Weekly Email – Advent 3
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Dear friends,
I was very pleased earlier on this week to be able to see the new exhibition at The British Library entitled “Fantasy – Realms of Imagination.” It is a really superb presentation and a fascinating exploration of the way in which fantasy, fable and fairy story have contributed to our corporate imagination.
I was very grateful indeed to Rachel Foss for giving me an introduction to the exhibition and showing me around. She is a regular parishioner of All Saints’ and works at The British Library. Indeed, she is one of the curators of the exhibition – the sections she has created are particularly interesting. She is to be congratulated on a really first rate achievement.
Our parish is organising a trip to see the exhibition on Tuesday 23rd January at 6.00 pm. The visit to the British Library is then followed by supper for those who wish to attend at the Pizza Express on the Euston Road. To book a place, please email the parish office.
The exhibition itself explores fantasy literature through a series of key themes: fairy and folk tales; epic journeys and quests; the weird and the uncanny; and portals to other worlds. It reveals how rich, intricate and sophisticated this realm of literary expression is, and just how many complex adult themes are explored through what can often seem simple or “childish” narratives.
There are some really fascinating “show stopper” artefacts: such as Galdalf’s staff and pipe used by Ian McKellen in the most recent film adaptation of the Lord of the Rings; handwritten manuscripts by Lewis Carroll, C.S. Lewis, and J.R.R. Tolkien; outfits worn by Nureyev and Fonteyn for the 1968 Royal Ballet production of Sleeping Beauty; and theatrical costumes from the Musical Wicked.
As I made my way around the exhibition, it struck me just how universal many of the basic narratives revealed to us by the items on display were as ways of explaining the human condition. Indeed, many of them have a very close synergy with some of the most important insights of Christian theology: the conviction that there is more to our existence than just the physical; the knowledge that forces other than those we can see influence our lives; and seeing life as a journey or pilgrimage to a goal in which we learn and grow.
It was interesting to discover that some of the earliest anthropological studies of “faerie” myths and supernatural stories were undertaken by clergy. A good example is the Revd Robert Kirk who documented fairy beliefs amongst his parishioners in the 17th century, in a book displayed in the exhibition entitled, “The Secret Commonwealth of Fairies.” He seeks to record objectively the range of fantastical beliefs he finds, but also clearly detects a hazy overlap between Christian faith, the realm the supernatural, and the role of the imaginary and delusional.
It was fascinating to see the influence that the Christian imagination has had on fantasy writing and the way in which Christian writers have used this genre as a way of reflecting upon the world we live in and the society we have constructed in the light of the Gospel.
Thomas More’s Utopia is a good example of this. An astonishing first edition is on display – I hadn’t realised that it is this edition that invents the idea of having a map at the beginning of a fantasy story to enable you to understand the text. In a similar vein, the many permutations of medieval Arthurian legend are attempts to explore through fantasy what a Christian hero looks like, and the kind of virtue and bravery those who lead politically need to exhibit.
As well as reflecting on the human condition, Christian writers also use the mode of fantasy writing apologetically, as a way of proposing the Christian faith.
Most famous amongst these writers are 20th Century Oxford luminaries such at Lewis and Tolkein. For them, fantasy isn’t merely a secular mode of childish entertainment, but rather a means whereby the sacrament of our imagination can communicate, explore and indwell the truth of the Gospel.
Rachel’s essay in the book accompanying the exhibition is excellent at exploring this question, and the way in which Tolkein saw the artistic creation of fantasy as a form of “sub-creation,” echoing God’s creative impulse. Fairy tales are not just children’s stories, but are also fundamentally needful for adults. For Tolkein, they actively contribute to human wellbeing and our integration into the creation God has placed us in through the escape, recovery and consolation they provide.
A further overlap with Christian theological discourse is that way I constantly found myself comparing what I saw in the exhibition with the way in which apocalyptic and visionary texts in the Scriptures function. One good example is a fascinating room that explores the architecture of the cities and realms created by fantasy authors. These extraordinary locations are embellished by fantastical buildings that speak symbolically of what the city represents, or the role of those who live there. My mind went immediately to the very “architectural” language used to describe the New Jerusalem in Revelation 21 and 22 in which a similar impulse can surely be detected – a presentation of a perfect re-created society in which God and man dwell together in harmony.
One of the most fascinating rooms is the last. It explores the phenomenon of “Fandom” – the way in which fans of certain books or film franchises meet up to explore the world their heroes inhabit. They often gather for conventions, and dress as the figures from the books they enjoy.
One might at first sight regard some of these people as overly obsessed crackpots. However, the more I pondered the comments of those interviewed in this section, the more I felt their hobby had what one might call a “liturgical” character: they gather in community in order to remove themselves from the quotidian expectations of the world they live in; they dress in such a way that shows their allegiance is to a narrative completely different from that espoused in “normal” world; they re-enact the shared stories that lie at the heart of their community in drama and song; and they find this community allows them to be their “true” selves in a way the “outside” world doesn’t. Maybe we who gather each week in community to celebrate the rites of the New Covenant have more in common – at least on an anthropological level – with these “crackpots” than we like to recognise!! It was a very thought-provoking last room with which to finish a first-rate show.
I heartily recommend this exhibition, and encourage you to come on our parish visit in January. It promises to be a most interesting and rewarding evening – and I am very grateful to Rachel for agreeing to talk to us and introduce us to what is a fascinating topic!
Fr Peter
Christmas Confessions
Priests will be available from 5.30 pm onwards at the following times in the week before Christmas for you to make your confession, or seek spiritual counsel and advice:
Monday 18th December – Fr Alan Rimmer & Fr Graeme Rowlands
Tuesday 19th December – Fr Peter Anthony & Fr Alan Rimmer
Wednesday 20th December – Fr Peter Anthony & Fr Graeme Rowlands
Thursday 21st December – Fr Peter Anthony & Fr Alan Rimmer
Friday 22nd December – Fr Peter Anthony
New Christmas Eve service
We are going to experiment with a slight change to the services we offer on Christmas Eve this year in order to allow as many people as possible to attend the liturgy in that holy night.
In addition to the usual 11.00 pm Midnight High Mass, there will also be a First High Mass of Christmas celebrated at 6.00 pm (as Christmas Eve this year is a Sunday, this will be in place of Evensong and the 5.15 pm Low Mass). This liturgy is intended for those who have voiced a concern that it can be difficult to get to All Saints’ and back home again on Christmas Eve once the Tube has stopped running early.
Christmas Services at All Saints’
Parish Christmas Carol Service – 9 Lessons and Carols
Sunday 17th December 2023
Nine Lessons and Carols | 6.00 pm
Fourth Sunday of Advent
Sunday 24th December 2023
High Mass | 11.00 am
Christmas Eve
Sunday 24th December 2023
First High Mass of Christmas | 6.00 pm
Midnight High Mass | 11.00 pm
Christmas Day
Monday 25th December 2023
Said Mass of the Dawn | 9.00 am
High Mass of Christmas Day | 11.00 am
Please note that from Tuesday 26th December until Saturday 30th December, there will only be one Mass each day at 12 noon.
Feast of the Holy Family
Sunday 31st December 2023
High Mass | 11.00 am
Please note that there will be no 5.15 pm Said Mass or Evensong on Sunday 31st December.
Feast of the Epiphany of the Lord
Sunday 7th January 2023
High Mass | 11.00 am
Said Mass | 5.15 pm
Epiphany Carol Service | 6.00 pm
Full details of all music through the whole Christmas period can be found here.
Frances O’Neil
Frances O’Neil’s funeral will take place at All Saints’ on Thursday 4th January at 10.30 am. There will then be a committal at Islington Crematorium in East Finchley at 11.00 am the next day, Friday 5th January. Please keep Frances’ family and friends in your prayers.
Shrove Tuesday Crêpes Suzette dinner
To celebrate Shrove Tuesday, we will be hosting a special Crêpes Suzette dinner at Le Beaujolais restaurant on Litchfield Street in Soho. The cost will be £50 for three courses. Instead of the usual cheese trolley, you are welcome to choose, as a special treat for Pancake Day, the restaurant’s famous Crêpes Suzette as a way of finishing Ordinary Time and preparing for Lent. To book a place, please email the parish office.
Confirmation classes
Anyone interested in being baptized, and/or confirmed should be in touch with Fr Peter or Fr Alan. Confirmation classes will begin in the New Year. Our confirmation next year will take place on Pentecost Sunday, 19th May 2024, when we will be joined by the Bishop of Fulham to administer the sacraments of initiation.
Lent Theatre Trip – Dead Poets Live: Gerard Manley Hopkins
There will be a parish trip to the theatre at Wilton’s Music Hall on Wednesday 6th March for Lent to see a fascinating show presenting the poetry and life story of Gerard Manley Hopkins. Tickets are £26 each and the play begins at 7.30 pm.
The blurb for this performance says the following: “Dead Poets Live return to Wilton’s for three nights to tell the story of Hopkins’s relationship with poetry, and poetry’s relationship with Hopkins: how his extraordinary spiritual life led him to write – and then not to write – as he did, how his poems were destroyed, how they survived, how they were misunderstood, and how, ultimately, their influence triumphed. It is the story of a radical and passionate style and the radical, passionate spirit that it continues to communicate.”
To book a place, please email the parish office.
Mary Rowe
The funeral rites of Mary Rowe will take place at at 2.00pm on Thursday 21 December 2023 at St John’s Wood Church, Prince Albert Road, London NW8 7NE.
Attendance last Sunday
Prayer List
The Friends of All Saints’ Margaret Street:
December 17th – Kirill Dashkovskiy, Christopher Davies, Robert Davies, Peter Dennis, Laura Denton, Joshua Dolphin, Suzanna Eaton
18th – Linda Edwards, Pamela Edwards, John Eldridge, Terrence Ellsworth, Sue Enoch, Carolyn Farrar, Martin Faulkner
19th – Sue Feakin, Adrian Felaar, Daniel Fielden, Janice Fielden, Julia Fielden, Nigel Fisher, Mark Fleming
20th – Stuart Fletcher, Christopher Forman, Anthony Fox, Charlotte Gauthier, Margaret Goddard, Paul Golding, John Goldsmith
21st – Genevieve Gomi, The Ven Thomas M. Greene, Jack de Gruiter, Canon Michael Gudgeon, Sheelagh Gudgeon, Ginger and Del Hall, Monica Joan Hall
22nd – Roger Hancock, Canon Richard Hanford, Paul Hannah, Jillian Hargreaves, Christopher Harrison, Patrick Hartley, The Rev’d Canon Jeremy Haselock
23rd – Eoghan Healy, Rebecca Hirst, Fr David Hobden, James and Gwendoline Holdcroft, Edwin Holmes, The Rev’d Canon Graham Holcombe, Bishop David Hope
The sick:
Martin Berka, David Craig, Jason Dunlop, Frances Gayler, Gill Hargreaves, Fr. Harry Hodgetts, Michael Lamprell, Elizabeth Lyon, James Roger, Bruce Ross-Smith, Doreen and Melvin Warren, Jean
The faithful departed:
Gary Hargreaves, Alma Lockley, Frances O’Neil, Mary Rowe, Pat Castle Stewart
Those whose anniversaries of death fall at this time:
December 17th – Edwin Forsyth, Joan Gower, Philip Prain, Richard Vick
19th – Ena Knight
20th – Lily King, Jack Monk, Elaine Bullock
21st – Charles Hillier, Adam Reddington, Harry Nuttall
22nd – Elizabeth Ross, Anthony Greek, Richard Routledge, Helen Turner
23rd – Harold Pobjoy Pr, Anne Scott
24th – Cynthia Tucker, Miriam Smith, Augustus Thompson, Paul De Fortis Pr, Doreen Forde
Service times this week
Saturday 16th December – Advent Feria
12.00 pm Mass
6.30pm Vigil Mass of Sunday
Sunday 17th December – Third Sunday of Advent
11.00 am High Mass
5.15 pm Mass
6.00 pm Parish Carol Service of Nine Lessons and Carols
Monday 18th December – Advent Feria
12.00 pm Mass
6.30 pm Mass
Tuesday 19th December – Advent Feria
12.00 pm Mass
6.30 pm Mass
Wednesday 20th December – Advent Feria
12.00 pm Mass
6.30 pm Mass
Thursday 21st December – Advent Feria
12.00 pm Mass
6.30 pm Mass
Friday 22nd December – Advent Feria
12.00 pm Mass
6.30 pm Mass
Saturday 23rd December – Advent Feria
12 noon Mass
6.30 pm Vigil Mass of Sunday
Sunday 24th December – Fourth Sunday of Advent
11.00 am High Mass
6.00 pm First High Mass of Christmas
11.00 pm Midnight Mass