish the divinity of Christ. In the earliest days of the Church, it had also been necessary to em phasise his humanity. The early theologians took that position against the Docetists — those who held that Christ only seemed (the Greek is dokein) to be human. By the time the Nicene Creed was written, and expanded at the Coun cil of Constantinople, the divinity of Christ, not his humanity, was under attack. An emphasis on the human 26 as well as being from God. He is “God, of the Substance of the Father, begotten before the worlds, and Man, of the Substance of his Mother, born in the world.” When it comes to being divine, Christ takes his “substance” (or nature, or being) from his Father, in the eternal gift that we call his “begetting”. When it comes to being human, Christ takes his “substance” from his mother, born in time. Jesus really is one of us, as human as any human being ever born of a woman. This opposes the subtle heresy, still encountered today, that everything about Christ — his humanity as well as his divinity — was introduced directly into the world by God, Mary functioning (as this position sometimes puts it) as no more than a viaduct. The Athanasian Creed may seem abstract, but the point it is making here could not be more earthier, physical and human. With the in carnation, God takes on a human family tree. What we are is determined by where we come from, especially when it comes to being born or begotten. Our new favourite word — ek — explains where Christ “comes from” in this sense: that he has natures both human and divine. As much as we use the word “from” to describe closeness and continuity we use the word to describe distance and departure. If I have travelled from London, then I am no longer in that city. ity remains in the creed, all the same. We might not notice it at first, but we will find it once again in that small Greek word ek. When the liturgies of Common Worship were in the last stages of preparation, the General Synod faced few disputes fiercer than the debate over this single word, at the centre of the Nicene Creed. With Common Worship, the Church of England decided to trans late into English the original Greek of the Nicene Creed rather than the Latin (itself a translation) familiar to many from musical settings of the mass: Credo in unum Deum, etc. This shift also gave us a creed that begins with the “We believe” of the Greek rather than the “I believe” of the Latin. Previous English translations had followed the Latin, and recounted the incarnation with the words “was incarnate by the Holy Spirit, of the Virgin Mary” (the Latin words are de and ex). That, however, makes a CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 in the beginning: Annunciation by pietro perugino (1489) distinction not present in the Greek, which has the Son incarnate both from the Holy Spirit and from the Virgin Mary: ek . . . kai — from . . . and from. Christ is as fully human as he is fully divine. He is as much “from” Mary (as to his humanity) as he is from the Father (adding the caveat, however, that ultimately everything, including his human descent, comes by the gift of God). IN THE contemporary Church, we pass over the Athanasian Creed. It is long and complicated, and its beginning and end are tough, even harsh, on heretics, who, we are told, “without doubt” will “perish ever lastingly”. All the same, it deserves our attention, since there are points of theology, especially concerning the incarnation, that find no more perfect expression than they do in this creed. One of them makes the point just recounted, that Christ is from Mary, WE NATURALLY describe the incarnation as a journey, with this sense of “from”. The tradition that Christ was born in the middle of Christmas night comes from a pas sage in the book of Wisdom, describing a journey. Or, rather, it describes a leap: “For while gentle silence enveloped all things, and night in its swift course was now half gone, your allpowerful word leapt from heaven.” There is a truth and a falsehood in treating the word “from” — “came down from [ek] heaven” — like this, as a journey. The Son comes to be one among us, and one of us. This, we might say, is quite some departure. Yet, in another way, it is not: he comes to be human, without ceasing to be what he was before. He comes from heaven, while re maining in heaven. “Heaven”, here, does not prim arily mean a place, but Christ’s relationship with the Father and with his own perfect divinity. On this front, he departs without leaving: “The heavenly Word pro ceeding forth, yet leaving not the Father’s side”, wrote Thomas Aquinas in a hymn. “Remaining in the bosom of the Father,” Augustine preached, “he made pregnant the womb of the Mother.” Our Christology is at its most compelling when we hold to both the humanity and the divinity in their fullness: to both departing and to remaining. Christ’s divinity makes his humanity all the more extraordinary and significant. It is difficult to imagine why we should think that the suffering of a Palestinian peasant in AD 33 urges us to defend the poor at every turn, were this peasant not also Almighty God. SIMILARLY, it is only in Christ’s humanity that we encounter God with the directness of one who can be “seen with our eyes . . . looked at and touched with our hands”. What is revealed there shows God to be features NATioNAL GALLeRY/YoRK pRoJeCT Statements of faith: left: an icon of St Athanasius, whose name is lent to one of the creeds; right: Nativity at Night by Geertgen tot Sint Jans, 1490 ‘At the nativity, God, too, became a caveman’ more extraordinary than we could ever have imagined. The incarnation gives us a window on to God as three and one: we see not only “God made visible”, but also this God living in the power of the Holy Spirit, and addressing God as his Father. It is from here that Trinitarian theology begins. The Son of God was not changed by the incarnation. As Augustine, again, put it, the incarnation has him “remaining what He was in Himself, and receiving from us and for us what He was not”. This is another point where the Athanasian Creed gets to the heart of the matter, with pithy directness. In Christ, we see a union “not by conversion of the Godhead into flesh: but by taking of the Manhood into God”. The incarnation was no “conversion” of God, which is to say that it was no truncation of God. On this, a great deal rests. If the incarnation was a truncation of God, then Jesus is not really Emmanuel, not really “God with us”, but “God reduced with us”, or “a sliverofGod with us”. Only because the fullness of God was incarnate in Christ (“in him the whole fullness of deity dwells bodily,” (Colossians 2.9) can we say with Karl Barth and his followers (and, on this front, that means a great cloud of witnesses in the 20th century), that God is as he is in Christ. ‘When it comes to being human, Christ takes his substance from his mother, born in time’ IN The Everlasting Man, G. K. Chesterton takes great delight in the particular destination of the Son’s “journey”: tradition has it that the stable in which Christ was born was a cave. The Church of the Nativity, in Bethlehem, was built in the early fourth century over the cave that was held to be the site of the stable. Archaeology confirms that caves often served this purpose. “The human story began in a cave,” Chesterton wrote, at least in as much as our imagination is captured by the figure of the “caveman” drawing animals on the walls. Caves with paintings, such as those in Lascaux in France, stand at the beginning of human history. At Christmas, we remember that the “second half of human history”, as Chesterton writes, “also begins in a cave. Animals were again present; for it was a cave used as a stable by the mountaineers of the uplands about Bethlehem”. And, whatever Pope Benedict XVI might write in his new book, if there was a manger, there were probably also animals. At the nativity, God, too, became a “caveman”. The Son “came down from heaven”, as the Nicene Creed puts it, not to be born on the surface of the earth, but under the earth, in a cave: a cave that Chesterton calls “a hole or corner into which the outcasts are swept like rubbish”, such that Jesus was “born like an outcast or even an outlaw”. From the first moments of his nativity, we see where the Son’s journey is to take him: to a cross between two bandits. After this birth in poverty, writes Chesterton, who is always a “political” theologian, our sense of our duties to the poor and outcast can never be the same again. The word “from” presents us with a journey, and, at Christmas, that journeywhileremaining of the Son of God has only just begun. Ahead lie infancy and childhood, adoles cence and adulthood, death and resurrection; ahead lie Egypt and Nazareth, Capernaum and Jeru salem, Hades and Heaven. The Church will follow this story in the coming months, to Holy Week and beyond. Its missionary challenge at Christmas is to encourage others to follow the journey with us. Perhaps the very fact that we are concerned with the infancy of Christ can be a spur, because with every birth comes the fascination of a story begun. Again, Augustine makes this point: “We have the infant Christ, let us grow with him.” The Apostles’ Creed is the creed of baptisms, and of the personal confession of the faith. The Nicene Creed is the creed of the eucharist, and being one body together. At Christmas — more than at any other time — the Church can expand its “I believe” to a “we believe”, which others can say alongside us. We do this in the hope that, in time, they will be able to take this Mystery Cultural Continued from page 16 Continued from page 14 comes in Elizabeth Jennings’s poem “The Annunciation”: have gone to it with their friends; but they were told that they had to have certain Christian prayers. They were turned away from the church because of its insistence on particular forms. What is remarkable about this is the growing sense of community values. Lampposts are laden with flowers marking the place where someone has died. Hundreds helped to clear up their cities after the 2011 riots. The Olympics had 70,000 volunteer Gamesmakers. People are inspired to rebuild their community; something that is at the centre of our message. The Church has a strong record of charity work, but perhaps we are being asked to step further into what is happening on the street, and join in. Nothing will ease the pain to come Though now she sits in ecstasy And lets it have its way with her. The angel’s shadow in the room Is lightly lifted as if he Had never terrified her there. The furniture again returns To its old simple state. She can Take comfort from the things she knows Though in her heart new loving burns Something she never gave to man Or god before, and this god grows Most like a man. There is still the shadow of an angel here. But I wonder whether we are now grownup enough to decide that angel messengers, or some of the other symbols, no longer really work for us. Perhaps they are now over worked and, positively, there are fresher ways of expressing wonder. If so, there is surely a need for writers — perhaps inspired by the strange James’s Infancy Gospel — to express the mystery of the incarna tion in newminted narratives. The Revd Nick Jowett is retired. He was formerly Vicar and Minister at St Andrew’s Psalter Lane Anglican Methodist Partnership in Sheffield. WE NEED to grapple harder with the question of how we might build a bridge wide enough for this large part of the population to find guidance for their spiritual life in what is their own heritage. Many feel that if our services and outreach (such as feeding the homeless or youth work) does not involve discussing the gospel explicitly, then we will not have honoured our ministry. Yet, because such a careful first step is needed, perhaps we are in danger of underestimating that God is still at work “with thee when we know it not”, as Wordsworth wrote. We are being asked to reveal our confidence in God: the good news “we believe” and make it an “I believe” of their own: an “I believe” that can grow into the theological maturity of the “Creed of St Athanasius”, that poetic, profound and underappreciated exploration of Christian faith. The Revd Dr Andrew Davison is Tutor in Doctrine at Westcott House, Cambridge. that God is working in people’s lives. What is more, we are being asked to show that people’s relationship with God can be enriched through contact with their own tradition, which seeks only to look for where grace is work ing within them, and to serve. Many of us have spent years work ing with people who have left the Church. Yet the public seems to be saying that we are a long way from doing enough. This voice should not be heard with disappointment, be cause their renewed interest is a great opportunity to move forward. Some people look for a connection with our belief in hospitality and community; others need to find support in conscience; while others want a loving God, or God’s awe inspiring mystery; and others still need to find a way to live with fear and doubt. They look to us to listen to them, and to accompany them. Our rich tradition, filled with people exploring God in music, literature, the arts, architecture, nature, hos pitality, social action, community in volvement, inner development, spir itual experience, and so much more, is there to be used in all its variety. If we could find the courage to step into conversation, and not to underestimate the trust that needs to be rebuilt; if we could have the faith to meet these people with their doubts; if we could look for grace in their lives in new ways — then we might find, with the grace of God, that we are able to serve them again. The Revd MarieElsa Bragg is Assis tant Curate at St Mary’s, Kilburn, and St James’s, West Hampstead, and a Duty Chaplain at Westminster Abbey. CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 27 features Another long day’s journey . . . pHoToS SARAH MALiAN/CHRiSTiAN AiD The arduous trip that Nazeeh Al Arabsi and his daughter Salsabeel have to take for her dialysis is an emblem of the health problems that face Palestinians in the West Bank. Ed Thornton reports TWO thousand years ago, a family, living under occupation, set out on an arduous journey. Joseph and Mary, his heavily pregnant fiancée, left Nazareth to go to Bethlehem, the town of David, to register in a census, the Gospel of Luke says. Today, pilgrims queue patiently in the Church of the Nativity, in Bethlehem, to enter the Grotto of the Nativity, the spot where, tradition has it, Jesus was born. The same pilgrims often make their way to Jerusalem, to retrace the footsteps of Jesus as recorded in the Gospels. Inside the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, they queue patiently again, waiting to glimpse the spot where they believe the same Jesus was raised to life some 33 years later. About an hour’s drive from Bethlehem, in a village in the northern West Bank, a Muslim Palestinian family, also living under occupation, are well acquainted with arduous journeys. Nazeeh and Lubna Al Arabasi have five children, aged between seven and 17. Their fourth child, Salsabeel, who is 11 years old, needs kidney dialysis three times a week — one of her kidneys has not been properly functioning for about two years. There is no organdonor register for Palestinians, and the Israeli donor waiting list is not open to them. There is no dialysis department in the West Bank, which means that, three times a week, accom panied by one of her parents, Salsa beel travels to the Augusta Victoria Hospital, in East Jerusalem, for treatment. Salsabeel’s family have the use of a car rather than a donkey, but the journey is not as straightforward as it looks on a map. As Palestinians, they are allowed to enter Jerusalem only through the Qalandiya military checkpoint. “We have to change transportation from cars to taxis and buses,” Mr Al Arabasi said. “It’s very tiring and exhausting for Salsa beel.” en route: top: Salsabeel Al Arabasi and her father, arriving at the Qalandiya checkpoint, where they have to queue three times a week; above: pilgrims at the Church of the Nativity, Bethlehem I MET the Al Arabasi family when I was on a trip to the West Bank with Full access toilets for churches without drainage. At your service. 01686 412653 info@natsol.co.uk www.natsol.co.uk/church 28 CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 ‘It really tires me out, going back and forth’ Christian Aid last month. We joined them on one of their regular trips to the hospital, leaving shortly before 5 a.m. Salsabeel, who has a cheerful demeanour and a cheeky sense of humour, says that she passes the time in the car by pretending to be a radio presenter, conducting mock interviews with her father, using his mobile phone. On the days when she travels with her mother, on public transport, she sleeps, having had to get up at 4 a.m. “It really tires me, going back and forth,” she said. “And when I am hooked up to the dialysis ma chine, I get really cold, and I shiver. I also get pain in my feet and back.” The Ministry of Health for the Palestinian Authority covers the cost of Salsabeel’s treatment; but the family bear the expense of travelling to and from East Jerusalem several times a week. Physicians for Human Rights Israel (PHRI), a partner of Christian Aid, has helped the family to navigate the bureaucracy, such as obtaining the necessary permits to go through checkpoints. “The costs add up,” said Mr Al Arabasi, who works as a builder. He believes that the exhaus tion of travelling has contributed to a worsening of his daughter’s health. It has also affected her education: on days when she has dialysis, Salsabeel does not get back home until 3 p.m., having missed most classes at school. “Every time I go to school, I’ve just missed a day; so I don’t know how to answer questions,” she said. “And the teachers don’t help me catch up with the lessons I have missed. So I don’t like school.” WE FINALLY reached the hospital, after navigating various checkpoints, and changing buses several times. One of the nurses tells us that about 60 of the dialysis patients are children. “All of them come from the West Bank, which doesn’t have haemodialysis facilities for children,” she said. If the children and their parents could not get through the checkpoints, she said, they missed their treatment. “It’s very dangerous, because regular treatment is essential. If they don’t get it, then fluid can accumulate in their lungs.” “Whatever we do, the occupation is still here, and we feel it,” Mr Al Arabasi said. “We have a proverb in Arabic that people ‘always wish for what they can’t have’. As Palestinians, we wish we had a health system that functioned well, and included organ donation.” Many other Palestinians living in the West Bank lack access to adequate healthcare facilities. PHRI attempts to address some of this need by operating mobile clinics every Saturday in villages in the West Bank. We visited a mobile clinic in Beit Fajjar, a Palestinian village in the West Bank, less than 20 km south of Bethlehem, run by PHRI. When we arrived, a crowd of villagers had congregated outside the main building of a community centre. Inside, a team of volunteer doctors and nurses — many of them Israelis — prepared to see patients. The volunteers included an 89yearold Israeli nurse, Pnina Felier, who has been volunteering for 15 years; and Dr Aharan Karny, who is 64, an Israeli family doctor who served as a soldier during the SixDay War in 1967. Dr Karny told us that he volun pHoToS SARAH MALiAN/CHRiSTiAN AiD teers about five or six times a year: “The people here are under the care of a system that is not developed enough, especially the primary care.” It was difficult to recruit col leagues to volunteer, he said. “People are afraid that it is not safe to come over. People have the notion that we have so many prob lems on the Israeli side: why waste the time and energy?” OUTSIDE, in the afternoon sun, as excitable children ran around, the director of the mobile clinic, Salah Haj Yehya, explained that Beit Fajjar’s one medical centre was not sufficiently resourced to provide adequate treatment for its 15,000 inhabitants. Mr Yehya, a Palestinian who has Israeli citizenship, said that the situation in Beit Fajjar was typical of Palestinian towns across the West Bank. The 1998 Oslo Accords transferred responsibility for health care from the Israeli government to the Palestinian Authority. The Israeli occupation of the Palestinian ‘What is the point of me getting an award, if nothing changes?’ territories, however, had limited Palestinians’ access to health care, he said. Mr Yehya’s mobile phone rang frequently as he spoke; he said that he got at least 50 calls from villages each week, asking for the clinic to visit. “It sits on my conscience, because we want to help. We can’t afford more than four Saturdays a month. Saturday is the doctors’ day off, and this is the only day they can volunteer with us.” Over in another building, a makeshift clinic had been set up by an Eritrean nun and nurse, Sister Aziza, and her colleague, Alicia, to treat people with physiotherapeutic and dermatological conditions. Sister Aziza — whose real name is Azezet Kidane — has worked for PHRI for threeandahalf years. She has also lived in London, where she studied at the School of Tropical Medicine, and in southern Sudan, where she worked for ten years. Care in conflict: above, left: Sister Aziza, who helped set up a mobile clinic in Beit Fajjur, near Bethlehem; top, right: Aharon Karni, an israeli doctor who volunteers for physicians for Human Rights; above: an 89year old israeli nurse, pnina Felier, volunteering at Bet Fajjar features their stories and to tell others.” Sister Aziza collected the testi monies of 1300 refugees, and the world took note: Pope Benedict called for Christians to pray for those who were being mistreated, and the US Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, presented Sister Aziza with an award for her work. But it has not gone to her head: “What is the point of me getting an award if the situation gets worse, and nothing changes?” she said. The director of PHRI, Ran Cohen, whom we met a few days later, said that Palestinian patients trusted Sister Aziza because, as a nun, she was obviously religious. But PHRI is not merely a humanitarian organisation doing good works, Mr Cohen said: it was a “humanrights organisation”, which was controversial in Israel. “Israel has a responsibility for the health of all people as long as it is controlling the West Bank and Gaza. . . We give medical care, but it is a channel to get to know the people — to understand the problems, and to identify the issues we want to advocate for, and to work on a political level to change that. If we have a goal, it is to stop providing medical care and make sure that the government does it.” Volunteers do not have to share the organisation’s political beliefs. “Some just want to do humanitarian work. This is OK as a starting point. We do not hide it that we would like them to start asking other questions: why do we need to do this work? Why don’t they get it from Israel, or the Palestinian Authority?” Sister Aziza would also like the pilgrims who queue at the holy sites to ask more questions about the situation in IsraelPalestine. “Christians come to Israel for one reason: to visit the Holy Land. But they don’t see what is really happen ing here.” This year, Christian Aid’s Christmas appeal is focusing on “Healing in this Holy Land”. For more information, visit www.christianaid.org.uk/ christmas. ON A short break between patients, Sister Aziza explained that she saw her work at the mobile clinic as a way to build a bridge to Muslims. “Most of the time we are the only Christians among them. We like the Church to be among these people and this beautiful event. We feel that the presence of Christianity among these people is important. . . They ask me, do I fast and pray? I say yes, different to you, but I do fast and pray.” On other days, she treats Eritrean and Sudanese refugees who have escaped from the clutches of people traffickers in the Sinai desert. “You cannot imagine the horrible things that have happened to these people,” she says. “I feel ashamed even repeating it. . . But the people need somebody to listen to them, to tell Mother and daughter: far left: Salsabeel, with her mother, Lubnar; left: Salsabeel in the kidney dialysis ward at Augusta Victoria Hospital in Jerusalem CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 29 features Unto us a child is born, on screen The Nativity Factor is an annual competition that encourages people to produce their own version of the Christmas story. Prizes are awarded for the best ones. Steve Tomkins reports A MAN in jeans and a hoodie walks through a wood, his face darkened with rage and pain. Memories of angry confrontations churn through his mind, as he screws up the photo of him and his girlfriend and throws it away. There is a flicker of light, and he notices two children, all in black, standing before him. They have come to tell him, in their own way, that Mary is telling him the truth, and much, much more. . . It is not the traditional depiction of the nativity story, but then that is the whole point. This surprisingly moving short film, No Pressure, is an entry in the Nativity Factor competition, in which contestants are challenged to make a film that tells the old, old story in a new and engaging way. The competition is run by ITN and Jerusalem Productions. “We’re looking for a creative and original retelling of the nativity story,” Dan Faulks, of ITN, explains. “It doesn’t necessarily have to be radically different — it could be quite tradi tional, if it had amazing production values.” The first competition was held last year, and the winner was the Revd Gavin Tyte, PriestinCharge of St Peter and St Paul’s, Uplyme, in Devon, with The Beatbox Nativity, a oneman summary of Luke’s nativity story that uses rap and beatbox. “That was a pretty traditional version of the story,” Mr Faulks says, “but done in a really offthewall way”. The point of the contest, he says, “is to raise awareness of the Chris tian values around the Christmas story. It’s not exactly aiming to raise the profile of the nativity story, because it’s everywhere, but trying to get people to take another look at it.” The film, featuring the figure in jeans and a hoodie, and two young “angels”, gets its title, No Pressure, from the angels’ ironic words of reassurance to Joseph. It is the work of 4six3, a group that makes DVDs ‘I wince when I see angels, and donkeys, and shepherds, and clouds’ Lent Books Advertise in Church Times Friday 18th January Contact Stephen Dutton: Tel. 0207 776 1011 Email. stephen@churchtimes.co.uk 30 its destination, the greatest obstacle being the Israeli separation wall. Finally, it arrives, and is put in place — and, if you haven’t guessed what it is, I won’t spoil the ending. “I was attracted by the idea of the Nativity Factor,” Canon Davies says, “but I wince when I see angels, and donkeys, and shepherds, and clouds; so I wanted to do something different. I do my own Christmas cards, and I based the film on one I did a couple of years ago, working back from that image to develop the story. “It gave me the opportunity to make some contemporary com ments about the situation in the Middle East at the moment. I asked someone who’s got good connec tions with the Middle East what the postal address would be for Bethle hem. It turns out it would be some thing like: ‘The Palestinian Autono mous District, via Israel’; so there’s the subplot.” Canon Davies says that the draw ings took him a couple of evenings, and then his friend Phil Wattis animated them in a couple of hours. “No false modesty, but people say ‘How do you find the time to do these things?’ It’s just spending a couple of evenings away from the pub, really.” CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 that explore life issues for Christian children’s groups. The project is run by Sarah Rob inson and Nick Willoughby, and involves local young people in the acting and camerawork, and some of the writing and production. Mrs Robinson and Mr Willoughby take the adult roles in the film. “We wanted something a bit different which changed the direc tion a little, and brought in the humour,” Mrs Robinson says. “It grew from a sketch we did five or six years ago about angels arguing who was going to tell Joseph the message from God, and we thought, ‘How can we expand on that?’ “Nick and I write together, and one will have an idea, and the other expand it, and it works very well. We recorded it in one day, everyone had a great time, and we were thrilled with it.” Nativity scenarios: top: No Pressure; middle: The Potato Eaters Nativity; above: The Founding A VERY different entry comes from Canon Taffy Davies, Rural Dean of Macclesfield. The Founding is a beautiful pencildrawing animation, in black and white — with one notable exception — and silent apart from a musical track. If the style seems familiar, Canon Davies is the erstwhile cartoonist for The Church of England Newspaper. In this film, craftspeople in a modernday foundry make a mys terious metal artefact, which is then shipped out to Bethlehem. We see them painstakingly make a mould, fill it with molten metal, and later paint the resultant disc blue. A series of vans and ships carries it to BOTH 4six3 and Canon Davies have found that, in entering the competition, they have created a resource for churches. Both have heard from people who saw the video on the competition website, and wanted to use it as part of their carol service — which they were delighted to agree to. The Potato Eaters’ Nativity is an entry by FISH (Friends in Social Harmony), the young people’s group at Guiseley Methodist Church, Yorkshire. Using the unlikely in spiration of Van Gogh’s painting Potato Eaters, they staged a nativity where all the parts are played by potato puppets, against a backdrop based on the original painting. “The people who were speaking had to be next to the camera,” Becky Morrish, the 15yearold who dressed and voiced the potato Mary, says; “so other people had to duck behind the stage and control the potatoes. It was a fun thing to do. Everyone enjoyed it.” Joseph finds the hotels are all “wedged” full, and Mary complains she is “roasting” after the journey. “We had a session where we had to think of as many potato references as possible, and then Nick [the Revd Nick Baker] combined as many as possible into a script.” Mr Baker says: “It went from the sublime — chatting about the meaning of Christmas — to ‘How are we going to get this across?’ ‘Potatoes.’ ‘OK then. . .’” Other entries in the competition include a superhero liveaction comic strip XMas Origins; a futur istic sciencefiction version Nativity 3001: A space Godyssey; and one told through voiceovers of animals, An Animal’s Tale. There is also Humble Beginnings, in the style of a trailer for a teen drama movie; and The Chinnie’s Nativity, acted by talking chins. The competition has a separate category for under16s. In this, you can see A Nativity Told Through Dinosaurs, by Taliesin Coleman; Posh Jesus and Street Jesus, both by Orchard School, Bristol; and The Lego Nativity, by Jacob, Samuel, and Matthew Crow. To see the films and find out who won, visit www.thenativityfactor.com. features I am an atheist, but I still love Christmas NeW HuMANiST The comedian and writer Robin Ince turns off the phone, and celebrates a godless Christmas O H, TO be an atheist at Christmas, hurling snow balls at the angelfaced children singing “Silent Night”, letting down the tyres on the bicycles of the old ladies who have cycled to midnight mass, and then stealing all the snowmen’s noses and turning them into soup. That is what some people might like to believe. Atheists, much like vegetarians, are wrongly thought to have taken their position owing to a vehement desire for a life without joy or hope. Just as vegetarians at banquets are served up a small pastry parcel that contains hints of the memory of vegetables, “because you don’t like food”, so atheists are expected to be Grinchish, grouchish, and generally grey clouded when Christmas comes around. Some years ago, I made the mis take of appearing on a TV debate show about “Winterval” and other popular Christmastheft legends. As with the majority of these TV events, it was not a debate, just a pub slangingmatch, without the excuse of inebriation or the advan tage of peanuts. One fundamentalist kept telling me: “You want to ban Christmas.” I don’t know where he got the idea from. It was from nothing I said. I can only presume that I looked particularly like Alan Rickman that day. Counterinstinctively, the more faithless my Christmas has become, the more “Christmassy” it has become. In reaction to the TVshow fundamentalist, I decided that something must be done to prove that the godless enjoyed celebration as much as anyone who dwelt in pews and porches singing carols. I came up with Nine Lessons and Carols for Godless People — a night that celebrates the universe and its contents with scientists, musicians, comedians, and, occasionally, hula hoopers and tap dancers. Soon, the onenight event spanned two weeks. A few Chris tians started buying tickets in error, having read only the first four words of the title, and they were surprised that — rather than a bolshie attack on believers — it was a night of experiments with giant testtubes, ogling at deepfield images of space, and an occasional gag about neutrinos. Getting Christmassy: above: Robin ince on stage at Nine Lessons and Carols for Godless People. left: this year’s poster H AVING spent years perform ing at drunken office parties, trying to make myself heard above minds in alcoholic despair, spending ten days talking about stars with wise men sets me up for a Christmas break. For the parent of a young child, Christmas really starts with the visit to the school nativity (the one that was banned, according to that TV debate show). Last year, my son was a star so as long as his cardboard and tinsel stayed hung around him, and his performance was a success. This time, he is a grumpy soldier with lines; thus there is an upping of the tension. Will this become the bit of footage that is stored in the cupboard, ready to play as punishment when he is older? As for worrying about my child’s taking part in a play about the birth of Jesus, well, I don’t. Children are bombarded by myths, histories, and anecdote as they learn. The dis cussions about why people believe what they do can be saved for when the questions occur to him. As he ‘I grasp any moment to stop, stare and contemplate’ grows up, I can only hope to give him the opportunity of free think ing, and critical thinking, and then he can use those tools as he wishes. I am fascinated by how many Father Christmases a child is likely to meet, nowadays. Within the first three days of December, my son had met three Santas, and there are many more to come. His fouryear old brain has rationalised why he encounters so many Santa Clauses. They are not the real Santas, but the franchise he has had to set up, while he is busy at the Pole preparing for chimney slides — the bodydoubles for a hectic man. B ECAUSE Christmas advertising begins while I am still packing away my beach ball and flip flops (I do not actually wear flip flops because of my ugly toes), I forget about all the preparation bits. I rarely see television; so I am not racked with anxiety by all those adverts that constantly remind you that, if you do not spend enough money buying everything, you will have failed as a human being. I usually start shopping on 22 or 23 December, carefully mapping out where I need to go, and what I wish to buy. My wife does not disguise her disgust and disappointment when presents are not what she wants; so the most important thing is the envelope to put the receipts in, so that she can exchange every thing in January. I believe that last year’s toasted sandwich maker was one of my finest gift choices (honestly). This has trebled the number of hot meals we have time to eat in an average week. I normally walk off the stage for the last time in the year at about 11.30 p.m. on 23 December. One of the joys of the Christmas season is the enforced holiday. I usually work seven days a week; so I enjoy being forced into a rest status. My family are very relaxed about Christmas. The regular churchgoers go off to the Christmas Day service, but I am afraid my atheism buys me a liein. It is not really a liein, just a brief lieback, after the hurricane of stockingdispensing excitement. My side of the family is non chalant about presents; we are the sort of people who forget birthdays for years on end, and, once in a while, someone might say, “Did you ever get that bicycle we were going to buy you for your 35th birthday all those years ago?” My wife’s family are Christmas present experts, and a flood of parcels surround the tree — every thing from jumpers to piccalilli. My motherinlaw thinks of all pos sibilities for you — and, fulfilling William Morris’s advice, they are either practical or beautiful. I HAVE been accused by religious friends of being a hypocrite for enjoying Christmas. But I see this time of year as all the positive clichés — a time for family, where I have no need to leave the room suddenly to finish an article, or do a show in Aberystwyth. Without the religious element of Christmas, there can still be days of relative calm, rural walks, and minds not needing to be as frantic as much modern living seems to engender. This is why I dislike the increasing pressure to create some kind of illusion of the perfect Christmas through consumerism. Sitting around, talking, inhaling the aroma of mince pies, and ob serving the peace of deadlinefree days, is enough for me, especially with a new jumper and jar of pic calilli. Then it’s paper hats, bad jokes, and sprouts. I am careful with pulling crackers, as, many years ago, I sent my grandmother to hospital after overzealously pulling a cracker, desperate for a cheap plastic puzzle or fortunetelling fish. Once bloated, and barely able to move, I place myself on the floor so that I am at the correct height to play with whatever car or train is my son’s new favourite — uncertain if I will ever be able to rise up from the ground with this new potato andpuddingbased centre of gravity. If I have time, I will also throw in a viewing of Alastair Sim’s Scrooge, and possibly an M. R. James ghost story. I may be one of those rational atheists, but a wellmade 1970s ghost play at midnight will have me believing every shadow and half reflection to be an angry spirit, until it is morning. Dennis Potter, in his haunting and provoking last interview, talked of “the blossomest blossom”. Know ing that he would never see the blossom again, he saw the beautiful details of the world in a way that he hadn’t before he was so directly confronted with his imminent death. As someone who believes his existence is finite, I grasp any moment to stop, stare, and contem plate. I hope that I may have 40 years more of seeing Boxing Day frosts, and looking at blue tits feasting on yesterday’s lard. But I try to make the most of knowing that the phone can be switched off, and the laptop put on sleep. Then, as the cacophony of family and new toys rises, the duffle coat is toggled up, and, with a boy on my back, the long country trek — to try and walk off a newly found belly — begins. So, happy Christmas — or, as we atheists like to say, happy Christ mas. For details of Robin Ince’s 2013 tour The Importance of Being Interested, visit www.robinince.com. LESS THAN £3 per ADVERT WEB WATCH - CHURCH TIMES A simple listing of websites of use to readers of this newspaper — Advertise your web address — Just £149 +VAT buys a year’s listing — The package includes 52 issues of Church Times and a FREE posting to the Links section of the Church Times website. Over 300,000 readers. Contact Kelly Farrer for details Tel. 020 7776 1060 email: ads@churchtimes.co.uk CHURCH TIMES 21/18 December 2012 31 features features Christmas without borders A new book tells the nativity story, using images by artist and iconographers down the ages and around the globe IN A King James Christmas, passages from the Authorised Version, selected by Michael Fitzgerald, tell the story of the birth of Jesus, providing a familiar spine to a text that is meant to be read aloud. The artist Catherine Schuon has chosen images to illustrate the text, including some of her own. They are drawn from a wide range of countries, including Italy, Spain, the UK, Greece, and Ethiopia, and lend an international flavour to the story. But the book is not simply a Christmas title. It takes the story beyond the infancy: parts two and three look at the childhood of Christ, and his teachings respectively. A King James Christmas: Biblical selections with illus– trations from around the world, edited by Catherine Schuon and Michael Fitzgerald, is published by Wisdom Tales at £12.99 (Church Times Bookshop £11.69); 9781937786038. All images used by kind permission of Wisdom Tales. Sacred songs: right: The Magnificat, by Catherine Schuon, 1969; below: The Presentation in the Temple, Cretan School, 17th century, Russian Museum, St petersburg Home and away: right: The Nativity, by Lou HoungNie, China, early 20th century; below: Flight to Egypt, Coptic painting, mid 20th century Visitations: right: The Annunciation, icon from the peribleptos Church (St Clement), early 14th century, National Museum, ohrid, Macedonia; below: The Adoration of the Magi, ethiopia, 19th century, private collection, paris 32 CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 33 features The faithful journey of unbelievers MiKe CoLLiNS Attending services at Christmas helps nonchurchgoing people to renew their faith, says Alan Billings C HRISTMAS is one of the few times in the year when a large part of the Church’s wider constituency makes itself known. We meet its members in both religious and nonreligious settings. They may be in church — at a Christingle, carol, or crib service, midnight mass, or Christmas morning communion. Or they may be watching a nativity play in school, or singing carols in a community centre or concert hall. In my part of the country — south Yorkshire and north Derby shire — they will also be found celebrating Christmas in pubs, with local carols. “While shepherds watched their flocks by night” will be sung to the tune of “Ilkla Moor Baht’at” or “Sweet Chiming Christ mas Bells”. They are not, however, regular churchgoers. Christmas is the critical season for this group of people. It is when they renew their commitment to Christian faith and, in some cases, join with regular worshippers. For many, the Church of England is the Church to which they instinctively turn, which is why we should take seriously how we can best minister to them when they come. But what do we know about the people who make up this largely hidden group? Because there is little research, we have to do our own detective work, paying close atten tion to the clues that come our way — in snatches of conversation at the church door, or the occasional piece of journalism or reporting. From that, we can build up a picture, and understand how we should respond. These are my best guesses. cept the part that clergy often play when some tragedy occurs in their locality, or where their town or village wants to celebrate something of importance. Some are part of that growing number who take city breaks and visit cathedrals. But they do not feel under any compulsion to become part of a congregation week by week. If they are not a majority of the population, they are certainly a sizeable minority. S ECOND, faith is important to them, although belief is less so. What beliefs they have are not F IRST, members of this wider constituency have no desire to attend services weekly. But that does not mean that they want to sever their relationship with the Church, or with Christianity. They think of themselves as Christian, although an increasing number may have been brought up without religion. They are not hostile to the clergy. They do not find a church building an alien place, or its worship an alien activity. They are content to say “Amen”. They will join in the Lord’s Prayer, especially in the old form, and as long as it is written down. They value the pastoral offices, particularly infant baptisms, and funerals and memorial services — although they have become less sure about weddings. They gladly, and gratefully, ac 34 CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 ‘Carol services are generally free from clerical overinterpretation’ necessarily well thought out, or even coherent. They may have difficulty articulating them, or, more likely, are reluctant to try. Instinctively, they feel that something as myster ious as God is not easily captured in words, and is probably best left largely unsaid. So offthepeg creeds and confessions of faith are not for them. Many are not convinced that any one faith has the answer to all of life’s conundrums, and they react against any form of Christianity that has no room for disagreement or honest doubt. The Church of England is attractive because it is a broad Church and relatively undogmatic. If we are anxious about this perception of our Church, we might note a recent comment by Janice Turner, a columnist for The Times. She writes scornfully about varieties of religion that make extravagant claims to religious knowledge, and fuel hatefilled intolerance of others, and then adds: ‘‘Far from being its major weakness, doubt is the Church of England’s most attractive quality. . . Modesty, distaste for proselytising, or indeed any firm conviction that it is the only true faith, always restrains the C of E from such trashtalking.” C HRISTMAS visitors distin guish between believing and having faith. They value faith, and theirs is often hardwon, and fragile. It may, in the words of Sir Andrew Motion, when he spoke about his own faith, “flicker on and off like a badly wired lamp”. For those who fit this description, Christmas is an important time, for three reasons. First, Christmas is an annual opportunity to reflect on the things that matter: God, faith, values, family. In the general rush of life, at work and in the home, such chances are rare. This is a precious time, enabling them to step aside for a while, in the midst of getting and spending, to remind themselves of their spiritual roots, and to renew their faith. Carol services, in particular, are popular because they are generally free from the clerical over interpretation that many find so off putting. All that needs to be said is contained in the familiar poetry of traditional scripture readings and carols — pegs and provocations for their own thoughts. Second, the Christmas story is at features The unborn Jesus arrives incognito George Pattison examines the details of The Census at Bethlehem, by Pieter Bruegel the Elder THE Census at Bethlehem, a paint ing in the Royal Museums of the Fine Arts of Belgium, in Brussels, may well be the most “secular” of all Bruegel’s religious paintings. In fact, it is hard to see anything obviously religious about it at all. Although the title identifies it as a familiar moment in the nativity story, we might be forgiven for thinking that it was merely a genre painting, illustrating winter life in a 16thcentury Netherlandish town. And, at one level, this is what it is. Bruegel is doing what he does so well — bringing to life the sights, sounds, and even smells of his age: the slaughter of a pig outside the inn where the taxes are being collected; children skating and tobogganing on the ice; a group of soldiers huddled round a fire; workmen erecting a woodframed shelter; packbearers struggling across a frozen river; and much, much more. And, while any competent painter could use a covering of snow to suggest winter, Bruegel’s bare trees, outlined against a stippled brown sky, his weary flocks of crows, and the dark red of the setting sun make us feel the cold seeping into our bones. This is indeed a bleak midwinter. We could stop here, and it would be enough. Bruegel would have given us a picture we can pore over, relish, and return to again and again, always discovering new details to delight and fascinate. Note the heart of their Christian faith. For them, Christianity is essentially about a way of living — showing love, kindness, generosity, and openness to others. All of this is exemplified in the one who comes into the world on Christmas Day. They are not greatly interested in doctrine, although what doctrine they do accept is accessed through story or picture. Christmas has both. The idea of the incarnation is assimilable as the story of God’s becoming one of us, born into a human family, and living a human life from inside a human skin. The story can be told in hymns or readings, or presented visually as a play, crib, or icon. Good Friday, as traditionally preached, has less appeal. The Christmas visitors understand the cross as the endpoint of the Christchild’s human journey — the final act of one who lives to show us how to live, and who, in his Passion, knows our suffering to the bone, including the pain of loving. But theories of atonement play little part in their understanding. The God ‘Mary passes unnoticed through their midst’ made known at the manger is already on their side. Third, Christmas is a time of enchantment, and mystery. Mystery is important to them; for God is mystery, to be experienced only fleetingly and partially. A darkened church, the play of candle flames, the haunting solo voice singing the first verse of “Once in royal David’s city”, the winding procession from shadow into light — all play a part in creating an atmosphere of wonder and mystery. I N HIS autobiography Leaving Alexandria, Richard Holloway writes about a woman he once knew in Glasgow, Lillian Graham, who, although she was a church goer, in many ways exhibited some of the characteristics of this wider constituency of hidden Christians. He says that, at Christmas, she was “the only person I knew who decorated her Christmas tree with real candles, a tradition she’d learnt in Austria. She liked the practices because they added grace and how the outer fortifications of the town are shown as broken and crumbling away, as if to suggest that — for all its perpetual motion — this is a world that is passing away, eking out its cold existence in the shadow of past glories. But there is more. If we look again, slightly to the right of centre, we notice the unas suming figure of a young woman seated on a donkey, apparently just arriving in town: Mary. And, once we see her, the balance of the whole picture changes. But what is it about her that holds our gaze, and makes her the true focus of this busy scene, the still centre of this teeming world? Perhaps it is just that — her stillness. This is a picture full of movement. Everyone is up and doing, or watching what others are doing — bustling, shoving, peering, staring; in short, a heaving mass of humanity. But Mary is not involved in, or attentive to, any of this. Her head is slightly bowed, and her face — again uniquely — is turned towards us, the viewers. But she is not exactly looking at us, either. Rather, she seems absorbed in herself, pondering the words she treasures in her heart, and brooding on the mystery she carries in her womb: the Word becoming flesh. Nor are any of the crowd giving her a second glance. She passes unnoticed through their midst. If only they knew that it was through her — this quiet, unassuming young woman — that a new and eternal light would shine into this bleak midwinter world, then, surely, they would look. Karl Barth spoke of the “secular ity of the Word”, and Søren Kierkegaard of the divine “incognito” — and what picture could better reveal this, the true humility of the incarnation, arriving without a fanfare, unobserved, unrecognised, but full of grace for all the world. The Revd Dr George Pattison is Lady Margaret Professor of Divinity in the University of Oxford, and Canon Residentiary of Christ Church, Oxford beauty to life. The poetry of quiet religion appealed to her. The doctrinal obsessions of noisy reli gion bored her.” There are many like her who, shyly, find their way to church at Christmas. It is hard to overestimate how important this one occasion in the Church’s calendar is for those who are present only once a year, or to exaggerate the loss if it is not available, or takes some disappoint ingly unfamiliar form. We could take the view that those who come only at Christmas are not really Christians at all. Some in the contemporary Church do, and dis miss what they see as a spiritually impoverished mix of folk religion and vacuous sentimentality. I believe that this is a mistake. In a time of no religion, when no one feels under any social obligation to go to church, and taking religion seriously is routinely ridiculed, any participation in religious celebration is significant, and for some may be courageous. It is evidence of an enduring Christian spirituality, built on an innate human characteristic — the capacity to sense a reality greater than that which comes through sensory experience alone. But that spirituality needs to be nurtured, tutored, and supported. And this is the vocation of the Church of England. the Advent and Christmas season. We then had a brief event to thank the artists and bless their work. Young people brought along proud parents and grandparents, viewed the stations, and lingered over mulled wine and mince pies. Some returned to look again and read the accompanying texts — underlining how essential it is for an established church to be open during the week, and not just for the Sunday congregation. In these ways, we give our extended Christian family oppor tunities to reflect again on the things that are important, and to renew their faith. This may lead to a deepening of that faith, and a desire to explore further. But, irrespective of that, it sustains a positive attitude towards Christianity — and the Church in the culture — more wide ly. In a secular climate, this matters. I N THE past, this sustenance came through the family, the school, and the culture more generally, as much as the Church. It could be taken for granted that it would happen. This is no longer the case. We need to think more carefully about the points where we can enable this again. One way we do this is through those traditional Christmas services that are familiar and reassuring. We could do more, even at Christmas. For example, one church where I was parish priest commissioned each year “Stations of the Nativity” — framed paintings and drawings — from different local schools, to replace the Stations of the Cross for Canon Alan Billings’s new book, Lost Church: Why we must find it again, is published by SPCK in January. CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 35 features Salute the happy morn? The world and his or her partner come to midnight mass, but it is the congregation on Christmas morning that gives Richard Coles pause for thought IN FINEDON, where I am parish priest, midnight mass is still one of the busiest services of the year. Three hundred or so dutifully turn up from gableended houses in the gingerbreadstone posh end — from the Banjo, as our streets of social housing are called, from shift work in the anonymous warehouses along the A45, and from the Conservative Club, the Old Band Club, the Glad stone Working Men’s Club, and the Bell Inn (estd 1042). Many of them are still fairly familiar with what we are doing, unfazed by the business with the crib or thurible. They are at home with candlelight, and with the trickier carols, some even remem bering — with tremendous gusto — the descants they learned at school. Afterwards, they disappear into the night, feeling, as I felt, that faint conspiratorial pleasure at participat ing in clandestine acts of worship. But the real conspiracy, the real clandestine act of worship, is not midnight mass, but Christmas morning. People might think that Christmas morning would be one of the busiest of the year, but, here, it is not. Perhaps, because of the relentless anticipation generated from bonfire night onwards, we peak early, on Christmas Eve, with our “living nativity” in the afternoon for the children, and midnight mass for the grownups. Perhaps it is the logist ical necessities of the day, quite apart from growing indifference to Christianity, which have edged church out of the itinerary. My Christmas Day timetable begins with Morning Prayer at seven — solo and perfunctory, I’m afraid, after four hours of sleep. The eighto’clock follows, unusually well attended here with a congregation of between 30 and 40. But, this Christmas morn, Christians seem slow to awake and salute. But Neil, the churchwarden, who does the early turn, is up and about. The altar is dressed, the candles are trimmed, and, once again, I thank God for calling him to this ministry. He is not only unfailingly reliable 36 early to rise: St Mary the Virgin, Finedon calendar, with bells and whistles and a general pushing out of boats, our congregation is not. Those who are around may well have attended at midnight, but many have gone away to spend Christmas with children, and grandchildren — the first gen erations of Finedonians who left to go to university and never came back. Or some of the betterheeled members of the congregation are in second homes in sunnier places. and diligent: he is also a builder, and will ascend ladders to do impossible things with light fixtures, and descend ladders to do impossible things with boilers, without demur, unlike his priest, who functions only at sea level. BOB the server is also here, again unfailingly reliable and diligent, and we wordlessly fall into our routine, except the pews are much emptier than usual, and our routine is interrupted for some communion wafer mathematics. As I do the headcount, I have a moment’s sober realisation that our hard core is getting smaller, death having un done two of my most faithful eight o’clockers in the past year. I try not to lapse into actuarial speculation about the next. Those who are here, present and correct, prefer the quiet of the eight o’clock — hymnless, and childless — and are usually of an age where it is preferred to get the business of the day done before nine. Their expectation, and the cus tom of the house, sometimes strikes me as being at odds with the character of the festival. Unto us a child is born, king of all creation; but it is business as usual at St Mary’s, Finedon, as far as our eight o’clockers are concerned. The pull ing of crackers and wearing of hats is for later. The old faithful, I think, look to the church to give a pattern to their lives, a sense of the passing year, and, indeed, the passing of their own years. They do not need or desire fireworks to help them do this, rather the formulae of words and actions that, in subtly altered forms, have been with them since childhood, learned in the parish’s boys’ school and girls’ school, from curates whose names are forgotten, but not the catechism they taught. IT IS also a service where we try to keep a measure of stillness and silence, helped by the wonderful play of light in the clerestory, which seems to happen quite this way only around the winter solstice. It is CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 silver gilt, unlike summer light, which is more golden, and falls across the 18thcentury organ case in a gallery at the west end of the church, picking out the arms of Queen Anne, from whose private chapel at Windsor it came. I think of all the incumbents who have preceded me since 1350, and have watched the same play of light as Christmas morning dawned, weather and the world’s unresting change permitting. At the end of the service, I go to stand just beyond the porch and parvise, and have a minute alone, while people gather their hats and gloves. It is one of my favourite moments of the day, to stand under the gargoyles, looking down across the churchyard, past lichencovered gravestones, and 1000yearold yews, into the hall’s park, laid out by Repton in the 1740s. There is a huge dead oak just beyond the haha, which always makes me think of Caspar David Friedrich, and, lest we surrender entirely to nostalgia, the smell of Weetabix, a 24hour, 365day op eration, blows in from Burton Latimer, two miles down the road. The first departing faithful pass ‘How can we recover, with confidence, our place at the centre of our communities?’ by, to whom I wish Merry Christ mas, and note how quickly it has come round again. I think of my grandmother, who lived to be 101, and told me that when you are over 90, you go to bed on Christmas night and wake up to find it’s Christmas morning. That same year, she thanked me for the pashmina I gave her, but said that she hadn’t opened it, because she was not likely to get much wear out of it, and I could have it back when she died and give it to someone else. And so it came to pass. AFTER the eighto’clock, I have a cup of coffee on the children’s table with Jane, the churchwarden on the late shift. Jane, for whom I also give thanks daily, has readings for readers, and intercessions for inter cessors. She also has a strategy for child management, which can be taxing, because we have no sound proofed space for our children, which can lead to unchristian feel ings when the twins decide to have a lusty shout out while the rest of us are trying to attend to the silent promptings of the Spirit. Fun Bags are available, full of Christmasthemed materials, and wildly inflationary quantitative eas ing with chocolate coins is promised at the end. But we know that most of the children we see for Christmas we saw yesterday at the living nativity, a learning experience much enriched by the appearance among the three kings of Darth Vader wielding a light saber. To add richness to the learning experience for grownups, Jon athan, our brilliant director of music, joins us, and we work out whether the choir will be strong enough in number to manage the “Hallelujah Chorus”, which we love, not least because our organ was once played by Handel, or so the legend goes. And what better piece could we therefore perform with it on this most holy morning? And it is here that we run into an inconvenient truth. While we are all geared up to mark this second most important day in the Church’s I CHECK the figures, and see that last year, on Christmas Eve, we had about 70 at the living nativity, and 220 at midnight mass. At the eight o’clock we had 24 — not bad; but at the main eucharist on Christmas morning we had 54. On a normal Sunday, we could double that. Who were these attenders? There are some solid 9.30 regulars who never miss; there are some parents with children too small to stay up for midnight mass; but, judging by the haggard expressions of their mummies and daddies, they woke up not long after. There are some posh townies, back from Islington and Putney, taking the grandchildren to see the grandparents in the country, the girls in dark coats with gold but tons, the boys in miniature jackets and ties. There are the local farmers and their families, in Sunday best, keepers of the tradition of Christmasmorning church, leaving their flocks in the fields, or — more likely — their winter barley. And there are the nonclassifieds, the Christmas walkins, the un recognised: the Romanian who works in a packhouse, far from home, who tells me how he would kill his grandfather’s pig on St Ignatz’s Day, and gets choked with homesickness; the new divorcee, on her own this Christmas for the first time in 25 years; the man in his 70s, last in, and first out, whom I have never seen before, but guess to be a priest; and then there is the person I don’t see. Every Christmas, I cannot help thinking that I am watching Chris tianity become one degree more marginal to people’s lives. This year, when we have had more explaining to do than usual, as the Archbishop of Canterbury put it, I feel it more acutely. Can we recover with confidence our place at the centre of our communities, by reaching out more readily, more intelligibly, to those who are re treating further into the margins and beyond? Or do we need to recover, with confidence, the irreducible weird ness of what we do, to restore to the gospel its mystery and power, by rediscovering it ourselves? These are not easy questions to answer, but I do not think that we choose between them. I think that our choices lie somewhere in the configuration of these nonclassifieds, in their differ ent distances and proximities to the crib, still steady with light and silence in the bewildering son et lumière that cannot quite displace or replace it. A happy and holy Christmas to all. The Revd Richard Coles is Priestin Charge of St Mary the Virgin, Fine don, in Peterborough diocese. features Christmas festivities under construction Pamela Greener gives a personal account of what it is like trying to keep a cathedral going when you have got the builders in diocese this year. All the churches have been invited to come, and receive a wooden cross made out of the former cathedral pews, as a lasting memento of the project. We hope that they, in turn, will come back next year to worship with us in the renewed nave. Christmas will stretch our imagination further. We are lucky that we are located right in the heart of the city centre; so the Christmas Eve Christingle service will, this year, be held outside, on the steps that extend the full length of the cathedral, in full view of all the shoppers milling about in the pedestrian precinct. It will be a great opportunity for everyone to join in, and there will be warm punch at the end of the service to prevent hypothermia. We hope that people will come inside afterwards to see the changes taking place. CHRISTMAS at Wakefield Cathed ral in 2012 will be like no other in my lifetime. The nave is closed be cause we are twothirds of the way through a 12month makeover. This is the first time since the 1870s that we have had a chance to renew our infrastructure (flooring, heating, lighting, wallcleaning, etc.) and to replace our uncomfortable pews with practical and movable chairs. Our cathedral was built as a medieval parish church, where the nave was used by the whole com munity, and the current work will create a large, flexible space that can recapture something of that wel coming and open spirit. The work will be finished in time for Easter 2013, to help celebrate the 125th anniversary of diocese, cathedral, and city. A closed nave means that, for Christmas 2012, we will all squeeze into the quire and east end. The one thing we can guarantee is that the place will be packed out. We will huddle together in the most un Anglican fashion, dreaming not of a white Christmas, but of a new heating system. Those who visit Wakefield Cathedral just once a year for midnight mass, or one of our other Christmas services, will be in for a shock. The first surprise will be that all the usual entrances are closed, and the meagre car park has been cordoned off to provide Bob the Builder with somewhere to store his tools. So there will be no slipping in at the back during the first carol. Like the rest of us, our annual visitors will follow signs, and eventually they will find what they are look ing for. I wonder whether, for Christmas, we should replace the usual entrance signs with a guiding star. A NAVE under reconstruction is quite a sight to behold, as viewers of my performance of the “VAT Ditty” on YouTube earlier this year will testify (News, 18 May). It brings home the awesome construction of the building. Even with all our modern tools and methods, it has still been a huge project to renovate the nave — we cannot begin to imagine the scale of difficulty ex perienced by the original 15thcentury craftsmen. In Advent, we wait, and long, not only for the coming of the Lord Jesus, but also for the opening of the renewed nave. The work we are able to see through our viewing windows has done a great deal to whet our appetite for what’s in store. Already, the previously grimy walls are Work in progress: above and left: Wakefield Cathedral has become a building site; below, left: last year’s Chief Constable of West Yorkshire’s Christmas concert Our 2013 calendar is made up of these photos, and we are planning a substantial exhibition in the nave when it reopens next year. It is interesting for us regulars at the cathedral to see what a visitor picks out as significant. A cathedral in a state of undress is a memory that will last a lifetime. Schools continue to flock to see the work at first hand, as do adult groups — all marvelling at the size of the space, and the painstaking renovation. golden and shining in the meagre December sunshine. One of the interesting by products of the project has been the creation of a website, www.366days. org.uk, for which all sorts of people — young and old, professional and amateur — have signed up to be the photographer of the day, to take today’s photograph of cathedral life. Some of these pictures capture the magnificence of the building, and some record the quirky people and activities that make up Wake field Cathedral. And many of them provide a lasting archive of the transformation that is taking place. ‘A cathedral in a state of undress is a memory that will last a lifetime’ OUR new heritage officer has joined a blossoming education team, pro viding imaginative programmes where young people learn about a living cathedral, and all that it contains. The “Christmas Journey” is a chance for schools to meet the baby Jesus through music, drama, and stained glass. The hope is that they will be captivated by, and treasure, the cathedral as they grow up. We are always delighted when one of our young visitors comes back the next weekend, to show his or her family what a special place this is. A closed nave calls for a great deal of improvisation. The choir has had to be on its best behaviour all year long, with the congregation up close and personal. The overflow congregation has had to sit in the southquire aisle, with limited vision of sanctuary and choir. As a result, we have started to film the services and project them on TV screens. This, in turn, has allowed a weekly upload to YouTube, and a chance to watch and listen again to the Sunday preacher. We have also developed the idea of “Mobile Cathedral”. Clergy and choir, together with some of the congrega tion, have been taking choral even song out into the deaneries of the THE cathedral is the largest public space in the Wakefield area. And, all year round, people love to sneak in to marvel at this peaceful, sacred space, to say a quiet prayer, and light a candle. But, normally, the runup to Christmas at the cath edral is such that, if we are not careful, we risk skipping Advent almost entirely. The Christmas trees and crib tend to move in at the end of November, and our only concession to Advent is to light the Advent wreath, and turn off the Christmas tree lights on a Sunday. The reason for these premature Christmas celebrations is that, in a normal Wakefield Advent, cathedral life is one of walltowall carol services and concerts. A thousand people visit each day to sing and listen to carols. Pupils, teachers, and parents gather from countless schools, because we are the only space in the area large enough to welcome them all. Similarly, we usually have three services for the local hospice, at which people remember their loved ones by sponsoring a light on the giant Christmas tree. The Yorkshire Philharmonic Choir tends to sell all its tickets before the posters even go on display. The Civic Carol Service, attended by the Mayor and coun cillors, is one of several occasions each December when our worship is supported by one of Yorkshire’s many brass bands, which raise the roof and cause our ears to ring. Perhaps more surprisingly, Huddersfield Town Football Club has an annual carol service here, and the Chief Constable of West Yorkshire’s Christmas concert could fill the nave twice over. A normal Advent, then, is a great opportunity for people from all over the diocese and region to experience the cathedral and its excellent choir. There is always a sense of a musical and liturgical marathon, which cul minates in the last lap on Christmas Day. I have to admit to a certain relief for us at home, when we finally settle down for our Christmas dinner at about 6 p.m., knowing that we have done our best — not just for all our visitors, but also for the newborn Babe. I suspect that it will be a bit different this year, with a more measured runin through Advent, and a gentler final sprint. Pamela Greener is director of tax at Pace plc, chairs the Friends of Wake field Cathedral, and is married to the Dean of Wakefield, the Very Revd Jonathan Greener. CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 37 features It’s 3 p.m. — time for the Queen pA The first royal Christmas broadcast was 80 years ago. So what have the Queen, and her predecessors, been talking about? Anthony Cane warms the valves IN 1923, John Reith, managing director of the yearold British Broadcasting Company, welcomed the Archbishop of Canterbury, Randall Davidson, and his wife, Edith, to dinner. During the even ing, Mrs Davidson, charmingly, enquired whether, when listening to the wireless, it was necessary to leave a window open. In this anecdote, we glimpse the revolutionary importance of what we now call “radio”, when, for the first time, the sound of the human voice could miraculously pass through the air, and go right around the world. The later impact of television, the internet, and the mobile phone are arguably but an extension of the “marvel of modern science” praised by King George V (in words drafted for him by Rudyard Kipling), during the first royal Christmas broadcast in 1932. Five years later, after the death of George V and the abdication of Edward VIII, there was a new King, George VI. A reluctant broadcaster in any event, as the Oscarwinning film The King’s Speech dramatised brilliantly, he was perhaps inclined to accept the view of the Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain, that an annual broadcast was not de sirable. With the outbreak of the Second World War, however, George VI decided he must speak “live” to his people. On Christmas Day 1939, he delivered a memorable address, culminating in a memorable quotation: “I said to the man who stood at the gate of the year, ‘Give me a light that I may tread safely into the unknown. . .’” By end of the war, there was no prospect of ending the Christmas broadcasts, which now had an audience of about 400 million. So, when the King died in February 1952, the royal Christmas broadcast was a firm expectation for the young Queen who ascended to the throne. QUEEN ELIZABETH II delivered her first such broadcast at the age of 26. Half a century later, in 2002, she said: “Christmas . . . remains a time for reflection and a focus of hope for the future. All great religions have such times of renewal; mo ments to take stock before moving on to face the challenges which lie ahead.” She has used her broadcasts to reflect on all manner of things, from conflict, change, and the Common wealth to sport, science, and space exploration. She has discussed the part women play in the world today; what it means to be a free society; communication between the generations; the reconciliation of 38 ancient antagonisms; religious tolerance; how we can have hope in the future; and much more. And, always, she has rooted her words in a deeply held Christian faith. In the millennial year 2000, her entire Christmas broadcast was about faith and the person of Jesus Christ, and included the following words: To many of us, our beliefs are of fundamental importance. For me, the teachings of Christ, and my own personal accountability before God provide a framework in which I try to lead my life. I, like so many of you, have drawn great comfort in difficult times from Christ’s words and example. In England, politicians and other public figures rarely “do God”; yet the Queen selfevidently does, and in a manner sensitive to religious diversity, and alert to the reality of secularism. We are in danger of forgetting how unusual and dis tinctive — even radical — her per spective is; of taking her for granted because she has been Queen for so long; and, for some, of not listening hard enough to the message, be cause it is delivered with all the trappings of establishment. I UNDERSTAND that, since 1968, the Queen has written the texts herself, with the help of Prince Philip, whereas before, they were drafted for her. None the less, there is an impressive consistency to the broadcasts (all of them are available online at www.royal.gov.uk), al though, if anything, their articula tion of the Christian faith has strengthened over time. The sense of marvelling at scientific advance, present in George V’s 1932 broadcast, is very much there in the Queen’s early broadcast. In her very first, in 1952, she said: “Let us . . . use the tre mendous forces of science and learning for the betterment of man’s lot upon this earth.” In 1954 she said: “We are amazed CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 by the spectacular discoveries in scientific knowledge, which should bring comfort and leisure to millions.” When we recall that the polio vaccine was invented in 1952, Crick and Watson revealed the doublehelix structure of DNA in 1953, and the first successful kidney transplant took place in 1954, it is no wonder that, in 1955, the Queen said: “Year by year, new secrets of nature are being revealed to us by science.” But this was only part of the story; for 1952 had also brought the first testing of a hydrogen bomb by the United States; and, in 1954, Russia constructed the first intercon tinental ballistic missile. In 1955, the Queen also noted rather pointedly that “the problem of living peaceably together” had yet to be solved, and, by the time of her televised Christmas broadcast in 1957, the tone had changed: “That it is possible for some of you to see me today is just another example of the speed at which things are changing around us. Because of these changes, I am not surprised that many feel lost and unable to decide what to hold on to and what to discard.” And then again: “But it is not new inventions which are the difficulty. The trouble is caused by unthinking people who carelessly throw away ageless ideals as if they were old and outworn machinery. They would have religion thrown aside, morality in personal and public life made meaningless, honesty counted as foolishness, and selfinterest set up in place of self restraint.” ARGUABLY, this passage from 55 years ago is as relevant as ever, not least because we live in an age when it has become fashionable for public intellectuals to argue in favour of having “religion thrown aside”; even if you agree with the suggestion of the Archbishop of Canterbury — in his 2012 Easter sermon — that “It just might be the case that the high watermark of aggressive polemic on air: the Queen, in the Long Library at Sandringham, in 1957, after making her first ever televised Christmas broadcast against religious faith has been passed.” In a different vein, and perhaps more predictably, the Queen has often spoken of the social import ance of the family. In 1965, she said: “I think we should remember that, in spite of all the scientific advances and the great improvements in our material welfare, the family remains as the focal point of our existence.” And then in 2007: “In my ex perience, the positive value of a happy family is one of the factors of human existence that has not changed.” Looking back over the past 60 years, one can hardly be unaware of huge social and cultural develop ments that might seem to challenge her argument. None the less, for all that more and more families diverge from the traditional ideal, it is widely agreed that the family re mains the best context for the nurture of children, the inculcation of values and faith, and, given the dehumanising forces at work in society, a more vital source than ever of intimacy, love, and trust. THE Queen has often compared the domestic family to the Common wealth “family” of nations (in 1952, 1956, 1967, 1972, etc.). As head of the Commonwealth, she has made it her most recurrent theme. In 1956, she boldly claimed that the Com monwealth “represents one of the most hopeful and imaginative experiments in international affairs the world has ever seen”. There is, indeed, something organic and pragmatic about the Commonwealth, a sense that it has emerged and developed without any grand plan. In political terms, it is an intergovernmental organisation of 54 independent member states. Nearly all were formerly part of the British Empire, and their combined population is 1.8 billion people — an extraordinary 30 per cent of the world’s population. “The Commonwealth bears no resemblance to the empires of the past,” the Queen said, because it is no longer based on power and submission, but on equal partners who have freely chosen to meet and cooperate. Those who are con vinced that it is a spent force should perhaps talk to Rwanda and Mozambique, who have recently joined, and South Sudan, whose application is pending. In her 1993 broadcast, she said: “There is no magic formula that will transform sorrow into happiness, intolerance into compassion, or war into peace, but inspiration can change human behaviour.” If I understand her correctly, the refer ence to “inspiration” is intended to encompass both the human and the divine. In fact, what seems to inspire her most, are human lives that express the divine, beginning with Christ, but also taking in people such as the only four individuals whom she has ever singled out for particular praise. Looking at them as a group, they seem to to exemplify four overlapping kinds of inspiration: the spirit of adventure, forgiveness, compassion, and reconciliation. Adventure: the roundtheworld yachtsmen Francis Chichester was praised in 1967 for his “enterprise and courage”, a modernday ex emplar of the spirit showed by the Tudor adventurers. Forgiveness: in 1987, the Queen was moved by “the depth of for giveness” shown by Gordon Wilson after the death of his daughter in the Enniskillen bombing. Compassion: here the reference is to Leonard Cheshire VC, still deter mined to make life better for others, especially those living with dis abilities, even as he was dying of motor neurone disease. Reconciliation: in 1996, the Queen said: “I shall never forget the state visit of President Mandela. The most gracious of men has shown us all how to accept the facts of the past without bitterness; how to see new opportunities as more important than old disputes; and how to look forward with courage and optim ism.” This often cited theme of reconciliation and forgiveness was central to last year’s Christmas broadcast, and makes for an appropriate conclusion: Although we are capable of great acts of kindness, history teaches us that we sometimes need saving from ourselves — from our recklessness or our greed. God sent into the world a unique person — neither a philosopher nor a general . . . but a Saviour, with the power to forgive. Forgiveness lies at the heart of the Christian faith. It can heal broken families, it can restore friendships, and it can reconcile divided communities. . . It is my prayer that, on this Christmas Day, we might all find room in our lives for the message of the angels, and for the love of God through Christ our Lord. The Revd Dr Anthony Cane is Chancellor and Canon Librarian of Chichester Cathedral. review of 2012 pHoToS pA/Ap uNLeSS oTHeRWiSe STATeD LAMBeTH pALACe Above, left: British olympians and paralympians on a busstop parade to mark their medal success; above: the Queen toured the uK to mark her Diamond Jubilee; far left: the bombardment of Homs by government forces signalled a new brutality in the civil war in Syria; left: the Queen and the Duke of edinburgh stopped at Lambeth palace during their visit to the General Synod; below: legal battles to protect the occupy camp outside St paul’s from eviction failed Below, left: bankers’ bonuses seemed recessionproof. Among the least popular was that of Fred Goodwin, whose knighthood “for services to banking” was annulled in February; below: egyptians set their hopes on a democratic election, but the results proved divisive 2012 the year in review JANUARY FEBRUARY THE year began with concerns about the violence in Syria. The rebellion had already been going on for ten months, and an estimated 5000 were dead. The figure now is more than 40,000. Egypt, meanwhile, celebrated the first anniversary of the uprising against President Mubarak. Asssisted dying was in the news again, as Lord Falconer announced that his self appointed “commission” had found in its favour. The Occupy protest outside St Paul’s was declared unlawful in the High Court, which granted the City of London Corporation the right to remove it. Five bishops led a successful rebellion in the Lords to exclude child benefit from a government cap in the Welfare Reform Bill. Attacks on Christians in northern Nigeria amounted to “ethnic and religious cleansing” according to a littleknown diocesan bishop, the Rt Revd Justin Welby. The gaymarriage issue made an early appearance, as the Archbishop of York criticised the Prime Minister, stating that heterosexual marriage “is set in tradition and history”. An unnamed Scottish woman was fined and given three points on her licence for reading the Bible while driving on the A90. THE February General Synod had its final opportunity to debate the contents of the draft womenbishops Measure. Members were given the chance to ask the House of Bishops to reintroduce the concept of authority derived from the Measure for traditionalists. A compromise was carried, asking the Bishops not to amend the basic Measure “substantially”. The Queen described the C of E as “commonly underappreciated”. Local councils could con tinue to say prayers at meetings if they were not part of the agenda, the High Court ruled, after a challenge in Bideford. The Coalition for Mar riage (i.e. against gay marriage) was launched. To date, nearly 620,000 have signed its petition. The Occupy protesters outside St Paul’s were forcibly removed in the early hours of 28 Feb ruary. The Dean and Chapter said that they were committed to pursuing the issues raised by the camp in their teaching and relations with the City. The 12 Zurbarán paintings were finally secured for Auckland Castle, thanks to a deal with Jonathan Ruffer brokered by a littleknown diocesan bishop, the Rt Revd Justin Welby. Continued overleaf CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 39 review of 2012 Left: a brief protest in Moscow Cathedral landed the pussy Riot band in prison; below, left: deep cleaning outside St paul’s after the occupy eviction; below: a flypast celebrated the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee; bottom: as the Leveson inquiry into the press proceeded, Rebekah Brooks and her husband Charlie were charged in relation to phonehacking allegations at News international Below: Dr Rowan Williams announced his resignation as Archbishop of Canterbury; bottom: General Synod members react to an impasse over women bishops LAMBeTH pALACe Above: renewed fighting scarred the border area between Sudan and South Sudan; right: the Dalai Lama accepted the Templeton prize; below: crime affected one third of Britain’s churches LAMBeTH pALACe SAM ATKiNS year in review continued from previous page 40 CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 MARCH APRIL MAY THE Government begins its consultation about samesex marriage. The Dean of St Albans, the Very Revd Dr Jeffrey John, criticised the Church for its opposition to the plan, calling it the “last refuge of prejudice” (and, in August, “morally contemptible”). Dr Williams announced his resignation, heralding in a lucrative few months for the bookies. The succession of diocesan votes on the Anglican Covenant finished, ending with its defeat by 23 dioceses to 15. It later emerged that, had 17 people changed their vote, the Covenant would have passed. A fragment of papyrus bearing a segment of St Mark’s Gospel was dated to the first century, making it the earliest known manuscript of that Gospel, if confirmed. An official report said that more than one third of Britain’s churches and religious buildings had been damaged by crime in the past year. The Chancellor, George Osborne, announced that churches must begin to pay VAT on repairs, at an estimated cost to the Church of £20 million. US believers thought that Jesus shared their political opinions, whatever they were, a poll suggested. CRITICISM of Christians in the UK did not amount to persecution, a new report concluded, but it was discrimination, and needed to be halted before it grew worse. Dr David Drew argued that sending an emailed prayer had contributed to his dismissal from Walsall Manor Hospital. An employment tribunal disagreed. In his Easter sermon, Dr Williams suggested that the tide might, in fact, be turning towards Christianity: “More useful than the passing generation of gurus thought”. The Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans (formerly GAFCON) met in London. The Archbishop of Canterbury should no longer have an automatic right to chair Primates’ Meetings, it concluded. Three members of a Moscow band, Pussy Riot, remained in prison for their antiPutin demonstration in the Orthodox cathedral in Moscow. Protests in the West were dwarfed by criticism of the band by the Moscow faithful. Fabrice Muamba, a Christian footballer for Bolton Wanderers, said that his recovery was “more than a miracle”, after his heart stopped for 78 min utes in the Tottenham ground during a game. THE Prime Minister’s rejection of a Robin Hood tax on financial transactions was “shameful”, said the RC Archbishop of St Andrews & Edinburgh, Cardinal Keith O’Brien. Sir Paul Coleridge, a High Court judge, launched the Marriage Foundation to promote marriage and provide support for couples. The House of Bishops amended the womenbishops legislation, mentioning the “theological convictions” of PCCs for the first time. The Chancellor agreed a deal over VAT on church repairs: churches must pay it, but they can expect a full refund for at least the next three years. The number of people using food banks had doubled in the past year, the Trussell Trust announced. Economic instability in Greece created uncertainty about the future of the euro. The Dalai Lama came to London to collect his £1.1million Templeton Prize: he would not keep the money, “though my pocket may complain”. The bishops in Sudan called for an end to renewed border violence. President Obama gave his backing to samesex marriage: “It’s also the Golden Rule: treat others the way you would want to be treated.” review of 2012 GReeNBeLT Left: the Greenbelt Festival survived rainstorms; right: fears for the rest of the world, however, surfaced at the Rio summit; below: Mohammed Khalid Chishti is arrested after falsely accusing Rimsha Masih, a 14yearold Christian neighbour, of blasphemy CHiCHeSTeR DioCeSe Above, far left: Dr Martin Warner, a traditionalist, was appointed Bishop of Chichester; above, left: violence erupted at the news that a film had been made in the uS about the life of Muhammad; above: the Bishop of Liverpool, the Rt Revd James Jones, chaired a panel about the Hillsborough disaster; left: 47 people, mostly miners, were killed during a protest in Marikana, South Africa; right: usain Bolt was one of the athletes at the olympics who expressed their faith in public JUNE JULY AUGUST SEPTEMBER CELEBRATIONS to mark the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee spread across the country at the start of June, despite a soggy weekend. Dr Williams noted: “She has made her public happy, and all the signs are that she is herself happy.” Church officials calculated that a change in Gift Aid to include unregistered small donations could bring in £13 million, on top of the £84 million reclaimed at present. The Archbishops’ Council, informed by a paper from the Mission and Public Affairs Council, criticised the “travesty” of Britain’s relationship with Europe, and the impression it gave of “slowly drifting towards the exit”. Dr Richard Scott, a GP in Margate, was repri manded for discussing faith with a vulnerable patient. The scheme to combine three West Yorkshire dioceses progressed, despite reserva tions expressed by Wakefield. At the Rio summit on sustainable development, observers were shocked at the lack of urgency expressed by global leaders when facing the problems of poverty, debt, and environmental decline. A scale model of St Bride’s, Fleet Street, part of the church’s £2.5million fundraising drive, was made entirely of sponge cake. AFTER a long debate, the General Synod declined to give final approval to the women bishops legislation. Instead, unhappy about the House of Bishops’ amendments, it deferred a decision until November, asking the Bishops to reconsider. Jewish groups criticised the Synod’s support for the Ecumenical Accompaniment Programme in Palestine and Israel (EAPPI). The Olympics began, with an acclaimed opening ceremony. Many churches provided stewards (Gamesmakers) and pastors for visitors and athletes. The Olympic torch passed through 8000 pairs of hands belonging to many of the most communityspirited citizens. The United Reformed Church became the first to encourage civil partnerships on its premises. The Episcopal Church in the US voted at its General Convention to permit transgendered people to be ordained. Church leaders appealed for more effort to be made to end the conflict in Syria. A colony of the British black bee, thought to be extinct, was found in the roof of a North umbrian church. A couple exchanged rings flown to them by a barn owl during their wedding service. AT THE Olympics, spectators noted the number of religious gestures made by successful athletes. Sundaytrading laws were relaxed for the duration. The C of E divested itself of its £1.9million holdings in News Corporation, Rupert Murdoch’s media company. Attempts to reform the House of Lords were shelved. A total of 23,000 students took RS A level, the highest ever (7000 male students and 16,000 female). Christians in Egypt expressed their concern after Islamist majorities prevailed in the election. President Mohamed Morsi said: “Stop asking who is a Copt, a Muslim, a Salafi . . . All I see is that we are all Egyptians.” Rimsha Masih, a 14yearold with learning difficulties, was arrested in Pakistan after being accused of burning pages of the Qur’an. The accusations by an imam turned out to be false. In South Africa, church leaders mediated in a mining strike, after police had shot and killed 34 protesters. The three members of Pussy Riot were jailed in Moscow. (One was later released.) Greenbelt survived torrential rain, unlike other festivals. The University of Manchester installed a “PrayoMat”, a converted photo booth offer ing more than 300 multifaith prayers. FOUR cases of alleged religious discrimination were heard by the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg. A UK government lawyer argued that having the freedom to resign meant that employees could not suffer religious dis crimination. An amendment to the women bishops legislation based on respect, suggested by the Revd Janet Appleby, was adopted by the House of Bishops. The Crown Nominations Commission met to choose the next Archbishop of Canterbury, but failed to reach agreement. The diocese of Chichester was criticised for its “dysfunctional” childprotection safeguards after a visitation commissioned by the Arch bishop of Canterbury. An independent panel into the 1989 Hillsborough disaster, chaired by the Bishop of Liverpool, was highly critical of the police. The United States was denounced across the Middle East for a badly made film, Innocence of Muslims, depicting Muhammad, made by an Egyptian Copt in California. The Revd Leah Philbrick, the first woman to play in a Church Times Cricket Cup Final, was part of the winning Southwark side. Continued overleaf CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 41 review of 2012 ReuTeRS Left: Sandy, the largest Atlantic hurricane on record, plunged New York into darkness. it killed at least 253 people and caused an estimated $66 billion damage; right: Barack obama celebrated a second term as uS president her ot ted 7% Not sta 4% Right: the 2012 Census figures, released in December, showed a sharp drop in Christian adherence; below, right: the Rt Revd Justin Welby, Archbishop M designate of Canterbury, collecting us lim his “peer of the year” award from 5% The Spectator No religion 25% Christian 59% Above: pope Benedict xVi summoned a Synod of Bishops in Rome to mark the 50th anniversary of the Second Vatican Council; left: revelations about widespread abuse by Jimmy Savile prompted criticism of the BBC; right: Nolbert Kunonga, a former bishop, was evicted from Anglican property in Harare year in review continued from previous page 42 CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 OCTOBER NOVEMBER DECEMBER DR WILLIAMS, in Rome, addressed the Synod of Bishops, summoned to mark the 50th anni versary of the Second Vatican Council. He told them of the importance of contemplation: “What people of all ages recognise in these prac tices is the possibility, quite simply, of living more humanly.” On the home front, he began a YouTube campaign in support of the draft womenbishops legislation, as opposed to the Forward in Faith Assembly, which urged its rejection. The US Episcopal Church began disciplinary proceedings against the Bishop of South Caro lina, the Rt Revd Mark Lawrence, saying that he had “abandoned” the Church. A chink of hope appeared for the Anglican Church in Zimbabwe, as the Supreme Court in Harare heard its argu ment for the return of its property, annexed by the former bishop, Nolbert Kunonga. The Scouts’ religious pledge came under fire. A Christian B&B owner, Susanne Wilkinson, was convicted of discriminating against a gay couple, Michael Black and John Morgan, by refusing them a double room. The Food Stand ards Authority raised doubts and hackles about reusing jars to sell homemade jam. CHURCHES on the East Coast of the United States were heavily involved in alleviating the hardship caused by Hurricane Sandy. Barack Obama won another term as US President, despite opposition from religious conservatives who favoured his Mormon opponent, Mitt Romney. The Anglican Consultative Council, meeting in New Zealand, heard Dr Williams describe “our wonderful, quarrelsome, diverse, untidy Anglican Communion”. The Rt Revd Justin Welby was named for Canterbury. The General Synod met to consider giving final approval to the womenbishops legislation. It gained the required twothirds majorities in the Houses of Bishops and Clergy, but fell in the House of Laity by six votes. Aid agencies expressed anxiety about child soldiers and the abduction of girls, as Rwandanbacked militia made large gains in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Anglicans in Zimbabwe rejoiced after a court ruled that Nolbert Kunonga and his supporters must leave the churches and schools that they had appropriated. In an experiment, 71 atheists agreed to pray for God to reveal himself to them. Two said that they had come to faith. THE House of Bishops promised to reintro duce legislation to enable the consecration of women as bishops in time for the July General Synod meeting next year. In a Commons de bate, MPs were critical of the Church’s inability to agree. The Minister for Women and Equalities, Maria Miller, described forthcoming legislation to permit samesex couples to marry in church. This included a “quadruple lock” to protect the Church’s interest in the event of a legal challenge. Figures from the 2011 Census were published. Those describing themselves as Christians declined by 13 per cent over ten years, to 59 per cent. Charities criticised proposed welfare reforms as being biased against the poor. The Bishop of Norwich, the Rt Revd Graham James, said in the wake of the inquiry by Lord Justice Leveson that the press had proved its inability to police itself. The Doha climate summit failed to provide any practical help for countries affected by the environmental damage. York Minster announced that it was dressing its stone with an oliveoilbased compound to help preserve it. Shaping our island story features GeTTY David Reason looks at a history of pageantry, exemplified by the Olympic and Paralympic ceremonies, and reflects on what it means to be British AT CHRISTMAS, the ties of family and friendship are rebooted, and the TV slumbers on the periphery of festivities, waking up only at choice moments — moments that often come to be part of domestic ritual, individually adopted, though shared by many. Perhaps the Christmas dinner must end before the Queen’s Christ mas broadcast, and everything else is put on pause as the family gathers around to watch those programmes that are linked to that special day. When I was a child, it was The Morecambe and Wise Show; now, it might be the latest Wallace and Gromit cartoon, or a repeat of The Snowman. And, once upon a time, it was distinctly British to focus celebrations and the exchange of gifts on Christmas Day itself. The passing year is often revisited, perhaps prompted by the ritual review in the media of the year’s memorable highs and lows. The achievements and legacy of the Olympics and Para lympics, and the com peting athletes, will figure prominently this year. Many things will be said, no doubt, but it would be surprising if someone didn’t ob serve (and others nod in jovial agreement) that this was an ex ample of the British at their best. Indeed, the occasion was shot through from the opening to the closing ceremonies with the very spirit of “British ness”. But it is not easy to say what this Britishness is. ALTHOUGH “British” is believed to be in our language from its very beginning, “Britishness” is coined no earlier than the mid18th century. It was forged largely during the 18th and 19th centuries, from conflict with Roman Catholic France, the signal success of the British Empire, and shared Protestant religious and cultural traditions. It provided an umbrella under which the distinct cultures of the Union were invited to shelter. During the later 19th and 20th centuries, Britishness became asso ciated with distinctive institutions of liberty and parliamentary demo cracy (unlike Europe in general); and the creation of a welfare state — especially a National Health Service has been a source of national pride, as it was in the Olympic opening ceremony. As these shift and change, so the character, clarity, and salience of Britishness alters. None the less, by the beginning of the 20th century, Britishness seems to have eclipsed the notion of a distinct “British character”, the one that will encompass all citizens, Jolly good show: above: the tribute to the NHS in the opening ceremony of the 2012 olympics appealed to British pride and its love of pageantry; below: St George and a druid priest from the 2009 english Church pageant, held at Fulham palace, then the Bishop of London’s residence ‘The emergence of “Britishness” coincides with the development of the modern state’ institutions, fashions, and beliefs of the British people. In short, the emergence of Britishness coincides with the development of the modern state, and, in its apparent inclusiveness, mirrors the view that the nationstate is one people, one culture, and one language. It is also a term whose usage reflects a certain anxiety at possible threats to national autonomy: not only a mirror, but also a shield, a weapon of defence. Where the penetrating powers of the European Community, the creeping Ameri canisation of British culture, the regimenting of the high street, and a progressive dependence on foreign investment and management set the pace, the invocation of Britishness is rarely far behind. The notion, vague as it is, has arguably been given an enhanced significance by recent demands for Scottish independence, as well as “moral panics” about the fragment ing effects of unbridled immigra tion, with consequent cultural div ersity. The United Kingdom is no longer united. National identity — Britishness — is threatened. Things are falling apart. Even the Estab lished Church of England is in conspicuous disarray. SO THE story goes — not, perhaps, finding an assenting ear everywhere, but listened to eagerly enough in some powerful places to require a response designed to draw us to gether again, pulling on the threads of history and honour that we trust to link us. That response takes the form of other stories, tales designed to enthral us, that will buttress, and even instil, a shared sense of British ness. The where, when, and how of the telling of the stories conspire to give them popular appeal. At the beginning of the 20th century, for example, at a time when the integrity of the British Empire had been questioned by war, and familiar social ways were challenged by a tide of modernity, the local historical pageant emerged. Records indicate that the first of these was held at Sherborne, in 1905, soon followed by a magnificent civic pageant in Oxford, in 1907. The passion for pageants was contagious, and most of the country succumbed to “pageantitis” (as one wag dubbed the craze) within a decade. England — for this was very much an English affliction — experienced annual spasms of this pageant fever well into the 1950s. The general form of the pageant was the same everywhere: a suc cession of dramatised historical scenes interspersed with historical tableaux whose content was drawn from myths of origin (Arthurian legend, for instance); the bricabrac of popular memory (memorable dates — 1066 and all that — and resonant moments plucked from whatever passed for local history, and mythology); and timely re minders of historical antecedents that were intended to help shape contemporary attitudes. THESE colourful affairs depended on the participation of local people, and, in drawing on the burgeon ing middle classes with enough leisure and money to be able to take part, pageants clearly depended on the very modernity to which they offered a critical mirror, an anti dote to a troubled and anxious present. Above all, they were an engaging spectacle, in which the audience played their parts, both directly, as a community, putting on a theatrical entertainment, and indirectly, by proxy, inserting themselves into the representation of their history. Thus the stories that it is hoped, will reintegrate a fragmenting social order are told not with words alone, but with ceremonies, “traditions”, and spectacles. For the Olympics, the opening ceremony, “Isle of Wonders”, in particular, was surely a broadcast Continued overleaf CHURCH TIMES 21/8 December 2012 43 features Continued from previous page spectacle, and a modern pageant, designed to speak to a national audience and remind it of proud moments; and to an external audience, beaming out an event to evoke not “Great Britain”, but an essence of Britishness both heady and hearty. It was inevitably onesided, edit ing out some of the more conten tious events (the Peasants’ Revolt, the Peterloo Massacre, the Clear ances in Scotland, and the imperial slaughter of indigenous Tasman ians, for instance), that would have focused on division, not unity; antagonism, not harmony; and duplicity, not honesty. Although some reports of the ceremony in the foreign media highlighted a certain smugness, most accounts conveyed a more flattering picture: in the foreground were inventiveness, creativity, eccentricity, and a selfdeprecating sense of humour (both the Queen and Mr Bean went down well around the world). IT SEEMS to me that the idea of Britishness, to have any usefulness at all, as a prop for “national iden tity”, must be more than merely descriptive — it must inform ordinary life. Complex dimensions of time (such an identity endures, preexists the individual, and forms the foundation for the present) and place (a national identity implies territory and frontiers, a meaningful landscape, and a characteristic built environment), and “custom and practice” (the takenforgranted realm of social habits, customary behaviour, unremarkable values) — all these play their part in stitching Britishness into everyday life. The sense of a national identity does not derive from a set of shared characteristics among the popula tion. Rather the converse: the use of the category of national identity invokes a sense of shared charac teristics, and speaks to a moral injunction to “belong in the home land”. In this way, nationality becomes more than a simple iden tity, it becomes a lived identity. Every time I write a British address on an envelope, I am caught up in a net of reminders not only of the distinctiveness of our forms of address (line by line from the most particular to the most general; these things are done differently in, for example, Russia), but also of my ties CHURCH TIMES TRAVEL AND RETREATS 25 JANUARY 2013 TO ADVERTISE please contact Stephen Dutton or Sue Keighley Church Times, 3rd Floor, Invicta House, 108-114 Golden Lane, London, EC1Y 0TG 020 7776 1011 email: stephen@churchtimes.co.uk 44 CHURCH TIMES 21/8 December 2012 to a nation and its history through the medium of mundane street names, for example, which com memorate places, battles, national heroes, and the like. Nationality, however, penetrates us more deeply than we are normally aware. The rhythms and cadences of speech, familiar idioms and clichés, what it is about us that marks a service “masculine” or “feminine”, as well as our implicit assumptions about just behaviour and good conduct — such matters as these are usually invisible to us, but are sure to reveal themselves as soon as we try to get to grips with living in a foreign culture. No one is as doggedly “British” as the British abroad. Britishness is lived differently at different times, and many surveys have noted that there seems to be a difference between generations and regions concerning the pertinence and pull of Britishness. In this con text, it is worth bearing in mind that, as David Miller argued in his book On Nationality: “In acknow ledging a national identity, I am also acknowledging that I owe a special obligation to fellow members of my nation which I do not owe to other human beings.” Arguably, such “national senti ments” also play a significant part in granting legitimacy to the state — in effect, they place the state in the position of a powerful parent with the best interests of its citizenchil dren in mind. OUR idea of Britishness often seems as idealised as did the view of England from abroad, and especially from the outlying colonies of the Empire. When a New Zealander used to talk of “home”, Britain was being referred to. Those with no special relation ship to the UK can also contribute to our sense of Britishness. Ralph Waldo Emerson, the philosopher and social commentator, writing in the light of American indepen dence, and before the torment and turmoil of the American Civil War, in his English Traits (1856) dissected the “English composite character” with an acute eye for its contra dictions — contradictions that also confound any simplistic view of Britishness. “The language is mixed,” he writes, “the names of men are of different nations — three languages, three or four nations — the current of thoughts are counter: contem plation and practical skill; active poised: King John about to give the Great Charter to the Barons at Runnymede in the 1909 english Church pageant (Features, 8 May 2009) ‘Britishness is a lived concept, embodied, and embedded, in day-to-day experience’ intellect and dead conservatism; worldwide enterprise and devoted use and wont; aggressive freedom and hospitable law with bitter class legislation; a people scattered by their wars and affairs over the face of the whole earth, and homesick to a man; a country of extremes . . . nothing can be praised in it without damning exceptions, and nothing denounced without salvos of cordial praise.” BRITISHNESS, then, is an idea of recent invention, the creation of particular historical circumstances answering particular historical needs, and which shifts such mean ing as it has as those circumstances and needs change. It is a complex idea whose components do not always cohere, and can be contra dictory, and it is selective enough for the different groups in society to endorse, reject, or amend elements to suit their purposes. It is a political concept, deployed both externally to distinguish “us” from “them”, and internally to pro mote a sense of cultural unity. It is also a moral concept, as it expresses standards of conduct to which we can aspire, and ideal values that can be appealed to in making moral judgements. So it is a lived concept — one that is not simply descriptive, but that is embodied and embedded in our daytoday experience. Its relevance and importance, and its hold on us, changes from generation to generation, in re sponse to developing contexts and differing anxieties. For a while, the Olympics and Paralympics were a focus of rapt attention for many, but not all. As well as cause for celebration and disappointment, it has provided us with a kitbag of things that are good to dream about, and good to think with. If this is its only legacy, then it will have justified its legacy label. But, before we raise a glass to a memorable occasion, I will close on one question to tease, as befits a fireside tale at Christmas. Would reflection on “Anglicanism” not produce a similar account of essen tially contested complexity and shifting salience? And, so saying, I raise a glass: hurrah for the Olympics, and a happy and peaceful Christmas to all. Dr David Reason is a retired Master of Keynes College, and Honorary Senior Lecturer in the Schools of Arts, at the University of Kent. review of 2012 arts MANY arts events this year were explicitly linked to the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee, which concided with the 350th anniversary of the 1662 Book of Common Prayer. A new two volume collection of anthems, Choirbook for the Queen (Canterbury Press), from which items are being sung in turn in the cathedrals of the UK, linked the two, as did a special Prayer Book exhibition, “Royal Devotion”, at Lambeth Palace Library, building on the suc cess of the King James Bible exhibition there in 2011. Other noted exhibitions included Graham Sutherland (Modern Art, Oxford); ten British painters (Haunch of Venison, London); Titian at the National Gallery; 850 years of Livery Company treasures at the Guildhall, and “Gold, Power and Allure” at Goldsmiths’ Hall; “Foppa, Zenale and Luini” (Robilant & Voena, London); “Hajj” and “Shakespeare: Staging the World” at the British Museum; tomb treasures of Han China in the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge; “Bronze” (RA); “The Lost Prince” (National Portrait Gallery); “Royal Manu scripts” in the British Library; Guercino (Sir Denis Mahon Collection, Ashmolean, Ox ford); “Picasso and Modern British Art” (Tate Britain); Van Dyck (Dulwich Picture Gallery); John Piper (Dorchester Abbey); the Pugin bicentenary programme in Birmingham. Contemporary shows included David Hockney (RA); John Kirby (Walker Gallery, Liverpool); David Crouch (Southwell Min ster); Nigel Groom (Worcester Cathedral and St Mary’s, Prestwich); Helen Marshall and Ruth Dent (Rochester Cathedral); “Reaching Beyond” in BromleybyBow; Daniel Eltinger and Celia Paul (Chichester Cathedral; Paul was also shown alongside works by Gwen John at Pallant House); Roger Wagner and Mark Cazalet (Snape); 14 artists’ Stations (Discoed). LAMBeTH pALACe LiBRARY Title page of a 1662 prayer Book, from the Lambeth palace exhibition; above, right: Choir of Survivors, by Herman Heinze, a German sculptor, in the ruins of the old Coventry Cathedral television THERE has never been a year when we have felt more concern for Auntie — but we have not been hovering round the sickbed offering grapes and sympathy. We have been wonder ing how far our exasperation can stretch before we declare the relationship over for good. The BBC is generally acknowledged as the world’s favourite and best broadcasting organisation, and the Queen’s Jubilee was the very subjectmatter at which it most excels; but The Diamond Jubilee River Pageant was a broadcasting error of such a scale as to call into question the directors’ basic commitment to the Corporation’s core values. These doubts were exacerbated by the unfolding horror of the Jimmy Savile revela tions; the accusations that Panorama had been leant on to pull a programme about Savile’s behaviour; the débâcle of Newsnight’s broad casting — in its eagerness to restore faith in the independence and fearlessness of BBC jour nalism — an accusation of child molestation against a politician who was immediately able to prove his innocence; and the appointment and hasty departure of a new DirectorGeneral. The sight of a onceloved and respected national institution in meltdown should strike a chord of sympathy with all members of the Church of England, but we are clearly in no position to offer advice. Despite this enveloping miasma, some very bright lights shone through the BBC’s slough of despond. The year 2012 could be con sidered as the Year of Great Britain — the Jubilee attracting around it a galaxy of native themed documentaries of the highest standard: Andrew Marr’s The Diamond New commissions for churches included Offertorium, a violin concerto (Edinburgh); Roger Wagner’s window for Iffley Parish Jonathan Harvey’s Welt Ethos, to a text by the Church; Herman Heinze’s sculpture Choir of theologian Hans Küng, at the Royal Festival Survivors for the Coventry Cathedral ruins Hall; and Martin How’s RSCM Advent (below); and glass doors by Mel Howse on a Cantata in Croydon. piscatorial theme for St Paul’s, Brighton. Other notable musical events were Bliss’s The renovation and conservation of the old The Beatitudes, originally commissioned for continued, most conspicuously with the Coventry Cathedral in 1962, but heard in that restoration of the great east window at York building for the first time to mark its 50th Minster. The Auckland Castle Zurbarán paint anniversary; George Dyson’s The Canterbury ings were bought by Jonathan Ruffer to keep Pilgrims and Berlioz’s Te Deum (Three them in the northeast; Pieter Brueghel’s St Choirs), and his Requiem (Proms). Bernstein’s John the Baptist Preaching to the Masses in the Mass had its Proms première; and the season Wilderness was sold for £1.61 million; Art also included John Ireland’s These Things Shall Fund supported a public appeal Be, Handel’s Judas Maccabeus, by the Fitzwilliam Museum, Messiaen’s Et exspecto CoVeNTRY DioCeSe Cambridge, to buy Poussin’s resurrectionem mortuorum, and Extreme Unction for almost £3.9 Howells’s Hymnus Paradisi. million. There was Gabrieli (400 years Highlights in contemporary since his death), and Charpent music included James Mac ier’s opera David et Jonathas, in Millan’s Gloria for Coventry Edinburgh; a tour of country Cathedral; and the world churches, “Music in Quiet première of his Since it was the Places”; the landmark but bleak Day of Preparation . . . (Edin revival of Vaughan Williams’s burgh); the UK première of opera The Pilgrim’s Progress at the Richard Causton’s Blake work Coliseum in London (ENO); TwentySeven Heavens; Rivers to Szymanowski’s Stabat Mater the Sea by Joseph Phibbs and (CBSO); Britten’s Ceremony of Centuries of Meditation by Carols choreographed by Richard Dobrinka Tabakova (Three Alston; Charles Wood’s The Choirs); Sofia Gubaidulina’s Passion according to St Mark press THERE are times when I think of print news papers as pistonengined aircraft: unimagin ably wonderful pieces of engineering, intel ligent in every detail, which have no future except as rich men’s toys, or workhorses where nothing else is profitable. The Leveson inquiry, then, would be a charter for the regulation of Spitfires and Hurricanes in an age of cruise missiles. It may well turn out to be a much less important step towards setting the bounds of free speech than Lord McAlpine’s decision to sue anyone with money who had defamed him by passing on rumours on Twitter. With that said, you still wouldn’t want to be strafed by a Spitfire, or a Hurricane, even if machine guns are now obsolete. The Daily Mail’s 12page preemptive attack on the Leveson inquiry suggested to me that the whole exercise had to be worth while. News papers are natural bullies, even if, like most bullies, they imagine that they are acting in selfdefence. While it is certainly true, as Max Hastings Queen, the Revd Professor Diarmaid MacCulloch’s How God Made the English, Ian Hislop’s Stiff Upper Lip, moving accounts of the work of Lucian Freud and David Hockney, a terrific account of The Dreams of William Golding. Add to these a slew of programmes about, and productions of, William Shakespeare, all attesting that our remarkable national creative heritage has no lack of worthy interpreters in the medium of TV. And TV redemption of a kind enlightened the heart of the year: the BBC’s coverage of the Olympic Games was magnificent, its explication of the marvels of human endeavour then, astonishingly, equalled, or even trumped, by Channel 4’s devotion to the Paralympics. The opening and closing cere monies of both sets of Games were amazing feats, conceived for a worldwide TV audience as much as for those in the stadium. They presented glorious impressions of a nation comfortable with itself, for good or ill, happy to laugh at its most cherished institu tions and to acknowledge the dark elements in our story, willing even to incorporate the odd hymn. I do not think it too farfetched to see them as paraliturgies, summoning core vir tues of inclusion, fellowship, endeavour, and commitment. The viewer has to be open to such consid erations, as explicit religion on TV was woe fully missing. It was most movingly present in the Christian faith underlying the nuns’ vocation in the BBC drama Call the Midwife. But my accolade for Most Promising New Actor of the Year is awarded — thanks to her starring role in the Olympic opening cere mony — to Her Majesty the Queen. Gillean Craig argued in the Financial Times, that most of the dreadful things uncovered by Leveson, and by The Guardian, were in fact illegal when they were done, this is not a complete argu ment that no laws are needed. “What took place at News International was not a breach of press ethics but sustained criminality. No regulatory body past, present or future, could investigate and punish such wrongdoing. It was plain to some of us years ago that the police had disgracefully failed in their duty to investigate News International. Lord Justice Leveson lets them off absurdly lightly.” You might as well argue against speed cameras on the grounds that speeding is already illegal. If the people who break the laws are so powerful that no one dares cross them, then further laws diminishing their power may be necessary for the existing laws to be enforced. Still, the pontifications of the great and good will matter less in the end than the various criminal trials of former journalists and executives, which will add so much to the delights of next year. It is in the light of those verdicts that the new press regime will be framed. radio FROM the selfproclaimed “biggest broad casting deployment in peacetime” to ignom iny, humiliation, and violent breastbeating, the BBC has had an embattled year, alleviated by none of the virtuous resilience of Dunkirk. The Olympic coverage may have demon strated how, in the hour of need, all hands could be turned to the pump — the cricket correspondent Jonathan Agnew commentat ing on archery, for example, and Five Live’s redoubtable team doing the best they could with synchronised diving — but, as the hour for the BBC’s big 90th anniversary approached, the Corporation was shooting at itself over sexualabuse allegations and editorial mismanagement. The only bene ficiaries of such a crisis are those who either do not know how bad standards of radio broadcasting are elsewhere in the world, or do not care. So it is with a certain protectiveness that I recall the broadcasting flops of the year; for they, at least, all dared to aspire. Classic Serial: Songs and Lamentations (Radio 4, June) is a case in point: a twohour narrative squeezed from the book of Jeremiah and associated texts, which suffocated in its own earnestness; another was Richard Holloway’s Honest Doubt (Radio 4, June), which attempted a 20part history of religious scepticism, and lost its way after a couple of outings. It is not that time and effort are not expended on these projects: take Says Who? (Radio 2, November), whose attempted survey of people’s attitudes to morality employed some refined production values. But pacing is everything, and this effort was slowed down (Farrant Singers, Salisbury); and a rare chance to hear Carl Loewe’s The Atonement of the New Testament (Oxford Harmonic Society). Michael Kiwanuka was named the BBC’s Sound of 2012. Drama and dance included Can We Talk About This? (DV8, National Theatre and touring); The Preston Passion (BBC); David Edgar’s Written on the Heart (RSC); The Beloved by Amir Nizar Zuabi (Bush, London); Life of Christ (Wintershall); How Like An Angel (touring cathedrals); Mike Bartlett’s adaptation of Colin Welland’s film script for Chariots of Fire in London (transferred to the Gielgud); the York Mystery Plays, their first largescale production since 2000; Shaw’s The Doctor’s Dilemma (National); Treasured, Jen Heyes’s drama about the Titanic, in Liverpool Cathedral; Damned by Despair, Molina, adapted by Frank McGuinness (National Theatre); a stage adaptation of William Gold ing’s The Spire by Roger Spottiswoode, in Salisbury; Chronicles of Light in Winchester Cathedral; and Alan Bennett’s new comedy People at the National Theatre. Films reviewed in our columns included Hadewijch; The Iron Lady; Acts of Godfrey; The Devil Inside; Corpo Celeste; The Monk; The Gospel of Us; Joyful Noise; Even the Rain; Faust; and Holy Motors. And on DVD: The Borgias; Relics and Roses; Ordet (The Word); Red State; The Vow; and Holy Flying Circus. AND so to less grand matters, on which my opinion might just be better informed. This was not a good year for the predictive powers of the religious journalists. The only thing you could say for us was that we knew better than the bookies, most of the time. It was the clear and repeatedly expressed opinion of all the experts that Dr Sentamu was going to be the next Archbishop of Canterbury. Clip pings from May now make embarrassing reading. Just as much of a shock was the failure of the draft womenbishops legisla tion. What both these failures suggest to me is that we are not eating enough. In particular, we are not eating enough lunches of the sort from which stories emerge. So long as the chief source of newspaper stories is what other people have written, we will be missing all the excitement and novelty of what people say face to face in conversation. In the light of this, and of the probable future of our industry, it should be the resolution of everyone in the business to spend far more of next year at lunch. Andrew Brown by the weight of background noise, the end less playlist of an overzealous editor. Two Radio 2 documentaries make it into my 2012 favourites: A Year in the Life: The Beatles 1962 (October) told the story of the Fab Four’s comingofage; and How Sweet the Sound: The Amazing Grace story (May), a survey of the hymn in all its myriad forms, from the Scots Dragoon Guards to the Blind Boys of Alabama. Rougher round the edges, but on a good day no less effective, is the Five Live method: immediate, and handson. Nicky Campbell taking performanceenhancing drugs (5 Live Breakfast, August) was compelling; and Men’s Hour (July) on circumcision was traumatic; while Victoria Derbyshire’s live programme in June from an abortion clinic justifies by itself her status as one of the BBC’s finest. You need great original material to make a great radio programme; and my two high lights of the year benefited from such. Radio 4’s drama Blasphemy and the Governor of Punjab (September) told the story of the life and death of Salmaan Taseer, murdered for questioning Pakistani blasphemy laws. Methodical, yet bristling with righteous anger, the piece gave a valuable insight into a dysfunctional society. Social dysfunction and moral ambivalence are all part of the world that James Joyce recreated in his masterpiece Ulysses, which, on Bloomsday this year (16 June), was celebrated on Radio 4 with a sevenpart adaptation of the novel. This story of a flawed hero, negotiating prejudices and blandishments with a quiet determination, would make an appropriate rolemodel for the BBC in these dark days. Edward Wickham CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 45 review of 2012 appointments THE Bishop of Durham, the Rt Revd Justin Welby, was nominated in 2012 as the next Archbishop of Canterbury and Primate of All England. Dr Richard Clarke was elected Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland, translated from Meath & Kildare. The Bishop of MasindiKitara, the Rt Revd Stanley Ntagali, was elected Arch bishop of Uganda. Other episcopal appointments during the year included those of the Very Revd Dr John Armes as Bishop of Edinburgh; Dr Martin Warner as Bishop of Chichester, translated from Whitby; the Revd Robert Hirschfeld as BishopCoadjutor of New Hampshire; the Revd Ellinah Wamukoya as Bishop of Swaziland. The Revd Jonathan Clark as Area Bishop of Croydon; the Ven. Michael Ipgrave as Area Bishop of Woolwich; the Ven. Richard Atkin son as Suffragan Bishop of Bedford; the Revd Darren McCartney as Suffragan Bishop of the Arctic; the Revd Dr Edmund Condry as Area Bishop of Ramsbury; Canon Glyn Webster as Suffragan Bishop of Beverley and Provincial Episcopal Visitor. Prebendary Nicholas McKinnel as Suffragan Bishop of Crediton; the Revd Philip North as Suffragan Bishop of Whitby, who subsequently withdrew from his nomination; the Rt Revd Jonathan Baker as Suffragan Bishop of Fulham, translated from Ebbsfleet; the Ven. Alison Taylor as Regional Bishop in Brisbane. The Rt Revd Kenneth Clarke, Bishop of Kilmore, Elphin & Ardagh, as Mission Director of the South American Mission Society Ireland; the Rt Revd David Hamid, Suffragan Bishop in Europe, as new Cochairman of IARCCUM; and the Most Revd David Moxon as the Archbishop of Canterbury’s Rep resentative to the Holy See, and Director of the Anglican Centre in Rome. OTHER clerical appointments in cluded those of the Revd Chris topher Futcher as Archdeacon of Exeter; the Revd Lister Tonge as Dean of Monmouth; the Revd Paul Hooper as Archdeacon of Leeds; Canon Steven Betts as Archdeacon of Norfolk; the Revd Mark Beach as Dean of Rochester; the Very Revd Dr David Ison as Dean of St Paul’s; books IN A YEAR when an Archbishop of Canterbury announced his resignation, the biographical studies of his predecessors reviewed in the Church Times included those of Geoffrey Fisher (by Andrew Chandler and David Hein), Cosmo Lang (Robert Beaken), Thomas Becket (John Guy), and Ralph D’Escures, William of Corbeil, and Theobald of Bec (Jean Truax). Dr Williams’s book Faith in the Public Square topped the Church Times monthly Top Ten, as did his study of C. S. Lewis’s Narnia, The Lion’s World. Books by other world religious leaders included the Dalai Lama’s Beyond Religion and Pope Bene dict’s XVI’s Jesus of Nazareth: The infancy narratives. Lent 2012 titles reviewed in the Church Times included: Love Unknown by Ruth Burrows; The Nail by Stephen Cottrell; On Retreat by Andrew Walker; The Heart’s Time by Janet Morley; Love Set Free by Martin L. Smith; Handing on the Torch by John Young; and Finding a Voice by Hilary Brand. The Church in rural England was 46 LAMBeTH pALACe Ap New posts: above: Lynne Tembey, commissioned by Dr Williams as the new Worldwide president of the Mothers’ union; left: Tawadros ii, the new Coptic pope; above, right: the Very Revd Vivienne Faull, now Dean of York; right: Dr Richard Clarke, Archbishop of Armagh, primate of All ireland Canon Victor Stacey as Dean of St Patrick’s Cathedral, Dublin. Canon Peter Wilcox as Dean of Liverpool; the Revd Dianna Gwil liams as Acting Archdeacon of Southwark; the Revd Nigel Genders as Head of School Policy of the Board of Education; the Revd Susan Macdonald as Dean of Edinburgh diocese; the Revd Wendy Callan as Dean of Killala; Canon Mark Bon ney as Dean of Ely; the Revd Roger Hughes as Archdeacon of Car marthen; the Revd Andrew Williams as Acting Dean of Bradford Cath edral; the Revd Jacqueline Searle as Archdeacon of Gloucester. The Revd Ian Morgan as Arch deacon of Suffolk; the Revd Dr Peter Pike as Archdeacon of Montgomery; the Revd Ian Linton as Archdeacon of Elphin and Ardagh; the Ven. Roger Bush as Dean of Truro; the Revd Peter Rickman as Dean of Waikato; the Revd Jonathan Wil liams as Archdeacon of Newport; the Very Revd Vivienne Faull as Dean of York. The Revd Peter Sutton as Archdeacon of the Isle of Wight; the Revd Dr Timothy Stratford as Archdeacon of Leicester; the Revd Sandra Pragnell as Dean of Limerick and Ardfert; the Revd Robert Miller as Archdeacon of Derry; Canon John Witcombe as Dean of Cov entry; the Revd Barry Naylor as acting Dean of Leicester; the Revd Andrew Swift as Dean of Argyll & The Isles diocese; the Revd William StuartWhite as Archdeacon of Cornwall. The Ven. John Green as Arch deacon Pastor of Coventry; the Revd Martin Gorick as Archdeacon of Oxford; the Revd Ruth Worsley as Archdeacon of Wiltshire; the Ven. Christopher Skilton as Archdeacon of Croydon; the Revd Alan Jevons as Archdeacon of Brecon; the Ven. Janet Henderson as Dean of Llan daff; Canon Duncan Green as Arch deacon of Northolt. The Revd Matthew Reed as Chief Executive of the Children’s Society; the Revd Arun Arora as Director of Communications for the Arch bishops’ Council; the Revd Philip Mounstephen as Executive Leader of the Church Mission Society; the analysed in Faith and the Future of the Countryside by Alan Smith and Jill Hopkinson, and Rural Life and Rural Church, edited by Leslie J. Francis and Mandy Robbins. The Church of the 21st century was discussed in The State of the Church and the Church of the State by Michael Turnbull and Donald McFadyen, and Religion and Change in Modern Britain by Linda Wood head and Rebecca Catto. Christianity in the public square was explored in A Public Faith by Miroslav Volf; Equality, Freedom and Religion by Roger Trigg; and Theology in the Public Square by Sebastian Kim. To celebrate the 350th annivers ary of the Book of Common Prayer, key titles reviewed included: The Book of Common Prayer: The texts of 1549, 1559 and 1662, edited by Brian Cummings; God Truly Worshipped: Thomas Cranmer and his writings, edited by Jonathan Dean; and Stir Up, O Lord by Kevin Carey. To mark the 50th anniversary of the opening of the Second Vatican Council, titles published included Reaping the Harvest by Suzanne Mulligan, Jim Corkery, and Gerry O’Hanlon; 50 Years Receiving Vatican II by Kevin T. Kelly; and the recently translated My Journal of the Council by Yves Congar. The topical issue of virtue economics was analysed in The Price of Inequality by Jospeh E Stiglitz; What Money Can’t Buy by Michael Sandel; How Much is Enough? by Robert Skidelsky and Edward Skidelsky; and Faith and Social Capital by Adrian Dinham. Anglican identity was explored in Mark Chapman’s Anglican Theology, and in Samuel Wells’s What Anglicans Believe. Christian living was celebrated in Jane Shaw’s Practical Christianity and in David Adam’s Occasions for Alleluia. Popular titles on spirituality included: Everyday God by Paula Gooder; Does My Soul Look Big in This? by Rosemary LainPriestley; Falling Upward by Richard Rohr; and Lectio Divina by Christine Paintner. Books on priestly ministry which came under review included Min istry Without Madness by Gordon Oliver; Called to Love by Raymond Tomkinson; and Mindful Ministry by Judith Thompson and Ross Thompson. Fresh Expressions were celebrated in Fresh! An introduction to Fresh Expressions of church and pioneer ministry by David Good hew, Andrew Roberts, and Michael CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 YoRK MiNSTeR pA obituaries DEATHS among the episcopate included those of the Rt Revd Michael Mann, former Dean of Windsor; the Rt Revd Dr Kenneth Cragg, Islamic scholar and former assistant bishop in the Jerusalem archbishopric; the Rt Revd Clarence Pope, former Bishop of Fort Worth; the Rt Revd Ambrose Weekes, former Chaplain of the Fleet, Dean of Gibraltar, and Suffragan Bishop in Europe; the Rt Revd Dr Mazilimani Azariah, former General Secretary of the Church of South India, and later Bishop in Madras. The Rt Revd Kobina Quashie, former Bishop of Cape Coast; the Rt Revd Roger White, former Bishop of Milwaukee; the Rt Revd Anthony Dumper, former Suffragan Bishop of Dudley; the Rt Revd Eric Devenport, former Suffragan Bishop of Dun wich; the Rt Revd K. H. Ting, the last Bishop of Zhejiang, and leader of the Protestant Church in China. Volland. Resources for allage worship included Creative Ideas for Using Worship by Paul Glass; and Worship Together by Sandra Millar. The rites of baptism and confirma tion were explored and celebrated in Taking the Plunge by Timothy Radcliffe, and in Peter Maidment’s and Paul Butler’s Living your Confirmation. The eucharist was discussed in The Eucharistic Liturgies by Paul F. Bradshaw and Maxwell E. Johnson. Titles to mark the Queen’s Jubilee year included Queen Elizabeth II and her Church by the Dean of Westminster, John Hall. Books on the God debate included Where the Conflict Really Lies by Alvin Plantinga; Why Religion is Natural and Science is Not by Robert N. McCauley; and God and the Scientist: Exploring the work of John Polkinghorne, edited by Fraser Watts and Christopher C. Knight. Wellknown writers who joined the debate included: Francis Spufford in his much acclaimed Unapologetic; Roger Scruton in his The Face of God; Jonathan Clat worthy in Making Sense of Faith in God; Rupert Sheldrake with The Science Delusion; and Raymond DEATHS among the clergy included those of the Revd John Suddards, Vicar of Thornbury and Oldbury onSevern with Shepperdine, who was murdered in February; the Revd Alyn Haskey, associate priest at St Christopher with St Philip, Snein ton; the Revd Christopher Jones, Policy Officer for Home Affairs in the Mission and Public Affairs Division of the Archbishops’ Coun cil; the Revd Tom Heffer, General Secretary of the Mission to Seafarers. Canon James Colling, Rector of Warrington at the time of the IRA bombing, and former Chaplain to the Queen; the Revd Dr Dudley Clarke, former Chaplain of Monk ton Combe School; Canon Thomas Smail, former VicePrincipal of St John’s College, Nottingham; the Revd Dr Alan Megahey, school master and historian; the Revd John Pollock, Christian biographer; Canon Dick France, New Testament scholar and a former Principal of Wycliffe Hall, Oxford; Canon Thomas Christie, a former chairman of Church House Publishing; Canon Charles Shells, founder of the Painting and Prayer Movement. The Ven. Dr David Griffiths, former Archdeacon of Berkshire; Canon Simon Mein, former Chap lain of St Andrew’s School, Dela ware; the Revd Cuthbert Mather, former Rector of Needham and Rushall, and in holy orders for 72 years; the Revd Dillwyn Thomas, former Vicar of All Saints’, Penarth, and Canon of Llandaff Cathedral; Canon Eric James, former Director of Christian Action, noted for his work for the report Faith in the City. The Revd Ronald Swain, possibly the oldest Anglican priest in England at 103; the Revd John Swallow, former Rector of West Mersea with East Mersea; the Very Revd John Lang, former BBC Head of Religious Broadcasting, and Dean of Lichfield; Canon Patrick Kent, former Chap lain of St Chad’s College, Durham; Canon Reginald Askew, former Prin cipal of Salisbury and Wells Theo logical College, and Dean of King’s College, London; Canon Ernest Brown, former Vicar of Thurnby with Stoughton; Prebendary James Trevelyan, Companion of the Society of St Francis, and sailor. The Very Revd Ian Watt, former Provost of St Ninian’s Cathedral, Perth, and Dean of St Andrews, Dunkeld & Dunblane diocese; Canon John Turner, former Pre centor of Lichfield Cathedral; the Revd Humphrey Newman, succes sively Vicar of Welling and of St John’s, Penge, and Rector of Knock holt; the Revd Richard Blakeway Phillips, botanist; the Revd Professor Christopher Evans, New Testament Continued on page 56 Continued on page 56 Revd Andrew Wright as General Secretary of the Mission to Seafarers. LAY appointments included Tim othy ByramWigfield as Chairman of the Church Music Society; Dr Alastair Jones as Chief Executive of the Frontier Youth Trust; the Lord Luce as Chairman of the Crown Nominations Commission; Andrew Reid as Director of the RSCM; Dr Lindsay Newcombe as Vice Chairman of Forward in Faith, and Dr Colin Podmore as Director; Lynne Tembey as Worldwide Pres ident of the Mothers’ Union. THE Egyptian Coptic Church elected Tawadros II as its new Pope. Also appointed were the Most Revd Dr Charles Brown as Papal Nuncio to Ireland; the Revd Dr Guy Liagre as General Secretary of the Con ference of European Churches; Fi McLachlan as Chief Executive of Burrswood Hospital; Marnix Niem eijer as Chairman of Micah Chal lenge; and the Revd Lorna Hood as Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland. © RCAHMS Helping Britain to make it books Augustine and the playgroup Roderic Dunnett considers the work of Basil Spence John Pridmore looks at reflections on children’s spirituality Basil Spence: Buildings and projects Louise Campbell, Miles Glendinning, and Jane Thomas, editors RiBA publishing £45 Church Times Bookshop £40.50 (9781859463093) Understanding Children’s Spirituality: Theology, research and practice Kevin E. Lawson, editor Cascade Books £32 (9781610975254) Church Times Bookshop £28.80 THIS is massive tome, running to 19 chapters, and chockfull of superb illustrations, arising out of an Arts and Humanities Research Council project led by Louise Campbell of the University of Warwick and her two scholarly collaborators, who contribute sub stantially to the book. One interesting thing about Sir Basil Spence (190776) — quite apart from his crowning glory, the new Coventry Cathedral, characterised here as “the single biggest ikon of postwar recon struction” in Britain — is, the book indicates, the ways in which his career spans several distinct eras and trends. Of these, the most significant was the keen interest that he showed, during its 1930s heyday, in the Modernist Germanbased Bauhaus movement, led by Walter Gropius and Mies van der Rohe, whose work he visited (soon after his honey moon), and from which he de rived much of the ethic of social responsibility which informed his work in postwar Britain, including his contributions to the 1946 “Britain Can Make It” exhibition at the Victoria & Albert Museum, and the 1951 Festival of Britain, at which Spence was a leading light. He didn’t build only ecclesiastical marvels: Scottish country houses, including quite selfindulgent castellated wonders built from scratch, entered his remit, as work flourished after the war. He built, and helped revolutionise, army barracks and parliamentary build ings. By 1929, he was assisting Sir Edwin Lutyens, and some of the latter’s versatility and good judge ment washed off on the younger man. Spence’s superb draughts manship extended to painting: some rewarding selfportraits are included here, and his youthful sketches — of Pugin’s work, for instance — already look masterly. Every facet of his work is explored in invigorating detail here, in a style that is as accessible as it is academic. This applies to all of the contributors; and the balance is about right, too: the early years get 40 pages, the 1950s 80, the ’60s 100, and the ’70s — up to Spence’s death, aged only 69 — a further 30 pages. The index is thorough, and nicely presented in four columns. Coven try gets a closely argued 32page chapter from Louise Campbell herself; the illustrations of various stages in the process stand testimony to the complexity, and the triumph, of the proposed, emerging, and finished project, the result of a wildly contested archi tectural competition announced in 1951. Ready or Not: Children, spirituality and journeying together Ruth Harvey Wild Goose publications £11.50 (9781849522175) Church Times Bookshop £10.35 © RCAHMS You don’t get a better imprimatur than that of the Royal Institute of British Architects, who have supported the project so much as to publish the book. In a spectac ular large format, it is, surely, one of the landmark books on British architecture of the past halfcentury. Recommending it very highly is a pleasure and a duty. MARTIN SAUNDERS has com piled 500 Prayers for Young People: Prayers for a new genera tion (Monarch, £9.99 (£9); 9780 857210173), to help them to pray about matters that affect them. The sections have titles such as “Inter cessions”, “Relationships”, and “School”, and prayers relate, for example, to exams, debt, selfharm, porn addiction, worship and spirituality, and the world’s needs. Draughtsman’s eye: above: design for the Hall of the Future at the “Britain Can Make it” exhibition at the V&A, London, perspective by Basil Spence, 1946; left: a Spence family Christmas card (the architect, with his moustache, is seen directing their work), c.1945 Church Times Bookshop Books that have a Church Times Bookshop price can be ordered from Church House Bookshop in any of the following ways (please mention “Church Times Bookshop price”): Website: www.chbookshop.co.uk/ofct21dec12 Quote CT524 in “voucher code” box when checking out. Discount price may vary slightly online. Phone: 020 7799 4064 (Monday 9.30 a.m. 5 p.m.; TuesdayFriday 9 a.m.5 p.m.) Fax: 020 7340 9997 Email: bookshop@chbookshop.co.uk Post: Church House Bookshop, 31 Great Smith Street, London SW1p 3BN pay by any major credit card (not American express) or Switch/Maestro, or by cheque payable to “Church House Bookshop”. please add postage: uK orders up to £25, postage is £2.50; £25.01£75, postage is £5.00; orders of £75.01 and above are postage free. overseas orders and postage will be quoted for individually. CT Bookshop prices are valid for two months after publication date. e&oe THE Society for Children’s Spirituality holds a conference every three years, and the papers presented at it are subsequently published. The 21 chapters of Understanding Children’s Spiritual ity began life as papers given at the 2009 conference. The Society for Children’s Spirituality (SCS) must not be confused with the International Association for Children’s Spir ituality (IACS), though the parts that they play are complementary. The SCS is primarily a North American forum, a context that narrows the focus of some chapters in this book. More significantly, its perspective on children’s spirituality is avowedly Christian. The IACS, by contrast, understands spirituality “broadly and inclus ively”, and maintains that the child’s inherent spirituality does not necessarily require religious ex pression, whether Christian or any other. Kevin Lawson, who edits these papers, has to call to order a com pany of academics with a be wildering variety of axes to grind. The only systematisation that he attempts is to herd into one fold those whose perspectives are theological and historical, and into a second those with more prac tical interests. One chapter towers above the rest in the first section, William Brown’s brilliant essay on “Wisdom and Child’s Play”. Brown invites us to attend to the Hebrew text of Proverbs 8.2231, an extraordinary passage that pictures the divine wisdom as a playful child. When we remember that this passage underlies the Prologue to St John’s Gospel — though this is not a point that Brown himself develops — the implications of his reading of the text are staggering. Is God a playgroup, Jerome Berry man once asked. It seems that he is. Or, to be more precise, she is; for wisdom is, of course, female. The two other important chapters in this first section are Elizabeth Dodd’s study of the image of the child in Thomas Traherne, and the Orthodox scholar Jennifer Mosher’s discussion of Irenaeus’s incar national understanding of child hood. Once again, we are made to realise how much misery children would have been spared had the Church in the West heeded Irenaeus and not succumbed to Augustine. They might, for example, have been spared the chapter in this volume on “childhood depravity”, and, in another chapter, the assertion that we should regard children in the church as “foster children” who may eventually become “fully adopted”. Kyrie eleison. Two scholars, highly respected in both the SCS and the IACS, con tribute notable chapters to the book’s second section. Karen Marie Yust writes from a wealth of experience on “intergenerational worship”; and Ann Trousdale draws attention to the “prophetic stance” that she discerns in the best of re cent children’s literature. Too much writing about chil dren’s spirituality, such as that which advocates the contemplation of sunsets and waterfalls, ignores the fact that children suffer and that, from an early age, they wonder why. Two closing chapters address directly — and belatedly — the problem of “spiritual distress”. Duane Bidwell and Donald Batisky reflect movingly on the “spirituality of hope” that they have found among children with terminal renal disease. Eva Korneck recognises that children, too, think about theodicy, and she claims that the book of Job, not normally seen as children’s reading, can help them to do so. It was a discourtesy to Korneck, whose first language is not English, that her article was not edited to make it read more fluently. If there is one thing that we have learned from the exploration of children’s spirituality in recent years, it is that it is, through and through, relational. The child in spirit relates to the transcendent, to nature, to others, and — mys teriously — to himself or herself. Those relationships can be studied with academic detachment, or they can be explored through personal engagement. The former approach yields learned papers, bristling with references and endnotes, such as we have in Understanding Children’s Spirituality; the latter invites the kind of meditative and poetic reflection we find in Ready or Not. Needless to say, the two approaches are equally valid. Ready or Not is a publication of the Iona Community. If, like an old fashioned sermon, the book had a text, this would be: “A little child shall lead them.” Between them, the 30 or more contributors touch on many themes. Some ponder on the intensity and the peril of the bond between parent and child. Others brood on the affliction that love suffers as it is forced to let go, and others on the piercing insight of a child’s sudden comment or ques tion. Mothers reflect on what it means to carry a child, or to lose a child, or to fail to find the fulfilment that motherhood is supposed to bring. Much in these pages is written in the halfprose, halfpoetry, that characterises much devotional writing. Readers will be arrested by sharp images. “Child — You are my burning bush”; “I drive for a bit into town, spot my middle years in shop windows.” One contributor believes that Philip Larkin is wrong. “They tuck you up in bed, your mum and dad.” The Revd Dr John Pridmore is a former Rector of Hackney in east London. CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 47 books Building on the rock . . . mostly Glorious fanes soared, not always wisely, says William Whyte How to Build a Cathedral: Constructing the story of a medieval masterpiece Malcolm Hislop Bloomsbury £24.99 (9781408171776) Church Times Bookshop £22.50 HOW best to describe the process of building? Over the centuries, architecture has been compared to many things. It is, Goethe wrote, frozen music. It is, Victor Hugo wrote, like a sort of book. It is both these things. Yet it is also more. Just think about how a building actually happens. Imagine the creativity involved in dreaming up something, some structure, that has never been seen before. Think of the effort needed to acquire materials and recruit workers; the sheer audacity of starting to build, and the determination required to carry the enterprise through to com pletion. All of this can be described in a variety of different ways. But it is best seen, I think, as a leap of faith: a great jump into the unknown. For the medieval cathedral builders who created the great churches of Canterbury and Chartres, Salisbury and St Denis, their work was an act of faith in more ways than one. It was a great religious duty to build, and to build well, for the honour and glory of God. Lacking our knowledge of physics peTeR MARLoW and our technological advantages, however, it was also always a risky business — one that threatened lives as well as reputations. The history of cathedral architecture is consequently often as much about dramatic failure as it is about in spiring success, as masons and their clients leapt too far in their search for greater height or breadth; or for larger, still more grandiose struc tures. Over the centuries, great high towers collapsed at Gloucester, Ely, York, Beauvais, and beyond. In this fantastic new book, the architectural historian Malcolm Hislop provides the reader with an expert account of this process, and reveals the secrets of the cathedral builders and the magnificent edifices they erected. From devising the plan to installing the stained glass, hardly a detail of cathedral architecture is missed. Not a glossy volume, and with only a handful of fullcolour images, How to Build a Cathedral is none the less a beautiful book. It is delightfully welldesigned and superbly illustrated with hundreds of drawings taken from the great 19thcentury architectural histories. This was an inspired decision, because not only are these en gravings attractive in their own right: they also reveal far more successfully than any photograph exactly what was built, how, and why. This, then, is a volume that can confidently be recommended to anyone seriously interested in architecture or church history. The Revd Dr William Whyte is Tutorial Fellow in Modern History at St John’s College, Oxford, and Assistant Curate of Kidlington. Not just snaps: peter Marlow’s view of Gloucester Cathedral, one of 42 naves recorded in his photos in The English Cathedral (Merrell, £45 (£40.50); 9781 858945903), with John Goodall’s commentary, and an essay by Martin Barnes, of the V&A, on Marlow’s place in the history of english cathedral photography If you go down to the woods People twitching Ronald Blythe enjoys a study of ‘the Terror of the Wild Wood’ Simon Jones reads a novel with warmth Gossip from the Forest: The tangled roots of our forests and fairytales Sara Maitland Granta £20 (9781 847084293) Church Times Bookshop £18 NATURAL HISTORY, story telling, and autobiography are wonderfully interwoven here. Twelve months, 12 woods, count less moods, and 12 entrances create the pattern. Bliss, terror, legend, and hard facts make its moods. Sara Maitland is right to say that this cat’s cradle of emo tions cannot be rationalised when we make our way into a forest. And, best of all, she includes “my” own Suffolk wood, Staverton Thicks — new to her, familiar territory to me. So much practical toil went on in forests, centuries of fuelgathering, pigfeeding, hunting, lovemaking, and so on, that one would think that the fear had been trodden out of 48 them. But no. Something mysteri ous and incalculable remains. She, rightly, does not attempt to unravel it. Entering Staverton, she says, “The magic here is very deep, because the mystery is very real.” My woodland shelf bulges with scientific and imaginative statements, but hers is the most original. Why, when we park the car or the bike to explore a great or little wood, are we so nervous? She blames the aptly named Grimm brothers and their scary tribe. None the less, she deplores our crazy obsession with “child safety” in the countryside, so that one rarely sees a boy or girl in an open meadow, let alone in a closedin wood, and thus never experiencing the countryside of the fairytale, or of Harry Potter and his modern woodlanders. Or, more importantly, Shakespeare’s and Thomas Hardy’s territories. Maitland is a dangerous country woman, leading us where “safety first” tells us not to go. Or where the sign says Private. Or where the trees themselves are soaked in myth and faith. And so old. Our finest nature poet is John Clare, who spent four years in an Epping Forest mad house, where he wrote some wonderfully sane things about woodland. Maitland, too, makes the reader resee the urbanised forest on CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 his doorstep, as well as the vast, dark stretches of the Caledonian woods. Her idea is to analyse the traditions of terror as they spread from a handful of fairytales, particularly Tom Thumb, Rumpel stiltskin, Rapunzel, and, of course, Hansel and Gretel. There is a stunning chapter on the Purgatory Wood in Western Galloway, where on Christmas Eve she biked to steal a tree. A lawlessness feeds her woodland appetite, a need to trespass. This wood is so called because it once contained a leper colony. She entered it “with nefarious intent”. Forests in gen eral retain their medieval keep out commands, and she is there to break them, and is thus a tradition alist. Her history lessons and move ments are exciting. At Staverton, a woman rushes from a cottage, shouting, waving her arms, the very image of a witch. “Trespass, tres pass!” But it is mostly trees that wave her on — or out. The reader is reminded of Kenneth Grahame’s forest fear, which he called “the Terror of the Wild Wood”. Why do we still feel it? Maitland cannot give the full answer, but she makes a brave attempt. Gossip From the Forest is a thrill — and beautifully written. The Yips Nicola Barker Fourth estate £18.99 (9780007476657) Church Times Bookshop £17.10 TAKE a vicar, a tattooist, a profes sional golfer, and a Muslim sex therapist, and you are almost cer tain to end up with a joke. Nicola Barker’s Bookerlonglisted The Yips is flamboyantly funny — but it is also ambitious, tender, wise, and deeply humane. Stuart Ransome, the golfer, has the condition that gives the book its title: a nervous twitch that makes putting impossible. And it is nerves rather than golf that give the book its organising structure (if some thing so odd and vortexed can be believed to have a structure at all). The Vicar, Sheila, is depressed. The tattooist, Val, is agoraphobic, although she is able to venture out in a client’s niqab (“She is no longer fearful, she is blank as an un addressed letter. She is dead. She is empty. She is un.”). The relationship between Val’s fears and her identity pay out movingly as well as comedically as she deals with the legacy of her Naziobsessed father and her attraction to Gene, Sheila’s husband, who has recovered from cancer a significant seven times. Sheila saw God on a train, but decided to become a vicar only after coming into contact with (the atheist) Gene’s goodness in the face of adversity. She loves the pro visionality of his lack of faith, while he is attracted to her assurance and focus. Each of these positions is challenged in the course of the novel, but Barker allows each spouse his or her beliefs without critical intervention. The detail sparkles (Gene’s eyes are “two errant kites on unreliable strings”, for example), but it is this authorial warmth that really impresses. All of her main characters — even the hopelessly ranting and misogynist Ransome — edge their way from fall to redemption. If every family is unhappy in its own way, Barker’s mission seems to be to attach the big subjects of their unhappiness to the smaller mercies of compassion. Turning a page on The Yips is a little like hitting the button on a jackinthebox. But it is also a little like real life. Simon Jones is editor of Third Way magazine. Stories that lend encouragement This author has seen the worst and best, Barbara Butler finds Hope: Moments of inspiration in a challenging world Tim Costello Hardie Grant Books £10.99 (9781742703756) Church Times Bookshop £9.90 WHEN Granny Smith threw her old apple skins and pips away in her back garden in the mid1800s, she did not expect to find a small tree growing in the same place the next year. The tree produced beautiful apples, which many people all over the world now enjoy. Tim Costello tells this story as a parable of Australia — a nation that began with discards, and made good. This is one of the many inspiring, challenging, and entertaining stories crammed into a book that offers hope for today. As the director of World Vision in Australia, the author has travelled widely, often to places of disaster and suffering. He has experienced many horrors, which have led him to question his Christian faith; but his questioning has driven him to a new understanding of both the many people he has met and God. He went to Sri Lanka immediately after the 2004 tsunami, where he encountered unspeakable trauma and grief. He wrote: “If I could offer one small hope, it was that both believers and nonbelievers from around the world would not forget them or abandon them. And that this was where they could find a sign of God’s presence, in the form of the compassion and action by the world’s citizens and governments.” There are stories here about many inspiring people, including Martin Luther King and President Obama. We read of a visit to Catherine Hamlin, an 85yearold doctor who works in a fistula hospital in Ethiopia, and of exciting meetings with Bono, followed by a renewed commitment to the eradication of poverty. There is a realisation that there are different kinds of poverty, and that poverty in relationships is as depleting as material poverty. Examples given include Australia, where there is still a huge gap between Aboriginal people and the white citizens; and the Middle East, where there is little meeting or listening towards peace. The author believes that all life is sacred, and that every person is a child of God. The challenge to us all is to show the face of God wherever we are. Barbara Butler is Executive Secretary of Christians Aware. An ‘open volume’? Adam Ford on God as revealed in Nature Places of Enchantment: Meeting God in landscapes Graham B. Usher SpCK £10.99 (9780281067923) Church Times Bookshop £9.90 YOU know that this author must be rooted in the Church’s life of thanksgiving when you read the list of acknowledgements, which in cludes “Hexham Abbey’s heavenly host of retired clergy and its staff team . . .”. If ever proof was needed that a period of sabbatical leave for a clergyman has value, then here it is. Graham Usher, Rector of Hex ham, Northumberland, has taken time off to focus on an important issue: how to reconnect the liturgy of the Church (celebrated mostly inside great buildings) with the rich realm of the created world. There has been a thread of suspicion running through Chris tian history about the dangers of enjoying nature — the fear that too much adoration of landscapes or sunsets, sun, moon, or stars might tip the believer over into the camp of that old enemy, pantheism (everything is God). Only God is to be worshipped; everything else is his creation. But this fear has always missed a trick: the creative hand of God “in whom we live and have our being” (Acts 17.28) can be seen in all his works, and the beauty and in dependence of them sing his praises. Panentheism (all things in God) can save the believer from slipping into pantheism, leaving him or her to rejoice in the great outdoors. Usher would go further, and he claims that “This book seeks to explore . . . why landscapes may continue to be the arena for revela tion about God.” Beauty is not to be thought of as merely something in the eye of the beholder, but as “a sacred manifestation of God’s immanent power in nature”. The book focuses, chapter by chapter, on forest, river, mountain, desert, garden, sea, and sky, and is liberally illuminated with references to scripture, poets, and nature writers, such as G. M. Hopkins, T. S. Eliot, R. S. Thomas, H. D. Thoreau, and others. We are also invited to look through the eyes of landscape painters — Turner, Constable, and the American artists of the sublime. But divine revelation does not always come easily. God can be elusive, and theophany will not necessarily happen where you expect it: we are reminded of Elijah, who did not find God in the earth quake, storm, or fire, but in “the still small voice” (or was it a “crushing silence”?). We need to learn to be attentive. This book could provide a useful format for a series of housemeeting discussions, to which participants would bring their experiences, from reading or walking, of the natural world. Their Church’s liturgy will be enriched. The Revd Adam Ford is a former Chaplain of St Paul’s School for Girls. books THe DeAN AND CHApTeR oF WiNCHeSTeR CATHeDRAL (ASSiGNeD BY RoGeR RoSeWeLL) new titles just published The First Thousand Years: A global history of Christianity by Robert Louis Wilken (Yale, £25 (£22.50); 9780300 118841). Making All things Well: Finding spiritual strength with Julian of Norwich by isobel De Gruchy (Canterbury press, £9.99 (£9); 978184825 2400). Lost Church: Why we must find it again by Alan Billings (SpCK, £12.99 (£11.70); 9780 281070190). The Shape of Living by David F. Ford (SCM press, £9.99 (£9); 9781848252479). A New Kind of Christian by Brian D. McLaren (SpCK, £12.99 (£11.70); 9780281069903). Selected by Frank Nugent, of the Church House Bookshop, which operates the Church Times Bookshop. Lifelike: detail of a Benedictine monk on the tomb of Bishop William Wykeham in Winchester Cathedral, from Roger Rosewell’s beautifully illustrated short guide The Medieval Monastery (Shire publications, £6.99 (£6.30); 9780 747811466) The ThreeinOne John Binns welcomes a belated Englishing On the Trinity Richard of St Victor with introduction by Ruben Angelici, translator James Clarke £19.50 (9780227679975) Church Times Bookshop £17.55 the thinking and culture of a differ ent age. RICHARD was born in Scotland, and became a monk at the Abbey of St Victor on the banks of the Seine around 1125. He was later elected prior, and wrote on spirituality as well as doctrine. He is convinced that faith reveals truth, which can be entered into through rational thought, which leads into an ever deeper relationship with God through prayer. Here his subject is the central doctrine of the Church, the Holy Trinity. He divides his material into six books, each with 25 chapters. These explain the unity of God; the various characteristics or attributes of God; the love of God; the persons of the Trinity; the relationships between them; and why they are given the names Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Aware that the language and thought on this profound mystery may be sometimes hard to follow, Richard provides a synopsis of his argument at the start of each of the six books, and the translator adds a clear and helpful introduction. This opens up the book, which might otherwise be obscure. Unlike our own age, when writing on the Holy Trinity seeks to show how God can be engaged in a violent and divided world, Richard’s was a confident century with economic growth, new theo logical schools, and increased availability of philosophical and theological texts. His writing is assured as he sets out an ambitious and systematic statement of why we affirm the nature of God as Trinity. The work was much read in suc ceeding centuries, but has gradually become less prominent. Scholars of the period will be grateful for the first English translation of this important work, while those less familiar with it will find that it helps them to enter into The Revd Dr John Binns is the Vicar of Great St Mary’s, Cambridge, and an Honorary Canon of Ely Cathedral. good news in front of more than 200,000 Anglicans — ‘the people in the pews’ The Sign (incorporating Home Words Words) brings you sixteen A5 pages or eight A4equivalent every month. Where else could you get this amount of properly researched, wellwritten material to add to your parish magazine each time? ailable lways av PLES asers and M A S E ti er FRE ntial adv nt to use for pote who might wa magazines. s n e h w is o ir par ts in the the inse And at such little cost? The Sign costs less than 10p a copy. You would be hardpressed to photocopy as many pages from any other source for that money. For a free sample pack, contact us. With a small change in design, The Sign now incorporates Home Words. Together our single new inset continues to help parishes to improve the look and content of their own local magazines. The inset is available in trimmed and untrimmed form, with a colour cover or without, folded or unfolded. The options are all designed to make the job of parish newsletter editor that much easier. ADVERTISING To help keep costs low, the inset takes a limited amount of national advertising — which varies from advertisements by the larger Christian charities through to those from individuals. You can advertise a holiday letting or make a charity appeal — anything that is relevant to the church going public. Want to know more? Simply make contact: Stephen Dutton, The Sign, c/o Church Times, 3rd floor, invicta House 108114 Golden Lane, London eC1Y 0TG Tel: 020 7776 1011 Fax 020 7776 1017 email: stephen@churchtimes.co.uk CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 49 @P6 =P6S< >; P6N O?N;Q78!!! 9$1G$JD !%%K ?Q< +?R;8 =/J53 !%%@ F7WQV=V72KAWV7; INV7V8W );9?S 87?768K $S?=;R;Q7 &N<;N HPQ7?=7 $S?Q8KJQQ6?S );77;N IP3 =PQ7?=7 4V7W IVN7W $?N;Q7 $;7;N# HS?VN; ?Q< +?R;8 ?N; ? :6Q ?Q< ?=7V5; 8V>SVQ9 9NP6O! $;7;N V8 <;8=NV>;< ?8 W?5VQ9 RP682 >NP4Q W?VN# >S6; ;2;8 ?Q< :N;=TS;8! $;7;N V8 8W2 4V7W 87N?Q9;N8 >67 4W;Q =PR:PN7?>S;# W; V8 ? SP5VQ9 >P2! C; V8 5;N2 VQ7;SSV9;Q7 ?Q< N;*;=7V5;! $;7;N SVT;8 4?7=WVQ9 YB# VQ O?N7V=6S?N =NV=T;7! C; SVT;8 OS?2VQ9 VQ 7W; O?NT ?Q< >;VQ9 P67<PPN8! C; ?S8P ;QUP28 9PVQ9 7P 8=WPPS! HS?VN; W?8 RP682 >NP4Q W?VN# >S6; ;2;8 ?Q< W?8 ? R;<V6R >6VS<! HS?VN; V8 <;8=NV>;< ?8 >;VQ9 =W?772 ?Q< 5;N2 =PQ,<;Q7! [W; V8 W?OO2 ?Q< >6>>S2 ?Q< ?S4?28 8RVSVQ9! HS?VN; ;QUP28 4?7=WVQ9 YB# VQ O?N7V=6S?N $;OO? $V9! 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(LII$ +$JH01 , )$1NEL33 =N0/H501 (L$2 L2$53? HLII$&/$JH01>I$1NEL33*70F*G4 (L3? %AMK OK! AB%@ :$253D +3$PL2L1H (L$2 [?Q<4;SS (IH# HN287?S CP68; HN287?S GNV5;# [?Q<4;SS I68VQ;88 $?NT [R;7W4V=T# IMM Z"D In the shadow of the G.O.M. Michael Wheeler on the put-up parsonson of Gladstone The Prime Minister’s Son: Stephen Gladstone, Rector of Hawarden Ros Aitken university of Chester £14.99 (9781908258014) Church Times Bookshop £13.50 THE architect of St Deiniol’s (now Gladstone’s) Library, John Douglas, built a chapel on the north side of the chancel of Hawarden Church in 1906. This was to accommodate the extraordinary monument to W. E. Gladstone, the Grand Old Man of British politics, and his wife, Catherine. Three years in the making, Sir William Richmond’s sculpture of the couple lying in the Boat of Life is too large for its allotted space, forcing the visitor to squeeze awkwardly around it — a fit symbol for the parental cramping of a tender son, which is the central theme of this book. Even though Stephen Gladstone had resigned the living of Hawarden three years earlier, it seems extra ordinary that his siblings and brotherinlaw did not consult him about the scheme, after more than three decades of devoted service. But then Stephen’s diffidence provides the base of Ros Aitken’s narrative. Handicapped by poor eyesight and a sense of inadequacy as the second son, and later the heir to the great statesman and intellectual who presided at Hawarden Castle, Stephen nevertheless managed, by sheer hard work, to survive a ghastly prep school, followed by Eton and Christ Church, finally gaining his father’s respect when he was ordained and served as curate in a mixed parish in Lambeth. When the valuable living of Hawarden suddenly fell vacant (his clerical uncle, Henry, was struck by lightning), it was inevitable that the mantle would fall on Stephen, in experienced and nervous though he was when confronted with the prospect of a large and expanding parish at the age of only 28. His father showed laudable paternal interest in all that he did. Unfortunately, he also interfered, particularly during parliamentary recesses and when in opposition. Rattling around in the large rectory at Hawarden, close to the church and only a brisk walk from the castellated parental home, Stephen struggled to gain the approval of both parishioners and family. In the end, he largely succeeded, very much against the odds, and marriage brought happiness and a fulfilling family life, in which he himself was now paterfamilias. The Prime Minister’s Son is written in an informal style, and tells an engaging story with a special appeal to the hardpressed parish priest, or longsuffering clergy spouse. More valuable for its bio graphical insights and discoveries about life in a Victorian parish than for its forays into wider ecclesiastical history, the book is the work of a former teacher whose father at tended the training college that is now the University of Chester, in the 1930s. Today, Aitken revels in the glories of Gladstone’s Library, and often contributes to the annual seminar known as the Gladstone Umbrella. Professor Wheeler’s most recent book is St John and the Victorians (Cam bridge University Press, 2011). books Australian liberties Don Manley finds himself stigmatised a ‘classics master’ Puzzled: Secrets and clues from a life in words David Astle profile Books £14.99 (9781846685422) Church Times Bookshop £13.50 WHEN I first read Notes From A Small Island by Bill Bryson, I was tempted to think “Blooming cheek! We know our country better than he does, and here is he purporting to lecture us!” The same temptation came to me when I picked up this volume by an Australian, who is clearly big news in his own country as a crosswordsetter and TV personality on the equivalent of our Countdown. Anyone who writes a book about crosswords may wish to include three text elements: a survey of clue types, an overview of the crossword world, and some personal anecdotes. David Astle has organised his chapters according to one element (the main types of clue), and padded them out with the other two. His own history will be of more interest to his fans down under, I guess, but his musings on crossword culture are quite illuminating, and he reminds us of some of our favourite stories, such as the one centred around the code words for the DDay landings. Each clue type is explained using a host of examples, including many from his favourite Guardian setters. Readers can also test their expertise with sample crosswords and “quizlings”, backed up by solutions and explanations. There is one telling error, where the author claims that Colin Dexter was a keen entrant in The Listener’s cluewriting competitions. Had he been more aware of the tradition of Poet of Blitz and Home Front This study assists the debate on war poetry from 1939 to 1945, says Martyn Halsall The Unassuming Sky: The life and poetry of Timothy Corsellis Helen Goethals Cambridge Scholars publishing £39.99 (9781443839754) Church Times Bookshop £36 THIS first comprehensive study of a poet who died aged 20 in 1941 raises again the comparative status of “war poetry” emerging from the 20th century’s two global conflicts. From 191418 we remember essentially the trench poets. Almost 70 years after the end of the Second World War, its lower poetic profile demands discussion. Helen Goethals responds through her study of Timothy Corsellis, pilot and paradox. Although remembered as a war poet, he died a civilian, in an accident, when completing an aircraft delivery from Luton to Carlisle. His military war ended when he received an honourable discharge from the RAF for declining bomber training. His front line was domestic, though harrowing — serving as an airraid warden and rescue worker in London during the Blitz. His resulting poetry is equally “Home Front”, more concerned about his emotional reactions to the state of war than the reportage of personal experience. His life was overshadowed by war and aircraft. His father lost a forearm at Gallipoli, later becoming a suc cessful barrister and flying himself to court from country homes in Suffolk. He died in a flying accident in 1930, but family connections took Timothy to Winchester, where his first poems were published. The young writer read voraciously. Jung and Russell challenged his school’s “Christian ethos”; Eliot and Auden broadened his poetry. Foun dations for the philosophical and political tones in his later work were laid here. By the time he left Win chester to begin legal training, he was agnostic: “However I’ll never be an atheist; no one who thinks ever has.” His early poetry was intellectually and structurally ambitious, reflecting the chill in the “long afternoon” between the wars, through poverty and unemployment, rearmament, and the Nazis’ persecution of the Jews. He retained an interest in Christian idealism, expressed through federalism, in poems that appear prophetic. Dark prophecy also haunts his final poems, which are much preoccupied with death. The last, and 100th poem included here, is “Engine Failure”. Goethals necessarily records a life and work in progress, and her thorough investigation provides a witness statement in that debate about the comparative poetry of the world wars. Robert Graves, she argues, continues to “provide the general bedrock” for the superi ority of the trench poets. Ap parently ignoring Corsellis, his judgement was particularly sweeping. “It should be added”, he wrote in 1949, “that no war poetry can be expected from the Royal Air Force.” Dr Martyn Halsall is Poetin Residence at Carlisle Cathedral, and poetry editor of Third Way magazine. Ximenes and Azed, he would have known that those competitions are in The Observer. And here we come to a sticky matter. Strict(ish) grammarians (such as myself) who write clues following the tradition of Ximenes are adjudged to be “much like the classics master who demands a clinical translation of Virgil”, while others with a more “libertarian” approach are “splashing colour on the canvas to mirror the galaxy that Virgil wrote about”. I am afraid that this is poppycock, and I am sorry to say that among a number of the author’s good, sound clues (with “colour”) there are rather too many poor “libertarian” ones, including some that that are “monochrome” and make little real sense. Such a flaw makes this beguiling tome dangerous for any wouldbe Church Times setter. That is a great pity in a chatty book that otherwise offers much to enjoy. Don Manley contributes crosswords to several newspapers, and is the crossword editor of the Church Times. Ap Religious preoccupations: Bob Dylan performs during his Rolling Thunder tour, in 1976 A sermon he gave You won’t find Bob Dylan’s gospel here, says Stephen Tomkins The Gospel According to Bob Dylan: The old, old story for modern times Michael J. Gilmour Westminster John Knox £10.99 (9780664232078) Church Times Bookshop £9.90 BOB DYLAN was one of the most important artists of the 20th century, and the man who showed how rock ’n’ roll could be a serious artform. Religious issues have been one of his most lasting concerns, and, over his 50year career, he has approached them in all kinds of ways. As a folk singer in the early 1960s, he drew on biblical imagery and gospelmusic traditions to support the civilrights movement, while also criticising Christian attitudes to war. On “going electric”, his absurdist mindscapes were peopled with biblical characters from Cain and Abel to the Good Samaritan, along side the likes of Cinderella and Romeo. He notoriously took on the story of the sacrifice of Isaac; and “Tombstone Blues”, in which he sends Samson to Vietnam and makes John the Baptist an American torturer, is a nightmare vision of a world ruled by respectability, reli gion, and violence. After this, Dylan’s songs increas ingly explored spiritual themes of redemption, leading to his infamous Evangelical conversion in 1978. Now his songs brandished a vengeful Christ at a world that disgusted him; but they also included gentler religious themes, which increasingly included the cracks in the spiritual life. Since then, far from abandoning his faith, he has offered in his songs a rich, mature spiritual vision of a world woven from the threads of faith, love, and violence. Clearly, then, there is a great deal to be said about “the gospel ac cording to Bob Dylan”; but I am afraid my main impression after reading this book is that there is still a great deal to be said on the subject. One must, I suppose, beware of criticising a book on the basis that it is not the book one wanted to read; and this book, by an Associate Professor of New Testament and English Literature, is perhaps written within a discipline that means little to me. The subject, however, means a great deal to me, and I was con stantly frustrated by how little it was elucidated here. Gilmour offers a long justification for analysing Dylan as a religious writer. He draws parallels with the approaches of other artists, quotes sources, and lists possible biblical allusions in Dylan’s vocabulary. There is an interesting section on how the last album before his conversion anticipated what was coming, but, on the whole, the book feels like a leisurely stroll around the subject while making strangely little contact with it. The Gospel According to Bob Dylan re mains to be written. Stephen Tomkins is deputy editor of Third Way magazine. CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 51 arts I whistle a happy tune pHoToS CoLLeGiuM Roderic Dunnett meets the composer and choral maestro, John Rutter JOHN RUTTER is one of the most successful composers of sacred choral music this country has ever known. His name is almost synomous with the genre in its contemporary form. He is well known for singable settings of the Gloria and Magnificat, and for his Requiem, and Mass of the Children (which he conducted last month, in Carnegie Hall, New York). And, of course, he composed “This is the Day”, the anthem for the wed ding of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge. But he is best known for his Christmas carols, and carol arrange ments — 100 or more at the last count. These include: “Donkey Carol”, “Carol of the Magi”, “Mary’s Lullaby”, and “The Colours of Christmas”. “For the infectiousness of his melodic invention and consummate craftmanship, Rutter has few peers,” the London Evening Standard wrote recently. But, for all this, I found him modest, even shy. “In a sense, I’m a writer of song, or song music, even before I’m a composer,” Rutter says. “I love writing tunes — not all, but much of, the time. Atonality [music without a key, often dissonant] is something we all had a go at in the 1960s and ’70s. “You can’t bury your head in the sand: this is music that matters. Webern and his musical complexity were, in part at least, the product of the vexed social conditions of AustroGermany in the 1910s, ’20s, and ’30s, and it’s important to remember that. I take my hat off to the explorers who’ve stuck with it — composers who are discovering new worlds, and voyaging through realms of uncharted territory.” He says that he has kept in touch with “the cutting edge of music — Bartók, Berio, works like Stock hausen’s Gesang der Jünglinge, Berio, some of Penderecki”. And he caught the recent Pierre Boulez concert at the Royal Festival Hall. “Boulez’s music is lovely, delicate, exquisite — much more in touch with Debussy and Ravel than I’d realised,” he says. “But that’s just not what I’m good at. You have to be happy with the gifts you’ve been given — not chase after ones you haven’t been given. Exploring the darker realms of music is not me. I like to cheer people up.” ‘As boys, John Tavener and I were always asking questions — buttonholing percussionists or doublebassoonists’ THE other significant work that Rutter introduced his Carnegie Hall audience to was Ralph Vaughan Williams’s “Hodie” (from A Christ mas Cantata), composed in 195354. “It’s an extraordinary piece,” he says. “Vaughan Williams was 81 when he wrote it, and by that time he felt free just to write whatever he wanted to write. The music is often beautiful, touching, evocative; but his ‘March of the Three Kings’ is quite dotty and odd: bold, wacky, and wonderful.” Rutter’s enthusiasm is infectious. It is visible at the countless choral singing events he runs, on both sides of the Atlantic, in which he conducts. He is an educator par excellence; and 52 CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 a vitaliser and galvaniser of others. “It was about 20 years ago that I started doing ‘Come and Sing’ days. The idea is that absolutely anyone is welcome. There’s no kind of audi tion, or selection process. We simply do a day’s singing together, and strive to perform better by the end of the day than we did at the start. I find that work really satisfying. It com plements the sessions I have with professionals.” His inspiration for this was Sir David Willcocks, then Director of Music at King’s College, Cambridge. “At the same time as he was insisting on perfection from his boys and men of King’s College, Cambridge, choir, achieving standards virtually no one Tuning in: left: John Rutter thrives on leading “Come and Sing Days” for choral enthusiasts; below: at home, with one of his four cats else could touch, David would do a singing session for amateurs in, say, Nether Wallop. Groups or choirs would approach and ask him, and, if he had a free day in his diary, he would invariably say yes.” Rutter was assisting Willcocks at the time, collaborating on the early stages of their series Carols for Choirs. “I was always slightly surprised, and fascinated, to see this side of him,” he says. “He simply didn’t mind if he was working with limited or amateur resources. David was, and still is, wonderfully open to all kinds of music. On occasions, we would round off concerts with ‘Walking in the Air’, from Howard Blake’s The Snowman. Brilliant! “David was my mentor, and I’ve tried, so far as I can, to follow in his footsteps, although nobody can hold a candle to him. I absolutely don’t mind, at a “Come and Sing” day, or perhaps a charity event, if it’s not noteperfect or perfectly tuned, or even not a good performance at the end of the day, so long as the participants go away feeling that they have done a bit better than they previously believed they could.” RUTTER and his wife, JoAnne, live just outside Cambridge, in a village he describes as “the Bournemouth of the Fens”. But his enthusiasm for these events means that, often, “I find myself jumping in the car on Saturdays, and heading to Scar borough, or Shrewsbury, or the Temple Church in London, or some of the lovely churches of North amptonshire. I do a dozen ‘Come and Sing’ days each year; so over two decades that amounts to quite a lot.” Rutter thrives on the human ex change that these sessions engender. “On occasion, somebody will come up afterwards and say: ‘That was the best experience I’ve had for ages.’ So the return is that they make me feel a whole heap better, too. They go back to their little church choir hopefully recharged, and I go home to Cam bridge, recharged as well.” A significant breakthrough, he says, “was getting my publishers on board. They initially needed some convincing. But I told them this was a service to the community, and making what they publish more or less freely available for events such as these would bring benefits in the long run. OUP’s support and cooperation — their foresightedness — has con tributed hugely to the success of these gatherings.” RUTTER caught the music bug, thanks to the inspiration of others, initially at Highgate Junior School: “We were directed by Martindale Sidwell, a wonderful man and excel lent musician who was organist of Hampstead Parish Church. He was peppery and difficult, but basically a warmhearted man, who taught us an immense amount. “Our Director of Music at High gate [Senior] School was Edward Chapman, who had been taught by Charles Wood and examined by Stanford. He was a conservative composer, but a very fine craftsman, and was incredibly encouraging and supportive. “Under him, we sang a slightly scaleddown version of cathedral repertoire in Highgate’s Victorian redbrick school chapel. That meant Sunday services as well, because pupils were mostly boarders then [though he was not]. . . “We sang Tallis and Byrd, plain song, Wesley, Stanford, and so on — in fact, a wide range of music. Minor publicschool chapels weren’t, by and large, doing that kind of stuff in those days. I was introduced to a wide repertoire, firsthand, in my teens, and I’ve always been grateful for that. “Being a day boy living in London also meant that I could haunt the cheaper seats at Covent Garden and the Royal Festival Hall. John Tavener [Rutter’s friend from Highgate] and I were always asking questions — buttonholing the percussionist or doublebassoonist and demanding to know how everything works.” From the beginning, he was cap tured by melody. “I’ve always en joyed music with a tune you could whistle. In the ’60s, the Beatles and the Rolling Stones meant a great deal to me, and they both had that gift.” Who has it now? “Today, I think of wonderfully versatile composers like Richard Rodney Bennett — a throughandthrough classical musi cian who can produce a fullblooded percussion concerto, but then turn his hand to compose gloriously tune ful, memorable film music, knock off a song for Cleo Laine, accompany with aplomb a complete evening of cabaret, and then pen a series of enchanting choral gems for groups like the King’s Singers.” He is often asked where he gets his ideas from. “The honest answer is: I don’t know. Where the music comes from is a mystery. I’m sure many other composers would say the same. The truth is, you have to hack away determinedly, a bit like a sculptor chiselling his stone. Hopefully, it comes in the end. “Julian Lloyd Webber has been asking me for about 12 years for a cello concerto — and he’s still wait ing.” This is the Day by John Rutter’s ensemble, the Cambridge Singers, is available on his own Collegium label: www.collegium.co.uk. arts Illuminating Christmas with the friars © THe FiTZWiLLiAM MuSeuM, CAMBRiDGe Pamela Tudor-Craig, with Nicholas Rogers, reflects on the context of an image of the Holy Family TWICE in my life, I have seen the herding of sheep. The first time was on the hills around the Sea of Galilee in 1982. The little flock that tumbled down a track was scraggy and assorted, goats as well as sheep. The shepherd stopped them while he tried to persuade us to taste their milk. The second time, a small flock was hurrying through an orchard on the slope between Assisi and San Damiano, bunched and hassled along by a bossy sheepdog. On both occasions, it seemed that we had taken a tuck in the web of sequence, that it could have been AD 30 or 1210. That telescoping of the years between the life of Christ on this earth and their present time was a constant aspect of the preaching of the Friars as they brought alive the Gospels, not in monastic enclosures but in the univer sities, the marketplace, and the home. For the first time, in the 1220s, the stories were recounted all over Europe and into the Near East in the vernacular, for everyone, not just the privileged, to savour and understand. The Dominicans have always been associated with preaching among the learned, and the Franciscans among the simple. St Francis had excluded books in his prescrip tion of holy poverty. But the distinction is too abrupt. It was St Anthony of Padua who immediately persuaded Francis to relax that stipulation; so there was always a strong Franciscan presence, as well as Dominican, in the universities and in the great houses. St Anthony of Padua, nevertheless, found that the Infant Christ distracted him from his studies by sitting on his book, and so he is always represented. Admittedly, Albertus Magnus, a giant among medieval botanists, was a Dominican, but his precursor, Bartholomew the Englishman, whose De Proprietatis Rerum, was finished only a few years after Francis’s death, was a Franciscan. Botany ought to have been a specifically Franciscan discipline. The impact of Franciscan preaching on largely illiterate country people in the High Middle Ages is manifest wherever you find traces on the walls of village churches of medieval paintings. Admittedly, the chancel arch lays out the Doom where none can avoid it. Otherwise, setting aside the narratives of popular saints depicted in favourite corners, the staple subjects are the infancy and Passion of Christ. Up and down the country, from West Chiltington in Sussex through Ashampstead in Berkshire to Corby Glen in Lincolnshire, an angel greets the shepherds, and does so expansively. At West Chiltington, such is their import ance that each of the three shepherds has his own angel. To appreciate the immediacy with which this homely scene has been endowed, we have to go forward another halfcentury or so to the Mystery plays where they find voice, at its loudest in the Wakefield cycle. At Corby Glen Church, the more decorous Magi wind their way along the nave north wall to the crib, while the shepherds opposite bring their sheep and a dog with them, all as large as life, as they stride the length of the nave to Herod — who would not have been pleased to see them. (A muddle there, rare in medieval iconography.) The village of Corby Glen is next to Irnham, where they still celebrate the Luttrell family and their patronage of the famous Luttrell Psalter. The Dominicans often found themselves as confessors in large households, and a Dominican friar, a family relative, shares the Luttrell feast in the margin of the psalm referring to feasting in that manuscript. Part of the Dominican mission was to instil education into families. The menfolk were usually too occupied with killing things, but the ladies and their children were at leisure to be beguiled into learning. Helpful spouse: the Blessed Virgin Mary reads in bed, as St Joseph nurses the Christchild in Horae, French, Fitzwilliam MS 69 folio 48r, The Nativity The wonderful scenes of country life that make the Luttrell Psalter so popular today are accompanied by the most outrageous gro tesques ever associated with a book of prayer, (rivalled only by that superficially demure little manuscript the Macclesfield Psalter, discovered in time for the great “Cambridge Illuminations” exhibition of 2005). The only possible excuse for some of these margins is their potential appeal to the adoles cent boys whom the Friars were anxious to persuade to study. The Friars had been associ ated with lavishly illustrated manuscripts to tempt a secular, often regal, audience since the glorious illustrated Apocalypses of the mid 13th century onwards, the Alphonso Psalter of 1284, and the Holkham Bible Picture Book of c.1300. In the second half of the 14th century, a group of artists, one of them John de Teye, an Augustinian Friar (so, like the Franciscans and Dominicans, free to live outside the cloister), illuminated very lively manuscripts for the de Bohun family, working from the de Bohun castle at Pleshey in Essex. If the Franciscans were behind the rustic procession to the crib in the nave of Corby Glen, the Dominican touch may be recognised in the north aisle, where among popular devo tional images the special subject of St Anne teaching the Virgin to read was rediscovered a few decades ago. This picture was especially dear to the Dominicans, for obvious reasons. Most late medieval pictures of the annunciation show the Virgin interrupted as she reads her Office. If she and her cousin Elizabeth could not read, how did they know the Song of Hannah? So the part played by Mary’s mother, St Anne, is marked: she must have taught Mary to read. The source of this expansion of the Gospel accounts was The Golden Legend, the great work of Jacobus de Voragine, the Dominican Archbishop of Genoa who died in 1292. That The Golden Legend, and especially St Anne as the rolemodel for all families educating their children, was immediately dear to the Dominicans in this country is witnessed by the survival of 15 paintings of Anne teaching the child Mary to read in English churches. Croughton in Northamptonshire, c.1310, is probably the earliest to survive, though Corby Glen is not much later. It is again one of the subjects on the frontal in the Cluny Museum in Paris, belonging to the same Dominican altarpiece as the Thornham Parva Retable, both of them having been painted in c.1330 for a Dominican friary in East Anglia. SO WE are equipped for the shock of this year’s miniature of the nativity in Fitzwilliam MS 69. Nicholas Rogers, an authority on this genre of illuminated manuscript, kindly visited the Fitzwilliam, and contributes his analysis of the manuscript and its implications: “Once one has got over the initial shock of the 18thcentury French harlequin binding, a jazzy composition of coloured lozenges that look more 1930s than 1730s, MS 69 in the Fitzwilliam Museum seems to be an ordinary French Book of Hours of the mid15th century, illuminated by a provincial artist who, to be honest, is not very good, although aspects of his style suggest an acquaintance with the work of the Rohan Master, the most individual French illuminator of the early 15th century. “The contents are unexceptional: a calendar in French, the beginning of St John’s Gospel, the Hours of the Virgin, penitential psalms, litany, Hours of the Cross, Hours of the Holy Spirit, and eucharistic and Marian devotions. The illustrations are conventional in appear ance, but the depiction of the nativity presents a novel reworking of a familiar theme. All the usual elements are there — Mary, Jesus, Joseph, ox and ass — but it is Joseph, seated humbly on the ground, who nurses the Christ Child, while the Virgin, in a golden kirtle and white headdress, sits up in bed reading. Mary and Joseph are linked compositionally by the ox and ass, which are penned in by a wattle fence. The ass appears to be nibbling at St Joseph’s halo. “Joseph first appears in nativity scenes in the fifth century. He is depicted as a seated, contemplative figure. Sometimes he seems to be asleep, reminding us of the important role of dreams in guiding Joseph. This mode of representation remained standard in the East. In the West it was not until the 13th century that Joseph is seen taking a more active role in the nativity. In a fragment of the destroyed 13thcentury roodscreen at Chartres Cathedral, Mary, resting in bed, touches the swaddled Child in the manger as a solicitous Joseph offers a cloth. “In 14th and 15thcentury Netherlandish and German art, Joseph is engaged in a variety of tasks. He can be found warming swaddling clothes, cooking food, or blowing a fire into life. In the mid14thcentury Bohemian Hohenfurth altar, he helps prepare the Child’s bath. A particularly charming example is the Netherlandish nativity of c.1400 in the Museum Mayer van den Berg, Antwerp, part of a portable altarpiece, which shows him cutting up his hose to make swaddling bands for the Child. “In another depiction of this motif, Joseph addresses the Virgin: ‘Mary, take my hose and wind your dear babe in them.’ Such familiar images of Joseph may derive from his depic tion in Mystery plays. It is rare for Joseph to be shown holding the Christchild. He does so in the PetriAltar by Master Bertram, of c.1379, now in the Hamburg Kunsthalle, but there he is clearly handing the Child over to his Mother. In Fitzwilliam 69, the emphasis is more clearly on his role as fosterfather. “This function is most commonly depicted in late medieval German art. A woodcut of the 1470s shows Joseph leading the Christchild by the hand, perhaps on the return from Egypt. In an altarpiece by a follower of the Lower Rhenish artist Hendrick Bogaert, Jesus assists Joseph in the carpenter’s shop. Out of elements of the iconography of the nativity and the flight into Egypt, devotional images of the Holy Family were created in the Low Countries and Germany in the 15th century. An early woodcut of the Holy Family in the Albertina shows the enthroned, crowned Virgin nursing the Child while St Joseph cooks a meal. “In Joos van Cleve’s Holy Family in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Joseph is depicted as an old man, with missing teeth and a stubby beard, holding a pair of spectacles. This is an extreme example of the standard medieval portrayal of him as a patriarchal, greybearded figure. The theo logian Jean Gerson, the chief promoter of the cult of St Joseph in 15thcentury France, objected to the depiction of the saint as a decayed old man, arguing that the Virgin would have required the support of someone in full vigour, especially during the Flight into Egypt. However, the representation of Joseph as a greybeard remained standard until the 17th century. “The Blessed Virgin Mary is most commonly associated with a book in the context of the annunciation, reading the word at the moment when the Word became incarnate. Sometimes, the book is inscribed with the words of her response to the angelic greeting. The book she reads in the Fitz william nativity is meant to remind us of that event, just as the book which St Anne uses to teach the Virgin foreshadows the annuncia tion. The Virgin’s book also provides a point of contact with the user of the Book of Hours, who is thereby encouraged to cultivate a spiritual union with Mary in her devotional Continued overleaf CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 53 arts Artist taken to Rome’s bosom Nicholas Cranfield reviews a southerly Vermeer exhibition THE reputation of the Delftborn artist Johannes Vermeer (163275) is now such that the inclusion of his name in the title of any exhibition is clearly intended to draw the crowds. From relative obscurity in the 19th century, his stock has gradually risen, partly because of the paucity of his known works. With no more than 34 surviving paintings securely identified as his, the catalogue of this show in Rome makes a virtue of reproducing all of them as a selling exercise. It is perhaps, therefore, less sur prising that the show currently on the Quirinal Hill can claim to be the first to showcase the artist in Italy. The exhibition is left in the capable hands of Arthur Wheelock and Walter Liedtke, who are both known as the leading scholars in the field within the United States. Of the 57 paintings on show, only seven are by the elusive Vermeer, two of which are among the three paintings disputed in his oeuvre. A Young Woman Seated at the Virginals has only recently begun to find acceptance as an autograph BARBARA piASeCKA JoHNSoN CoLLeCTioN FouNDATioN work. It had been posthumously repainted, but tests carried out in 2011 show that it was painted on a similar panel to that of the Louvre’s famed Lacemaker (1669/70). The other is a signed copy of a Floren tine devotional work. The eighthcentury basilica of Santa Prassede in Rome tradition ally marks the burial spot of the daughters of St Paul’s first convert there, a senator named Pudens. The church, enlarged by the great re former and pioneering pontiff Pas chal I, houses the relics of other early saints and part of the column to which Jesus was tied when he was whipped in the Praetorium. According to tradition, St Praxedes sought to offer Christian refugees a safe home during the persecutions of the emperor Marcus Antoninus. Her piety extended to gathering their mortal remains, and, in a Baroque painting by the Tuscan Felice Ficherelli (16051669?), she is depicted in the act of squeezing out a sponge containing their blood into an urn (private collection). Ficherelli, who was born in San Gimignano, was of a somewhat re tiring disposition (his nickname is “Il Riposo”), but his paintings have a sexual charge that palpably sug gests the inescapable interplay be tween sexuality and religion, and between eroticism and chastity. Londoners who know only his Illuminating Continued from previous page reading, linking her prayers with those of the Virgin at the nativity. “What do we know about the person for whom this image of the nativity was created? There is no coat of arms or inscription to enable the first owner of Fitzwilliam 69 to be identified, but there are several clues. De Gaulle once complained about the difficulty of governing a country that has 246 different kinds of cheese. Many popes must have felt the same when faced with the Gallican Church, with its multiplicity of local liturgical Uses. “Fitzwilliam 69 is of the Use of Besançon in the FrancheComté, between Burgundy and Switzerland. The calendar and litany are peppered with obscure local saints: Ferreolus, Ferrutio, Antidius, Nicetius, Prothadius. The book was made for a lady who is depicted kneeling in prayer before the Virgin and Child The Rape of Lucretia (Wallace Col lection), will recognise this feeling all too well. On first visiting Savoie, I was amazed that the gallery in Chambéry displays his St Sebastian without even a word of warning. The Ficherelli canvas of St Praxedes is here simply because Vermeer, in one of his first known works, seemingly imitated it slav at the beginning of a French translation of the prayer ‘Deprecor te domina’. Her rosemadder gown with white turneddown collar and green heartshaped horned headdress would have been fashionable in the 1440s. It is pos sible that the book was a wedding present. It was customary in France well into the 20th century for a bride to be given a Book of Hours, or, later, a paroissien (a layfolk’s missal with added devotions) on her wedding day. Some 30 years later, either this owner or a subsequent one had further Gospel readings added at the end of the book. Thereafter, there is no sign of usage until the book passed into the collection of Richard, 7th Viscount Fitz William.” THERE was a Dominican presence in Besan çon. (Where was there not?) A son of the city, Stephen of Besançon, served briefly as Master of the Order in 129294. I am tempted to add just one more example to Nicholas Rogers’s list of helpful St Josephs. In the years 135063, the newly built private chapel for Edward III and his Queen, Philippa, Three into ONE ishly; it has the same dimensions, and the composition is identical, as if it has been traced over. Vermeer’s copy, which has been in the Barbara Piasecka Johnson Collection since 1987, seems to be a pale repro duction. It may be that Vermeer, the newly converted papist, painted it only to satisfy his motherinlaw, in Westminster Palace was painted with the royal family coming in state to worship the Holy Family, and with scenes of the Old and New Testament. Only pathetic fragments of the paintings survived the disastrous fire of 1834, and are now in the British Museum. A few copies were made, however, when the paintings were rediscovered behind panelling in the first years of the 19th century. Among these was a poor rendering of the annuncia tion to the shepherds by J. T. Smith of 1804. We must thank him, despite his inept brush; for without him we would not have any account of this bucolic scene — four shep herds again, a sufficiency of sheep with a dog — and then, above them all, the Virgin in bed with a plainer red rug over her, ox and ass in support, and Joseph helping to wind up the baby in his swaddling cloth — a rolemodel for the private devotions of one of our most powerful kings and his family. The repres entation in the Besançon hours of a century later is luxurious in comparison. To return to it: in the unprecedented emergency in which they have found them inspired by Ficherelli: St Praxedes, 1655, by Johannes Vermeer (1632 1675), on loan from the Barbara piasecka Johnson Collection Foundation the redoubtable Maria Thins, after his marriage to Catherina Bolnes (1653). Calvinist Holland tolerated Catholicism only if it was practised privately, and Mrs Thins harboured Jesuits; the Society of Jesus had a strong attachment to celebrating persecution, which may explain the particular choice of an otherwise seemingly obscure subject. Whatever Vermeer’s own credal persuasion (like threequarters of the population, he had been Protest ant until he married), religion rarely informed his work, although he did name his sons Francis and Ignatius. He is not known to have painted any altarpieces, and another early work, Christ in the House of Mary and Martha, in the National Gallery in Edinburgh and not in this show, is equally problematic. The Metropolitan in New York has loaned its painting Woman Playing the Lute. Given how often musical instruments, with the con notations of love duets, feature in Vermeer’s genre scenes, it is inter esting to note that none was recorded in the inventory taken at the time of his death. Wheelock’s own institution has sent the delight ful Girl with a Red Hat (National Gallery of Art, Washington DC), a small work (22×18 cm) whose attribution has sometimes been questioned, although it is ubiquit ous across the Eternal City on posters. Three of Vermeer’s paintings Continued opposite selves in this account of the scene in the stable at Bethlehem, the ox and ass have come to a mutual arrangement. They have split forces: the ox keeps Mary warm, while the ass, bending over Joseph, directs his breath, the reassuring warm breath of stable and straw, on to the Infant Christ (and, if he is tempted to nibble Joseph’s halo at the same time, we are not criticising). In this version, the helpful way in which Joseph is sharing the care of the Holy Infant means that the exhausted mother has a small space in her life to do something else. Let us hope that the joyful bride who first received this book found such a space. In the myriad images of the nativity which have come our way, neither Nicholas Rogers nor I have seen elsewhere this endearing iconographic touch. Dr TudorCraig is an arthistorian. Nicholas Rogers is the archivist of Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge. The authors acknowledge the help of Dr Nicholas Robinson of the Manuscript Department of the Fitzwilliam Museum. for ADVERTISERS . . . We are now booking advertising space in these renowned publications.You can choose to appear in just one, two, or all three.There is a special offer for space booked in all three. The Church Book & Desk Diary 2014 needs no introduction. It is the most respected and well-loved of all the diaries. A page-a-day format with two pages for Sundays; daily offices, key contacts, and a host of other features. Regular advertisers will know all about it. The Personal Organiser 2014 is the younger sister to the Desk Diary. Now in its fourth year, it has established a new market all of its own. Most advertisers wish to be in both publications. The Canterbury Preacher’s Companion 2014 (formerly Church Pulpit Year Book) contains sermons for Sundays, Holy Days, Festivals and Special Occasions, and now has ideas for family-friendly services, too. Regular advertisers will need no further incentive. All three books are hugely popular with both parish priests and Readers.The Desk Diary also reaches a wider audience. Together they make a powerful advertising platform. Pages in everything are just £396+ VAT; half pages just £252 + VAT For more information contact us: Stephen Dutton or Sue Keighley Church Times, 3rd Floor, Invicta House, 108-114 Golden Lane, London EC1Y 0TG Tel. 020 7776 1011 email: stephen@churchtimes.co.uk 54 CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 arts NATioNAL GALLeRY oF ART, WASHiNGToN, DC “Delightful”: Girl with a Red Hat, 166567, by Johannes Vermeer, on loan from the National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC (Andrew W. Mellon Collection) Artist Continued from previous page depict a woman with a wineglass with the subtext of a lover’s encounter. That on show here is the one from Braunschweig (the others are in Berlin and New York). The curiosity here is that, although there are two cavaliers in the scene, one of whom is paying court to the seated girl, she alone can drink. The table is stocked with a porcelain wine flagon and white napery, while a peeled lemon lies on a silver salver; but there are no other stem glasses for the gentlemen. A formal portrait on the wall (the only decoration in the room) is hardly glimpsed. Is it, perhaps, her absent husband, or a disapproving father? The other cavalier is melancholy, seated as if he is bored by waiting for his friend to finish the business. The likely subtext of the picture is lightly airbrushed for an Italian audience, where it is explained that Petrarcan love, pure and unattain able, is transformed from a quasi neoplatonic ideal into a reality that could be represented. In the stained glass panel of the open window stands the figure of Temperance, but the woman turns aside to look at us, as if to ignore her own safety. A much less temperate society of allday drinking emerges in the Zurich painting Two soldiers and a chambermaid, c.1655 (Pieter de Hooch), and in Two Peasants Smok ing and Drinking, painted in the 1640s by the Haarlemborn painter Adriaen van Ostade, who had studied with Frans Hals (Mont pellier). Life was hard in Holland, and the grit was real. The Dis obedient Drummer (Madrid) by Rembrandt’s pupil Nicolaes Maes (163494), and Hendrick van der Burch’s Woman with a Child Blow ing Bubbles in the Garden (Zurich) suggest simpler passions and pleas ures. The last painting in this ex quisitely staged exhibition is, how ever, The Allegory of the Catholic Faith, from New York. A female form, personifying the Roman Catholic Church, in accordance with the Iconologia published by Cesare Ripa in 1603, stands in front of a painting of the crucifixion by Jacques Jordaens, next to a Flemish tapestry of the later 1500s. Ripa wrote of faith’s having the whole world at its feet, and this gives the clue to Vermeer’s including a Dutch globe dating to 1618 in a com position that also includes a Roman Missal, a chalice, and a crown of thorns, as well as an all too obvious serpent. Vermeer may not dominate the exhibition, although it is impossible to ignore the bravado and sheer beauty of his 1658 Little Street, which is the first work to be shown (Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam), and which suggests a plausible link to the writing of Alberti on per spective. From the Golden Age emerges a veritable treasury of works, many from private collections. Anthonie de Lorme was born in Tournai, and established himself as a Dutch painter, predominantly of church interiors in Rotterdam, where he died in 1673, aged 63. The Chapel in the Laurenskirk with the Tomb of Admiral Witte de Witt (1667) is a painting of great social significance. St Laurence’s Church (14491525) was the first allstone building in Rotterdam. It had been gutted in 1572 by the Calvinists. De Lorme’s view shows the south transept and the public monument designed by the sculptor Pieter van Rijck for Admiral de Witt (15991658), who had been killed fighting the Swedes at the siege of Copenhagen. At the time, the Swedes under Charles X Gustav seized his body and displayed it at Elsinore Castle as a trophy of war, but it was later returned to Holland and buried on 7 October 1659 in the Rotterdam pantheon. De Lorme depicts a Hol lander couple showing the monu mental tomb to two Ottomans, while a mendicant looks on, per plexed and bemused. The dog that urinates against the column in the foreground is a harsh reminder of the ritual laws of purity; the Catholic church would have been defiled by the presence of the Turkish traders in the past, but the Calvinist church knew no such barriers. It is somehow telling that it was de Lorme’s paintings of this church’s interiors which allowed it to be rebuilt accurately (195268) in the aftermath of the Rotterdam Blitz of 14 May 1940, when it became a national monument as, roofless, it had defied the worst of the Luft waffe’s aerial bombardments. In the city of so many Baroque churches, it is faintly unnerving to contemplate the progress of the Reformation and the power of Calvinism. “Vermeer: The Golden Age of Dutch Painting” is in the Scuderie del Quirinale, Via XXIV Maggio 16, Rome, Italy, until 20 January 2013. Open daily from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesdays to Sundays (and additionally 24 and 31 December to 3 p.m.), and late opening Friday and Saturdays to 10.30 p.m. Phone 00 39 06 39967500. http://english.scuderiequirinale.it Winchester royal tribute Roderic Dunnett hears a new composition for ‘the sweetest Queen’ LOYAL to the Saxon crown two centuries before King Alfred, and in thrall to Celts and Romans from 150 BC, Winchester and its cath edral bade farewell to Queen’s Elizabeth II’s Diamond Jubilee with a gargantuan choral jamboree, gathering in young and old. By way of a preface, the opening stages in cluded a series of engaging items, including the portentous, Copland inspired (marginally tonguein cheek) brass Fanfare for an Un common Woman by an American composer, Joan Tower (b. 1938), and a very simple, lucid Beatitudes, set by Peter Amidon and warmly sung by Winchester Community Choir. This followed a striking 1960s setting, Psalm 150, by Diana Owen, cheered by almost Monte verdian trumpets, and some vibrant vocal runs that drew notably good singing from the girls. This at tractive work is worth the attention of today’s cathedral and abbey choirs. Next, a beautifully shaded, flow ing performance of the Concert THE genre of pop cantatas on a religious subject began with Herbert Chappell’s The Daniel Jazz (1963), which launched a series of Old Testament followons: the Goliath Jazz, Holy Moses, the Creation Jazz; and the most famous, Joseph and his Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat by Andrew Lloyd Webber, writes Roderic Dunnett. Some of the catchiest, sacred and secular alike, were composed by the late Michael Hurd (19282006), who excelled at composing clever, manageable, but challenging scores for energetic children’s choirs. JonahMan Jazz and Swingin’ Samson have recently been revived on disc (Naxos) by the New London Children’s Choir, directed by Ronald Corp. AdaminEden and King and Conscience (about St Thomas Becket), witty and serious alike, are other prime examples. One of the UK’s most accomplished youthopera groups, Jubilee Opera, based in Benjamin Britten’s home town of Aldeburgh, has just staged HipHip Horatio (1975), Hurd’s spoof on the life of Étude Automne by Cécile Cham inade (18571944), a superior salon piece in which Diana Owen, now at the keyboard, displayed an accom plishment akin to Rachmaninov: it was the first half’s certain highlight. But the event of almost Han overian splendour was the second half première of Jubilee Wisdom, a new choral work by June Boyce Tillman, celebrating the Queen, and dedicated to the Lord Lieutenant of Hampshire and Chancellor of Win chester University, Dame Mary Fagan. From its haunting opening with solo trumpet and horn (I recall Howard Blake’s use of viola in similar circumstances; a yearning viola would likewise emerge here, midway), this proved a work of joyous, vigorous impact: energetic, forceful, and varied. It falls harmonically into a genre spanning, say, John Ireland and Vaughan Williams, but reaching beyond these. The solo work — a soprano early on, prominent flute, refined offerings from the Southern Sinfonia’s leader, many brilliantly judged, sly, subliminal, and subtle touches, utilising numerous pieces of percussion — as well as the orchestra’s ensemble playing — lifted the work on to a high level. Of course, the choir mattered most. The text, often a drawback in such events, seemed buoyant and alive, not too cloying. The children are required to sing almost micro tonally to produce a soughing, grieving effect (“Hold the green”; latterly “Walk the way”). The text, indeed, engages with a “green” theme, being a chant deeprooted in the medieval, but with ozone getting a peepin. The ensuing adult procession was haunting, and the sonorities picked up by the cathedral really worked: shades of Vaughan Williams’s Tallis Fantasia, or Old Hundredth. Percussive bursts — side drum, gongs, shakers — en livened the young children’s column, striding the endless way from West End to the crossing. The folk violin that followed in the section infused by morris dance was inspired. Cecil Sharp would have been pleased. The gleeful finale, orchestrated with outrageous bombast, was a musical treat, but the more so for what built up to it: a setting of the Dickie Valentine song In a Golden Coach which gave this cheerful event its title (“In a golden coach, there’s a heart of gold Driving through old London town . . .”). Originally recorded by Billy Cotton and his orchestra, it came third in the hit parade in Coronation year, 1953. BoyceTillman’s resplendent adaptation, bells and all, swept over us like a Dam Busters’ flypast. Cantata into opera Admiral Lord Nelson, written for the Southend Boys’ Choir, who also recorded it and several of the works above (now reissued on Vista). What is not fully realised is how brilliantly these cheerfully irreverent works translate to the stage, given (as here) a suitably precocious cast, and captivating design and costumes. An intelligent orchestration for small forces, though not strictly necessary, is preferable. Here, one was supplied by Jubilee’s conductor, Timothy Henty, who with five players elicited subtle combinations worthy of a full orchestra. In the Jubilee Hall, Aldeburgh, where Britten operas were first staged, the cast responded accordingly. The singing, from boys and girls, mostly drawn from three local primary schools, was exemplary. So was the acting: from MMA, NeW YoRK © ART ReSouRCe/SCALA, FiReNZe The world at the feet of the faith: Johannes Vermeer’s The Allegory of the Catholic Faith, c.167072, on loan from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (The Friedsam Collection, legacy of Michael Friedsam, 1931). See review, left the ubiquitous Rector of St Martin intheFields (13yearold William Rose, an engaging mimic), and the slightly less frenetic Vicar (Fleet wood Daniels) of St Mary’s, Burnham Thorpe, in Norfolk, Nelson’s birthplace, to colourful cameos from Theo Bimson, who doubled “Kiss me, Hardy” with a colourful calypso band leader, and an empathetic Egyptian camel (Nathan Hayward). Nelson (Toby Garrington), in Frederic WakeWalker’s inventive and endlessly detailed production, was a diminutive, semireluctant hero, hoisted from comfortable beginnings to an improbably lofty position on Europe’s waters, before laudably expiring, onearmed, one eyed, and seemingly onewitted, amid grieving burial mourners. The vital quality of this gifted ensemble stemmed partly from the ability — given their head — of these children, mostly not yet teenagers, to devise characterful ideas for themselves. WakeWalker, directing (and better known from the Opera Company, Mahogany Opera, and Glyndebourne), inspired in them a power of invention and stage discipline way beyond their years: not a gesture was wasted, fluffed, or muddied. The final word, inevitably, goes to the indomitable cleric from St Martin’s (hence guardian of Nelson’s Column); but also to his elder brother, playing the landlord of the Trafalgar Tavern (Jamie Rose: a singer of some talent and pathos, and an engaging compère). The company’s repertoire is not all comedy. They recently excelled in Hans Krása’s Brundibár, an opera conceived and performed in Terezín, the Nazi concentration camp. With a range such as this, it is hardly surprising that Jubilee leads the field in staging children’s opera. CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 55 review of 2012 obituaries pA pA upp books Continued from page 46 Continued from page 46 scholar; the Revd Robin Denniston, former publisher at OUP, and former chairman of Mowbray’s. The Revd Iris Thomas, the first woman to be made deacon in the Church in Wales; Canon John Spence, former Bush Brother, and Bishop’s Chaplain at Truro; Canon Michael Baker, Chaplain to North amptonshire County Cricket Club; the Revd Graham Hullett, motor cyclist; Canon Paul Carter, for 60 years a priest in Yorkshire; the Revd John Chapman, Australian evangel ist; the Revd Alistair McGlashan, missionary in Tamil Nadu and psychoanalyst; the Revd Dr Peter Staples, lecturer in church history at Utrecht; the Very Revd Michael Till, former Dean of King’s College, Cambridge, Archdeacon of Canter bury, and Dean of Winchester; the Very Revd Richard Eyre, former Dean of Exeter. Tallis in his In Defence of Wonder. Novels reviewed included Bring up the Bodies by Hilary Mantel; The Casual Vacancy by J. K. Rowling; and The Potter’s Hand by A. N. Wilson. The bestselling memoir of the year was Leaving Alexandria by Richard Holloway. There were bio graphies, diaries, and collections of letters of John Keats, Mary Living stone, Mary Robinson, Penna Davies, Edna O’Brien, John Stott, Martin Luther King Jr, and T. S. Eliot. Books on the Bible included: Simply Jesus and How God Became King by Tom Wright; The Paul of Surprises by Geoffrey Turner; The Power of the Parable by John Dominic Crossan; Jesus and His World by Craig A. Evans; With My Whole Heart (the Psalms) by James Jones; and Inscribing the Text by Walter Brueggemann. Other books reviewed included: Disabled Church by John Gillibrand; Jesus and the Subversion of Violence by Thomas Yoder Neufeld; Temple Mysticism by Margaret Barker; Jesus Freak by Sara Miles; Lost in Wonder by Aidan Nichols; Sacred Land by Martin Palmer; We Don’t Do God by George Carey and Andrew Carey; Speaking Christian by Marcus J. Borg; The Art of Tentmaking by Stephen Burns; Making the Most of the Lectionary by David Stancliffe; Healing Agony by Stephen Cherry; Christian Beginnings by Geza Vermes; and Saints, Sacrilege and Sedition by Eamon Duffy. The Advent titles reviewed in cluded: Companions on the Bethlehem Road by Rachel Boulding; Saving Power by Michael Doe; Inside the Christmas Story by Anthony and Melanie Bush; and Come Emmanuel by Ann Lewin. DEATHS among lay people inc luded the Earl Ferrers, former High Steward of Norwich Cathedral; the Lady Runcie, pianist, restorer of Lambeth Palace Garden, and widow of the late Archbishop of Canter bury; Sir Stuart Bell, former Third Church Estates Commissioner; Sir Philip Ledger, former Director of Music at King’s College, Cambridge; Sir Bernard Lovell, first Director of Jodrell Bank Observatory. Dr Ruth Etchells, first female principal of a C of E theological col lege; Professor John Hick, theolo gian; Professor Suzanne Martineau, ecumenist; Leonard Rosoman, artist; Chuck Colson, founder of the Prison Fellowship; Dr John Birch, organist, choral director, and teacher; Dora Saint (Miss Read), teacher and novelist; Billy Neely, former boy sop rano; Major Kenneth Adams, busin essman and church administrator. CHRiSTiAN AiD/K.D. CReVANCe Christopher Chapman, former VicePrincipal of St John’s College, York; Carlo Curley, international concert organist; Tony Bishop, in terpreter and Russophile inspirer of the Philokalia Society; Valerie Eliot, T. S. Eliot’s widow and editor; Jhan Moskowitz, a founder of Jews for Jesus; Donald Wright, former Sec retary to the Crown Appointments Commission; Anthony Cooke, former director of music at Leeds Grammar School; Derek Wills, for 65 years chorister of St Barnabas’s, Linthorpe. pA in memoriam: top row: Sir Stuart Bell, Valerie eliot, Canon eric James; left: the Rt Revd K. H. Ting; right: Rosalind, Lady Runcie Patrick Locke, former Secretary of the Church Commissioners; Lionel Wadeson, former Assistant Sec retary of the Church Assembly and the General Synod; Kathleen Lee, former nursing missionary in China; Jonathan Harvey, composer. AMONG Roman Catholic, Ortho dox, and Free Church clergy whose deaths were noted were the Coptic Pope Shenouda III; Ignatius IV, Primate of the Greek Orthodox Church of Antioch and All the East; Patriarch Maxim of the Bulgarian Orthodox Church; Patriarch Abune Paulos of the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church; Cardinal Carlo Martini, former Roman Catholic Archbishop of Milan; Mathews Mar Barnabas, former Metropolitan of the the Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church; the Revd Dr Ray Davey, founder of the Corrymeela Com munity. The Rt Revd Kuno Pajula, former Archbishop of the Estonian Evan gelical Lutheran Church; the Rt Revd Mack Boyd Stokes, bishop in the United Methodist Church. In praise of solitude City of faith radio television THERE are not many guests on Desert Island Discs (Radio 4, Sunday) who eagerly embrace the prospect of being stranded alone in the middle of the South Pacific; but Sister Wendy Beckett, much of whose life is spent in solitude, was no ordinary guest. Solitude, for her, is “the greatest imaginable bliss”; and though, over a busy Christmas, we might at times have sympathy with this position, I doubt we would go so far as to spend Christ mas morning in a caravan praying for seven hours. But then again, to Sister Wendy every activity entails an element of prayer. “This is prayer,” she declared, to the evident delight and dismay of Kirsty Young, most of whose guests are in the studio not to pray, but to plug a project. “It’s not the kind of prayer I would have chosen,” she added, and Young chuckled. Indeed, the two women seemed to be hitting it off famously, until a peculiar mo ment when, in answer to one of Young’s untargeted digs about the contemplative life, Sister Wendy slipped in an almost uncon scious “sweetheart” among the genial words. She may be holy, but she is certainly no fool, and one cannot but wonder whether the con descension was intended. It may have been simply the editing, but was there not a distinct lack of that affec tionate, indulgent laughter from our host in the latter part of the interview? Sister Wendy is, of course, a mistress in the art of the putdown; her best on this appear ance was to say, of contemporary Brit artists: “I’m so pleased these young people are in regular employment.” Behind her prolific 56 CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 modesty, there is a keen awareness of her own abilities: she made sure that we knew of her congratulatory First from Oxford, and the fact that her marks were as good as those of Harold Wilson (who was said to have had the best ever results in History at Oxford). None of which makes her any less likeable: in fact, it makes her a more reliable witness to, and credible commentator on, the often very worldly art that she encounters. The ego may not be a good companion while communing with God, but it is an essential one when dealing with the culture of television. It would require a mortification of the flesh far more intense than Sister Wendy’s to spend Christmas listening to the Revd J. M. Gates’s seasonal offerings. Chosen as part of the Revd Richard Coles’s An Alternative Christmas (Radio 4, Tuesday of last week), these included tracks such as “Will the Coffin Be Your Santa Claus?” and “Did You Spend Christmas in Jail?”, and were delivered to his Georgia kins folk over the airwaves in the 1920s. Coles is clearly not a fan of the Christmas standards, and compares singing “O come all ye faithful” as a priest to the days when, as a pop star, he would mouth the band’s favour ites to dwindling audiences. Unlike many Christmas musical curios, this was not sprinkled with liberal amounts of cheese, but rather included items too hard hitting to make it into the mainstream. There was “There Is No Sanity Claus II”, a late’60s rant against the arms trade, for instance; and a Miles Davis number, “Blue Christmas” — a diatribe against commercialism, which sat in congruously as the final track on a compilation album of Christmas music with the decep tively innocent title Jingle Bell Jazz. Edward Wickham YOU cannot understand history without understanding religion: at last, the popular media are beginning to get the message. Rome: A history of the Eternal City (BBC4, Wed nesdays) explicitly employs religious faith and practice as the lens through which the story of the great city is brought into focus. So far, we have seen two episodes, and I am sorry to say that I found the first, pagan, chapter more gripping than the second, which chronicled the triumph of Christianity. Simon Sebag Montefiore presents us with fascinating details. Did you know that the oldest sur viving monument in Rome is the great drain, the Cloaca Maxima, dating from the sixth century? Sebag Montefiori found a number of links between pagan and Christian eras, with more emphasis on continuity than radical disjunc tion. The great Christian idea was martyrdom, the shock presented to the pagan mindset by believers’ being willing to suffer a hideous death rather than renounce their new faith by offering sacrifice to the gods. This led to the cult of the saints and their relics. With more martyrs than anywhere else, and early pontiffs willing to send shavings of holy bones to distant bishops, Rome was the epicentre of the Christian world, the popes filling the vacuum left by the transfer of imperial power to Byzantium. I find Sebag Montefiori’s delivery over insistent, and he employs the terms “holy” and “sacred” rather too frequently, without much critical analysis or reference to any where else — surely, until modern times, every culture considered its main city a centre of religious as well as temporal power? And the background music is inappropriate: “Scheherazade” is not exactly suitable wall paper to accompany an account of early medieval Christianity. In the vicarage, we have been following the series Last Tango in Halifax (BBC1, Tuesday of last week) because it is set in Mrs Craig’s native land, and, as is the way in such situations, squeals of delight as this or that muchloved landmark is recognised are balanced by the groans of excoriation caused by solecisms of accent or vocabulary. This is a tale of old love, as former flames Alan and Celia find each other after the demise of their spouses. Their lateflowering bliss is the calm centre, whipping up a storm of passion among their offspring, whose marital and sexual situations are exemplars of the relational mess that is contemporary Britain. It is wonderfully observed and acted — but neither plot nor dialogue bear serious scrutiny. Despite this, it is somehow redeemed by a touching faith in, well, redemption: however chaotic and angerfilled the situations, we feel confident that all will, movingly, turn out well in the end. The Hour (BBC2, Wednesday and Thurs day of last week), the drama series about a ’50s TV news series, has come to a thrilling climax. I was initially rather sniffy about it, con sidering that too much frisson is generated by the retro aspect of the production. Look at their clothes! They are all smoking! But this second series has been performed with such bravura style as to produce TV drama of a high order, and a gallery of distinct yet complex characters of whom we long to see more. Gillean Craig media Loving the new extensions press THE most interesting piece on a serious topic this week was by Fr Timothy Radcliffe OP, in The Guardian, against gay marriage. “Tolerance means, literally, to engage with other people who are different. It implies an attention to the particularity of the other person, a savouring of how he or she is unlike me, in their faith, their ethnicity, their sexual orientation. “A society that flees difference and pretends we are all just the same may have outlawed intolerance in one form, and yet instituted it in other ways. It says, ‘We shall tolerate you as long as you pretend to be just like us.’. . . “Religious conviction, if it impinges on the public sphere, is viewed with a mixture of fear and derision. And so it is both true that mod ern Britain is a model of multiculturalism, and also that we drift around in a fog of mutual ignorance.” This is interesting because it is something that only Radcliffe among prominent religious leaders can say in the expectation — however faint — that he will be listened to. So many of the opponents of gay marriage transparently don’t believe in what he calls the equal dignity of gay people. The Kampala Daily Monitor, for example, reports that the Most Revd Stanley Ntagli, the new Primate of the Church of Uganda, at his enthronement on Sunday, “pledged to work towards reviving believers’ commitment to God as a way of helping the country fight the rampant evils such as defilement, homo sexuality, child sacrifice, and domestic violence”. God knows what is meant by “defilement” in this quote, but the bundling of homo sexuality with child sacrifice and even domestic violence would finish the career of anyone in public life here. That is why I am not a cultural relativist. There is a genuine clash here of views over purity which cannot, so far as I can see, be the subject of a compromise. And the Church of England is com promised in the public mind by the huge institutional efforts that it makes to stay in communion with Churches such as that in Uganda. Let’s not forget that the Rt Revd Sandy Millar was ordained as a bishop there when he retired from Holy Trinity, Brompton. So the C of E cannot make a case against gay marriage without sounding bigoted. supposed to improve your character by changing your brand of false hair is really to be trusted with any moral decisions at all. BUT the oddest piece of postChristianity came from the Daily Mail, which recorded how the crowd at a darts tournament turned against a hippyish Australian spectator. “A darts fan was kicked out of a live televised final after the 4500strong crowd interrupted play by taunting him — because he looks like Jesus. Bearded Nathan Grindal was enjoying the clash between Phil Taylor and Kim Huybrechts when some of the audience spotted his likeness to the son of God. “Chants of ‘Jesus’ quickly spread through the rowdy crowd packed into Butlins at Minehead, Somerset. The labourer, of Abingdon, Oxfordshire, was close to tears as six bouncers removed him from the Cash Converters Players’ Championship which was being shown on ITV4. “As he left a chant of ‘Stand up if you love Jesus’ broke out with many of the boozedup crowd getting to their feet.” He should have worn a different wig. Andrew Brown THE Muslim Council of Britain, meanwhile, has grabbed the opportunity for self importance, and demanded that it, too, should have legal protection for its stance against gay marriage. This ought to be an opportunity for the Church of England to look a great deal more enlightened, but I can almost guarantee that it will be muffed. ON A late (and unheated) commuter train out of Liverpool Street, I picked up a discarded copy of Star magazine. There was an interview with Chantelle Houghton, who became a sleb (i.e. someone who appears regularly on cable television) after she won an episode of Celebrity Big Brother, even though her only expertise was being a lookalike for another sleb. She later married, or at least had a child with, one of the original’s discards, with whom she has since split because of his sexual habits: “A lot of people think crossdressing is just wearing a skirt and dancing around singing ‘I’m every woman.’ But what Alex actually does is a lot darker.” The interviewer gets to the point: “We’re loving the new extensions. Is your new look helping you move on?” “Definitely. New hair, new me! [laughs] I feel a bit more like myself. I’ve had extensions for years but [this brand]are the best by far. All the celebrities are having them. Katie [Price] has got them. I’m back to me again!” I’m not sure that a society where you’re At the sharp end: the fate of a Jesus lookalike at a darts match, featured in The Sun week ahead TV HIGHLIGHT: Goodbye to Canterbury Dr Rowan Williams reflects on his ten years as Archbishop, and on the art and architecture of Canterbury Cathedral. BBC2 New Year’s Day 5.30pm RADIO HIGHLIGHT: Belief Joan Bakewell’s guests include General Lord Dannatt, Loretta Minghella and former US President Jimmy Carter. Radio 3 Christmas Eve 9.25pm; Christmas Day 10pm; Boxing Day 9.40pm; Thursday 9.10pm; Friday 9pm TELEVISION: Friday 9pm (BBC2) Westminster Abbey The part played by the Abbey in national life is explored (3/3). Sunday and Monday 9am (BBC1) David Suchet: In the footsteps of St Paul David Suchet (far right) tracks the man who brought Christianity to the Gentiles. Sunday 4.30pm (BBC1) Songs of Praise David Grant hosts carols and Christmas readings. 9pm (iTV1) Joanna Lumley: The search for Noah’s Ark Joanna Lumley travels over three continents to explore the origins of an ancient story. Christmas Eve 3.55pm 6.15pm (BBC2) Carols from King’s A specially recorded sesrvice from King’s College, Cambridge, with the nativity story told in the words of the King James Bible (repeated on BBC2 at 10.45am on Christmas Day). 10.15pm (iTV1) Christmas Carols on ITV Aled Jones and the cast of Coronation Street retell the nativity story. 11.45pm (BBC1) Midnight Mass from Leeds Cathedral A service live from St Anne’s RC Cathedral in Leeds, West Yorkshire. Christmas Day 10am (BBC1) Christmas Day Eucharist A morning service live from St Mary’s, Redcliffe, Bristol. 11.40pm (BBC1) On Christmas Night The story of Christmas from St Luke’s Gospel, read by the paralympian Rachel Morris 5.25pm (BBC2) Arena: Sister Wendy and the art of the gospel The 82yearold Carmelite nun reveals how paintings can connect the viewer to the gospel stories they depict. 7pm (BBC4) A Musical Nativity with John Rutter The composer conducts carols at Dorchester Abbey. Boxing Day to Friday 8pm (BBC4) Royal Institution Christmas Lectures: The modern alchemist peter Wothers looks at the ancient elements of air, water, and earth. Sunday 30 December 3.30pm (BBC1) Call the Midwife As Christmas approaches, a baby is abandoned on the steps of the convent. 4.50pm (BBC1) Songs of Praise Alfie Boe and 5000 singers are at the Royal Albert Hall for hymns that reflect this historic year. New Year’s Day 12.15pm (BBC1) and 5.25pm (BBC2) The Archbishop of Canterbury’s New Year Message Dr Williams’s final such address. RADIO: Saturday 7.48am (R4) Thought for the Day Dr Williams’s last “Thought” as Archbishop of Canterbury. Sunday 6.05am and 11.30pm (R4) Something Understood Alan Hall reflects on the angelic in the everyday. 8.10am (R4) Sunday Worship A service from the Chapel of unity, Methodist College, Belfast. 4pm (R3) Choral Evensong a repeat of last Wednesday’s service from Lichfield Cathedral. 7pm (R2) Follow the Star Hardeep Singh Kohli investigates the Star of Bethlehem. 8.30pm (R2) Sunday Half-Hour Diane Louise Jordan (above) presents an hourlong Christmas edition from Beverley Minster. 8.30pm (R3) Drama on 3: A new cycle of Mystery Plays A repeat of last week’s retelling of five New Testament stories. Christmas Eve 3pm (R4 and BBC World Service) A Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols The traditional order of service, live from King’s College, Cambridge (repeated on Radio 3 at 2pm on Christmas Day). 11.30-12.45pm (R4) Midnight Mass live from the RC Cathedral of Christ the King, Liverpool. Christmas Day 9am (R4) Christmas Service from St peter ad Vincula, Tower of London. 9pm (R2) Sing in Heavenly Peace: The true story of Silent Night Cliff Richard explores aspects of Franz Gruber’s 1818 song. Boxing Day 3.30pm (R3) A Meditation on Christ’s Nativity John Tavener’s Ex Maria Virgine, with the choir of Clare College, Cambridge, from 2008 (repeated on 30 December on Radio 3 at 4pm). Sunday 8.10am (R4) Sunday Worship A service from St Mary’s episcopal Cathedral, Glasgow. New Year’s Day 10.05pm Belief Joan Bakewell talks to the actor Ben Kingsley. Wednesday 3.30pm (R3) Choral Evensong live from St peter’s College, oxford. CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 57 gazette appointments ALLINGTON. The Revd Andrew Allington, Vicar of Stainforth (Shef field), to be Vicar of Filey (York). ASHTON. The Revd James Ash ton, Team Vicar in the Merstham, South Merstham and Gatton Team Ministry (Southwark), to be PriestinCharge (Team Rector designate). BRADDOCK. The Revd Andrew Braddock, Diocesan Missioner and Hon. Canon of Gloucester Cathed ral, to be Director of the Depart ment of Mission and Ministry, and Canon Residentiary of Gloucester Cathedral (Gloucester). BRAE. The Revd Yvonne Brae, NSM (Associate Priest) of Holy Apostles’, Charlton Kings, to be NS Associate Priest of the Sodbury Vale Benefice (Gloucester). COLLIER. The Revd Paul Collier, PriestinCharge of St Saviour’s, Peckham (Southwark), to be Vicar. CONVERY. The Revd Malcolm Convery, formerly PriestinCharge of St John the Baptist, German, and Assistant Curate of St Michael and All Angels, Michael, to be Canon Emeritus of St German’s Cathedral, Peel (Sodor & Man). COULTON. The Revd David Coul ton, NSM of Tewkesbury with Walton Cardiff and Twyning, to be NS Associate Priest of Tewkesbury with Walton Cardiff and Twyning, and of Deerhurst and Apperley with Forthampton, Chaceley, Treding ton, Stoke Orchard and Hardwicke (Gloucester). DANBY. The Revd Dr Shirley Danby, NSM of Cricklade with Latton, and of Ashton Keynes, Leigh and Minety (Bristol), to be Assistant Curate (Assistant Minister). DORLING. The Revd Philip Dorl ing, Rector of St Peter’s, Vryheid (Zululand, Southern Africa), to be Rector of the Inglewood Group (Carlisle). EDWARDS. The Revd Helen Edwards, Vicar of Christ Church, Norris Green, to be also Hon. Canon of Liverpool Cathedral (Liver pool). ENEVER. The Revd Vivian Enever, Team Rector in the Newark Team Ministry (Southwell & Notting ham), to be Rector of Queen Thorne (Salisbury). FRENCH. The Revd Christine French, Assistant Curate of Key worth and StantonontheWolds, and Bunny with Bradmore, to be PriestinCharge of Norwell with Ossington, Cromwell and Caunton (Southwell & Nottingham). FRY. The Revd David Fry, Assistant Curate (Associate Vicar) in the Healey and Gleadless Valley Team Ministry, now Vicar of Heeley (Shef field). HEDGER. The Revd Graham Hed ger, Assistant Diocesan Secretary (Deployment, Planning, and Policy), and PriestinCharge of Clopton with Otley, Swilland and Ash bocking, to be fulltime general As sistant Diocesan Secretary, remain ing Hon. Canon of St Edmundsbury Cathedral (St Edmundsbury & Ipswich). HUTCHINSON. The Revd Ray mond Hutchinson, Rector of All Saints and St George, Wigan, and Chaplain of Wrightington, Wigan and Leigh NHS Trust, to be also Hon. Canon of Liverpool Cathedral (Liverpool). HYDE. The Revd Jacqueline Hyde, NS Assistant Curate in the South Cheltenham Team Ministry (Glou cester), to be NS Associate Priest. JARVIS. The Revd Stephen Jarvis, NS Assistant Curate of Bisley, Chal ford, France Lynch and Oakridge (Gloucester), to be NS Associate Priest. JEFFREYS. The Revd Laksmi Jeffreys, Diocesan Mission Adviser (Derby), to be PriestinCharge of Wootton (Peterborough). KETTLE. The Revd Martin Kettle, formerly Hon. Assistant Curate of East Leightonstone, and of Great with Little Gidding and Steeple Gid ding (Ely), to be Adviser on Home Affairs Policy for the Mission and Public Affairs Division (Arch bishops’ Council). LOWDON. The Revd Christopher Lowdon, Team Vicar in the Buxton with Burbage and King Sterndale Team Ministry, with special respon sibility for St James and St Mary (Derby), to be PriestinCharge of Maughold and South Ramsey (Sodor & Man). MIDDLETON. The Revd David Middleton, Assistant Curate (Asso ciate Vicar) in the Healey and JANUARY SALE 2013 (Starts January 2nd) 10% OFF ALL CHURCH SUPPLIES including candles & consumables plus EXCEPTIONAL JANUARY OFFERS with up to 30% OFF Take advantage of these great offers on any orders placed during January VANPOULLES Church Furnishers Quality Church Supplies for over 100 Years Est. 1908 Telford Place, Crawley, West Sussex, RH10 1SZ Tel. 01293 590100 Fax. 01293 590115 sales@vanpoulles.co.uk www.vanpoulles.co.uk 58 CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 New archdeacons THE next Archdeacon of Ports down, in Portsmouth diocese, is to be the Revd Dr Joanne Woolway Grenfell, Residentiary Canon of Sheffield Cathedral, and Diocesan Director of Ordinands and Post Ordination Training, in Sheffield diocese, since 2006, and Dean of Women’s Ministry in that diocese since 2008. Before her present appointments, she served in Liverpool and Sheffield dioceses. The next Archdeacon of Lewis ham and Greenwich, in South wark diocese, is to be the Revd Alistair Cutting, Rector of Hen field with Shermanbury and Wood mancote, in Chichester diocese, since 2010, and ProProlocutor of the Convocation of the Province of Canterbury since 2011. Before his present posts, he held appoint ments in Sheffield, London, and Chichester dioceses. The next Archdeacon of South wark, in Southwark diocese, will Gleadless Valley Team Ministry, now Vicar of Gleadless Valley (Shef field). MOTHERSDALE. The Revd Paul Mothersdale, PriestinCharge of Malew, and Rural Dean of Castle town and Peel, to be also Canon of St German’s Cathedral, Peel (Sodor & Man). OGLESBY. The Revd Elizabeth Oglesby, Vicar of St Michael and All Angels with All Souls with Em manuel Church, Camberwell, to be also Area Dean of Southwark and Newington (Southwark). REYNOLDS. The Revd Simon Reynolds, PriestinCharge of Dar ton and of Cawthorne (Wakefield), to be Rector of Farnham (Guild ford). RICHARDSON. The Revd Charles Richardson, Acting Area Dean of Dulwich, to be Area Dean, remain ing Vicar of St John the Evangelist, East Dulwich, and Hon. Canon of Southwark Cathedral (Southwark). ROBERTS. The Revd Janet Roberts, be the Revd Dr Jane Steen, Canon Chancellor of Southwark Cathed ral, and Southwark Diocesan Director of Ministry and Training, since 2005. Before that, she was the Bishop of Southwark’s Chap lain, and Hon. Chaplain and Priest Vicar of Southwark Cathedral. New acting archdeacon THE Ven. Christine Froude, Archdeacon of Malmesbury, in Bristol diocese, since 2011, is now also Acting Archdeacon of Bristol. New temporary archdeacon THE Revd Suzanne Sheriff, Canon and Prebendary of York Minster since 2001, Vicar of Tad caster with Newton Kyme, since 2007, and PriestinCharge of Kirk Fenton with Kirkby Wharfe and Ulleskelfe since 2010, also in York diocese, is to be temporary Arch deacon of York. PriestinCharge of St Nicholas’s, Blundellsands, to be also Hon. Canon of Liverpool Cathedral (Liver pool). ROGERS. The Revd Cyril Rogers, Rector of Andreas, Ballaugh, Jurby and Sulby, to be also Hon. Canon of St German’s Cathedral, Peel (Sodor & Man). SPARKES. The Revd Lynne Sparkes, NS Assistant Curate of Barnwood, and Chaplain of Church House and the Diocesan Board of Finance Staff (Gloucester), to be Pioneer Minister of St Mary’s, Sherrards Green (Wor cester). STANIER. The Revd Robert Stanier, Chaplain of Archbishop Tenison’s School, Kennington, and Hon. Assistant Curate in the North Lambeth Team Ministry, to be Vicar of St Andrew and St Mark, Surbiton (Southwark). TAYLOR. The Revd Patricia Taylor, Hon. Assistant Curate of St Mary’s, Hornsey Rise (London), to be Hon. Assistant Curate (Associate Minis resignations and retirements GREENMAN. The Revd Irene Greenman, OLM Assistant Curate of Cornholme and Walsden (Wake field). GWILLIAMS. The Revd Dianna Gwilliams, Area Dean of Dulwich, remaining Vicar of St Barnabas’s, deaths EYRE. — On 12 December, the Very Revd Richard Montague Stephens Eyre: Tutor of Chichester Theo logical College (195961); Chaplain (196162); Eastbourne College (1962 65); Vicar of Arundel with South Stoke and Tortington (196573); the Good Shepherd, Preston (197375); Chichester Diocesan Director of Ordinands (197579); Archdeacon of Chichester (197581); Canon Treasurer of Chichester Cathedral (197881); Dean of Exeter (198195); PriestinCharge of Pau (200103); aged 83. ordinations SHEFFIELD By the Bishop in his Cathedral on 16 December: Deacons: Michael Burn (Rother ham); Carl Chapman (Malin Bridge). Dulwich, Chaplain of Alleyn’s Foun dation (James Allen’s Girls’ School), Dulwich, Hon. Canon of Southwark Cathedral, and Acting Archdeacon of Southwark (Southwark). ILES. The Revd Paul Iles, NS As sistant Curate (Associate Priest) in the North Cheltenham Team Minis try (Gloucester). JEANS. The Revd David Jeans, PriestinCharge of Deepcar (Shef field): 28 February. KNAPP. The Revd Anthony Knapp, Team Rector in the Swindon Dorcan Team Ministry (Bristol): 13 January. LEE. The Revd Samuel Lee, NSM of Worlingham with Barnby and North Cove (St Edmundsbury & Ipswich). McCONNELL. The Revd Brian Mc Connell, Canon Residentiary of Car New home for college THE Bishop of London, the Rt Revd Richard Chartres, has blessed the new home of St Mellitus College, a £7.3million conversion of St Jude’s, Courtfield Gardens, in Kensington, writes Madeleine Davies. St Jude’s, a Grade II listed former parish church, built in 1870, now houses four lecture spaces as well as a new central library for the col lege’s 510 students. The Dean of St Mellitus, the Revd Graham Tomlin, ter) of St Michael and All Angels with St Stephen, Wandsworth (Southwark). TIPPING. The Revd Brenda Tip ping, PriestinCharge of South Mymms and Ridge, to be Vicar, remaining Chaplain among Deaf People, NSM Officer for Hertford archdeaconry, and Hon. Canon of St Albans Cathedral (St Albans). TRACEY. The Revd Gareth Tracey, Assistant Curate (Pioneer Minister) of St Luke’s, Eccleston, in the Eccleston Team Ministry (Liver pool), to be Vicar of Colney Heath (St Albans). WEBSTER. The Revd Glyn Web ster, Canon Chancellor of York Minster, and Bishopdesignate of Beverley (York), to be also Assistant Bishop (Liverpool). WHITWORTH. The Revd Duncan Whitworth, formerly Vicar of St Matthew the Apostle, Douglas, Rural Dean of Douglas, and Canon of St German’s Cathedral, Peel (Sodor & Man), to be Canon Emeritus. WILLIAMS. The Revd Marion Williams, NSM of St Catharine’s, Gloucester (Gloucester), to be NS Associate Priest. WALES REES. The Revd Michael Rees, Vicar of GorsLas, to be Vicar of Betws with Ammanford, remaining Area Dean of Dyffryn Aman, and Canon of St Davids Cathedral (St Davids) (correction). STONE. The Revd Christopher Stone, Team Vicar in Bassaleg Rec torial Benefice (Monmouth), to be Team Rector. LAY APPOINTMENTS BUCKLEY. Vivien Buckley to be Diocesan Adviser on Environmental Issues in the Social Responsibility Network (Wakefield) (correction). ELLIOTT. Dr Esther Elliott, Dio cesan Lay Ministry Officer and Warden of Readers, to be also Lay Canon of Derby Cathedral (Derby). ILIFFE. David Iliffe, Lay Chair of Chesterfield deanery, to be also Lay Canon of Derby Cathedral (Derby). INGRAM. Janet Ingram to be Education and Pilgrimage Officer of St Davids Cathedral (St Davids). lisle Cathedral (Carlisle): 31 January. SHAW. The Revd Grahame Shaw, Acting Area Dean of Southwark and Newington, remaining Vicar of St Paul’s, Newington, Southwark Arch deaconry Ecumenical Officer, and Hon. Canon of Southwark Cathedral (Southwark). TURNER. The Revd Geoffrey Turner, Rector of Loughor (Swansea & Brecon): 31 March. WARE. The Revd Stephen Ware, Warden of Readers, remaining As sistant Diocesan Director of Or dinands (Gloucester). WEST. The Revd Penelope West, NSM (Associate Priest) of Ashle worth, Corse, Hartpury, Hasfield, Maisemore, Staunton and Tirley (Gloucester): 31 December. WOOLCOCK. The Revd John Woolcock, PriestinCharge of Sea scale and Digg (Carlisle): 15 Feb ruary. said that he had been “surprised and delighted” by the growth of the col lege over the past five years. Jointly founded by the dioceses of London and Chelmsford, it now serves 110 ordinands and 400 other students. The Bishop of Chelmsford, the Rt Revd Stephen Cottrell, said that the “generous orthodoxy” of the college provided “excellent training”. The diocese’s partnership with it had made a “major contribution” to the growth in the number of people in selfsupporting ministry from 68 in 2003 to 104 in 2010. organs fixtures & fittings CHURCH SIGNS The largest builder of church organs in the world greenbarnes www.greenbarnes.co.uk t 01280 701093 vestments For all your church supplies Quality ˜ Choice Have your business seen and remembered by up to 80,000 readers ˜ Service ˜ Value The finest consoles, electronics of the highest calibre, superior tonal finishing by proven experts and peerless after-sales are well documented by Allen traditions of 75 years. Starting from just £6,700 including VAT, a new Allen organ will last a lifetime. High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire HP14 4NB www.allenorgans.co.uk sales@allenorgans.co.uk 01494 563833 VANPOULLES Church Furnishers Telford Place,Crawley, West Sussex, RH10 1SZ Phone: 01293 590100 sales@vanpoulles.co.uk www.vanpoulles.co.uk Have your business seen and remembered by up to 80,000 readers ads@churchtimes.co.uk church furnishings audio/visual Hilltop Audio Visual Communion Linen • Made by Zimbabwe Mothers’ Union in support of the mission of the Church Matabeleland Church Linens 7 The Daedings, Deddington Oxon OX15 ORT matabelelinens@gmail.com Sound reinforcement • Induction loop • Video Projection • Digital Hymnal 2 Rising Lea, Derby Road, Risley, Derbyshire 0115 9395 995 info@hilltopav.co.uk www.hilltopav.co.uk books/music The finest purificators, palls, corporals and lavabo towels, at affordable prices ReSouRCeS foR ChRiStian Order online at www.chbookshop.co.uk or phone 020 7799 4064 Address: 31 Great Smith Street, London SW1P 3BN Fax: 020 7340 9997 • Email: bookshop@chbookshop.co.uk Candle glows, year planners, story rolls, gospel visual aids ry including posters & sto bags and much more! 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Please contact: Vino Sacro Ltd, Marsh Lane Crediton, Devon EX17 1ES Tel/Fax: 01363 772333 Email: sales@vinosacro.co.uk CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 59 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS Church Times, 3rd Floor, Invicta House, 108114 Golden Lane, London EC1Y 0TG Tel: 0207 776 1010 • Email: ads@churchtimes.co.uk Pilgrimages Dagenham Park Church of England School School Road, Dagenham, RM10 9QH Telephone: 020 8270 4400 Fax: 020 8270 4409 Mixed 11-18 Voluntary Controlled School Headteacher: Mr Simon Weaver SCHOOL CHAPLAIN Salary- Negotiable to attract an outstanding candidate Required As soon as possible Dagenham Park is a mixed, multi-ethnic 11-18 Voluntary Controlled Church of England school. Teaching Vacancies Anglican Schools in Hong Kong are seeking GAP YEAR STUDENTS who are looking for a Challenging Year Out. We are looking for Native English Speaking Students, either pre-college or post graduate, to work in Kindergarten and Primary Schools in Hong Kong helping the children to improve their English. Those appointed will also become involved in the Church’s work with young people. Teaching experience is not necessary, although in one school it will be very helpful. Accommodation is provided as well as a moderate Living Allowance. Full details of the Project and how to apply can be found on the website: www.HKGaps.org.uk Our most recent OFSTED inspection – May 2011 rated the school as “GOOD” and our recent SIAS inspection June 2011 rated the school as “GOOD with certain outstanding features” Our recent GCSE results in 2012 was 60% 5+ A*-C grades (including English and Mathematics). We are seeking to appoint an inspirational, outstanding and committed Anglican Chaplain to support the pastoral and spiritual life of this community and to take a keen interest in all aspects of school life and to work to assist with the development of the Christian Ethos. The successful candidate will be an ordained member of The Church of England. Ref: 2BECC Salary: Grade 6 (£25,251 to £29,249 per annum) Liverpool Hope University is the only ecumenical University in Europe. The ethos of Hope is reflected in the one ecumenical chapel, which has been recently refurbished. We celebrate the riches and diversity of Christian Life and Faith. The University’s founding Charter states that it seeks “to be fully Catholic, fully Anglican and fully Christian”. The University is seeking to appoint an Anglican Chaplain to lead the Chaplaincy team and, especially, to guide the liturgical life of the University. The Chaplaincy team works to support the spiritual, social and personal needs and aspirations of all members of the University community. They encourage and foster the faith-life of individuals who desire such support; they minister to the pastoral needs of the University, and are always available to help with spiritual direction or counselling. The Chaplains oversee initiatives and activities in areas of pastoral care, leadership development and awareness of social justice. Please visit our webpages for further information http://www.hope.ac.uk/jobs/ Closing date: Wednesday 2nd January 2013 at 12pm (midday) There is a teaching requirement attached to the post but this need not be the teaching of Religious Education. You will have significant opportunities to shape the development of chaplaincy at Dagenham Park, using a multi-agency approach. You will work flexibly with staff, young people and their families, within the school and in the community, and through this will promote the Christian Ethos of the school widely. You will also build partnerships with parents, local churches, parishes and the wider community. As an equal opportunities employer we welcome applications from all sections of the community, including persons with disabilities. The South Western Synod of the United Reformed Church An opportunity for a Korean-speaking minister to serve the Bristol Korean Church (Mission Project of the U.R.C.) Based at Redland Park U.R.C., Bristol or by applying to: The Revd. Patrick Nicholas 35, Norwich Drive, Cheltenham. Glos. GL51 3HD Telephone: 01242 510007 Email: patnic@btinternet.com An application pack can be obtained from: Kim Wiley (PA to Headteacher) Dagenham Park Church of England School, School Road Dagenham RM10 9QH Tel: 020 8270 4400 • Email: kwley@dp.bardaglea.org.uk or from the school website. Closing date: 28th February 2013 Closing date: 28 December 2012 Stipend of £23,800 “This post is exempt from the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act and a comprehensive screening process, including a disclosure check, will be undertaken on all applicants” Housing Provided jobs.churchtimes.co.uk PRIEST-IN-CHARGE THE ANGLICAN CHURCH OF CHRIST CHURCH, BRITTANY Friendly, welcoming English-language congregation is looking for a priest-in-charge who will enjoy being part of an ex-pat community, as well as living in a beautiful part of France. The Bishop seeks an experienced priest for this growing chaplaincy, who will: • have the spiritual gifts to inspire, enthuse and develop the three congregations; • be a team leader encouraging and guiding the PtO clergy Readers and active laity already involved in the chaplaincy; • welcome worshippers of all traditions and none, and be happy with a variety of worship styles; • to have Christ Church’s mission statement as their objective – ‘To know Christ and make Him known’ The post offers a half UK stipend (13,800 Euro), appropriate accommodation, a car and associated expenses, other expenses of office, standard French social security contributions and complementary medical insurance cover. Further information and application form from: The Appointments’ Secretary, 14 Tufton Street, London SW1P 3QZ Email: catherine.jackson@churchofengland.org Closing date: 31 January 2013 Short-listing date: 08 February 2013 Interview date: 5 March 2013 There is a commitment to safeguarding children, young people and vulnerable adults. Safeguarding Policies (vetting and screening) will apply to this post CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 A Five Year Appointment Under the Special Category Ministry programme Of the United Reformed Church Applicants should be a minister in good standing of a member church of CtBI Application Deadline: 30th December 2012 Information and application details from: Jasmine Warburton Email: admin@urcsouthwest.org.uk Clerical 60 ANGLICAN CHAPLAIN Church Times would like to wish you a Merry Christmas The Priory Church of St Bartholomew the Great in the City of London is seeking the temporary support of an Good Schools Guide: A top-notch co-ed school catering for that neglected breed, ordinary children, as well as for the higher flier. Independent School of the Year 2010/11 Top UK Boarding School 810 boys and girls aged 3-18; senior school of 470 pupils with 155 boarders, ASSISTANT PRIEST male or female, at the Sunday Solemn Eucharist Traditional worship & excellent music Honorarium available. Longer term position possible. Enquiries to the Revd Dr Martin Dudley Email: rector@greatstbarts.com • Tel: 020 7248 2294 CHRISTIAN CHAPLAIN September 2013 This is an exciting opportunity for an energetic and inspiring pastor to lead the spiritual life of the Prep and Senior Schools. For suitably qualified applicants, there is the opportunity to combine this post with teaching in any subject in the Prep and/or Senior Schools and/or residential work in boarding. All teachers are expected to contribute to our flourishing co-curricular programme. For an application form and further information, please contact Mrs Anne Rylands, Head’s PA, Ashford School, East Hill, Ashford, Kent TN24 8PB Closing date for receipt of applications: 12 noon on Tuesday 15 January 2012. T: 01233 739032 • E: rylandsa@ashfordschool.co.uk W: www.ashfordschool.co.uk Applicants must be willing to undergo child protection screening including checks with past employers and the CRB. UNTIL FILLED Advertise your job with our unique guarantee. See jobs.churchtimes.co.uk for more information or call one of the ads team on 020 7776 1010 or Email: ads@churchtimes.co.uk Fill your vacancy with our GOLDEN GUARANTEE... How it works: Until Filled 1. Decide on what you wish to say. We can show you examples and guide you on the style, copy, and format of your advertisement Modern four bedroom Rectory in quiet location. jobs.churchtimes.co.uk An opportunity for Ministry in the DIOCESE OF CLOGHER www.clogher.anglican.org An exciting opportunity exists for an experienced priest to provide overall vision, leadership, direction, and management at the Cathedral of St George. Enquiries are invited from clergy in respect of the following incumbency: The candidate will have a deep faith and theological acumen with wisdom, self-knowledge and understanding of people. Grouped Parishes of Garrison, Slavin, Belleek and Kiltyclogher Counties Fermanagh and Leitrim The candidate will provide leadership and direction for the Cathedral congregation through preaching and demonstration of living a life by faith. This group of rural parishes straddle the jurisdictional boundary between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland, in reasonable reach of the county towns of Enniskillen, Sligo and Donegal. There are approximately 261 parishioners, and four church buildings, all of which are in regular use, with two morning services taking place within the group each Sunday. All four church buildings are in an excellent state of repair, each having undergone substantial restoration in approximately the past five years. The Rectory is an attractive period house close to the village of Garrison in County Fermanagh. This group of parishes has a well-established and committed team of parishioners that provides a firm foundation for an enthusiastic and developing ministry. Applications close: March 2013 The position will commence: July 2014 Website: www.perthcathedral.org ads@churchtimes.co.uk For further information and to express interest in the above vacancy please write to: The Rt Revd John McDowell, The See House Fivemiletown, Co Tyrone. BT75 0QP The Diocese of Wellington New Zealand and the Wellington Cathedral Church of St Paul are seeking a Dean who will work with the Cathedral Vestry, the Cathedral congregation, the diocese, the city, and other partners to further enliven the ministry and mission of a contemporary Cathedral, in particular to: • nurture, lead, and challenge the Cathedral family so that the Cathedral fulfils its intent of being a sacred space of worship, hospitality and education; • consolidate and strengthen the Cathedral’s relationship with the diocese; • strengthen the Cathedral’s work and witness with city and government; • maximise the potential of the Cathedral property so as to better serve the Cathedral’s mission; and • continue to hold the highest standards of Cathedral liturgical and musical worship. Further details about this position and the application process are available at http://wn.anglican.org.nz/news/vacancies. Applications close: Tuesday 5 February 2013 Application pack available from: The Archdeacon of Taunton 2 Monkton Heights, West Monkton, Taunton TA2 8LU Telephone: 01823 413315 Email: adtaunton@bathwells.anglican.org www.bathwells.org.uk B•O•G•O•F YOUTH VACANCIES For a limited period of time, we are offering a buy one get one free offer on all Youth Vacancies. Book now to avoid disappointment Advertising Department 020 7776 1010 ads@churchtimes.co.uk Youth Work ST JAMES THE GREAT, THORLEY FULL-TIME CHILDREN’S WORKER Our mission is to reach out in the love of God to all local children and families. We are seeking an inspirational leader Expressions of interest in the above vacancy should be made in writing by Wednesday 23rd January 2013. • to provide oversight and develop activities within the church and wider community • to work strategically and pastorally alongside our volunteers • to liaise with and extend partnerships with local organisations Scottish Episcopal Church Diocese of St Andrews, Dunkeld and Dunblane The focus for this role is the primary school age group, but it is hoped that you will be interested in activities with the older and younger groups. St Andrew’s Episcopal Church, St Andrews DEAN We are looking for a full time Rector to lead our Benefice as we continue working towards ever more effective rural ministry in our three parishes. Closing date for applications: Wednesday 9 January 2013 5Interviews: Thursday 24 and Friday 25 January 2013 See also the new website which both supports and promotes your recruitment advert: Expressions of interest and request for further details should be sent to: The Chair of the Dean Search Committee 38 St Georges Terrace, Perth, WA, 6000, Australia Email: deansearch@perthcathedral.org Excellent communications - Junction 23 of the M5 just two miles away With four Readers and many willing Lay helpers, you will need to be an effective leader and have a passion for pastoral care. An understanding of the demands and rewards of rural ministry is essential. We seek an effective and inspiring preacher of the Good News who is committed to enabling God’s people to become ambassadors of Jesus Christ in their lives, words and deeds. There are a few terms and conditions but in essence you have a GOLDEN GUARANTEE. Situated in the heart of the city of Perth, St George’s is the principal cathedral of the Anglican Province of Western Australia and the metropolitical Diocese of Perth. The Cathedral’s ministry extends to the congregation, visitors to the Cathedral, the Diocese, the City and the wider community. Located along the Polden Hills in Beautiful Rural Somerset Can you lead and inspire us? 3. We will continue to advertise your vacancy for as long as you want us to — until you fill it or get tired of trying He/she should have a deep understanding of the traditions of the Anglican liturgy and a commitment to Church music providing a pivotal role in worship. For the Benefice of Woolavington, Cossington and Bawdrip We want to work with you to: • Place our churches at the heart of each community • Discern & develop talents and spiritual gifts • Reach out in love and pastoral care to everyone 2. You pay for two weeks advertising, and add a 20% premium for the ‘Until Filled’ deal DEAN OF ST GEORGE’S CATHEDRAL, PERTH, AUSTRALIA RECTOR Appointment of RECTOR For further information or an application pack, please contact: parishoffice@stjamesthorley.org www.stjames-church-bishops-stortford.org.uk St James the Great, Thorley Church Lane, Bishop’s Stortford CM23 4BE Tel: 01279 506753 Closing date for applications: 18th January 2013 This lively and diverse congregation in the heart of St Andrews seeks an experienced priest to lead it into the next stage of its life. The congregation provides opportunities for challenging and fulfilling ministry An Information Pack (including the Congregational Profile and Application Form) can be obtained from: Martin Passmore (Vestry Secretary) 2 Montgomery Court, Hepburn Gardens St Andrews, Fife KY16 9LT Email: rector@tesco.net Telephone: 07714 295424 Diocese of St Andrews, Dunkeld and Dunblane | Scottish Charity Number: SCO17654 jobs@churchtimes.co.uk WHERE TO WORSHIP £149 PER YEAR (52 issues) add a picture for an extra £1, per issue To list your church in the Church Times paper contact Kelly Farrer Tel 020 7776 1010 or Email: ads@churchtimes.co.uk CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 61 Organists & Layworkers All Saints’ Church, Bromsgrove, Worcs seeks Organist and Choir Trainer from 1st January, 2013. Classical tracker action two manual Tamburini organ and Allen two manual drawstop organ. Three sung eucharists, two lay-led services, one evensong monthly. Weekly choir practice. Festivals, baptisms, weddings and funerals. Traditional and modern repertoire. Remuneration by arrangement plus wedding and funeral fees. Contact: Mike Carrick 01527 873 135 mike. carrick@zen.co.uk Classified advertisement Order fOrm FOR ANY RUN-ON ADVERTISEMENT TO APPEAR UNDER ANY HEADING 99p a word (Plus VAT at 20 % — Minimum 12 words) Your advertisement will normally appear in FRIDAY’S issue provided that we receive your instructions and remittance by FRIDAY (seven days in advance) St James’s Church, Piccadilly VERGER Starting salary: £21,396 St James’s is a busy Anglican Church in central London with a broad range of activities including services, concerts, a daily market and a variety of ministries and projects. We are currently looking for someone with good communication and practical skills to join our team of vergers. Previous experience not necessary, although the successful applicant will be open, energetic, willing to learn and in sympathy with the church’s aims and ethos. Main responsibilities: to keep the Church and site safe, tidy and secure, and to service all events taking place here. Closing date for applications: noon on Thursday 10th January 2013 Interviews: week commencing Monday 14th January 2013 Full job description and application form available from: www.st-james-piccadilly.org The Chapter seeks to appoint ALTO, TENOR and BASS CHORAL SCHOLARS from September 2013 Accommodation provided Also an ALTO, TENOR or BASS LAY VICAR Start date negotiable Enhanced CRB Disclosure required Further details from: Miss Kirsten Norfolk 14 St Mary’s Street, TRURO, TR1 2AF 01872 245002 kirsten@trurocathedral.org.uk www.trurocathedral.org.uk Subscribe to Church Times so that your copy arrives each week in the post, or you can order it through your local newsagent. For postal subscriptions please call 01603 785911 to pay by direct debit; credit or debit card Sub-Organist The Dean and Chapter of Westminster seeks to appoint a Sub-Organist with effect from September 2013. For a full job description and details of how to apply, please visit: www.westminster-abbey.org/jobs Closing date for applications: Midday on Monday 14 January 2013 WESTMINSTER ABBEY IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITIES EMPLOYER Choir Leader/Organist St. Augustine’s R. C. Church, High Wycombe, Bucks. We are a well attended Church in the Middle of Town, and are seeking a new Choir Leader urgently, who is able to play a 2 Manual Pipe Organ, for our SATB choir. This extra job involves choir practice, 1 hour per week, sung Mass 11am on Sundays plus the usual extra services, weddings & funerals. Please contact: Fr. Willie Strain on staugustines.hw@gmail. com The leading Anglican newspaper CHURCH TIMES 13-17 Long Lane, London EC1A 9PN Tel: 020 7776 1010 Fax: 020 7776 1086 62 CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 Name ............................................................................................................................................................................ Address ........................................................................................................................................................... ...................................................................................................................................... I enclose £............... : ...............p for ..................... insertions of the above advertisement to appear under the .................................................. heading. Remittances to be made payable to: CHURCH TIMES, 3rd Floor, Invicta House, 108-114 Golden Lane, London EC1Y 0TG Holy Trinity Church, Hoghton (Blackburn) requires an Organist and Choir Trainer who has the energy and enthusiasm to play the recently restored 2 manual pipe organ and continue to bring new members to our choir and further develop the music making among the younger members of our congregation. We have a well-established choral tradition with an RSCM affiliated SATB robed choir. We have one sung service each Sunday morning. Remuneration and fees within RSCM guidelines depending on experience and agreed job description. For more information, contact: Elisabeth Sawle on 01772 821213 • eandnsawle@talktalk.net HOLIDAY UK AND HOLIDAY ABROAD SPECIAL OFFER ‘5 for the price of 4’ Lineage ads: 99p per word + VAT, min 12 words Contact: Advertising Department Tel: 020 7776 1010 Email: ads@churchtimes.co.uk ST JOHN THE DIVINE, PEMBERTON, WIGAN DIRECTOR OF MUSIC & ORGANIST Committed and enthusiastic musician sought to enrich our Eucharistic tradition with excellent congregational and choral music. Abbott & Smith 2-manual organ, full compass, maintained by Wells. Deputy available to offer relief. Opportunities in church primary school for reinforcing established SATB choir. Regular weddings and funerals. RSCM rates. 2 minutes from M6 & M58. 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Web: www.undicihols.com You too could advertise for as little as £11.88 (+VAT) and reach over 80,000 readers Articles Wanted ALL CHURCH CONTENTS PURCHASED — Robert Mills Ltd, Narroways Road, Bristol BS2 9XB. Tel: 0117 955 6542. Email: churchtimes@rmills.co.uk ALL CHURCH FURNISHINGS — Fixtures and fittings purchased nationwide. Old chairs urgently required. Chancellors, Rivernook Farm, Sunnyside, Walton on Thames, KT12 2ET. Tel: 01932 252736. Email:Antiquechurch@ btconnect.co CHILTON — Architectural Antiques purchases chairs, fixtures and fittings. 26 Windsor Road, Chorley, Lancs PR7 1LN. Tel/Fax: 01257 273 095. Email: barry.chilton@talktalk. net CHRISTMAS PRIZE CROSSWORD While the choir with peals of glee Doth rend the air asunder. word from Wormingford Notes in a book cause Ronald Blythe to feel intoxicated I AM writing our Nine Lessons and Carols. The mid Advent sun blazes through the study window, and is hot on my back. The white cat dreams on a radiator. Chaf finches swing on the feeder. I write Churchwarden, Bell ringer, Boy, Commuter, Girl, Farmer, Mother, Gardener, Lay Canon. Then I read the incomparable Oxford Book of Carols, and, as always, mourn our limitation. Percy Dearmer, Ralph Vaughan Williams, and Martin Shaw edited this masterpiece in 1928. Here are 200 carols, plus a preface and notes, the latter as intoxica ting as honeywine, shall we say. Once upon a time, carola meant a dancing choir. Try that at King’s. The clergy were anticarol for ages. “Please, Sir, may we sing a carol?” the people asked Parson Woodforde on Christ mas morning. “Yes, but wait until I am out of the church.” This in 1788. It was Percy Dearmer who wrote the fine essay on carols in my treasured collection. He was the Vicar of St Mary’s, Primrose Hill, and Professor of Ecclesiastical Art at King’s College, London. Omega and Alpha he! Let the organ thunder, Crossword No. 1194 by Peter Chamberlain There were giants in church in those days. Meanwhile, I sort out small gifts. How can I thank Jamie the postman for bumping down the an cient track every midmorning without fail? Or the unseen milkman? Or the saintly ones who drive me to services? Or the day for breaking, and the midnight frost for glittering? Or Advent for being so thrill ing? Dearmer wrote: “Perhaps nothing is just now of such importance [it was the early postFirst World War aftermath] as to increase the element of joy in religion; people crowd in our churches at the Christmas, Easter, and Harvest Festivals, largely because the hymns for those occasions are full of a sound hilarity; if carol books were in continual use [there are carols for every season], that most Christian and most forgotten element would be vastly increased, in some of its loveliest forms, all through the year.” In the high street, two lads play Bach to the taxi rank. Children stare up at them in wonder. A few steps away is the big old house in which John Wilbye played the lute when Shakespeare was alive, his wage the lease on a sheep farm. Both of them would have sung a carol called “The Song of the Ship” for Advent. There comes a ship asailing, With angels flying fast; She bears a splendid cargo And has a mighty mast. This ship is fully laden, Right to her highest board, She bears the son from heaven, God’s high eternal Word. Across 1 5 8 12 13 14 15 16 17 Village Hours, the latest col lection from Wormingford, is 19 out now (Canterbury Press, £14.99 (CT Bookshop £13.49); 21 9781848252370). 23 24 26 28 SCRIBBLE PAD sponsored by 30 32 34 36 39 43 44 46 47 48 50 51 52 53 Priest with one reindeer not starting or another (7) Reportedly restrict one coming from European republic (5) A supporter taking meat comes to fatherly figure (7) Hospital tender (5) ‘Sing through all _____’ (carol) (9) Group of powerful women in Banff ate sandwiches (5) Strip search beginning late bothered senior cleric (46) Display spoils by Harry, officer in one of the services (37) Favourite language, Eastern and Middle Eastern, used for wine (532) No matter what happens during no particular item during sports contest (2,3,5) Part of highest romantic enthusiasm of poetic inspiration (5) Fairly OK, like repeats (22) Runs behind one tree (4) Saw notice long time afterwards (5) Superintendent, saving time before Sunday, makes a sort of false move (10) ‘_____ is born’ (carol) (4,2,1,3) ‘_____ 39 Across with a kiss’ (carol) (10) Computer facilities? Prisoner would like to get his hand on them! (6,4) Betsy Perry removed from area reserved for priests (10) See 32 Across (3,7) Do not hide facts about meat (6) ‘Worship Christ the _____ king’ (carol) (34) ‘Nor _____ infest the ground’ (carol) (6) Glittery stuff that could be silent (6) ‘When like stars, His children _____’(carol) (7) Some more gin available in the city (6) ‘No ear may hear his _____’ (carol) (6) ‘Ding dong _____ on high’ (carol) (7) One making a great show is one of Rudolph’s friends (6) Down 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 18 20 22 23 25 27 29 31 33 35 36 37 38 40 41 42 45 48 49 Long drink containing very soft fruit (9) Fruit, mostly tropical, growing wild (7) Small bird climbing plant (7) ‘_____ and be merry’ (carol) (7) Arrest chemist uprooting seasonal plant (9,4) ‘Shining in the _____’ (carol) (4) Blessed young children who will be remembered just after the present day (4,9) One old railway worker, someone dependent on charity (7) Whistler overseeing pitched battle (7) On the run she carries round socket on camera (3,4) Parasite removed from motel site (9) One of the mistakes in Shakespearean comedy? (5) The spirit of the Russian people (5) ‘Whereon the _____ of the world was born’ (carol) (7) ‘Star of silver, _____ across the skies’ (carol) (5) Drink I love in fancy jar (5) ‘All _____ to God on high’ (carol) (5,2) Gentleman has removed one, bowled (5) Brief period of enchantment (5) Song performed deadpan day after day removed (5) Cold meat free of germs (5) Picture including one traitor is to do with robbers in the main (7) Move NNE transporting poison (7) Seasonal blazer (4,3) ‘Then _____ in those wise men three’ (carol) (7) Romeo to disappear going round in glossy coat (7) Hopelessness of the French duo (7) One genuflecting in recess (5) Caught William in Welsh glen (3) ‘Was born upon this _____’ (carol) (3) Last week’s solution GUILD OF CHURCH BRAILLISTS Please join us and help put Christian books into the National Library for the Blind Email: info@gocb.org • Website: www.gocb.org Tel: 01363 860 141 The senders of the fifirst rst three correct solutions opened on 14 January will win a copy of St Paul’s Cathedral: 1400 years at the heart of London by Ann Saunders, kindly donated by Scala publishers Ltd. This beautifully illustrated book, with glorious colour photographs of St paul’s Cathedral and its treasures, tells the history of this much loved national landmark. Send your entries to: Christmas Crossword Church Times 3rd Floor invicta House 108114 Golden Lane London eC1Y 0TG CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 63 back page interview ‘As a historian of the post-war years, I can sit down every day and have lunch with some of my exhibits’ Peter Hennessy journalist, historian, peer Having tried to find out what the British Constitution is, since read ing Walter Bagehot late one night at St John’s College, Cambridge, I’ve become a tiny moving particle in a big moving part of the British Constitution, which is the House of Lords. It’s even more baffling [from the inside]. But then, I don’t want to find out, because it’s a romantic thing, the British Constitution, a thing of shreds and patches. I think it suits us. It would be agony if we tried to write it all down. It would take years, and we’d have immense fights. And also I like things to have an air of magic and mystery, which Bage hot did, too. I’m one of those people who think we should go in for organic re forms rather than knock it all down and start again. I want to see a slimmer House of Lords, one where hereditary peers are converted into life peers so you don’t have a byelection when one dies; to end the link between the peerage and the honours system, because it’s a job, really — reforms of that kind. I think bishops matter — apart from the fact that they’re great fun and tremendous gossips. They do add something: there’s no question about it. I’d firmly vote to keep a number of bishops in the House, even if we did have a largely elected chamber. No doubt at all. Governments are so different, and the circumstances are so different within which each prime minister operates; so I’m not one to rate them. But the Coalition Govern ment is fascinating to watch because of the emotional geography of it. Lib Dems, with one or two exceptions, are largely herbivorous politicians, whereas Conservatives are largely carnivorous, and these tempera mental differences mean it’s not easy for them. It was the only thing that could have given us a period of stability in Parliament, given the parliamen tary arithmetic that the electorate produced in May 2010. I don’t think the alternative rainbow coalition was a runner. I’m one of nature’s optimists, but I do think that the Middle East is always in an immensely perilous condition, and the knockon effects from, say, an Israeli attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities would be immense. And that does make me fearful. I think the greatest shared boon of our lifetime is the Cold War’s end ing the way it did. It’s the most remarkable thing. That’s not the only reason I’m optimistic — it’s a temperamental thing. 64 Churches to fall out over everything. Best manifesto ever written: 175 words and no caveats. That’s where I go if I need to. Human curiosity — what Einstein called a “holy curiosity” — is within all of us, and it takes different forms. Mine was probably picked up from listening to family stories. I love Schubert. That amazing out pouring — there’s hardly anything in there that doesn’t bring solace. It’s the great and most reliable transporter of mood for me. I can’t play an instrument, sadly, though I did think that I might take up the ukulele when I retire so that I could do George Formby impressions and irritate everybody. In the late ’50s, my sister Kathleen, who was a history teacher, bought me R. J. Unstead’s book Looking at History — that wonderful picture book. I can remember lovingly copying the outline drawing of a monastery. So, certainly by then, it was deep within me. And I found I enjoyed writing essays and stories; so the combination of my curiosity and the pleasure in writing fused, to make me a professional historian. What annoys me? Apart from the silly little frictions of life like mobile phones on the upper deck of buses? When we score own goals in society, really. Like letting class or status infect every bit of education. I get quite cross about that. I’m not a republican in most things, but I do believe in the republic of the intel lect. All this Russell Group stuff about “élite universities” — why can’t we just get on with it? Good schools in every sector are beyond price, and I wouldn’t do anything to harm Oxbridge, or public schools, because if you have places that give knowledge with aplomb and insight, that’s important. But there’s a dis dainful attitude to some graduates because they come from a particular institution. I’ve enjoyed it all in turn. I was lucky to do them in the sequence in which I did, because journalism is a young man or woman’s trade — “routine punctuated by orgies”, to use Aldous Huxley’s description. And I really loved every minute of the 20 years at the university that I was in from 1992. And the House of Lords is a place of fascination and delight — not just because of the great gossip that you get every day. As a historian of the postwar years, I can sit down every day and have lunch with some of my exhibits. It’s very pleasureable, and very illuminating, and an incredible form of adult education in the Lords, because people very often know such a lot. I knew it was a great repository of wisdom and experi ence, but I didn’t realise quite how deep. Even deeper than I thought. And that’s a great justification for it. But the other reason for it is that it’s very useful to have, somewhere in the legislative structure, a group of people — not just the crossbenchers, but really experienced people on the party benches — who are there primarily because they know things rather than because they believe things. We’re much more open than we used to be — amazingly more so than when I first started as a journ alist, when there would be a leak inquiry if I mentioned the letters and numbers of a particular cabinet committee in a Times newspaper story. It’s much, much more open. You just have to draw the line in a sensible place. There are so many things that can go into the making of the psychic weather of a country and people at any one time. Governments are only part of that. They can surprise us all by rallying us at a time of great peril, when the rational prognosis is dreadful, and the classic example is of 1940. But there’s a terrible tend ency among politicians, most of the time, to use an old phrase of Yehudi Menuhin’s: “drift to confrontation”. The model is very adversarial in this country. Politicians tend to love taking ideological and rather personal away days, and reducing things to primary colours and soundbites when it’s all much more compli cated, and that’s why the public gets so irritated. So, if there’s a general malaise or despair, they can add to it by not rising to the level of events, but sticking to the tribal reserva tions of both their minds and seat ing in the House of Commons, and only talking to their own kind. That’s what depresses people. But politicians are indispensable, and they can actually make things better. It doesn’t have to be quite as raucous and coarse as it is. It’s the sound of freedom. If it was all muted, it wouldn’t be a fully CHURCH TIMES 21/28 December 2012 open society. I’m always a bit torn on that. Thank heavens we don’t have a presidential system. That wouldn’t sit well with us: we’re much more of a collective in our approach to these things. I really miss: M. R. D. Foot, a his torian of the Resistance, who was the most wonderful friend and com panion, who died earlier this year. I’ve been really lucky — extremely blessed in that way. My wisest choice was marrying my dear wife, unquestionably — or asking her to marry me, much more accurately — in the spring of 1968. We have two daughters and two grandsons. The books that make me really purr with pleasure are the ones that slip down so easily because they’re so wonderfully written. Professor Sir Michael Howard has a golden pen. And there’s Dr Paul Addison, who wrote The Road to 1945. I remember thinking, I’d give anything to try and write history books like this. I regret that I lapsed from going to church from the age of 17 to the age of 54. I didn’t stop believing. When my oldest daughter was going to marry a lovely Catholic lad from Liverpool, she said: “Can you take me to church, so I can start getting used to it?” And I thought, why on earth did I stop coming? On a much lesser level — absolutely minuscule compared to that — I regret that I will not now write the book The Impact of Gossip and Rumour on the Making of Politics. But, for that, I’d have had to start taking notes when I was a young political correspondent in the mid ’70s. That’s my scholarly regret. I’d like to be remembered for laughter — grandad being an af fable idiot. It would be nice if my books were read for a bit, but it’s not right to expect people to do that, or crave it. They might like the jokes. And I have enjoyed the company of students, I really have. I hope I’ve never bored them. I still have the most wonderful history master, Eric Pankhurst, who every three months sends me a packet of cuttings he thinks I ought to read, just in case I’ve missed them. He’s a lovely man, and he had a great influence on me at the time, and never ceased to have an influence. There are people like Sir Michael Quinlan, Permanent Secre tary at the Ministry of Defence, who was not only a great mentor of mine, but also a most wonderful human being; and John Ramsden, whom I worked with at Queen Mary College, a man of great character and verve — just two examples from each of my worlds. There are probably about 20 people from my professional life who have gone on before and who Yes, I’m scribbling away. Always — scribble, scribble. The rhythm of the week wouldn’t be complete without scribbling. I try — I fail — to write 1000 words a day most days. It doesn’t have to be scholarship: it could be diaries or letters, to keep my hand in. There was a sermon that Dr Rowan Williams gave at the anniversary of the Carthusian Martyrs at Charter house two years ago which really moved me. It was on the theme of martyrdom. It was the combination of his wonderful temperament, power with words, and the evoca tion he brought to it, in that beau tiful chapel, surrounded by the brothers of Charterhouse and others. Magic isn’t the word one should associate with religion, but it’s the only one that fits. Apart from being with the family, which is irrespective of place, I love being in the Lake District. My mum and dad were from the north, and part of the Fell and Rock Climbing Club; so they were always talking about the Lake District, and it really lived up to expectation when I went there. The Orkneys are a great family favourite, because of their austere beauty, and the fact that the winds are so fierce the midges get blown away — the little buggers don’t stand a chance. My daughters thought for years that holidays were always cold and wet. They didn’t associate them with sun. I always go back to the Sermon on the Mount. It’s the thing we all sign up to without exception, and when we stray a few inches from that, we start falling out. It’s the great thing we can all fall in on, as opposed to the terrible tendency we have in our I profoundly believe in Newman’s faith in university education for its own sake. I don’t want to rant about this: I try to avoid ranting. I’m happiest with the family, and when a piece of weaponsgrade gossip that’s very funny and not malicious comes my way. Also, I do love the reading and the writing. I’m very fortunate: work that’s also play. I’m not very good at prayer. I try. It matters. But I don’t think that I’m that good at it. I find the form of words which come to me in normal social relations becomes a bit re petitive and stilted. I can be repeti tive and stilted in normal life — of course I can. But this is difficult. I’m not one of those who can just chat with the Almighty. Words are never enough in prayer, are they? My consoling thought is that, if one got complacent in prayer, one would be in trouble. Locked in a church with a com panion? I think it might be St Benedict. I’d say to him: “That Rule is amazing, and it’s very hard for civvies to apply it. I’m rather keen to have a better go at it than I ever have before. Let me tell you how I go about my daily and weekly routines.” And I expect he’d sigh inwardly and think: “Not another one,” but he wouldn’t show it. Lord Hennessy was talking to Terence Handley MacMath. Among his works are The Hidden Wiring: Unearthing the British constitution (1995), The Secret State: Whitehall and the Cold War (2002), Having It So Good: Britain in the Fifties (2006), and The Secret State: Preparing for the worst 19452010 (2010). printed by Mortons printers and publishers, Newspaper House, Morton Way, Horncastle, Lincolnshire LN9 6JR; registered as a newspaper at the post office