Last Sunday was a very special day with a flying visit back to Yorkshire for ordinations in the Bradford Diocese.
In line with the current trends in the Church of England the main morning Cathedral event was the ordination of deacons, with the priestings at an array of churches around the Diocese later in the day (more on the significance of this trend in another post).
Ordinations always have a very special character and ambience to them - an event in terms of attendance which muddles up the deeply committed with family and friends who perhaps rarely enter a Church or share in worship and yet who realise the significance for their friends or family who are to be ordained. In this sense it offers a particular liturgical challenge of matching solemnity and depth with accessibility.
At Bradford Cathedral I was struck by a sense in which these people who were being made deacon were being given "permission" by the Bishop (and being commissioned by a wider group of people present) to develop ministries which few of us can imagine. Such is the change in the Church (or at least the change needed in the Church) that few of us can predict what opportunities will present themselves as these newly ordained deacons develop their ministries.
The priesting in the evening was at the wonderful church of Christ Church Skipton which represents all that is best about the liberal Catholic tradition within the Church of England and with the added dynamic of the Bishop (Hewlett Thompson former Bishop of Exeter) ordaining his daughter Louise. ( see above)
We were made especially welcome by the local Church members with none of the fuss and pomp which sometimes overcomes Cathedral ordinations. I was reminded by the liturgy of some words of Robert Runcie about being priested in which he compared it to a a pilot being permitted "to fly solo for the first time".
From my own experience and others that I have known the first year of priesthood has a very special quality when the restrictions of training and diaconate are left behind, but the constraints, responsibilities and expectations of incumbency have yet to become a burden.
Then I had to drive back up to Scotland which might seem a crazy burden but actually was rather spectacular as I chased the departing day-sky back up the M6/M74 to arrive at Hamilton with a quite wonderful sunset over Glasgow.
So blessings particularly to the Revd June Marks (doesn't that sound and read well) in her ministry as a deacon, and to Nigel Wright in his ministry as a priest and to all who were ordained with them.
They should unlock the first door and immediately lock it back once they are inside.
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