The Supper at Emmaus … a window by Daniel Bell of Bell and Almond in Holy Trinity Church, Old Wolverton (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2023)
Patrick Comerford
The celebrations of Epiphany-tide continue today. Tomorrow is the Fourth Sunday of Epiphany (Epiphany IV, 28 January 2024), and today is Holocaust Memorial Day (27 January 2024).
Before this day begins, I am taking some time for reading, reflection and prayer. Christmas is a season that lasts for 40 days that continues from Christmas Day (25 December) to Candlemas or the Feast of the Presentation next Friday (2 February). The Gospel reading last Sunday (John 2: 1-11) told of the Wedding at Cana, one of the traditional Epiphany stories.
In keeping with the theme of Sunday’s Gospel reading, my reflections each morning throughout the seven days of this week have included:
1, A reflection on one of seven meals Jesus has with family, friends or disciples;
2, the Gospel reading of the day;
3, a prayer from the USPG prayer diary.
‘The Road to Emmaus’ icon by Sister Marie Paul OSB of the Mount of Olives Monastery, Jerusalem (1990), commissioned by the Canadian theologian Father Thomas Rosica
7, The Meal on the Road to Emmaus (Luke 24: 13-35):
By a huge margin, the Bible story quoted most often at the first week of the world Synod of Bishops on the Bible in 2008 was the story of disciples meeting Jesus on the road to Emmaus, according to the Canadian theologian Father Thomas Rosica, who briefed English-speaking journalists on the synod speeches.
It is said the story kept coming up at the synod in Rome because so many bishops and other synod members saw it as the perfect example of what the Church must do with the Scriptures: discuss them with people, explain them and let them lead people to recognise Jesus.
The Superior General of the Salesians, Father Pasual Chavez Villanueva, told the synod that the story gives precise instructions for how to evangelise the young, emphasising that it is Jesus who evangelises through his word and that evangelisation takes place by walking alongside people, listening to their sorrows, and then giving them a word of hope and a community in which to live it.
Father Chavez told that synod that today’s young people definitely share with the disciples ‘the frustration of their dreams, the tiredness of their faith and being disenchanted with discipleship.’ They ‘need a church that walks alongside them where they are.’
The story of Jesus and the Disciples on the Road to Emmaus is a rich one and one that offers a model for Christian life and mission.
After seeing all their hopes shattered on Good Friday, two disciples – Cleopas and another unnamed disciple – head out of Jerusalem, and are walking and talking on the road as their make their way together.
Emmaus was about 11 km (seven miles) from Jerusalem, so it would have taken them two hours, perhaps, to get there, maybe more if they were my age.
Somewhere along the way, they are joined by a third person, ‘but their eyes were kept from recognising him’ (verse 16, NRSV), or to be more precise, as the Greek text says, ‘but their eyes were being held so that they did not recognise him.’
They cannot make sense of what has happened over the last few days, and they cannot make sense of the questions their new companion puts to them. When Jesus asks them a straight question, they look sad and downcast.
I get the feeling that Cleopas is a bit cynical, treating Jesus as one of the visitors to Jerusalem for the feast of the Passover, and asking him if he really does not know what has happened in the city. In his cynicism, Cleopas almost sounds like Simon the Pharisee asking his visitor Jesus whether he really knows who the woman with the alabaster jar is.
Like Simon, Cleopas and his friend thought Jesus was a Prophet. But now they doubt it. And the sort of Messiah they hoped for was not the sort of Messiah Jesus had been preparing them for, was he?
And they have heard the report of the women visiting the tomb, and finding it empty. Hearing is not believing. Seeing is not believing. And believing is not the same as faith.
When I find myself disagreeing fundamentally with people, I wonder do I listen to them even half as patiently as Jesus did with these two.
There are no interruptions, no corrections, no upbraidings. Jesus listens passively and patiently, like all good counsellors should, and only speaks when they have finished speaking.
And then, despite their cynicism, despite their failure to understand, despite their lack of faith, these two disciples do something extraordinary. They press the stranger in their company not to continue on his journey. It is late in the evening, and they invite him to join them.
On re-reading this story I found myself comparing their action and their hospitality with the Good Samaritan who comes across the bruised and battered stranger on the side of the road, and offers him healing hospitality, offering to pay for his meals and his accommodation in the inn.
These two have also come across a bruised and battered stranger on the road, and they offer him healing hospitality, offering him a meal and accommodation in the inn.
Jesus had once imposed himself on Zacchaeus and presumes on his hospitality. Now Cleopas and his companion insist on imposing Jesus on their hospitality. The guest becomes the host and the host becomes the guest, once again.
He goes in to stay with them. And it is not just a matter of finding him a room for the night. They dine together.
And so, in a manner that is typical of the way Saint Luke tells his stories, the story of the road to Emmaus ends with a meal with Jesus.
And at the meal – as he did with the multitude on the hillside, and with the disciples in the Upper Room – Jesus takes the bread, blesses it, breaks it, and gives it to those at the table with him (verse 30).
Their time in the wilderness is over, the Lenten preparation has been completed. The one who has received their hospitality now invites them to receive the hospitality of God, and to join him at the Heavenly Banquet.
Their journey continues. Our journey continues. Christ is not physically present with us on the road. But we recognise him in the breaking of the bread. And we, being many, become one body, for we all share in the one bread.
The Supper at Emmaus … a mosaic in the Church of the Holy Name, Beechwood Avenue, Ranelagh, Dublin (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Mark 4: 35-41 (NRSVA):
35 On that day, when evening had come, he said to them, ‘Let us go across to the other side.’ 36 And leaving the crowd behind, they took him with them in the boat, just as he was. Other boats were with him. 37 A great gale arose, and the waves beat into the boat, so that the boat was already being swamped. 38 But he was in the stern, asleep on the cushion; and they woke him up and said to him, ‘Teacher, do you not care that we are perishing?’ 39 He woke up and rebuked the wind, and said to the sea, ‘Peace! Be still!’ Then the wind ceased, and there was a dead calm. 40 He said to them, ‘Why are you afraid? Have you still no faith?’ 41 And they were filled with great awe and said to one another, ‘Who then is this, that even the wind and the sea obey him?’
He was made ‘known to them in the breaking of the bread’ (Luke 24: 35) … bread baked for the Easter Eucharist at Mount Athos (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Today’s Prayers (Saturday 27 January 2024, ):
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: ‘Provincial Programme on Capacity Building in Paraná.’ This theme was introduced on Sunday by Christina Takatsu Winnischofer, Igreja Episcopal Anglicana do Brasil.
The USPG Prayer Diary today (27 January 2024, Holocaust Remembrance Day) invites us to pray in these words:
Today we remember the atrocities of the Holocaust. May we continue to commemorate these tragic events in the hope that they will never happen again.
The Collect:
Almighty God,
whose Son revealed in signs and miracles
the wonder of your saving presence:
renew your people with your heavenly grace,
and in all our weakness
sustain us by your mighty power;
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:
Almighty Father,
whose Son our Saviour Jesus Christ is the light of the world:
may your people,
illumined by your word and sacraments,
shine with the radiance of his glory,
that he may be known, worshipped, and obeyed
to the ends of the earth;
for he is alive and reigns, now and for ever.
Additional Collect:
God of all mercy,
your Son proclaimed good news to the poor,
release to the captives,
and freedom to the oppressed:
anoint us with your Holy Spirit
and set all your people free
to praise you in Christ our Lord.
Collect on the Eve of Epiphany IV:
God our creator,
who in the beginning
commanded the light to shine out of darkness:
we pray that the light of the glorious gospel of Christ
may dispel the darkness of ignorance and unbelief,
shine into the hearts of all your people,
and reveal the knowledge of your glory
in the face of 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.
Yesterday’s reflection (The Last Supper)
Continued tomorrow (Breakfast by the shore, John 21: 1-17)
The reredos in the Priory Church of the Holy Trinity, Micklegate, York, depicts the Supper at Emmaus and six saints associated with the north (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2023)
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
The Supper at Emmaus (left) and the Apostle Thomas (right) in a window in Christ Church, Leomansley, Lichfield (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
27 January 2024
Daily prayers during
Christmas and Epiphany:
34, 27 January 2024
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The Fragility of Freedom
is the theme of this year’s
Holocaust Memorial Day
‘One of the most precious monuments of Jewish culture in Poland is dead’ … the Izaak Jakubowicz Synagogue in Kazimierz, the historic Jewish district of Kraków (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Patrick Comerford
Tomorrow marks Holocaust Memorial Day (HMD), which takes place each year on 27 January. The theme for Holocaust Memorial Day this year (2024) is Fragility of Freedom.
The Holocaust Memorial Day Trust encourages remembrance in a world scarred by genocide. The day remembers the 6 million Jews murdered during the Holocaust, alongside the millions of people murdered under Nazi persecution of other groups and during more recent genocides in Cambodia, Rwanda, Bosnia and Darfur.
The date 27 January was chosen because it marks the anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau, the largest Nazi death camp, on 27 January 1945.
This year, 27 January is also Shabbat Shirah, the Sabbath of Singing, in the Jewish calendar. Many congregations highlight this Shabbat by creating services brimming with extraordinary music to celebrate Moses and Miriam leading the people out of Egypt and across the Red Sea of Reeds into liberation and freedom. Shabbat Shirah we celebrates a very special moment in the Torah, a very musical moment in Jewish biblical history.
Each year on Holocaust Memorial Day, thousands of people come together to learn about the past and to take action to create a safer future. The Holocaust threatened the fabric of civilisation, and genocide must still be resisted every day. This world often feels fragile and vulnerable and we cannot be complacent. Even in Britain, prejudice and the language of hatred must be challenged by all.
This year’s theme, ‘Fragility of Freedom’, was inspired by words written by Anne Frank in her diary after the Germans invaded the Netherlands: ‘That is when the trouble started for the Jews. Our freedom was severely restricted by a series of anti-Jewish decrees.’
Anne Frank and her family went into hiding. But they were betrayed and Anne died in Bergen-Belsen Concentration Camp, three months short of her 16th birthday. Her comment concludes: ‘You couldn’t do this and you couldn’t do that, but life went on’. But of course, for Anne Frank, and millions of others, life did not go on. Building on the multiple restrictions on their freedoms, their freedom of life was destroyed, and they were deliberately murdered.
Inside the Izaak Jakubowicz Synagogue … seriously threatened by large cracks in its high barrel vault (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Like many people who have visited Auschwitz, I have stayed in Kazimierz, the historic Jewish district of Kraków, where I have visited many of the surviving synagogues and Jewish sites. They include seven of the most prominent synagogues in Kazimierz: the Old Synagogue, the High Synagogue, Remu'h Synagogue, Wolf Popper Synagogue, the Tempel Synagogue, Kupa Synagogue and the Izaak Jakubowicz Synagogue.
The synagogues of Kraków represent virtually all the European styles of architecture, including the Gothic, Renaissance, Baroque, Neoclassical, and the Modernist. They were built between the end of the 15th century and the end of the 19th century, and are on the UNESCO World Heritage List.
Three of these synagogues are still active, some also serve as houses of prayer, and the district also has two Jewish cemeteries. The architectural historian Carol Herselle Krinsky regards the Izaac Synagogue as ‘the most architecturally important’ of all the old synagogues of Kraków.
So, I was saddened to learn through Jewish Heritage Europe earlier this week that the structural integrity of the 17th century Izaak Jakubowicz Synagogue, a jewel of Kazimierz, is seriously threatened by large cracks that have appeared in its high barrel vault.
In an announcement on Facebook earlier this month, the Social Committee for the Restoration of Kraków Monuments (SKOZK) pledged support to save the Baroque building, which dates from 1644.
The Izaak Synagogue is knowm for its colourful wall paintings of prayers and ritual imagery and the elaborate stucco work on the vault (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
The announcement on Facebook declared dramatically: ‘One of the most precious monuments of Jewish culture in Poland is dead.’
The Izaak Jakubowicz Synagogue is the largest synagogue in Kazimirz. It is believed to have designed by either the Italian-born architect Francesco Olivierri or Giovanni Trevano, an Italian royal architect working in Kraków in the mid-17th century, and its construction was completed in 1644.
The Izaak Synagogue is noted for its colourful wall paintings of prayers and ritual imagery, as well as the elaborate stucco work on the vault, which soars to a height of 14 metres.
After cracks appeared on the vault above the prayer hall in the synagogue in 2018, investigations showed large and wide cracks that were spreading and that the surface of the vault is decaying and can no longer bear the load.
Last year, with the support of SKOZK, a technical project began in an effort to secure the vault and its beautiful stucco decorations, using carbon fibre tapes that fasten the vault from the roof.
The report concluded that the ‘the basic cause of the damage’ appeared to be ‘the faulty geometry of the vault structure … compounded by other problems, including, above all, deformation of the roof structure.’
Less serious cracks had already been detected in the vault in 1988, it said, and renovation in the late 1980s and early 1990s had seemed to have resolved the problem. But, ‘as it turned out, this was a wrong assumption.’
Maciej Wilamowski, director of the SKOZK office, was quoted in local media as describing the situation as ‘truly one of the most serious failures in a monument of this class in Kraków in recent decades. It covers the entire vault above the nave.’
Reports estimate the repairs will involve considerable costs, because the technology involving the installation of carbon fibres from the top is expensive. Other proposals would have involved removing and replacing a very large part of the 17th-century stucco work.
The Izaak Synagogue once had a widely-admired, wooden, baroque Aron haKodesh or holy ark, destroyed by the Nazis in 1939 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
The Izaak Synagogue (Synagoga Izaaka), formally known as the Isaak Jakubowicz Synagogue, dates from 1644 and is named for its donor, Izaak Jakubowicz, who died in 1673. He was also known as Isaac the Rich, a banker to King Ladislaus IV of Poland. The founding legend of the synagogue was first told in the early 19th century by the Polish rabbi, Simcha Bunim of Peshischa.
The interior walls of the synagogue are decorated with painted prayers, visible once again after conservation removed covering layers of paint. The vaulted ceiling is decorated with baroque plasterwork wreaths and garlands.
Before the Nazi occupation of Poland, the synagogue boasted a widely-admired, wooden, baroque Aron haKodesh or holy ark. On 5 December 1939 the Gestapo came to the Kraków Judenrat building and ordered Maximilian Redlich, the Jewish official on duty that day, to burn the scrolls of the Torah. When Redlich refused he was shot dead. The Nazis then destroyed the interior and furnishings, including the bimah and Aron haKodesh.
After the war, the synagogue was used as a sculpture and conservation workshop and then by a theatre company as a studio and for storing props. Until recently it was an exhibition space. A fire in 1981 damaged the interior. Renovation work began in 1983 and the building was returned to the Jewish community in 1989. It is a practicing Orthodox synagogue once again, and houses Kraków’s Chabad Lubavitch community and the Jewish Education Centre.
Holocaust Memorial Day this year is an opportunity to reflect on how freedom is fragile and vulnerable to abuse. It is an invitation to pledge not to take our freedoms for granted, and to consider what we can do to strengthen freedoms around the world.
• Holocaust Memorial Day is being marked in Milton Keynes tomorrow (27 January 2024) with a short service at 2 pm at the Milton Keynes Rose, including readings and a performance by a local choir.
Shabbat Shalom
‘Arbeit macht frei’ … the gate at Auschwitz … this weekend marks Holocaust Memorial Day (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Patrick Comerford
Tomorrow marks Holocaust Memorial Day (HMD), which takes place each year on 27 January. The theme for Holocaust Memorial Day this year (2024) is Fragility of Freedom.
The Holocaust Memorial Day Trust encourages remembrance in a world scarred by genocide. The day remembers the 6 million Jews murdered during the Holocaust, alongside the millions of people murdered under Nazi persecution of other groups and during more recent genocides in Cambodia, Rwanda, Bosnia and Darfur.
The date 27 January was chosen because it marks the anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau, the largest Nazi death camp, on 27 January 1945.
This year, 27 January is also Shabbat Shirah, the Sabbath of Singing, in the Jewish calendar. Many congregations highlight this Shabbat by creating services brimming with extraordinary music to celebrate Moses and Miriam leading the people out of Egypt and across the Red Sea of Reeds into liberation and freedom. Shabbat Shirah we celebrates a very special moment in the Torah, a very musical moment in Jewish biblical history.
Each year on Holocaust Memorial Day, thousands of people come together to learn about the past and to take action to create a safer future. The Holocaust threatened the fabric of civilisation, and genocide must still be resisted every day. This world often feels fragile and vulnerable and we cannot be complacent. Even in Britain, prejudice and the language of hatred must be challenged by all.
This year’s theme, ‘Fragility of Freedom’, was inspired by words written by Anne Frank in her diary after the Germans invaded the Netherlands: ‘That is when the trouble started for the Jews. Our freedom was severely restricted by a series of anti-Jewish decrees.’
Anne Frank and her family went into hiding. But they were betrayed and Anne died in Bergen-Belsen Concentration Camp, three months short of her 16th birthday. Her comment concludes: ‘You couldn’t do this and you couldn’t do that, but life went on’. But of course, for Anne Frank, and millions of others, life did not go on. Building on the multiple restrictions on their freedoms, their freedom of life was destroyed, and they were deliberately murdered.
Inside the Izaak Jakubowicz Synagogue … seriously threatened by large cracks in its high barrel vault (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Like many people who have visited Auschwitz, I have stayed in Kazimierz, the historic Jewish district of Kraków, where I have visited many of the surviving synagogues and Jewish sites. They include seven of the most prominent synagogues in Kazimierz: the Old Synagogue, the High Synagogue, Remu'h Synagogue, Wolf Popper Synagogue, the Tempel Synagogue, Kupa Synagogue and the Izaak Jakubowicz Synagogue.
The synagogues of Kraków represent virtually all the European styles of architecture, including the Gothic, Renaissance, Baroque, Neoclassical, and the Modernist. They were built between the end of the 15th century and the end of the 19th century, and are on the UNESCO World Heritage List.
Three of these synagogues are still active, some also serve as houses of prayer, and the district also has two Jewish cemeteries. The architectural historian Carol Herselle Krinsky regards the Izaac Synagogue as ‘the most architecturally important’ of all the old synagogues of Kraków.
So, I was saddened to learn through Jewish Heritage Europe earlier this week that the structural integrity of the 17th century Izaak Jakubowicz Synagogue, a jewel of Kazimierz, is seriously threatened by large cracks that have appeared in its high barrel vault.
In an announcement on Facebook earlier this month, the Social Committee for the Restoration of Kraków Monuments (SKOZK) pledged support to save the Baroque building, which dates from 1644.
The Izaak Synagogue is knowm for its colourful wall paintings of prayers and ritual imagery and the elaborate stucco work on the vault (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
The announcement on Facebook declared dramatically: ‘One of the most precious monuments of Jewish culture in Poland is dead.’
The Izaak Jakubowicz Synagogue is the largest synagogue in Kazimirz. It is believed to have designed by either the Italian-born architect Francesco Olivierri or Giovanni Trevano, an Italian royal architect working in Kraków in the mid-17th century, and its construction was completed in 1644.
The Izaak Synagogue is noted for its colourful wall paintings of prayers and ritual imagery, as well as the elaborate stucco work on the vault, which soars to a height of 14 metres.
After cracks appeared on the vault above the prayer hall in the synagogue in 2018, investigations showed large and wide cracks that were spreading and that the surface of the vault is decaying and can no longer bear the load.
Last year, with the support of SKOZK, a technical project began in an effort to secure the vault and its beautiful stucco decorations, using carbon fibre tapes that fasten the vault from the roof.
The report concluded that the ‘the basic cause of the damage’ appeared to be ‘the faulty geometry of the vault structure … compounded by other problems, including, above all, deformation of the roof structure.’
Less serious cracks had already been detected in the vault in 1988, it said, and renovation in the late 1980s and early 1990s had seemed to have resolved the problem. But, ‘as it turned out, this was a wrong assumption.’
Maciej Wilamowski, director of the SKOZK office, was quoted in local media as describing the situation as ‘truly one of the most serious failures in a monument of this class in Kraków in recent decades. It covers the entire vault above the nave.’
Reports estimate the repairs will involve considerable costs, because the technology involving the installation of carbon fibres from the top is expensive. Other proposals would have involved removing and replacing a very large part of the 17th-century stucco work.
The Izaak Synagogue once had a widely-admired, wooden, baroque Aron haKodesh or holy ark, destroyed by the Nazis in 1939 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
The Izaak Synagogue (Synagoga Izaaka), formally known as the Isaak Jakubowicz Synagogue, dates from 1644 and is named for its donor, Izaak Jakubowicz, who died in 1673. He was also known as Isaac the Rich, a banker to King Ladislaus IV of Poland. The founding legend of the synagogue was first told in the early 19th century by the Polish rabbi, Simcha Bunim of Peshischa.
The interior walls of the synagogue are decorated with painted prayers, visible once again after conservation removed covering layers of paint. The vaulted ceiling is decorated with baroque plasterwork wreaths and garlands.
Before the Nazi occupation of Poland, the synagogue boasted a widely-admired, wooden, baroque Aron haKodesh or holy ark. On 5 December 1939 the Gestapo came to the Kraków Judenrat building and ordered Maximilian Redlich, the Jewish official on duty that day, to burn the scrolls of the Torah. When Redlich refused he was shot dead. The Nazis then destroyed the interior and furnishings, including the bimah and Aron haKodesh.
After the war, the synagogue was used as a sculpture and conservation workshop and then by a theatre company as a studio and for storing props. Until recently it was an exhibition space. A fire in 1981 damaged the interior. Renovation work began in 1983 and the building was returned to the Jewish community in 1989. It is a practicing Orthodox synagogue once again, and houses Kraków’s Chabad Lubavitch community and the Jewish Education Centre.
Holocaust Memorial Day this year is an opportunity to reflect on how freedom is fragile and vulnerable to abuse. It is an invitation to pledge not to take our freedoms for granted, and to consider what we can do to strengthen freedoms around the world.
• Holocaust Memorial Day is being marked in Milton Keynes tomorrow (27 January 2024) with a short service at 2 pm at the Milton Keynes Rose, including readings and a performance by a local choir.
Shabbat Shalom
‘Arbeit macht frei’ … the gate at Auschwitz … this weekend marks Holocaust Memorial Day (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
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