22 January 2025

Saint Mary Bishophill
Senior, the site of an old
Roman villa and an early
church in the heart of York

The gates leading into the site of Saint Mary Bishophill Senior in York (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

Patrick Comerford

Saint Mary Bishophill Senior was once an Anglican parish church in the Bishophill area of York, and I visited the church site within the city walls when we were staying in York last weekend.

The churchyard stands behind gates and tall railings at the point where Bishophill meets Cromwell Road. Carr’s Lane, an old cobbled lane on the east side of the churchyard, runs down to Skeldergate, separating the churchyard from the site of an old Quaker burial ground, where the burials include the American abolitionist John Woolman (1720-1772) and several members of the Tuke family.

Across the street from the old churchyard and the former Quaker burial ground, the Golden Ball stands on the corner of Cromwell Road and Victor Street, facing the entry to Carr’s Lane. It is York’s first community co-operative pub, and I enjoyed visiting it too last weekend.

Saint Mary Bishophill Senior … the church before its demolition depicted on a noticeboard on the churchyard railings (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

Saint Mary Bishophill Senior had long fallen into disuse when it was demolished in 1963. At the time the church was being demolished, excavations in 1959-1960 and 1964 came across evidence of a Roman presence on the site and a of 10th century cemetery with a precinct wall, although there was no clear evidence was found of an associated church and nothing was found to support speculation that there had been a Saxon cathedral on the site.

A Roman villa or town house, with an open courtyard, was first built on the site of the later churchyard ca 350.

It has been suggested that Saint Mary’s Church, Bishophill Senior, is the aula of Saint Mary, referred to by Alcuin as existing in the 8th century. However, there is no evidence for ecclesiastical use of the site before the 10th century, when a rectangular enclosure was formed on the site in the 10th century, probably as part of a religious burial ground.

The earliest church on the site was built in the early or mid-11th century, before the Conquest. It was a small rectangular stone building, reusing some Roman and Northumbrian stones. By the late 11th century, there was a single-cell church on the site.

Additions were made to this church in the early Norman period but after damage by fire in 1137 an entirely new church was built. A north aisle and a south doorway were added ca 1180 and the enclosure was also enlarged, to both east and west.

Carr’s Lane, an old cobbled lane, on the east side of the churchyard, runs down to Skeldergate (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

The oldest surviving record of the church is from 1202. Both the crown and successive noble families had the right to appoint rectors, and the church often had two incumbents, until the mid-18th century.

The chancel added in the early 13th century was longer than the original structure, which became the church nave. The north aisle was extended one bay further east ca 1300, and a north chapel was built ca 1319. A severe thunderstorm on 6 April 1378 destroyed the wooden porch and part of the stone belfry. The north aisle of the chancel was rebuilt, perhaps in 1403, two south windows were inserted in the late 15th century, and the east window and roof were replaced.

After the Tudor Reformation, the parish was extended in 1586 to include Clementhorpe, outside York city walls.

Brick was used to heighten the chancel in the 17th century, and a north west tower was built in 1659, replacing a detached tower in the churchyard. Work on the church continued when a brick porch was added in the late 18th century. A gallery was built in 1841 to house a growing congregation.

Saint Mary Bishophill Senior was grade I listed but was demolished in 1963 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

The church was restored in 1859-1860, by the York architects and brothers JB and W Atkinson. They were also commissioned to build Saint Clement’s Church on Scarcroft Road to meet the needs of a developing suburb on the other side of the city walls.

When the new Saint Clement’s Church on Scarcroft Road was made the parish church in 1876, Saint Mary’s was falling into decline and it was reduced to being a chapel of ease. This decision was unpopular with parishioners, and the church was transferred instead to the parish of Saint Mary Bishophill Junior instead in 1885.

The church was used for worship until 1919, and was closed entirely in 1930. By 1950, it was in a poor state of repair. Although it was grade I listed, the church was demolished in 1963.

The churchyard remains consecrated ground, with many surviving headstones,and is run as a community garden (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

Much of the stonework was rescued by the architect George Pace During excavations on the site, three fragments of an Anglo-Saxon cross shaft were found, all dating from the 10th and 11th century. But local speculation that there had been a Saxon cathedral on the site was not confirmed.

George Pace reused parts of the fabric in building Holy Redeemer Church, on Boroughbridge Road, Acomb, on the west side of York. Some of the monuments and fittings inside the church were moved to Saint Clement’s Church on Scarcroft Road, while the organ and plate were moved to Saint Mary Bishophill Junior.

The churchyard remains consecrated ground. The earliest visible headstone dates from 1775. The wall and gates largely date from the 17th to the 19th centuries and are grade II listed. The section to the south-east may incorporate part of the boundary wall of the Saxon burial ground.

Since the church was demolished, the Bishophill community has taken responsibility for maintaining the churchyard as a community garden in partnership with the Parochial Church Council of Saint Mary’s Bishophill Junior.

The Golden Ball, across the street from the churchyard, is York’s first community co-operative pub (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

Across the street, in the heart of Bishophill, is the Golden Ball, where Charlotte’s father introduced me to the Sunday music evening. The pub stands on the corner of Cromwell Road and Victor Street, facing the entrance into Carr’s Lane. It is a Grade II listed free-of-tie pub with a well-preserved Victorian layout and tiled bar, and it is York’s first community co-operative pub.

The pub was first mentioned in newspapers in 1773, and it is said locally that Charles Dickens, was a patron during his frequent visits to York to relative who worked on nearby Micklegate.

The future of the Golden Ball was thrown into question some years ago, when the licensees, Linda and Dave Foster, decided to retire. But its regulars stepped in with a plan to secure its future, and a co-operative was launched on 12 November 2012, making the Golden Ball the first city centre pub in England that is owned by the community.

In time, 200 members paid £400 to sign up to the co-operative, and the pub’s community links have blossomed since then. A range of community groups use the pub. It has hosted beer festivals and an annual summer fete, sells works by local artists and hosts local music nights.

The Golden Ball supports local independent businesses, selling locally sourced food as well as local, free-range eggs from Johnson’s in Terrington delivered directly each week. Visitors are invited to donate a box of eggs to Hoping Street Kitchen to help provide free meals for people in need. The pub was grade II listed in 2010 and is listed in CAMRA’s National Inventory of Historic Pub Interiors.

The Golden Ball in York is the first city centre pub in England that is owned by the community (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

Daily prayer in Christmas 2024-2025:
29, Wednesday 22 January 2025

‘Stretch out your hand.’ He stretched it out, and his hand was restored (Mark 3: 5) … ‘Hands of Healing’, a sculpture by Shane Gilmore at Ennis Cathedral, Co Clare (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

Patrick Comerford

The 40-day season of Christmas continues until Candlemas or the Feast of the Presentation (2 February). This week began with the Second Sunday of Epiphany (Epiphany II), with readings that focussed on the Wedding at Cana, the third great Epiphany theme, alongside the Visit of the Magi and the Baptism of Christ.

Today is the Fifth Day of the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity. The calendar of the Church of England in Common Worship today remembers Vincent of Saragossa (304), Deacon and first Martyr of Spain.

Before today begins, I am taking some quiet time this morning to give thanks, to reflect, to pray and to read in these ways:

1, today’s Gospel reading;

2, a short reflection;

3, a prayer from the USPG prayer diary;

4, the Collects and Post-Communion prayer of the day.

Signs and symbols of healing for holding in hands … in the chapel at Milton Keynes University Hospital (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

Mark 3: 1-6 (NRSVA):

1 Again he entered the synagogue, and a man was there who had a withered hand. 2 They watched him to see whether he would cure him on the sabbath, so that they might accuse him. 3 And he said to the man who had the withered hand, ‘Come forward.’ 4 Then he said to them, ‘Is it lawful to do good or to do harm on the sabbath, to save life or to kill?’ But they were silent. 5 He looked around at them with anger; he was grieved at their hardness of heart and said to the man, ‘Stretch out your hand.’ He stretched it out, and his hand was restored. 6 The Pharisees went out and immediately conspired with the Herodians against him, how to destroy him.

A doctor’s sign in Hersonissos in Crete … the healing stories in the Gospels involve physical and spiritual healing (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

Today’s Reflection:

In the Gospel reading at the Eucharist yesterday (Mark 2: 23-28), we heard a debate about the detailed interpretation and application of faith and practice on the Sabbath. That continues in today’s reading (Mark 3: 1-6) with a discission about healing and the Sabbath. The story of Jesus healing a man with a withered hand on the Sabbath is found in all three synoptic Gospels (see Matthew 12: 9-13, Mark 3: 1-6; Luke 6: 6-11).

In his hymn ‘Songs of thankfulness and praise’, one of the hymns at the Sung Eucharist in Saint Olave’s Church, York, on Sunday (19 January 2025, Epiphany II), Christopher Wordsworth (1807-1885) links the three traditional Epiphany narratives of the Visit of the Magi (verse 1), the Baptism of Christ in the Jordan and the Wedding at Cana (verse 2)m with the miracles of ‘making whole / palsied limbs and fainting soul’:

Manifest in making whole
palsied limbs and fainting soul;
manifest in valiant fight,
quelling all the devil’s might;
manifest in gracious will,
ever bringing good from ill:
anthems be to you addresst,
God in man made manifest
.

Several Gospel passages involve controversies over healing and observing the Sabbath, including: casting out an ‘unclean spirit’ or demon, out of a man (Mark 1: 21-28; Luke 4: 31-37); healing Simon Peter’s mother-in-law (Matthew 8: 14-15; Mark 1: 29-31; Luke 4: 38-39); the controversy over grain (Matthew 12: 1-8; Mark 2: 23-28; Luke 6: 1-5); today’s story of the healing of a man with a withered hand (Matthew 12: 9-13; Mark 3: 1-6; Luke 6: 6-11); the healing of the woman in the synagogue (Luke 13: 10-16); the healing of a paralytic man (John 5: 9-18); the discussion about circumcision on the Sabbath (John 7: 22-23); and the healing of the man born blind (John 9: 1-33).

Once again, as with yesterday’s reading, we are faced today with an example of rhetorical humour on the part of Jesus. Of course the Pharisees were not opposed to doing good on the Sabbath, still less were they likely to object to healing on the Sabbath.

The word Pharisee has become a byword for hypocrisy, and this has been challenged in recent weeks by Giles Fraser in a ‘Beyond Belief’ BBC discussion with Professor Amy-Jill Levine of Vanderbilt University, co-author of The Pharisees, the Catholic theologian James Alison and Dr Stephen de Wijzeoft Manchester University.

The Pharisees were not like some judgmental evangelicals and Free Presbyterians who wanted to keep the playgrounds, parks, golf clubs, sports venues and pubs in Northern Ireland locked up and closed on Sundays. Works of necessity and works of mercy are allowed, even encouraged on the Sabbath day, even for animals. Indeed, healing is intrinsic to the sabbath.

A work of necessity readily given as an example is when the Jews decide to continue fighting in the Maccabean war even on the Sabbath (see I Maccabees 2). Healing is an act of mercy and so does not violate the Sabbath. The rabbinic tradition teaches clearly, ‘Any danger to life overrides the prohibitions of the Sabbath’ (m. Yoma 8: 6). Thequestion here, then, is whether the man's coniditon is life-conditioning: could he, and Jesus, not wait until the next day?

A man with a withered hand faced the regular barrier of being perceived as ritually unclean, because he was unable on his own to carry out the ritual obligation of washing both hands on many occasions throughout the day, including before and after eating a meal with bread, before eating dipped fruit or vegetables, before prayer, after sleeping, or after touching certain parts of the body. This involved pouring water over both hands, something a man without the use of one hand could not do on his own.

Today’s reading says Jesus sees this man as he enters the synagogue, not inside the synagogue. The man is not only healed, but he can now wash both hands and enter the synagogue, taking his rightful place in the community of faith, and in the synagogue on the Sabbath. He has been restored both physically and spiritually.

Cardinal Karl Lehmann, who died in 2018, was described as the face and voice of Catholicism in Germany for over 35 years. He was the Bishop of Mainz and former Professor of Dogmatic Theology at the University of Mainz, and in the 1960s he was an assistant to Karl Rahner, the Jesuit theologian, during the Second Vatican Council.

The German theologian Professor Johanna Rahner of Tübingen University told the German weekly Die Zeit that Cardinal Karl Lehmann ‘interpreted the Church’s teaching as a seelsorger (a ‘carer of souls’ – the German word for priest) and not in the narrow, doctrinal, sense.’

I like the idea of seeing the priest or the pastor as the physician or doctor of souls. The German theological journal, Seelsorger describes itself as a ‘Journal for the Contemporary Cure of Souls,’ and the topics on pastoral care it discusses range from sexuality to post-modernity, the conscience to the use of story, vice, virtue, and baptism and the dangers and blessings of a long-term pastorate.

The soul is the deepest centre of the psyche. Problems at the level of the soul radiate out to all levels of the psyche and even the body.

The priest, the soul doctor, traces the problem to its deepest point. A hurting person should be addressed at all of those levels, but it is the soul doctor who addresses the very deepest level.

Among the Patristic writers, Saint John Chrysostom says that every priest is, as it were, the father of the whole world, and therefore should have care of all the souls to whose salvation he can co-operate by his labours. Besides, priests are appointed by God as physicians to cure every soul that is infirm. Origen has called priests ‘physicians of souls,’ while Saint Jerome calls us ‘spiritual physicians.’ Later, Saint Bonaventure asks: ‘If the physician flees from the sick, who will cure them?’

Canon 21 of the Fourth Lateran Council in 1215 drew an analogy between the physicians of the body and the physicians of the soul. This analogy between medical or physical care and spiritual or pastoral care was enthusiastically developed in mediaeval sermons and penitential literature, opening the door to many further comparisons.

The English word curate refers to a person who is charged with the care or cure (cura) of souls in a parish. In this sense, ‘curate’ correctly means a parish priest. In France, the cure is the principal priest in a parish, as is the Italian curato and the Spanish cura. But in English-speaking places, the term curate is commonly used to describe priests who are assistants to the parish priest.

However, the word curate in the 1662 Book of Common Prayer means the incumbent of a benefice, who is licensed by the bishop to the ‘cure of souls.’ The shared cure of souls is made clear by the traditional wording of the bishop’s deed of institution to a new incumbent, ‘habere curam animarum, et accipe curam tuam et meam, receive the cure of souls which is both mine and thine.’

In other words, when a parish priest begins his or her new ministry, the bishop is sharing the care of the parish — described traditionally as ‘the cure of souls’ — with the priest, but the bishop does not give it away. The 43 Canons of the Church of Ireland, listed in Chapter IX of the Constitution, refers specifically to cures rather than parishes.

The soul is just as complicated as the body, just as rich and strange and puzzling. And it needs just as much attention. That does not mean that any priest can necessarily address these soul problems. But the true soul doctor is the depth psychologist.

When we think about salvation, it is worth recalling that the English word ‘salve’ is derived from the Latin salvus, which means healing. The priest, as an alter Christus is seen as one who mends broken hearts, heals hurting souls, and applies God’s soothing balm on pained and wounded lives.

The priest truly is the ‘doctor of souls.’ Perhaps theology is the technical language of soul doctoring. But the prescription is the word and the medicine is the Eucharist, regular confession and daily prayer. The proper exercise is found in prayer, regular good deeds and acts of kindness.

The popular German word for priest means ‘carer of souls’ (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

Today’s Prayers (Wednesday 22 January 2025):

The theme this week in ‘Pray With the World Church’, the Prayer Diary of the Anglican mission agency USPG (United Society Partners in the Gospel), is ‘Whom Shall I Send?’ This theme was introduced on Sunday with a Programme Update by Rachael Anderson, Senior Communications and Engagement Manager, USPG.

The USPG Prayer Diary today (Wednesday 22 January 2025) invites us to pray:

Heavenly Father, as these young leaders return to their local dioceses, may the lessons they learned and the reflections they shared transform their lives and their communities.

The Collect:

Almighty God,
in Christ you make all things new:
transform the poverty of our nature by the riches of your grace,
and in the renewal of our lives
make known your heavenly glory;
through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord,
who is alive and reigns with you,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever.

The Post-Communion Prayer:

God of glory,
you nourish us with your Word
who is the bread of life:
fill us with your Holy Spirit
that through us the light of your glory
may shine in all the world.
We ask this in the name of Jesus Christ our Lord.

Additional Collect:

Eternal Lord,
our beginning and our end:
bring us with the whole creation
to your glory, hidden through past ages
and made known
in Jesus Christ our Lord.

Yesterday’s Reflection

Continued Tomorrow

Saint John Chrysostom says priests are appointed by God as physicians to cure every soul that is infirm (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

Scripture quotations are from the New Revised Standard Version Bible: Anglicised Edition copyright © 1989, 1995 National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide. http://nrsvbibles.org