Christmas at St Bunion sLucy Moore |
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This festive season can sometimes put a strain on the very best of our church fellowships, so to help you cope with the stresses of the coming weeks, Barnabas offers you the chance to eavesdrop on the forum chat from St Bunion’s in the parish of Much Dripping. The Revd. Venables, St. Bunion’s jovial rector, Hengist its irascible organist and Queenie its matronly choir-mistress, along with Noodles (?) that ever-helpful teenager and the retired Revd. Prink are in heated debate about this year’s nativity play and carol service…Read on…..
Revd Hannibal Venables
In this run-up to Christmas, Young Warriors, let us remember the need for teamwork, assisting each other through the labyrinths of swinging axes and boiling oil that constitute our PCC meetings as we prepare for the festive season It would also be fruitful, I feel, to strive for unity as we consider the content of both nativity play and carol service. While last year’s alternative nativity from Noodles and the youth group, Merry Textmas, had its undoubted good points, perhaps we should attempt something less ambitious this year? Perhaps without Noodles’ impressive sound system. It would be nice to avoid another Summons for causing a Breach of the Peace. I would like to have a more intellectual approach to the Christmas story this year, in order to help us understand more of the facts of the narrative. Has anyone any ideas? Christmas on the Television is a time of repeats, but let us endeavour not to have a repeat of last year’s little occurrence during the Carols by Candlelight. While our dear organist, Hengist’s choice of carols was original and indeed challenging, Mrs Frunghorn still suffers from palpitations and the baldachin will never be quite the same. I shall propose a more traditional list of carols this year. The collection will be going as ever to the Nether Dripping Llama Sanctuary. So, this Christmas, may the spirit of peace and harmony, unity and tolerance descend on us all like unto a camouflage net dropped upon unwitting young warriors from a pine tree. Amen.
Hengist MacDougal
‘Away In A Manger (first verse sung by children only)’ What does this mean? ‘ Away in a manger?’ Far away in a manger? Put away in a manger? A misprint for a babe in a manger? And what about ‘No crying he makes?’ How do you make crying? Is this great literature? And is it not sickly enough without lisping children’s voices singing it? ‘lays down his sweet head’ ‘bless all the dear children’ Can you see any correspondence between the sentiments in this carol and the gum-chewing, tamagotchi-touting i-Pod-wearing oiks we have in our children’s choir? ‘Once in Royal’ A wee bittie dodgy on the theological front, don’t we think, in this enlightened age? ‘When like stars thy children crowned / All in white shall wait around.’ Pardon me – where do we read that all there is to do in heaven is to wait around as if at some celestial bus station? Or like a row of high class staff in Weatherspoons? And was Jesus so ‘mild and obedient’ as a child? I don’t call staying out for three nights in Jerusalem either mild or obedient. ‘O Come all ye faithful’ We are only singing this if Queenie takes the children’s choir through this word by word so that we don’t have last year’s rousing chorus of ‘Oh come let us abhor him.’ I am not a biology teacher and I refuse to be the one to describe to young Rodney Mopp what abhorring a virgin’s womb might entail. ‘In the bleak midwinter’ ‘Snow had fallen, snow on snow / Snow on snow.’ How much snow? At least ten foot drifts, by my reckoning, which would make it physically impossible for any shepherd to bring a lamb anywhere near Bethlehem. And in answer to the question: What can I give him? Poor as I am…, wouldn’t it be more appropriate in this day of strapped for cash churches, with the parish share getting bigger by the hour and congregations with less and less idea of tithing, to offer something other than just ‘Gi-i-ive my heart’, which is, after all, an easy option compared with ‘Gi-i-ive my Volvo’? I could go on with the tedium of the tune of ‘The first Nowell’ or the immature giggles occurring every year around Good King Wenceslas’ innuendoes because ‘earth’ doesn’t rhyme with ‘trod’. I could mention the peculiar pointlessness of ‘Ding Dong Merrily On High’ or the unlikeliness that a night in a room full of animals, birthing women and shepherds could be anything near ‘Silent’ but I can bear it no longer. Isn’t it time we had some Christmas carols that were more than sentimental illiterate Victorian nursery rhymes? I applaud the Rector’s quest for intellectual rigour: let’s have it in the choice of carols too.
Queenie Quorn
Children’s Choir will meet at 6pm on Weds to practise. After the last Family Service all kazoos have been banned from church premises by order of the Wardens. Please note we will not be repeating the ‘sing along to a ring tone’ exercise suggested by Noodles last time, so mobile phones need not be brought either, and it would be appreciated if all chewing gum is removed before singing commences.
Noodles
Revd Ozymandias Prink
Noodles
Revd Ozymandias Prink
Noodles
Revd Ozymandias Prink
Noodles
Revd Ozymandias Prink
Hengist MacDougal
Queenie Quorn
Revd Hannibal Venables
While I sympathise entirely with Hengist’s unique ‘take’ on the carols, I can’t help feeling that we would face a public outcry if we sang the ones on his proposed list. I’m sure Vietnamese throat-singing and thirteenth century Latin plainchant has its place, but perhaps not at the most popular service of the year. And I do not like to think how Mrs Frunghorn would react to the Swedish Body-Plucking version of ‘We three Kings’. Remember the true meaning of Christmas is one of peace and goodwill to all – with the possible exception of the part of the story about King Herod and the bit we don’t mention about the children being slaughtered.
Hengist MacDougal
Revd Ozymandias Prink
Hengist MacDougal
Queenie Quorn
Rodney Mopp will be singing the solo of ‘Away in a manger’ and Jodie will sing the descant for the final verse of ‘Oh come all ye faithful’ if she can keep her concentration on the singing and off Noodles’ tattoos. We will practise singing by candlelight. You do not need to bring cigarette lighters or indeed anything inflammable. A last reminder: no gum. No mobile phones. No cropped tops and visible body piercings to be taped over. Did Mary reveal her tummy? I don’t think so. Did Joseph have a pierced nostril? I feel it is unlikely. Let us emulate their example.
Hengist MacDougal
Revd Hannibal Venables
But we are deeply indebted to Noodles and the children, who rallied round superbly and presented such a moving impromptu nativity play at one evening’s notice. The llama from the sanctuary made an excellent donkey substitute and Gretchen has just the stuff to get the stains out of the carpet, so no worries there. While Rodney’s solo version of ‘Away in a Manger’ owed more to Eminem than to King’s College Choir, we must remember we have a whole year to restore relationships between church and outraged parishioners who like their carols straight. Miss Quorn may like to meditate on forgiveness and Rodney may like to apologise for giving her such an unexpected version of this usually touching and sweet carol. Where you learnt your rap version from, I cannot imagine, but perhaps I could see Rodney and Noodles before Epiphany so that they can explain? How pleasant it is to belong to a church where so many ages work together for the greater glory of God. Reflecting on the Christmas story, perhaps it is not a story for children. Revd Prink is right in that we need to sort out the hard and fast truths from the traditional sentiment that has been superimposed onto the Christmas story. But it is also a story of mystery and wonder. A story that, like so much of the Scripture, goes beyond our intellectual understanding. And I caught something of this as I watched young Jodie stumble clumsily up the aisle with the cushion up her costume. Perhaps that is why we need it to be told to us by children: it is such hallowed ground that only children, with their relatively undamaged spirituality and openness to God, can take us beyond our cognitive appreciation of its objective truths. God can and does use the children’s enactment of this story to move us in our emotions and inner being. Young warriors, old warriors, blessings to you all in your heads and your hearts this Christmas. |
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