Once I was a clever boy learning the arts of Oxford... is a quotation from the verses written by Bishop Richard Fleming (c.1385-1431) for his tomb in Lincoln Cathedral. Fleming, the founder of Lincoln College in Oxford, is the subject of my research for a D. Phil., and, like me, a son of the West Riding. I have remarked in the past that I have a deeply meaningful on-going relationship with a dead fifteenth century bishop... it was Fleming who, in effect, enabled me to come to Oxford and to learn its arts, and for that I am immensely grateful.


Showing posts with label Kevin Athaide. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kevin Athaide. Show all posts

Saturday, 12 September 2015

An Ordination in Leicester


This morning I travelled up to Leicester to attend the priestly ordination of a friend, Kevin Athaíde, at the Dominican Priory of Holy Cross.

Fr Daniel the Provost of the Oxford Oratory offered seats to two of us who knew Kevin when he was studying in Oxford. We arrived in good time and used that advantage to visit the Anglican cathedral, and nteh new tomb of King Richard III. As aresult of installing this and re-ordering the cathedral ( a medieval parish church elevated to cathedral status in 1926) now presents a somewhat curious lay- out. The new tomb is in what was the choir, and it seems almost like a shrine to the King. We said some private prayers for him. I strongly suspect that he is still in need of  them - to make a topical analogy, was he the Jeremy Corbyn to King Edward IV's Tony Blair and New Labour for the Yorkists?  The cathedral has some nice Comperesque furnishings - notably the choirscreen - and a monumentally hideous modern episcopal throne. We did not have time to venture into the strikingly entitled Visitor's Centre across the churchyard "Dynasty, Death and Discovery" but King Richard is clearly big business in Leicester for the tourist industry, and the lampstandards around bore banners and the royal standard as used in 1485. It is something of an historical irony that a town so associated with the House of Lancaster in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries as part of their ancestral Duchy should now be prospering on the almost chance burial there of the last reigning Yorkist.

We then walked across part of the city centre - this was my first visit to the city to explore anything of its history - to the Dominican priory.

The priory website, which has an excellent
photo gallery and a history of the Dominicans in Leicester can be seen at Holy Cross Leicester 

Image result for Dominican Priory Leicester

The Dominican church in Leicester

Image:godzdogz.op.org


The present, very handsome church replaces a much smaller one from the mid-nineteenth century - still preserved behind the ritual east end of the church as the parish hall. The eastern sections were built between 1928 and 1931 by Arthur Young and A. D. Reid of London. The nave and facade were added in 1956-1958 by Alan Sharp. This appears to be a slight modification of the original design but maintaing the overall conception and design. Externally it is a brick building with stone details, but onside is stone or rendered and in a perpendicular style.


Holy Cross Church, Leicester: The exterior of  of the church on the New Walk


Holy Cross Church, Leicester: The interior


Holy Cross Church, Leicester:The south transept

Images:docbrown.info

I thought this was a very fine church, with the side altars all maintained and decorated, and with statues and shrines to saints with pricket stands distributed through the church.

As the Bishop of Nottingham is in Rome the ordination was conducted by Bishop William Kenney, auxilliary in the Birmingham archdiocese. There was a significant turn out of clergy - Dominicans, Oratorians and diocesan clergy. Amongst the Oxford friends I saw there were David Howell as the Deacon of the Gospel, and Br Pius Collins O.Praem.from Chelmsford, who only received the diaconate there yesterday, and back in his home diocese as one of the Deacons at the throne.

Following his Ordination Fr Kevin returned to give First Blessings to members of the congregation.

Here he is imparting his first blessing to Fr Daniel:

photo

Image; Oxford Oratory website

The reception afterwards, with traditional Goan food reflecting Fr Kevin's ancestry, was an opportunity to catch up with old friends and acquaintances before returning to Oxford.

Fr Kevin is an excellent young man who will, I am sure, be a good and conscientious priest, and i would ask readers to keep him in their prayers.

 

Saturday, 14 June 2014

Diaconal Ordination at Westminster Cathedral


Today I travelled with a friend, who is the Rector of the Brothers of the Oxford Oratory, to attend the diaconal ordination at Westminster Cathedral of a young man who used to attend our meetings when he was studying in Oxford at Blackfriars.

This necessitated an early start, and delays with the traffic, taking us on a long detour from Hillingdon to Hammersmith and back to Shepherds Bush, meant we arrived in the cathedral during the Gloria.

Our friend Kevin Athaide was ordained alongside Cyril Chiaha and David Lucuy, who are from the diocese of Westminster and studying with him at Allen Hall. In the current vacancy of the see of Nottingham, which is his sponsoring diocese, Kevin's ordination was conducted along with theirs by Bishop John Arnold as an auxiliary bishop of Westminster.vi

As befitted the occasion and setting this was a dignified liturgy, and it conveyed - as it should of course - a sense of the Church as a whole doing something significant in ordaining these three men.

Afterwards we were able to congratulate Kevin, and catch up on news as well as to see Fr Richard Duffield C.O.from York. We talked with him about developments there at St Wilfrid's, all of which sounded very promising.

Afterwards the two of us from Oxford went up to visit the exhibition of Cathedral Treasures in the lower part of the tower. After some comic difficulties negotiating the turnstile, we got in to see firstly the display about the building of the cathedral, and to look at the original model for the building. One thing I discovered was that the architect, J.F.Bentley, came from my father's home town of Doncaster.


The collection of treasures is very well worth seeing, and includes relics, altarplate and vestments. Here are some pictures of the display from the cathedral website:

Cathedral Guide Book

The mitre was worn by Cardinal Wiseman at the dedication of St George's Southwark, and is a Pugin design.
The enormous monstrance was given by a nun as a thanksgiving for her accetance into her Community.

Image: westminstercathedral.org

Also on display is the amethyst encrusted cope morse traditionally worn for their enthronements by the Archbishops of Westminster, including the present one.



The Archiepiscopal morse

Image: heraldsgospelsinengland.blogspot

In another case was Cardinal Hume's Order of Merit, and relics of  St John Southworth, and a display about the survival of the relic of his body, which is enshrined in the cathedral.

The cathedral website has details about the exhibition which may be read here.

Before we left the cathedral precints we had a good look around the St Pauls Bookshop and that of the Catholic Truth Society in the piazza outside. 

An enjoyable day, and a significant one for the three deacons, whom I invite readers to join me in keeping them in our prayers.