Thursday, 26 April 2007

AKA...?


‘Doctor Who is, above all, a programme about identity,’ our Old Testament lecturer proclaimed this morning in chapel as he kicked off a series of homilies on Exodus – we leavers take our turns later. And yes, this is a valid position. But it is so much more than that, as Exodus is so much more than just a history or a story. ‘Dr Who’ follows the journey of a group of people, built around the core of Dr Who and his travelling companion(s), and is all about the defeat of evil through these people led by the iconic Dr. It’s the same moral story as depicted in Westerns – the white hatted goody on his white horse wins over the black hatted baddies on their scrawny nags. (And pause to think about the stereotyping in that…no wonder few Westerns are made now.)
The good Dr is not human although he appears in human form. He has powers and knowledge that are super-human on our scale of things, and, in the end, always wins out against the worst baddies that the human imagination and the BBC’s FX Department can produce. Other non-humans in the stories often already know him as The Master. There is sacrifice for the cause – his companions may die – and the body count in many stories is amazingly high, both in terms of exterminations and transformations from human to something else. But all tastefully done with the mimimum of blood and bits. ‘Star Ship Troopers’ it is not. Dr Who – always, so far, a male Dr – is quirky, not your Mr Average, and nowadays youngish, with good looks and GSOH but not always – Dr W No 1 (William Hartnell) was crotchety, of late middle age and devoid of a funny bone. The programme’s success back in the 1960s owed very little to the cult of the personality or celebrity.
Of course the really astounding thing about Dr Who is his ability to take on a new human form – a commercially brilliant idea that allows the BBC to continue making the programme for generations. Entering into the story, we don’t know what he really looks like (although I have a very vague, probably mistaken, memory of something Other appearing briefly during one regeneration), only see him as he chooses to present himself and that is in a form that we can accept and understand. In this sense we are his chosen people, and he has a passion and admiration for humanity that seems much of the time to be unjustifiable. I have shied away from describing his transformation into a new Dr as resurrection, partly because he doesn’t die and also because I think that it stretches any parallels too far. But it is interesting, and perhaps fruitful, to ponder on what insights ‘Dr Who’ might give us into the spirituality of Western, pluralistic, postmodern culture. The series has lasted from modernity into postmodernity and accommodated itself to new audiences. Like the book of Exodus, Dr Who is a story about the salvation of a people. The saviour comes in human form and is committed beyond all reason. But ultimately Dr Who is meandering around killing time in his eternal life rather than on a journey towards an end; his motivation is curiosity rather than love.

And yes, I have met Dr Who – in a shop in Yorkshire where he was buying waterproof clothing.

Monday, 23 April 2007

Beginnings and endings...


A new term dawns... This afternoon I have the first of this term's classes, with lots of texts that I should have read in preparation. The vacation tradition of morning prayer followed by breakfast on F Staircase continued this morning but for the last time, for me anyway. Brewed coffee, croissants, pains aux chocolat and good bread toasted and buttered while hot - not to mention the greengage jam and the homemade marmalade. Of such is heaven made... Now a lot a reading and the completion of my self-assessment form will fill the rest of the morning. And perhaps a bit of essay writing this evening.

The made-to-measure clerical shirts arrived on Friday - trying them on I was told that a black clerical shirt really suits me. In 10 weeks time it will be the second day of my curacy...

Thursday, 12 April 2007

I will lift mine eyes...

I was quite taken aback unexpectedly when travelling down the A66 towards Keswick on Tuesday. The tops of the Blencathra ridge were hidden in cloud so it wasn't the view that affected me. It was seeing the hills and remembering the last time I was up in the Lake District - between being told that I had advanced cancer and the operation. So I was expecting the last time to be the last time... Thankfully the tumour was benign and I more than survived. But all that emotion came back as I drove along.
'I will lift up mine eyes to the hills; from whence cometh my help? My help comes from the Lord.' Good old psalmist.
It has been wonderful walking on the tops again even though I did rather too much yesterday and seem to have picked up a ligament niggle that I have never had before. But a pain killer, a night's rest and only the steep downhill bits cause a twinge now. Off to the south of the Lakes tomorrow...

And down in the Conistonwater area the weather continued to be hot and sunny, and dry - no mud and not much in the way of boggy bits either. All a bit unusual for the spring... It was too hazy to get any good photos from the tops so you will just have to imagine what it looked like from the summits of Wetherlam, Coniston Old Man and Bowfell.


Sunday, 8 April 2007

Alleluia! He is risen indeed...


I just love this time in the Christian calendar. Christmas has been highjacked somewhat but the real party happens now, at Easter. And it’s partly the contrast with Holy Week, when we pretend that we don’t know what’s coming on Sunday. Even though we are halfway through the vacation a small group of us have been continuing to say morning prayer together in Ridley’s chapel. I don’t know why the others come – apart from those who are ordained – as most sensible ordinands are not getting up to gather anywhere for anything at 8.15 am. Perhaps it might be the bacon butties or the croissants or toasted homebaked bread afterwards… But for me it puts the day – my life – in the right place. We met on Good Friday morning, six of us, led beautifully by Rob. It was a very stripped down service which concentrated the mind on the significance of the day and set off wonderfully by starting with Psalm 69. Read it and remember the story of Good Friday.

That was the first of four services that day for me. No 2 was a Good Friday meditation at St Bene’t’s (my adopted church – I have a sort of dual nationality when it comes to which church I belong to). That concentrated the mind and heart even more on the day. After the third hot cross bun of the day (buns for breakfast too) we joined the ecumenical service of witness in the market place, clutching our individual wooden crosses from the meditation service and shivering in the wind. The large cross had to be held in place as the one that the council puts up had been vandalised last year and not replaced. But about 150 people turned up from several denominations and attracted curious stares from passers by and tourists. Are we just a folk or historical curiousity now, I wonder?

The last service was in the large Roman Catholic church in Cambridge where for about the fourth, and last, time I joined the choir for the service of the veneration of the cross, one of the Triduum services. It is a dark service, with unaccompanied singing throughout of several different styles of music. It takes you to the stunned ‘I cannot believe what is happening’ reaction that the disciples and others must have experienced after the crucifixion and burial. The sort of service that you walk or drive away from quietly and thoughtfully. And being a Roman Catholic service – albeit in a not very high church – it has a sense of theatre about it. Something that Anglican churches are often not that concerned about or good at, which is a pity as about two thirds of us are not that grabbed by words but by actions and visuals.

Back to the RC church last night to sing in the choir again in the Easter Saturday vigil, a three hour service. Not to mention the rehearsal before. It all makes for a great deal of singing – much of it almost by sight for me. The service started in complete darkness, with a congregation of about 1,000 – standing room only. Then the west doors opened to show the fire outside. After lighting the paschal candle – imaginatively decorated by the children – from the fire the single flame of light came into the church and processed up the nave to the crossing – with acclamations on the way. We lit our candles, the liturgy began and we sang three or four psalms by their light. At the Gloria all the lights came on, all the altar candles lit, Wayne Marshall in the organ loft went beserk on the keyboards and pedals and lots of bells were rung. Clouds of incense were made and the purple curtain in front of the large rood cross came down – narrowly missing the paschal candle. Easter morning had come. He is risen indeed! Then we were off. Lots of singing, baptisms, confirmations, lighting of candles, more Marshall extravaganzas on the organ – where is he going and how on earth will he get back to the tune/key?, but he always does – and communion, finishing with easter eggs and a celebratory drink aterwards. Musically it was fun, with Wayne in the loft and one quarter of G4 in the choir, and the drama and overall joy of the occasion emphasises the meaning of Easter and why we just have to celebrate it.

Being a bit befuddled getting home after midnight, I mis-set my alarm and managed to wake up too late for the 6.30 am service in my home church. But this morning’s baptisms (full immersion) and confirmations were also a joyful occasion. Bishop John gave an excellent address, all the arrangements worked, the worship was uplifting and it was a wonderful start to Eastertide. But we are Easter People, living in joy and anticipation.

The final seal on the day is the chance that a Brit might just pull off a win in the Masters this evening…

Sunday, 1 April 2007

It's a Wonderful Life...


Got seduced this weekend into wandering around the UK census records on the internet seaching for scraps of information about my grandparents, etc. So far I’ve got back to the 1850s without trying that hard. The experience reminded of me how small the world has become. There’s a saying that we are all only seven steps away from the rest of the world; you know someone who knows someone who knows… seven times and you have contacted everyone on this planet. Sounds farfetched, even to me, but it has, apparently, been proven to be true. And so I discovered that I am only three steps away from the American actor James Stewart, a long-standing favourite of mine.

So, how can that be…? After WW1 my grandfather was in the CID in London but apparently had to resign in a hurry. The matter made the ‘News of the World’ – though I can’t find out what happened. I suspect a bit of corruption was the case as an off-shore banking account surfaced years after he died. My grandparents never had any money worth speaking of when they were alive. Or so everyone was led to believe...

The ex-policeman became a private detective and, in between being the house detective for the Lyons Corner Shops in London, did a spell working for Bernard Docker in the 1930s. Docker later became known for all sorts of things – gold-plated Daimlers, accusations of dodgy business with money, and a rather glamorous and outrageous second wife. My grandfather worked for him around the time of Mr Docker getting divorced from Mrs Docker No1. He married Jeanne Stuart in 1933. It was a dreadful mistake, all went horribly wrong, and they divorced in 1935 – quite a scandal at the time. Jeanne Stuart was an actor, quite well-known and successful. After the divorce she went back to the stage, and supposedly had a three year relationship with James Stewart, before he went to war, came back, married and settled down. And that is how I am three steps away from James Stewart.

It would have been good to have asked my grandfather about this side of his life – what exactly did happen when he was a policeman and what was it like working for the Dockers? But he’s long gone now, and so are those who might have known more of the story than I’ve been able to find so far. Somewhere I have a paper napkin with family trees sketched in it during a family outing to the local posh carvery when my mother and uncle worked their way through all the relatives they could remember. By the end of that lunch I had several new cousins and great aunts/uncles I never knew I had. But until I can find that piece of paper it’s a matter of trawling the on-line archives when I should be reading or writing that essay.

Hang on though, the essay is about modernity and postmodernity, and that means things like globalisation and the world getting smaller. Wonder if I could get Jimmy Stewart into it somehow…?