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Wednesday, December 18, 2024

UK news in short

Icon stolen from Magdalene College, Cambridge

A GILDED icon that depicts the Virgin and Child with two archangels was stolen from Magdalene College Chapel, Cambridge, between Tuesday and Wednesday of last week, the College reports. The Chapel Dean, the Revd Sarah Atkins, said that “the icon vanished from its place beside the altar” while the constructing was open to the general public. The icon was created by Dom Anselm Shobrook, an Anglican Benedictine at Alton Abbey, in Hampshire. It was donated by Professor Eamon Duffy in 2009 to commemorate the thirtieth anniversary of his election as a Fellow. The College is appealing for details about its current whereabouts.

 

Dr Inge, retiring, receives Lanfranc Award

THE Archbishop of Canterbury has presented the retiring Bishop of Worcester, Dr John Inge, with the Lanfranc Award for Education and Scholarship. The award, which recognises outstanding work in theological education, was given on 20 September before a ceremony in Lambeth Palace Chapel conferring doctorates to graduates of the Lambeth Research Degrees in Theology programme, whose Council Dr Inge has chaired since 2019. Dr Inge said that he was “surprised and delighted”. He has been Bishop of Worcester since 2008, and can formally retire on Wednesday (News, 3 May). A service in Worcester Cathedral on Sunday marked the tip of his public ministry within the diocese. In his sermon, Dr Inge said: “I feel that I actually have received so rather more than I actually have given. I’m profoundly grateful — to you and to God.” The process to appoint he next Bishop of Worcester has began, but an announcement shouldn’t be expected until summer 2025 on the earliest.

 

 

Former choirmaster sentenced for child abuse

A FORMER organ teacher and choirmaster at St Peter’s, Hersham, in Surrey, Sean McNally, 71, of Todmorden, Calderdale, has been sentenced at Kingston Crown Court to a few years in prison for non-recent child-sex offences. He pleaded guilty on Monday to 5 sexual offences against a boy between 1973 and 1976, Surrey Police report. At a hearing in July, Mr McNally had also pleaded guilty to 2 counts of indecency with a toddler and three counts of indecent assault on a male person. Two of the fees involved greater than 40 occasions of touching and indecent assault of the kid victim, who was aged ten-13 years old and was McNally’s pupil on the time. The child was groomed, the Police report. “McNally would then play on the victim’s faith, making him swear to God that he would never tell anyone concerning the abuse.”

 

Pott Shrigley carries off top magazine prize

THE Gold, Silver, and Bronze Awards for the very best church magazines within the country this 12 months have been awarded to C of E publications, in a contest run by the Association for Church Editors (ACE). The announcement was made on Saturday on the annual ACE meeting within the Methodist Central Hall, Westminster. The Gold Award went to Ho†Pott, from St Christopher’s, Pott Shrigley, in Cheshire. The editor, Kath Matheson, said: “It’s lovely that our attempts to bring the Christian message, in addition to stories regarding local people and events, to our rural community have been recognised in this manner.” The Silver Award went to Connections, at St Mary the Virgin, with Hudswell, Downholme and Marske, in Richmond, North Yorkshire, edited by John McCormack; and the Bronze Award went to In Touch at Otley Parish Church, in West Yorkshire, edited by Stephen Hey. The ACE, a not-for-profit interdenominational organisation, celebrated its silver jubilee this 12 months. churchmag.uk

 

Project seeks to enhance public-sector religious literacy

A NEW initiative, the ReLIT standard, developed by the Religion and Belief Literacy Partnership, has been launched to enhance religious literacy in the general public sector. It seeks to assist public-sector organisations to know, respect, and interact with faiths and beliefs higher when shaping policy and delivering services. The project builds on recommendations from the Bloom review: an independent assessment of religion engagement. Mark Hammond, project lead and former head of the Equalities and Human Rights Commission, told Premier Christian News that establishing “an ordinary to aspire to” would significantly enhance religious literacy in the general public sector. A consultation event held this week had received strong support from government departments and public-sector organisations, he said.

 

Death of frightened flat-owner ‘tragic’ says bishop

A LEASEHOLDER, Amanda Walker, who gave evidence to the House of Lords in July 2023 about how the cladding scandal had affected her well-being, has died, aged 51. She had told peers that the concern that her flat was an unsaleable fire risk had “consumed” her life. Her family reported this week that Ms Walker had been found dead in bed in January. A post-mortem examination was held, and an inquest is resulting from be held next week. The former Bishop of Kensington, Dr Graham Tomlin, now the director of the Centre for Cultural Witness at Lambeth Palace, ministered to the Grenfell community, and has been campaigning for the Government to handle the crisis. “This is such a tragic story,” he posted on X on Monday. “It gives an urgency to finding out the cladding crisis. It needs the main target of presidency and the development industry to search out an answer soon.”

 

Dr Mann shortlisted for T. S. Eliot Poetry Prize

THE most up-to-date poetry collection by the Archdeacon of Bolton and Salford, the Ven. Dr Rachel Mann, Eleanor Among the Saints (Carcanet 2024), has been shortlisted for the T. S. Eliot Poetry Prize. The prize awards £25,000 to the writer of the very best recent poetry collection published within the UK or Ireland. Shortlisted poets receive £1500 each. “Our shortlisted poets are splendidly diverse in style, theme, and idiom, embracing myth, popular culture, sport, faith, trans identity, AI — a gamut of present and past life,” the poet and judging chair, Mimi Khalvati, said. Dr Mann said this week that she was “flabbergasted” by the news.

 

LICC releases YouTube series for young Christians

THE London Institute for Contemporary Christianity (LICC) has released a recent YouTube series, Unscripted, hosted by Ennette Lainchbury, LICC’s Emerging Generations Champion and a co-host of the Growing on the Frontline small-group course. “Imagine a cross between an after-work pub chat and LICC’s signature form of biblical insight on culture and also you’re there,” a press release says. “As the name suggests, each episode of Unscripted is an unfiltered, authentic conversation about topics including online dating, swearing, veganism, and holidaying along with your spouse before you’re married. Each topic is addressed in a casual, relatable, and biblical way.” The free-to-watch series is geared toward young Christians. Episodes can be released fortnightly.

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