At the meeting of the local chapter of the SCP last week the conversation, reprehensibly, turned to vestments and the impracticality of the maniple, the embroidered strip of cloth a priest of a traditionalist bent might wear over their left arm (in origin it was a napkin to wipe things up). The consensus was that people don't use them for fear of knocking over everything on the altar. 'Oh, you get used to it', I said ostentatiously. 'I wore a maniple at Christmas', put in one of my brethren. 'It was made of tinsel'. I decided not to pursue the matter. A bit later I saw another of my colleagues blithely topping up his coffee with sparkling water from a bottle. I don't think it'll catch on.
As we stood in the chancel of the church which was hosting us for Mass, my imagination was suddenly taken back a millennium or more to some sparsely-decorated chapel of Anglo-Saxon England where a group of monks or clerics would have been gathered around an altar in exactly the same way doing pretty much the same sort of thing. All those figures would, in their time, have been linked into the eternal worship of Heaven just as we, a group of miscellanously-shaped and -gendered Anglican priests, were in ours. They took part in it, died, and handed their role on to others who took their place - and so on, until there we all were centuries later. The liturgy abides: we who celebrate it come and go. We are part of its story, not it of ours. It's more real than we are. And there's something profoundly comforting about that.
Monday, 30 January 2017
Saturday, 28 January 2017
An Interlude of Uplift
In the midst of a crazy world, blogs can default to a
catalogue of complaints and gripes, and I don't want to give you the impression
I am anything other than happy here in the fair parish of Swanvale Halt. I am
remarkably blessed in every way you can imagine, thanks to no virtue of my own,
and every day begins and ends with gratitude. It's been a long while since any
very black moods have swept across me, and I turn my eyes to the hills that lie
around the village, and remember from where my help comes. Sometimes happiness,
I find, can even edge towards joy.
My New Zealand reader Fr Wellington offers prayers for me with great kindness and grace:
May the church bureaucrats be kind to you.
May the parishioners not desert you
Let the tithes and offerings not tempt to build bigger barns
May the media reports be gracious
May the media reports be gracious
May meetings be not too disputatious
Let the SD be perspicacious in his advice to you
Let the SD be perspicacious in his advice to you
And may the Bishop grant you her approbation in all things
and leave you in peace.
Amen.
Not much chance of bigger barns being constructed, I must say, but it gives us something to aim at. God bless you, one and all.
(This won't last, of course).
Thursday, 26 January 2017
Morning Thoughts
Blogs are places for thinking through things.
The advocates of torture always seem to have in their minds movie and TV scenarios where the hero has captured a wrongdoer with limited time to go before some disaster befalls the innocent, the key to avoiding which the wrongdoer knows. But, quite apart from the question of whether these imagined events are ever realistic, they take place within a context of crime, gang violence and the like, in which the hero is always implicated and ambiguous. They are episodes of passion and moral conflict, in which the hero might or might not take the decision he (it’s always he) does. This is what makes them dramatic. The fictional scenarios never show what really happens in torture: the calculated and deliberate infliction of pain by officials of the State, in accordance with a predetermined policy. In those, more real, circumstances, when states and their agents use torture they take a step of degradation. The State should by rights act to restrain violence and promote law and negotiation: by using violence to extract information (setting aside the question of the reliability of the information so extracted), states instead normalise such acts, and lower the resistance of others to doing the same as them. Greater violence, if you like, circulates in the system. Whereas the fictional act of torture takes place in a context which is already lawless and violent, the real one injects more violence into a context in which the State’s role should be to reduce it and to bring about adherence to law. This is why the use of torture by states degrades those involved in it, the states themselves, and the world community, and why, in that fictional scenario, it might actually be – chillingly – better for innocents to suffer to avoid worse events in the future.
Suits You, Father
The other Pope caused some discussion among people I know
recently by preaching about clerical attire. This puts one in mind of the vicar
who angrily denied Bishop Mervyn Stockwood’s accusation that he’d preached a
series of sermons in Lent about Georgian architecture with the words ‘It was
Advent’, but Papa Francesco was focusing more on the moral implications of what
priests choose to wear. As we know, he has a rather different sartorial style
from his predecessor who favoured things like fanons and fiddlebacks and
anything that might hark back to the days before Vatican 2, and he probably checks
the tag on his chasuble to make sure it is
genuine polyester.
Speaking at mass in his private chapel in December, Pope Francis
described how an elderly priest colleague had been in Euroclero, the big
clerical outfitters, and spotted a young chap trying on a saturno hat and an unnecessarily fancy cape and checking himself
out in a mirror. The old monsignor had, said the Pope, ‘conquered his pain with
humour’ and said to his preening colleague ‘and they say that the Church does
not allow women priests!’
If that rather disagreeably misogynist remark, and the fact that the
Pope sees nothing amiss with it, doesn’t make you feel too sick to continue
reading, you might take on board the rest of his argument, that once a priest
ceases to see themselves as a mediator
of God to his people (that is, someone who in loving and sacrificial words and
deeds does for them what God does), and instead becomes merely a functional intermediary (someone who occupies a
position of bargaining between God and human beings), they will give in to
rigidity and worldliness. They will, bizarrely, look ‘sad and serious’ and have
‘dark, dark eyes’ – and, presumably, shop about for elaborate churchy gear to
emphasise their status.
One of my friend’s online interlocutors groused ‘Has the
Holy Father nothing better to do than gossip about young priests in tat shops?’
‘In my experience, it's the traditionalist priests with conservative sartorial
taste who are often ministering in the places others shun. A bit like the
Incarnation really - beauty among the dirt and grit’, commented another. ‘Some
of the best priests I have known wore yards of lace and brocade in church and
jeans and tee shirt in the pub in the evening’. Another friend of mine said ‘Perhaps
the Msgr in the article would have much preferred it if he'd gone into Euroclero
and spotted a nun playing a guitar badly. Because that (very 1960s) kind of
Catholicism really got people flocking back to church didn't it. Perhaps we
should be grateful to the Msgr for inspiring the Holy Father to teach us that
dressing up is not consistent with humility and genuine mission. If only I'd
known that when I was a parish priest in inner city Bristol working amidst the
homeless and drug addicts - and when I increased my congregation from 30 elderly
people to double that with lots of young families.’
You can see ideas eliding into one another here. Church is about the sacraments of
Christ’s Kingdom and so churchy things should definitely declare the beauty of
God, even if what we might consider to be
beautiful will vary from setting to setting and arguably, though if we’re
honest not wildly, from person to person. Francis isn’t explicitly taking a pop
at that: saturnos and velvet capes do
seem rather more about adorning a human individual rather than the God they
serve. You know where he’s coming from, about that as well as the strained
mediator-intermediary dichotomy, even if this isn’t a particularly edifying way
of talking about it. However, you might be forgiven for suspecting that lurking
behind his irritation at fancy clerical street-dress is also a scorn of fanons
and fiddlebacks, his rolling-back his predecessor’s
rolling-back the 1960s; so perhaps the clergy comments above aren’t that far of
the mark. If that is what he thinks,
it’s drawing an analogy too far. I for
one hadn’t considered that having dark eyes might be a sign of spiritual
disorder: if so, I got it from my Mum along with that particular dominant gene.
Well: not all my weekday-mass homilies have been impeccably thought-out theological
masterpieces, either.
My church gear is a sort of battledress, it seems to me. The
fallen world militates against beauty and hope, denies the reality of heaven
and the true nature of human beings: the Church insists on the presence of the
Kingdom, and even my biretta, which is both smart and ludicrous at the same
time, is a little pom-pommed declaration that I’m not going to compromise about
this stuff. Of course if that’s where your religion stops, it’s a bit
catastrophic, but it very rarely is.
Outside church, priests should not be scruffy unless they
are seriously unworldly (and very few of us are), and never dirty. Off duty entirely, I quite like the fun of
conservative male dress, the selection of ties and shirts and hats and shoes
according to occasion and circumstance: but I never think that it’s anything other
than a game, an amusement which I trust causes no harm and may even bring a
little delight to the world. I hope I’m right, anyway.
Tuesday, 24 January 2017
Swanvale Halt Film Club: Suffragette (2015)
Apart from Meryl Streep doing her panto turn as Mrs
Pankhurst (of which there isn’t very much in the movie), we very much enjoyed
the worthy Suffragette. I kept
thinking I’d seen Carey Mulligan in something else, but checking her biography
I haven’t – it must have been another actress with similar mannerisms, not that
it matters much.
What struck me most forcibly – why it had never really done
so before I can’t imagine – was the disruptive force of Suffragism and the
sense that anyone who got involved with it was pitching themselves against the
whole way a society functioned, its assumptions and relationships. Ms
Mulligan’s character Maud loses her home and her family as her poor husband,
even more trapped within the patriarchal system than she is, sees his wife turn
into a terrorist and is jeered at, emasculated, by his workmates for allowing
it. He isn’t a bad man: he just can’t see outside that particular box, and is
it any wonder? The way Maud’s understanding of reality is loosened and her eyes
opened to the oppression of the laundry she works in, and the society that
facilitates such petty tyranny, is portrayed with great restraint and all the
more effective for it. No wonder the ‘straight’ world thinks the Suffragettes
are crazy: they can see something everyone else can’t, and when your reality is
so very disturbing to the mainstream’s, mad is very much what you are. Making
this clear, resisting the temptation to present Suffragism as an obvious idea
whose triumph was inevitable, but as something profoundly dangerous, is one of the film’s main achievements, quite
apart from its technical proficiency and the work of the players. Trying to think of a contemporary parallel, I
settled on veganism: but I’m not a vegan, and will leave talking about that for
another time.
Sunday, 22 January 2017
More About How Things Are Done Or Not Done
It was a wet Monday morning, and I went with Debbie our
ordinand for a meeting with the Powers That Be at the diocese to express some
of her dissatisfactions with the way the process of settling her curacy was
handled, as you may recall. The Powers manifested themselves on this occasion in the form of the
Director of Ordinands and the Director of Training, clad in the kind of
comfortable, approachable clothing – pastel pullovers and long-loved jackets -
which clergy now all seem to wear unless they’re a bishop. It doesn’t fool me,
I can tell you.
A lot of the discussion centred on whether or not Debbie had
had a particular form which is supposed to constitute part of her Final Report
and on which ordinands indicate something about their aims for
their title parish - Catholic or Evangelical, rural or urban, within 5 miles of
a Waitrose, that sort of thing – and who was supposed to ensure that she got
it. ‘The national understanding is that the initiative in placing ordinands
rests on the training institution’, said the Director of Ordinands, and said it
repeatedly through the meeting. I thought this was less important than the fact
that Debbie’s future, in or outside this diocese, had been settled without a
word being said to her about it, and asked how the picture of the initiative
resting with the colleges fitted with the parallel one of the training
department here settling placements
for local ordinands. 'I do try and speak to the ordinands', said the Director of Ordinands, 'but sometimes they're in Bristol and sometimes they're in Durham. The training institutions are supposed to be best-placed to make a judgement on what's best for them.' The person in question, of course, was barely a 15-minute drive away, but I let that rest.
If anything was clear from the discussion, it was that
things weren’t clear. It is perhaps not possible to offer a set of accessible
criteria for settling curates in parishes because parishes, and their
incumbents, are complex and quirky and there are important factors which feed
into the decision-making process which can’t really openly be talked about,
such as when this or that incumbent might be about to move on or (despite what
they say in public) can’t work with someone of the opposite sex. But the
boundaries between the responsibilities of the colleges and the diocesan
authorities could do with some clarification: and ordinands themselves could at
least be talked to. That was all I expected to get, and that’s what was said.
Debbie is now safely provided with a title post in another
diocese, so none of this matters to her, apart from the relief of saying her
piece. But who knows, I may one day be a training incumbent to another
ordinand, and the piece said could easily matter then.
Friday, 20 January 2017
Washing of Hands
I share this because of my interest in mental health - I have lots of crazy friends, and may well be crazy myself at some point, who knows.
Poor Cylene has been going through a hard patch recently,
and her anxieties have brought her a variety of dramatic and baroque
hallucinations. Artist though she may be, these are not at all easy to deal
with and she would sooner not have them.
She tried to call her GP and after 90 minutes trying and
failing to get through called her mental health team instead. The MHT recently
discharged her, not because she was well, but because she’d been through their
offered programme of therapy and that was it. It is in their interest to
discharge patients because they are no longer a drain on time and resources,
regardless of how far they are towards a cure and what sense ‘cure’ may make in
their particular case. The MHT refused to speak to her. ‘We discharged you,
you’re not our responsibility, talk to your GP’.
So Cylene again attempted to call her GP and finally got
through. ‘I’ll try to contact your prescribing psychiatrist and call you back’,
the GP said. When Cylene got that call, two hours later, it began with the doctor ranting for fifteen minutes about the behaviour of the MHT. ‘They refused to
speak to me,’ she said. ‘I said, I’m not a random member of the public, I’m a
health professional enquiring about one of my patients who you have also
treated and who is presenting with psychotic symptoms. It would really help me
to speak to her psychiatrist. They simply just kept saying that you’d been
discharged and weren’t their responsibility any more. In the absence of consulting your psychiatrist, all we can advise is that
you take another 25mg of your current antipsychotic.’
‘So I said thank you, as I knew that’s all she could do’,
sighed Cylene. ‘But I’m already taking 300mg, I don’t see what another 25 will
do. If I could get more than 2 hours’ sleep a night it would help.’
Wednesday, 18 January 2017
Longing for the Day
The congregation of Swanvale Halt is mercifully free of the
brand of Christian who gets excited about signs of the impending end of the
world, but somehow I was copied in on an email referring to a blogging
evangelist who was calling attention to the Paris conference about the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict and how it portended the terminal stage of human
civilisation. Much was made about the number of nations present, seventy, and
its fulfilment of Biblical prophecy: I don’t need to go into it in detail, I
expect. You get the picture. ‘We hurtle towards our Lord’s bodily return!!’
I sat in front of the computer and wondered why I didn’t feel more enthused. After all, I tell myself that the final triumph of God is the hope that undergirds my life. The answer, I fear, is more than mere distaste for dubious analysis of current events in the light (or obscurity) of Scripture, but hesitancy at the whole thing.
I sat in front of the computer and wondered why I didn’t feel more enthused. After all, I tell myself that the final triumph of God is the hope that undergirds my life. The answer, I fear, is more than mere distaste for dubious analysis of current events in the light (or obscurity) of Scripture, but hesitancy at the whole thing.
The following day we sat at Morning Prayer in church and
read, as directed by our holy mother the Church of England, from Chapter 5 of
the Prophecy of Amos. And among what we read was:
Alas for you who desire the day of the Lord! Why do you want
the day of the Lord?
It is darkness, not light: as if someone fled from a lion,
and was met by a bear; or went into the house and rested a hand against the
wall, and was bitten by a snake.
Is not the day of the Lord darkness, not light, and gloom
with no brightness in it?
Well, quite. It’s inhuman to welcome mass suffering, no
matter that it might be the birth pangs of something new and better, and God
makes it clear that he knows this. The process of tearing apart good and evil,
which at the moment are intermingled in us, is not going to be easy, never mind
what it turns out to look like, and never mind when it comes. The Day of the
Lord will be like surgery without an anaesthetic: adamantly necessary given the
prevailing desperate conditions, but not a prospect to relish, if you are sane.
Jesus says in Luke 21 that ‘when these things begin to take place, stand up and
lift up your heads, for your redemption is at hand’: and so we should, and
there is some exultation, some leaping of the spirit, in knowing so. But it’s
going to be hard, and if I see it, I doubt I will like it.
Sorry about all the religion. Fundamentalist Christians are always in an apocalyptic mood, but perhaps the whole world is presently.
Monday, 16 January 2017
Which Counterculture?
A few weeks ago The Big Issue had a piece penned by Peter Seewald, Pope
Emeritus Benedict’s biographer, about his forthcoming book about the retired
pontiff and his work. Only a couple of paragraphs in, it’s clear that Benedict XVI Last Testament isn’t going
to be exactly hard-hitting. ‘It has made me angry to see how a silly
understanding of him has encroached on public perceptions,’ says Mr Seewald,
‘this not only contradicts the historical truth, it is also dangerous. It
prevents us from engaging with Pope Benedict’s important message.’ ‘From the
beginning’ he goes on, ‘I was impressed by his realism, his courage and his
strong-heartedness’.
That's all fair enough. And this message is? ‘Ratzinger sees his Church as a resistance movement against the bedevilment of this age, against the Godforsakenness of fundamentalist atheism and new forms of paganism. He encourages us not to be bedazzled or carried away by the latest contemporary trends, yet at the same time he sets us against being rigid or narrow-minded’.
That's all fair enough. And this message is? ‘Ratzinger sees his Church as a resistance movement against the bedevilment of this age, against the Godforsakenness of fundamentalist atheism and new forms of paganism. He encourages us not to be bedazzled or carried away by the latest contemporary trends, yet at the same time he sets us against being rigid or narrow-minded’.
I would also like to see the Church that way. It would be
energising and invigorating to see oneself as part of a battle-line in the combat
for hope and love; even more, a sort of underground, countercultural one, as
implied by the term ‘resistance movement’ with its suggestions of laconic women
in macs and berets, secret caches of arms and crackly radio sets operating
under the noses of the powers-that-be. I think that is, indeed, how many
Christians see themselves. I’ve spoken here about rowing against the tides of
the times, and what I see as the demand of the Gospel that power, complacency
and socially-accepted delusion are exposed and called to account.
But it doesn’t wash, does it? This age may be subject to
bedevilment, but all ages are: there’s nothing unique about the times in which
we find ourselves. The radicalism of Jesus lies in his questioning, his
elevation of heavenly standards beyond earthly ones, and his refusal to
tabulate what he was talking about into easily-assimilated statements. That’s
why the manifesto of the early Church wasn’t a doctrinal essay but an account
of a life, and eventually four mutually-conflicting if complementary accounts
of it. None of this was authoritarian or even stable: none of it could easily
be corralled into a system which gave clear and unequivocal guidance how human
beings should manage their lives or societies. It would always be turbulent, disruptive,
no matter what the world around it was like. It would always, will always,
demand more than human culture can ever deliver. The Gospel will always be at
odds with the age.
Of course Pope-Emeritus Benedict knows all this well enough.
What he leaves out, as Roman Catholic thinkers (and to an extent Christian
thinkers more generally) usually do, is history. Notwithstanding the
inescapably disruptive power of the Gospel at its core, the Church has been far
from inescapably disruptive. It has crowned and approved of worldly power, used
the secular sword to fight its battles and enforce its ideas – and less
high-mindedly, its grubby self-interest – and showed only occasional bursts of
conscience at its collaboration with the forces that nailed Christ to the
cross. It has done very well out of it, thank you. And now, deprived of that
long power, for the Church to make a virtue of necessity and suddenly to
discover a counter-cultural mission is a bit rich.
One suspects that Benedict (and plenty of other Christians
of all sorts of types) only see this age as especially bedevilled because
Christians are not in charge of it. And no reverential biography of the retired
Pope is likely to question him about that.
Labels:
books,
Christianity and society,
ecumenism,
history
Saturday, 14 January 2017
On Kosovo Field
On Kosovo Field is over now. This past week Radio 4 has been
broadcasting a drama in the 10.45am/7.45pm slot, based on PJ Harvey’s trips to Kosovo with Seamus Murphy while preparing Hope
Six, using material from her notebooks and the demo versions of songs for
the album. The two central characters, Dardan and Rebekah, are young Kosovans
evacuated to the UK in 1998, and now returning to find out what happened to
their parents after the discovery of a mass grave (‘there were only 19 bodies’)
near their home village. They negotiate their way through the hazardous young
state, and undergo a very strange experience in the mountains where they
discover that the past is not what they thought it was.
Of course I was deliriously
excited: I was getting tearful before we even started. Then just as the first
jangly guitar notes issued from the wireless on Monday morning the doorbell
rang: it was my 11.30am appointment, some 45 minutes ahead of time. ‘Sorry I’m
early’. Yes, you are a bit, aren’t you? Thankfully this is not the Old Days
when if you missed a broadcast, that was it, Sunny Jim; and you, my interloper,
should be more thankful for that even than I. I reorientated my emotional state
and in the end my appointment left at
the time she should have arrived.
PJH fans have of course got very excited about the airing of
material they’ve never heard before. Some of the songs for Hope Six were trailed in live performances before the album was
recorded, but there are pieces in Kosovo
Field which are entirely new to the world: songs called ‘Pity for the Old
Road’ and ‘Dance on the Mountain’ relate directly to poems published in PJ and
Seamus Murphy’s book, The Hollow of the
Hand, and ‘The Red Road’ is the one where she grapples with the troublesome
imagery of fallen plums (‘Think about what I can get a song from. Plums not
good for song’, she admonishes herself in her notebook, pages of which are
included in the e-version of Hollow –
yet she goes ahead and writes one anyway). But ‘Clothes of Grief’ and ‘Where is
our City?’ have no parallel in anything published hitherto, so for
Pollywatchers those compositions are very interesting. Now, to be honest,
there’s nothing earth-shattering about much of this material, and the singer’s
voice, heavily reverbed, at the top of her range and stripped of anything but a
guitar and the occasional piano note, sounds a little awkward. The songs are
just rough outlines for the full versions, and there are presumably good
reasons why some never progressed beyond the demos. But ‘The Red Road’ sounds
rather thrillingly like Balkan folksong; and ‘Clothes of Grief’, composed in the English folk idiom, could have come from the 18th century. It’s jaw-droppingly beautiful. It
would have been interesting to see where both of these might have gone.
As for the drama itself, it starts a bit stiltedly and
oscillates between realism and decidedly non-realistic scenes in a way which,
as a listener, you either decide to run with or away from. The two young actors
playing Dardan and Rebekah have to carry the unorthodox way the play reveals
the characters’ past, and the past of their country, and frankly it’s tough on
them. It sounds strangely as though they’re less real than the very expressive
soundscape around them (which may be the point). But the awareness that,
fiction though this is, it arises from absolute reality, and partly from the
observations and experiences of someone we know (and some of us care a lot
about), carries it forward powerfully.
The author, Fin Kennedy, hasn’t let on how this
‘collaboration’ came about (and of course PJH hasn’t either), and you wonder
what the discussions were like. You might imagine Polly saying, ‘If you want to
use the songs on the album you have to pay Island, but I have these you can
use’, and they are in fact much more appropriate for the form, being less
overpowering. Mr Kennedy and his producer retraced some of the singer’s travels
in Kosovo, and you can spot elements of the songs appearing very directly in
the drama – the woman who looks after the keys of her vanished neighbours’
houses from ‘Chain of Keys’, the ‘blind man [who] sings in Arabic’ who appears
in ‘The Wheel’. In doing so, they provide another layer to the album, just as
the album comments on the world. Pop singers are incessantly questioned about
who has influenced them and, when they survive as long as Polly Harvey has, in
turn get quizzed about the influence they themselves have had on others; but this
is different. This is someone having an effect way beyond their own field,
their work used not just as set-dressing in someone else’s, but their
imagination shaping the imaginative works of others. Here is this woman who
began by strumming a guitar in her bedroom thirty-odd years ago and who now
affects the gravity of our cultural discourse.
When I was at school we went on an organised holiday to
Venice and that included a day out to the Postojna Caverns in what is now
Slovenia but was then (in 1986) still Tito’s Yugoslavia. We had our luggage on
the coach trodden on by a sour-faced border guard, and were ferried on a tiny
railway through the caves by an insane driver who seemed relatively unconcerned
how many of us survived: but that was as far into the Balkans as I’ve ever ventured.
When, over the next decade, Yugoslavia fell apart, I felt unaccountably
affected by it, even as I struggled to understand all the internecine conflict
which forms the background to On Kosovo
Field. It was this series of wars that first made me realise how poisonous
the construction of nationhood could be, and how conflict reveals what people
really feel about each other, or part of what they feel. Across the Balkans
neighbours discovered how they hated one another when they never quite had before,
and found themselves written into savage narratives of resentment that began
centuries before they were born.
I first uncovered my ancestry
From under my neighbour’s body
Where the grass starved to white.
I first learned the sound of my name
As that lascivious knife sucked out
From between his ribs.
I first heard the accents of my motherland
Visiting door to door
With the thin, heady sting of petrol in a can.
Don’t
think it couldn’t happen here. It won’t come immediately, it will take time,
but the walls are a-building: we live in the time of the Making of Nations.
This is clearly Fin Kennedy’s concern, it’s undoubtedly Ms Harvey’s, and it’s
mine.
UPDATE: In fact, On Kosovo Field was featured on Feedback a couple of days ago. In the piece, Fin Kennedy described how the producer, Nadia Molinari, had come to him with the seven songs from PJH, and that after repeated listening he wove the drama out of them. It's interesting that the impetus lay with Ms Molinari: a glance at her Twitter account reveals her to be the usual sort of left-wing troublemaker the Tory newspapers complain about infesting the BBC and to whom no heed should be given. I wonder what the background to that is.
UPDATE: In fact, On Kosovo Field was featured on Feedback a couple of days ago. In the piece, Fin Kennedy described how the producer, Nadia Molinari, had come to him with the seven songs from PJH, and that after repeated listening he wove the drama out of them. It's interesting that the impetus lay with Ms Molinari: a glance at her Twitter account reveals her to be the usual sort of left-wing troublemaker the Tory newspapers complain about infesting the BBC and to whom no heed should be given. I wonder what the background to that is.
Thursday, 12 January 2017
Meeting in the Big House
At various points during the meeting at the house of our suffragan bishop, her cat positively launched itself at the arm of the chair occupied by the Diocesan Director of Training, and then, failing to gain purchase, slipped off back onto the floor, much to the Director's discomfiture. It then ran around the room chasing imaginary things. It would be unfair to suggest this was any kind of metaphor for the activity of the Church of England as a whole.
We Local Vocations Advisers had been summoned after the departure of the diocesan Vocations Co-ordinator to - well, most of us didn't seem to have had the memo with the agenda, so I think it was mainly exchanging our experiences and outlining the diocese's general approach to the discernment of vocations. The diocese is keen:
We Local Vocations Advisers had been summoned after the departure of the diocesan Vocations Co-ordinator to - well, most of us didn't seem to have had the memo with the agenda, so I think it was mainly exchanging our experiences and outlining the diocese's general approach to the discernment of vocations. The diocese is keen:
- to broaden the body of Advisers to include laypeople and a wider range of people generally;
- to make sure the process isn't so sclerotic and controlled it stops people calling one of the Advisers for a chat and not being immediately channelled down the runnels of The System;
- to emphasise that vocation includes what people do in their working lives - that the Church needs more Christian teachers, doctors, and so on.
'Thank you so much for coming', she said to me and Daniel, the Vicar of Throop at the top end of the diocese. 'It's so important that we do all we can to make sure people from the Catholic end of the Church are encouraged to come forward, it's not healthy if it's all one-way'. Oy, tell me about it. Ideas on a postcard.
Somewhere downstairs in the house is a cuckoo clock. It cuckooed five times at one point: I checked my watch and discovered it was eight minutes past 8pm. There's another metaphor one should resist.
Tuesday, 10 January 2017
Come and Play
Before she entered the magical world of theme parks, Cylene
the Goth talked to me about her devotion to a video game released in 2012
called Journey, whose adherents form a sort of subculture in themselves. In
contrast to a lot of games, it’s neither violent nor competitive, but consists
of – you may not be surprised to discover – a journey towards a mountain,
glimpsed in the distance, which involves challenges and puzzles in which you
may encounter other players, who can assist one another if they choose, but who
cannot communicate with each other. Altruism is rewarded and as the player
progresses (their ‘character’ is not a muscled hero or a heavy-chested girl
with suspiciously revealing and impractical body-armour, but a sexless,
abstract robed figure) the music shifts correspondingly. In the climax of the
game, which may only take 90 minutes or so to reach, the player arrives at the
mountain, ascends it by flight, and is extinguished in a suffusion of light. ‘I
never reach the end without crying’, says Cylene, and you can see why: this is
very clearly indeed a metaphor for the spiritual life; in fact even more than a
metaphor, it’s a way of representing it in a non-religious form, a form so
unspecific that players of any ideological tradition could get something out of
it.
Not long ago another friend, Karla, who is also a determined
gamer, drew attention to this article by Brie Code, a female games designer discussing why people don’t like video
games and what her colleagues might do to change that. This is what Ms Code
says in conclusion:
I'm not remotely interested in shockingly good graphics, in
murder simulators, in guns and knives and swords. I'm not that interested in
adrenaline. My own life is thrilling enough. There is enough fear and hatred in
the world to get my heart pounding. My Facebook feed and Twitter feed are
enough for that. Walking outside in summer clothing is enough for that. I'm
interested in care, in characters, in creation, in finding a path forward
inside games that helps me find my path forward in life. I am interested in
compassion and understanding. I'm interested in connecting. … I want to make
games that help other people understand life. ... We should be using this medium to help us adapt to our
new, interactive lives. This is how we become relevant. … We want games that
aren't gritty, toxic pseudo-realistic pseudo-masculine nonsense nor frustrating
time wasters that leave you feeling dead inside. We want games about how each
of us could be in the future, how the world could be in the future. We want
games built on compassion and respect and fearlessness. This is so much more interesting.
I've never played a video game. I don't think I have any
interest in doing so, either, because I don't have time to do all the things I
want to as it is. I am, however, interested in the idea that gaming could
provide a means for exploring and assimilating life. Via the magic of LiberFaciorum,
I asked Karla:
How common do you reckon it is among games designers to
think in these very idealistic terms rather than just in terms of supplying a
market with entertainment?
To which she replied:
There are a fair number of indie developers who work with
concepts like this … My view of gaming
was permanently marked by the game that really turned me into a lifelong
devotee of the artform - Ultima VI: The False Prophet, which, although it used
the standard structure of a computer role playing game of the time, revolved
around themes of virtue ethics, unintended consequences of actions in the name
of good, and justice in warfare. Other instalments in the same series looked at
issues of racial prejudice, deception and religious intolerance, or demanded
that the hero set the world to right not by slaying the Big Bad, but by
becoming a moral examplar. They … really shaped my expectations of, interest in
and hope for games as a medium to communicate something meaningful.
This all made me reflect that I, a non-gamer, engage in this
business of representing life so it can be explored, assimilated and changed,
partly through music and even gardening, but mainly through religion. Christian
spirituality consists of an immersive, imaginative engagement, by a variety of
means, in a story, reading your life and experiences through the lens of that
story and adjusting the way you interact with the world as a result. Some time
ago I said to a friend that the Church was a sort of Live-Action Role Play, and
I only meant it part-facetiously. Apart from the assumption of Christianity
that behind its key interpretative narrative lies something, and somebody,
absolutely real, the mechanism is exactly the same. For people who have no
faith, gaming could provide a means for doing the life-shaping job that
religion does for those who have it. But saying that ‘gaming is like religion’
is a little obvious; it’s more interesting to posit that religion is a form of
gaming.
Saturday, 7 January 2017
Embroidery and Entombment
Sunny though it was, Thursday turned out to be a day of
Gothic concerns. I sped up to London on the train with Is This Desire? on the
headphones (a good start) and by noon was at the V&A for ‘Opus Anglicanum’,
its show of material from the time – the 14th and 15th
centuries – when English needlework was the envy of Europe. Amid the dark of
the V&A’s temporary exhibition space, islanded within pools of light were
works of such sumptuous detail and grandeur that they made one gasp. Of course
I’ve seen a lot of this before, illustrated, but to see it in the flesh, in the
thread and the silk, is a different matter. I was caught out by how long the vestments are: the great Clare
Chasuble would come down nearly to my feet, and your average medieval clergyman
would have been a bit shorter than me. Catherine-spotting was rewarding: she
was present quite a bit. The ‘Embroiderers’ Lantern’, a hanging table-top-sized
lamp with the known names of craftspeople picked out in black fretwork, managed
to move me rather: these were the people whose fingers made these beautiful
things, whose minds planned them, whose hearts rejoiced to see them complete
and ready to be used.
The only one of the ‘magnificent seven’ Victorian cemeteries
ringing the capital I’d never visited was Abney Park, so from Kensington that
was where I went. The great Egyptian piers of the entrance are rather grander
than anything you find inside the rails: there are no big, elaborate monuments
or characterful culturally-distinct sections such as you find at Highgate,
Kensal Rise, or West Norwood. The cemetery’s status as a nature reserve (like
its cousin at Tower Hamlets) means that much of it is even wilder than it would
otherwise be, and straying off the main paths is a hazardous enterprise. The
tree cover is such that even Abney Park’s grandiose centrepiece, the heroically
unattractive Chapel, can easily be missed if you don’t know it’s there, no
matter that it’s winter. The sun filters through somewhat reluctantly. There
are many moving and pretty corners, though. The Chapel’s being renovated at the
moment, hopefully rendering it a bit less dangerous than it is now: my Goth
accountant friend Ms Death-and-Taxes was once photographed posing inside it for
the cover of Accountancy News, and it
looked as though the arches could collapse any moment. In the Visitor Centre I
met the custodian, a middle-aged gentleman in a black leather coat and a pair
of New-Rock boots who clearly has his ideal job. He was touchingly uncertain
what to do when I requested to buy a guidebook and a handful of postcards,
implying it was an unexpected eventuality.
Labels:
days out,
exhibitions,
funerary art,
Gothic,
museums,
St Catherine,
vestments
Thursday, 5 January 2017
Blue or Not, and Who Might Care
Here’s a recondite little liturgical matter for you. I was mildly
surprised to see photos of a couple of my clerical colleagues from deeper in
the Anglo-Catholic world than my own location having celebrated mass on New
Year’s Day resplendent in blue for the BVM, which would never had occurred to
me: at Swanvale Halt we kept it as the Naming and Circumcision of Jesus and, as
a Feast of Our Lord rather than Our Lady, in gold.
I hadn’t picked up on the fact that in 1969 Pope Paul VI
reclassified January 1st as ‘The Solemnity of Mary, the Mother of
God’, I suppose concentrating on the Virgin’s maternal role, which is all very
well. However I do wonder whether this is less about her as such, and more
about the slight squeamishness we moderns may feel in approaching the fact of
Jesus’s, or rather his parents’, obedience to Jewish custom in this inescapable
respect. The old Anglican Prayer Book collect is, as usual, brutally upfront
about the whole business:
Almighty God, that madest thy blessed Son to be circumcised,
and obedient to the law for man: Grant us the true circumcision of the Spirit;
that, our hearts, and all our members, being mortified from all worldly and carnal
lusts, we may in all things obey thy blessed will.
This is authentically medieval, reflecting the theology
implicit in that wonderful New Year hymn ‘Hac in anni ianua’, that Christ’s
circumcision is part of his perfect fulfilment of the Old Law and therefore the
liberation of humankind from its curse – liberation to obey God’s will in the
Spirit rather than by rule-following. The modern Common Worship collect is
basically the same as the 1980s version which replaced the BCP, with a bit more
inclusive language:
Almighty God, whose blessed Son was circumcised in obedience
to the law for our sake, and given the Name that is above every name: give us
grace faithfully to bear his Name, to worship him in the freedom of the Spirit,
and to proclaim him as Saviour of the world.
You will note that, even though the circumcision of Jesus is
mentioned, it’s no longer the major
theme of the collect; it’s the element of Jesus being named which has taken over. It does seem very odd to be celebrating
the genital mutilation of a small child, however culturally specific and
theologically glossed. Perhaps the squeamishness, thinking about it, is less to
do with taste so much as the prospect of small children in church (assuming
there might be some) lisping innocently to a hapless parent, ‘Mummy, what does
circumcised mean?’ However, our Lord’s de-foreskinification did happen (Luke
2.21), and at least the Anglican Church seems actually to be less reluctant to
face the fact than our Roman brethren are, or were in 1969 anyway.
Over on LiberFaciorum a
friend-of-a-friend commented on this that ‘Our Lord must shake his head in
bemusement at us all’. My question in reply of ‘What does he know about it?’
was only half-facetious. These feasts, fasts and seasons are all means by which
we limited human beings encounter, understand and appropriate the unfolding
mystery which is Him, and I imagine he is more than content to let us work out for
ourselves what best achieves it. What we choose to do with this particular day depends entirely on what signals we might want to send about how we think of ourselves and the Christian communities we are part of. Now, I am no great Marian, and I think Our Lady is a retiring character anyway, surely as satisfied as I am without yet another feast day in addition to her Annunciation, her Dormition, Conception, Visitation, Nativity, Presentation, all those peculiar Roman Catholic ones, and, my personal favourite, Our Lady of the Snows on August 5th (inconveniently for Anglicans, St Oswald’s Day as well). The inescapable carnality of the Circumcision positively forces people to face up to things about Jesus I think they may sooner not, and so is worth it for that.
Labels:
churchmanship,
ecumenism,
liturgical,
New Year,
saints
Wednesday, 4 January 2017
Documents and Devotions
Driving down to the record office in Dorchester afforded me one new experience: having to pay for my parking space by phone as I forgot to bring any change. 'Download the app', the voice told me. Not on my phone, which still has a black-and-white licence. I was there to cross-check some well references against the Tithe Maps where they were supposed to appear (though curiously, as it turned out, not all did). The Dorset History Centre now has most of the county's tithe maps copied and freely available, so I was able to whack through the whole process very swiftly and only had to call up one actual document. I now have a slew of 'new' wells to visit when I come actually to begin that process, such as Paddicks Well at Allington and Orchard Well at Bishop's Caundle, probably none of them very spectacular sites but important to check out.
From there I zoomed to Abbotsbury. My last visit in the summer found the village swaddled in mist but yesterday was beautiful with chilly sunshine, filtered through high, filmy cloud. St Catherine's Chapel is now free of its transitory pigeon residents and their attendant aroma, and, true to its word, English Heritage has repaired the west window which makes the building so much lighter and happier. Far from me being the only person who now leaves prayers there, I found two 'votive deposits' in the niches, mostly candles and tealights but one with the unfamiliar accessory of a glass of white wine next to the photo of a loved one. There were a couple of little Christmassy arrangements on the window ledge, and a big lit candle.
I wasn't sure I would have enough time to take in the chapel before heading back to Bournemouth for tea with my mum, and then home. But while at the record office I stopped for tea and thumbed through the latest edition of Somerset & Dorset Notes & Queries which just happened to contain a little article on wishing traditions associated with St Catherine, so that was Definitely A Sign.
From there I zoomed to Abbotsbury. My last visit in the summer found the village swaddled in mist but yesterday was beautiful with chilly sunshine, filtered through high, filmy cloud. St Catherine's Chapel is now free of its transitory pigeon residents and their attendant aroma, and, true to its word, English Heritage has repaired the west window which makes the building so much lighter and happier. Far from me being the only person who now leaves prayers there, I found two 'votive deposits' in the niches, mostly candles and tealights but one with the unfamiliar accessory of a glass of white wine next to the photo of a loved one. There were a couple of little Christmassy arrangements on the window ledge, and a big lit candle.
I wasn't sure I would have enough time to take in the chapel before heading back to Bournemouth for tea with my mum, and then home. But while at the record office I stopped for tea and thumbed through the latest edition of Somerset & Dorset Notes & Queries which just happened to contain a little article on wishing traditions associated with St Catherine, so that was Definitely A Sign.
Wanting to be terribly helpful, I tidied up all the spent tealights and broken bits of candle from around the chapel into a paper bag, and sat and ate my sandwich. And then left the bag there.
Labels:
Dorset,
folklore,
holy wells,
prayers,
St Catherine
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