Sunday 26 April 2015

We Regret to Announce that Summer in Brighton has been Delayed...



We regret to announce that summer in Brighton has been delayed. The sky is grey and leaden today, there is a chill North by North-East breeze making it fell like seven or eight degrees Celsius and the Channel is an uninviting grey-green colour.


Even the seagulls are out of sorts, stumping around and muttering to themselves. The prognosis over the next few days is not much better, ‘unsettled’ is what the BBC calls it.

After the sunshine and warmth of Easter there was a flurry of activity with many of the entertainments and cafes open for business. Quite a few have now closed again although the 131-year-old Volks Railway - the oldest public electric railway in the world - is still trundling along between the Palace Pier and the Marina.
 
 
 
Behind it, the three-year-old Brighton Wheel is slowly and nervously revolving, many of its capsules empty. It’s nervous because further along the seafront the same architects who designed the London Eye have designed the Brighton i360 tower, which is now under construction and, on completion, it is expected to attract 700,000 additional visitors a year to the city. The i360 will have a viewing platform 138 metres high - compared to only 50 for the Wheel - and should, on a clear day, enable people to see for 25 miles, to Eastbourne and beyond for example.     

Although many businesses on the seafront are closed and shuttered, there are still a few open, including this colourful artist's shop.

 
Squeals and shrieks of terror or joy - or possibly both - attracted me further along to where the carousel was in operation. This little girl was very nervous at first, clinging tightly to the horse's neck as the ride gathered speed...



Then, mounting panic overcome, she really began to enjoy the ride, squealing with the sheer exhilaration of it all, flying along...


And a few spaces behind her were two other girls, quite a bit older, who maybe remembered when they were much younger and rode a flying horse for the first time...


 We end with the 20-ton recycled scrap iron artwork titled ‘Passacaglia’ by Charles Hadcock and erected 17 years ago. Framed in it is the remains of Brighton's West Pier, built in 1866, closed in 1975 and, following two fires in 2003 and several storms, it is now just an iron skeleton. We Brightonians hope that one day - like the mythical phoenix bird - it will be reborn in all its glory...

Tuesday 21 April 2015

Counting Down to Festival 50 – just 74 Days to Go!



Yes, in 74 days time, on 5 July 2015, it will be Festival 50, the biggest party of the last 50 years for Catholics in Sussex and Surrey. The American Express Community Stadium at Falmer, just outside Brighton, home to Brighton & Hove Albion football team (the Seagulls), is hosting this unique event.

The Fifth of July is a happy conjunction of several anniversaries and opportunities:
·         50 years since the formation of Arundel & Brighton Diocese (it was formerly part of Southwark Diocese).
·         50 years since the watershed Second Vatican Council ended.
·         The first major public event for our new Bishop, Richard Moth, since his installation.
·         A concluding Mass for the whole diocese celebrated with Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O’Connor and Archbishop Peter Smith, priests, deacons, religious and laity of A&B.
...and an opportunity for Seagull supporters to visit the home ground – and pray for the future success of Brighton & Hove Albion, who are currently facing potential relegation from The Championship league.
It will be a huge event and sunshine is guaranteed on the day, even if we have to make it ourselves. For the ten or twenty thousand – or more – people who attend, there will be entertaining speakers, competing choirs, workshops, fairground rides, arts and crafts, children’s activities, bands, theatre events and cinema screenings, displays, exhibitions, family events and much more.
 
A word about the Amex Community Stadium at Falmer, which is situated at the edge of the beautiful Sussex Downs - yet it is less than nine minutes by train from central Brighton to Falmer Station, which is very close to the arena. Completed just four years ago at a cost of £93 million, the 30,000 capacity stadium is a state-of-the-art multi-purpose facility designed to host a variety of activities, including other sports such as rugby and hockey, and music concerts, conferences and exhibitions (- and diocesan Masses!).


A small group of interested parties from DABCEC (the diocese’s education centre) visited the Stadium today for a preview of the facilities available – and we were impressed!


 Last night they celebrated the Player of the Year ceremony in this 500-seat lounge, the venue for keynote talks at Festival 50.


We even visited the home team’s changing room, with its couch, display boards of tactics, vast LCD screen and adjoining baths and showers.

At the lower levels were the refreshments kiosks, bars and toilet facilities. Apparently, when an away team travels to the Amex Stadium, they are carefully catered for; their team crest is placed in a prominent place, part of the area is decorated in the visiting team’s colours, serving staff wear the visiting team’s shirts – and they even order beer from the visiting team's local brewery to make them feel at home!   

 
Of course the ground is the most important part of the venue and, throughout our visit, groundsmen were at work rolling and tending it.



The field is surrounded by an artificial strip of plastic grass but the rest is real and manicured to within a millimetre of its life.  

 


The stand seats are padded and very comfortable so that resting there for an hour or several should be no hardship. From a distance the club’s logo, the white outline of flying seagulls set against a deep blue background is very striking.

Just how this was achieved using seats of different colours is part of the spectacle of the Amex. Come and see it for yourselves on 5th July.    
 
 

Monday 20 April 2015

The Catholic (Universal) Church and Baptism

Yesterday we celebrated a happy and moving Rite of Baptism for Several Children - five in total, belonging to four lovely couples who took part in our Baptism Preparation class one week ago.

It was rather busy on the altar with the priest, Fr Kevin Dring, parents, godparents and infants. With one or two children we use the baptistery at the back of the church, but with several families it gets crowded and it is difficult for family and friends to see and participate effectively.


The word 'Catholic' in Catholic Church means 'universal' and I was reminded of it by the variety of nationalities present: among the four couples were nationals of Argentina, France, Cameroon, Ireland - and of course the United Kingdom. Several more nationalities were present among the friends and relations attending - and Fr Kevin's opening welcome in both English and Spanish clearly surprised and delighted one couple from Peru.

In the front porch is a poster underscoring the global nature of the Church. The parishioners attending the Sacred Heart Church come from more than 40 different nationalities - 46 at the last count.


The Church is considered Catholic/Universal in at least two key senses: as Christ is present in the Church, which is His visible body, and since He transcends dimensions, she is necessarily universal; she also has a mission and is organised to evangelize the entire world. The Sacrament of Baptism - the 'door to the Church' - is key to this. To Christ's own command to 'make disciples of all nations, baptizing them... (Matt 28:19) is the related promise that 'The one who believes and is baptized will be saved...' (Mark 16:16). So, yes, there's a lot of happiness involved in baptisms - the first stage on the journey to Heaven!  

Wednesday 15 April 2015

(Almost) A Summer's Day

It’s a busy time of year but it was so beautiful this afternoon that I tore myself away from the computer with its reports, half-finished accounts and secretarial returns, to walk down the hill to Hove Park.

Bright blue skies, an unusually warm mid-April day at almost 70 degrees Farenheit and the flowers in our garden have started to come out...


 
...but our brown fingers are no competition to our neighbours Jim and Joyce who have true green-fingered skill and a passion for gardening. Their garden is an orderly riot of colour and good taste that probably adds value to every house in the street.

 

Walking down the hill towards Hove Park, there is evidence of vigorous life and growth everywhere, particularly the brilliant flowers – in fact once or twice as I passed gardens shielded from view by hedges or trees the enticing bouquet from hidden flowers sneaked out and tweaked my nose.




Certainly some of the blossoms and flowers are fading. The daffodils, still plentiful, are beginning to bow down while the blossom trees are starting to lose their blossoms.

 
Most of the deciduous trees are still bare and stark, their twisted limbs outlined against the sky. Whole streets are awaiting the restoration of their leafy canopies and, in some cases, the city council’s pruning seems to have been rather severe – a number one haircut!

 
 
But, elsewhere, there are signs of new growth and, looking closely, there are green buds and dwarf leaves. It won’t be long before all the city’s trees are wearing their summer green, providing shade and refuge for the birds.
 
In the park people are already sunbathing and enjoying games. Can you see the frisbee?
Clue: look closely at the seated couple in the middle of the picture.
 
 
 

 
There!

The earth is awakening and life is beginning anew.

An old friend of ours went home today. When I say old, she would have been 95 years old if she had lived another three months. She slipped away peacefully this morning at 6.30am. Fr Kevin had given her the last rites a day earlier and we visited her yesterday afternoon. She was not conscious of our presence and the only sign that she was still alive was the occasional movement of the throat as she breathed. Because the hearing is the last sense to go, we prayed the Our Father, Hail Mary and Glory Be... at her bedside and said our farewells.
She was not destined to enjoy the summer in all its glory - but I’m sure her destination was infinitely more enjoyable.        

Sunday 12 April 2015

Summer has just arrived in Brighton (& Hove)

According to the meteorological view, summer in the Northern Hemisphere does not start until the 1st of June and continues until the end of August. In Brighton & Hove it seems to have started already...

Today saw the opening of our ‘summer season’ with the Brighton Marathon. This is followed by various car meetings and displays throughout April, then, in three weeks time, the largest arts festival in England, Brighton's 49th annual Festival of music, theatre, dance, circus, art, literature, debate and events – over 700 of them – during three weeks in May.
Then we’re into serious fun time with the London to Brighton bike and vintage car runs, Paddle Round the Pier tomfoolery, mud-spattered races, naturist bike ride, the Fiery Foods Festival, national speed trials, Pride Annual Parade, Rugby World Cup festivities and a few hundred other joyous events. Then the Veteran Car Run from London to Brighton in November signals the wind-down of Brighton’s season.

The Brighton Marathon – pardon me, it really should be called the Brighton & Hove Marathon – only started in 2010 so this is its sixth year, but it already attracts over 15,000  runners for the 26.2 mile course, many linked to the over 400 different charitable fundraising causes. This year the men’s winner was Duncan Maiyo, a Kenyan (in 2:10:15) and the women’s winner was Pennina Wanjiru, also Kenyan, in 2:34:25 - in fact, Kenyans have won eight of the 12 top men’s and women’s places since 2010.
Today I walked  along the cordoned-off Church Road in Hove just before the Brighton (& Hove) Marathon began. It was a brilliant sunny day with bright blue skies and a forecast top temperature of 13 C (55 F). Volunteers were setting up the stalls for water supplies for the runners.


There was a raucous noise of horns in the distance and soon the official race car appeared heading the ‘honour guard’ of a convoy of scooterists and motorcyclists, moving slowly past Hove Town Hall, sounding their horns...




...followed by a fleet of a couple of dozen Minis and small cars, with balloons attached, weaving from side to side and also tooting.     


 They were followed by a police car, police motor cyclist, then pedal cyclists in orange tops, escorting the first runners.

 


(Eventual winner, Duncan Maiyo, is on the right)
 It seemed like a good 10 or 15 minutes before more runners arrived, first the occasional one or two, then the first woman runner, then a trickle and then a flood.  








Of course, being part of Hove, we're quite laid back about this sort of thing and if we can have a good brunch at the same time as enjoying the atmosphere...



Let's hear it for the caped crusader...



And for someone who's just full of life!


Saturday 4 April 2015

Alleluliah - He is Risen! - He is Risen Indeed!


As dusk fell, almost five hours ago, Georges the senior Altar Server and his daughter Cassandra lit the brazier. The wood caught fire and the flames leaped up as we gathered round warming our hands.

At the stroke of 8.00pm Father Kevin and Father Francis emerged from the Presbytery carrying the large Paschal candle. The congregation stood quietly in a semi-circle, holding their own unlit candles. Fr Kevin then performed the first ceremony of Easter Vigil, the lighting of the Easter candle, incising it and inserting grans of incense and blessing it before bearing it in procession into the darkened church.  As the congregation entered, they lit their candles from the Paschal candle, passing the light to their neighbours until everyone had a light and the church was lit by the warm glow of a couple of hundred flickering candles.

Then, by the light of these candles, the liturgy of readings began, the organ and choir high in the loft pouring out praise after each reading. Then came the point where the priest announced 'the light of Christ' and, in a sudden thunderous burst of bell-ringing and a blinding illumination, all the lights in the church were turned on and the altar servers scurried round lighting all the candles - even the candles high up on the side walls, lit just once a year. In a moment the church was ablaze with light.

This year we had eight candidates and catechumens join the Church and the beautiful ceremony then took place we all renewed our baptismal promises, the prospective members professed their faith, were blessed, anointed with holy oils and were joyfully welcomed into the Church as full members. The congregation broke into loud applause, sharing their joy and welcoming them into the family of Christ.

Finally, it was Mass, Easter Mass, a very special one for both the new and the old members. I was serving as a Eucharistic Minister and stood with my chalice to the left of the altar.

Then, almost three hours after we had begun, it was over and we left the church, wishing each other a Happy Easter, taking one of the proffered chocolates to break our Lenten fast - enjoying the sweet taste of Christ risen.

It's early the next morning now, I'm too tired to write much detail - apologies - but please enjoy the photos... (they are a bit grainy, it was rather dark!)    








***********************
 
It's now 11.20am on Sunday morning. The 9.30am Mass, traditionally the children's Mass, where they undertake the readings (from a children's simplified version of the Bible), sing their own hymn (with gestures!), take the collection and process the gifts, was packed, absolutely packed. All the pews were full, people scrunched up against each other like sardines, the overspill stood at the back of the church, down the sides and even in the entrance and in the porch outside. As we queued for Holy Communion I experienced something I've never seen before - the line came to a complete stop for a few minutes. Holy gridlock!
 
Alleluliah - He is Risen! - He is Risen Indeed!