Over late months I've acquired a couple of pictures which I have just now got around to putting on the walls of the Rectory. While I was at Petworth House at the start of the year, the National Trust shop had a little selection of art including some watercolours by a lady called Georgina Ling. One of these, to my great surprise, showed narrowboats on the canal at Swanvale Halt, caught in a snowy winter. Thanks to Dr Bones I do have a fascination for canals and so I had to buy that.
Thursday, 29 September 2022
Pretty Pictures
Tuesday, 27 September 2022
Back Inside
One change is that we no longer have the services of Alec who used to play the piano so I had rigged up some music and a couple of hymns on my iPod. It turned out that the speakers weren't up to the job, leaving the music so quiet that even on 'All Things B&B' and 'We Plough the Fields' we were a bar out of time after a single verse. More kit required. I could barely remember what to put in the bag as it was, and spent a good chunk of Tuesday morning frantically photocopying hymns after the folder with the old hymn sheets was nowhere to be found.
Sunday, 25 September 2022
Goth Walk 35: Chasing the Golden Dawn
Friday, 23 September 2022
You Cannot Go Back
- The GP's website relocates me to Patient Access
- Patient Access tells me I do not have a GP registered on my account
- Having selected my GP I must now prove my identity and I am relocated to NHS Login
- My first photograph of my driving licence is unacceptable
- My second photograph, exactly the same as the first, is acceptable
- My face must be scanned to make sure it's the same as the person on the driving licence
- It doesn't seem to be similar enough no matter the angle or arrangement of spectacles
- I am offered the chance to record a video of my face instead, during which recording I have to repeat a code of four numbers
- Despite making sure NHS Login can access my laptop camera, the video doesn't work
- It is made very clear that I can't go back and try another driving licence photo
- I give up and in the afternoon visit my GP so I can be issued with an access code
I suppose such obstacles are one way of putting people off making appointments!
Wednesday, 21 September 2022
Ta-Da!
This flower has appeared in the garden as a welcome distraction from anything else that might be going on and a reminder that the earth will spin on, carrying out the Lord's instruction to be fruitful and multiply, no matter what we manage to do to it. This stuff is bergenia, and heaven knows how it got into the borders of my lawn, just in front of the camellia. 'Pigsqueak' and 'Elephant's ears' it's apparently called, so symbolically it introduces not just colour and delight but an entire, if small, menagerie.
Monday, 19 September 2022
Move Along Now
There was something to offend everyone within the space of ten
minutes on the World Service this afternoon. Rob Watson’s statement that the
monarchy makes British people ‘think, Our history is pretty cool’ might be
taken as an insult to all the many victims of that history, but it was a matter
of opinion. When, however, he went on to say that ‘a head of government and a
head of state were changed in 3 days with the minimum of fuss’ he neatly glossed
over the fact that changing the head of government took months of the ruling
party arguing with itself, and then that new head of government being selected
by a tiny group of party members without reference to anyone else; and that it would never have happened in the first place without the previous incumbent’s
trashing of truth, the law, and the constitution. Pretty cool, all that. He was
followed by Professor Alice Hunt from Southampton University, who topped her
comment that the Coronation would be ‘the only ceremony that has any constitutional
standing’ (OK, so Edward VIII was never really king and the many Acts of
Parliament he signed were invalid) with the breathtaking insistence, speaking
for the late Queen and the whole nation, that ‘nobody really believes that there
is a divine being at work here, and yet that is what the Coronation will say’. Where
does the BBC get these people from? Southampton University, apparently.
I pondered my own reaction. I don't feel emotionally involved in the Queen's passing, though I appreciate the emotions of those who are, and in fact it's those who affect me. I don't feel watching a TV programme is 'taking part in history', and I deal with death and life every day so I don't need more meditations on mortality. And yet, even I could hardly fail to be affected by the pipes and drums, especially
when the pipes, at least, were at a safe distance. When the jabbering
commentators straining to find something meaningful to say fell silent it was even
moving, not least because inside that grand coffin draped in the royal standard
was the body of a tiny old lady: ‘if she gets any smaller, she’ll disappear
completely’, S.D. said to me the last time we met – but he was friendlier with
the late Queen Mother, it has to be said.
At Swanvale Halt, we had just enough big candles to keep the memorial to
the Queen illuminated until today was passed. In the short commemoration we kept
at the end of mass on the 11th I used the Kontakion, so it was
pleasing to hear it in the committal service today; and because His Grace of
Hornington was on holiday I ended up reading prayers at the local Accession
Proclamation alongside our republican Mayor. I hadn't intended to do anything else:
I watched in increasing incredulity the goings-on at Fr Thesis’s church in
London where it seems nothing has been celebrated but Requiem Masses for the
Queen since her death, and pondered dropping him a line to remind him he was
allowed to do something else. But in the end I weakened and did do a Requiem of
our own yesterday evening; we sang a bit, and got 16 souls. 73 people signed
the Book of Condolence deposited with us by the Town Council, and a member of the congregation had to be persuaded
not to walk out yesterday morning after Greta the Lay Reader alluded to the new
King not paying inheritance tax in her sermon. She was the only one.
As we say with our Spring Fair, planning for the next one has (probably) already begun. I look forward to the choir of St George’s Chapel Windsor singing ‘Ying Tong Iddle I Po’ in twenty-odd years' time ... !
Saturday, 17 September 2022
Long Ditton & West Molesey
The fundamental impressions St Mary's Long Ditton left me with were grandeur and cleanliness: its surfaces shine and nothing seems out of place. It isn't one of my 'core' churches but the Blessed Sacrament is reserved, so perhaps it reached a degree of soundness even later than The Church Traveller's Guide could reveal. It's what the church was designed for, with those sedilia. Nobody could describe that mighty pink marble reredos as beautiful, but it impresses by sheer force.
It has an elegant Lady Chapel where the Sacrament resides behind a brass aumbry door decorated very pleasingly with the Sacred Heart, though the altar cross and candlesticks are the spindly, spiky kind beloved of the 1960s and 70s. Why does it have a brass set as well?
Some of the glass is obviously Kempe ...
... and some isn't. Just because it's modern doesn't mean it's bad, though.
St Peter's last Catholic incumbent was the lovely Peter Tailby, a man of such gentle and transparent saintliness that I and Il Rettore used to try and sit next to him at diocesan events because we felt embarrassed at the mere idea of misbehaving if he was around.
Thursday, 15 September 2022
Retaining Clergy
At Deanery Chapter we counted up the incumbents of local parishes who have left full-time ministry over recent years, and spent some time musing why this seemed so common. It was slightly surprising to me that several of my colleagues talked about money worries and especially those of clergy with families not being able to manage without a great deal of help - parishioners supplying secondhand white goods, charities paying for holidays, and so on. I can't recall anyone who actually quit the clerical life - though not the clerical state, that's a more radical and problematic step to take - mentioning this as a factor, though it may feed into the stress which definitely is. Most of the time the cause seemed to be something less definable, to do with a sense of purpose and support. In fact, as we spoke, we became unsure whether clergy were very different from other professions, teachers, nurses, even the armed forces, in the proportion who took the decision to leave after a certain time. Perhaps we are operating on a model of lifelong service, expressed in that old belief that ordination imprints a permanent character, which is less relavent now than hitherto.
One thing we were agreed on was the feeling that our diocese doesn't feel like a collaborative venture in which our ministries are supported by a pastoral centre, but like a managed one in which we are supposed to deliver locally a central agenda. Funny how our discussions almost always seem to orbit in around the same point: there must be something in it. I feel the diocese's hand sits rather light on Swanvale Halt, but, as you know, the confirmation service last week was the first time I'd been in the bishop's presence in about three years.
Tuesday, 13 September 2022
Portrayed
Another in the occasional series 'portraits of the Rector by church children', courtesy, this time, of Polly and Warren. My hat is not, as a rule, completely like this, nor is my bicycle, but it's the first time I've ever seen the latter portrayed at all.
Sunday, 11 September 2022
An Unexpected Find
At some point I will post about something significant, and even describe a few churches, but I haven't the energy for that today. Instead - so it is preserved - here is an image of a battered but still standing Art Deco building in the backstreets of Farnborough which I spotted while on the way to one of those churches. It's a garage now, and inside is utilitarian indeed (though I wonder what the upstairs flat is like - are there any original features left?), and it's lost most of its old glazing bars; but it holds on, and the company using it has chosen a nice jazzy font for its signage.
Friday, 9 September 2022
Reign Fall
Any questions I might have wanted to ask the Bishop about the reallocation of the Hornington patronage after the confirmation service last night – an
affair, I fear, of rags and patches attended by a rather shockingly thin
congregation in an unavoidably gloomy building – were rather put paid to by his
announcement of the Supreme Governor’s death at the start of the service. That meant
I couldn’t loiter and neither could he. ‘I’d better go and call the Comms
department to find out if there’s anything I should be doing’, he flustered. Even
I wished him luck with that.
Earlier in the day I’d taken communion to Don and Shirley and of course we
talked about the Queen’s illness, which led to me saying that after a cup of
tea I’d be going to town to try and find a black-edged photo frame, just in
case. ‘I’m sure we’ve got a spare one’, Don said, and they had. Little did we
know that Her Maj had already departed by then. It did save me trouble, that
angel whispering in our respective ears.
After printing off some prayers and a photo, I scooted down to the church
and set up – well, what shall I call it? I hesitate to use the word shrine.
But I happen to have visited a variety of churches today and there is an irony
in that a non-monarchist seems to have erected what appears to be the grandest ‘presentation’
for the Queen in any of them. Perhaps I am compensating in a safe way for my
own conflicted feelings, combining admiration and even some affection for an
individual (and certainly being moved by some aspects of her life and work)
with lack of sympathy for the institution they were part of. I don’t feel inclined
to hold any special services: that’s for people who are clear about what they
think. But I am leading prayers at the Local Proclamation on Sunday, in lieu
of the Vicar of Hornington who has with I imagine some relief gone on holiday.
The Queen spent her entire life doing things that weren’t all that congenial to
her, after all.
‘THERE ARE NO WORDS’, our friend Lord MaryBendyToy wrote on LiberFaciorum, but in truth there are lots, and lots. And then more. Looking positively at all the verbiage, the endless analysis of every aspect of this woman’s experience, it’s part of a national conversation about who we are and how we have changed over her long life. If the monarch expresses aspects of British identity, for both good and ill, then discussing the monarch’s legacy is a sort of talking therapy in uncertain times. Or any times.
I am not at all sure that churches will really be ‘the foci of mourning’ as our official guidelines from the Church claim they will be: today I’ve seen very little evidence of people going into them to pay their respects. Ironically the very qualities people admire most in the Queen resulted from the faith she was very open about, but which they pay little attention to. Even if Charles III is happy to take part in a Coronation along the same mystical, quasi-medieval lines as his mother, will that mean anything to the people watching it? I have told myself it helped to have such a public Christian bringing the Faith in front of the country repeatedly, and was grateful for it; but has anyone been listening for a long time?
Wednesday, 7 September 2022
A Matter of Choice
Every Anglican parish has a patron, the person, or body, who has the right
to propose someone to be its vicar or rector, a system which goes back to the
early Middle Ages when the system of parish churches was first established;
before the creation of Parish Church Councils representing the laypeople, the
patron merely appointed the incumbent, and the right to appoint to a rich
parish was well worth owning. When partisan activity in the Church was at its
height in the late 1800s and early 1900s the societies set up to promote
various aspects of either the Anglo-Catholic or Evangelical position gaily
bought up ‘advowsons’ – the patronage of parishes – to embed their own
viewpoint. The trade in advowsons came to an end in 1924, and, especially in
rural areas where churches have been yoked together in multi-parish benefices, patronage
is now often a complex matter, a patchwork of religious societies, Church
authorities, Oxbridge colleges, and private individuals; Fr Barkley’s patron in
Yorkshire is the local Lord of the Manor, while Il Rettore’s in Lamford
was the Lord Chancellor. Since the foundation of PCCs representing the laity, the
PCC has the ability to reject a candidate for the incumbency – not that it
would be advisable for them to do it too often.
I learn that the patronage of the putative united parish of Tophill, Bramblecombe
& Hornington is to be passed to the Church Pastoral Aid Society, an Evangelical
missionary society which has been around since the 1840s. Now, the last appointment to the united benefice
of Tophill and Bramblecombe, just after I arrived in Swanvale Halt, was made by
a patronage board including the Archdeacon, the Area Dean, the Lay Chair of the
Deanery Synod, the PCCs of the two churches, and the Martyrs Memorial Trust; the
MMT – like Simeon’s Trustees, another Evangelical body – has handed all its
patronages over to the CPAS which explains their involvement. But the patron of
Hornington is the Bishop. The proposal for the CPAS to take over the wholesale
patronage of the entire united parish is presented in the form of a request to
the Bishop to surrender his interest in Hornington, and as a tidying-up exercise.
But, although our current Bishop is an evangelical, his successors might not
be, and the removal of the Bishop effectively disposes of any non-evangelical
influence in the appointment of a new incumbent.
Of course it makes me think about Swanvale Halt’s position. With the exception of Thorpe, whose patron is Keble College; St Augustine’s Aldershot, where the Bishop and the Society for the Maintenance of the Faith appoint the incumbent jointly; and the Clandons, where the Bishop and the Earl of Onslow alternate to make appointments, all the remaining Catholic parishes in the diocese are pretty vulnerable. Our patron here is the Bishop, making another reason for me to stick around to see whether Guildford Diocese is abolished and merged with a more congenial neighbour. I wonder how the Bishop would react to a suggestion from our PCC that he ‘surrender his interest’ in the patronage in favour of, I don’t know, the Guild of All Souls?!
Hearing is Believing
I have had to battle with audio systems too. At Lamford I was always getting nasty crackling interference: Il Rettore maintained it was due to my insistence on wearing a trad cassock-and-alb, too many layers mucking up the signal, while Dr Bones argued it was the Devil trying to stop my sermons being heard. I was not completely sold on either explanation, I must admit.
Here in Swanvale Halt we sometimes get a horrendous rasping buzz which comes out of the speakers at the worst possible moment in a service and makes everyone gasp: it's a wonder nobody has ever gone into cardiac arrest (at least, not because of that). The company who installed our sound system can never identify any cause, of course: my car mechanic Dad always said the words any engineer dreaded most were 'intermittent fault', and I suppose sound technicians are no different. But it only seems to happen on weekdays, leading to the suspicion that somewhere nearby in a shop or something is a bit of kit that interferes with our system, which on Sundays is turned safely off.
This Sunday the sound wasn't working at all. I flicked the mute switch on my mic set on and off, checked the little set of lights stationed high up in the rafters, and during the Gloria at the 8am nipped back into the Vestry to cast an eye quickly over the audio system, but nothing happened. For some reason any problem with the sound system makes me unspeakably anxious, and I find myself concentrating less on what I'm saying in the Mass than the way I am saying it, having to project and enunciate to maximise the chances of people hearing. It's massively distracting, and I am not really sure why I find it so distracting. It turned out that a crucial switch obscured by the edge of the cupboard holding all the kit in the vestry had been turned off when the PAT testing was done this week.
Another little aspect of church life that you don't get warned about at theological college!