When, some years ago, I became the Bishop’s Surrogate for
this area – the person deputed to hear oaths which, technically, should be
sworn before the bishop for the purpose of getting married without banns being
read and things of that order – I said I’d do it provided I got appropriate training
as I was very unsure what to do. My training arrived in a brown envelope from
the Bishop’s Registry and consisted of a booklet. Well, I thought, that’s
distance learning.
As you know not so long ago I became Chaplain to the local squadron of the Air Cadets as I thought it was a helpful institution to have
links with. My predecessor didn’t do a great deal apart from turn up for
enrolment services, but it was suggested to me that I might be a bit more
involved and do ‘Padre’s Hour’ with the cadets from time to time, to which I
breezily said Yes, it being entirely open as to what Padre’s Hour might
comprise. I was advised to contact one of the other padres in the area, who, it
turned out, had moved. A second I haven’t been able to coincide diaries with. A
third was friendly but uninformative apart from advising me to pay as much attention
to the welfare of the adults as to the cadets. There was a ‘manual’, I was
told, which followed the national RAF chaplains’ ‘Patterns for Life’ scheme,
dealing with a variety of big moral and emotional matters such as ‘Respect’ or ‘Integrity’.
And so in advance of my first session this Tuesday I looked
through the bewildering pages of ‘Patterns for Life’ and battered together
something which I hoped would take about 40-50 minutes depending on how
talkative the cadets turned out to be. I was terrified. Of course these
teenagers were likely to be more tolerant, helpful and respectful than any
other group I am ever likely to encounter, but I still had next to no idea how
what I wanted to do or say would go down. They weren’t awfully talkative although probably more so than they would have
been had I simply launched into the work without the ice-breaking exercise I
worked out beforehand. I do sometimes get the impression that I just suck the
initiative and confidence out of any group of people I deal with. I came home,
insisted on doing the washing-up alone (Ms Formerly Aldgate and I would
normally do it together), and had some port to recover. I spend so much of my time doing
things I seem attitudinally completely unsuited to. There must be some purpose
to it, mustn’t there?