17 November 2024

Daily prayer in the Kingdom Season:
18, Monday 18 November 2024

The window depicting Christ the healer in the Chapel of Saint John’s Hospital, Lichfield (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

Patrick Comerford

We are in the Kingdom Season, the time between All Saints and Advent, and this week began with the Second Sunday before Advent. The calendar of the Church of England in Common Worship today remembers Elizabeth of Hungary (1231), Princess of Thuringia, Philanthropist. She is the patroness of Secular Franciscans and of the many congregations of women and men following the Franciscan Third Order Regular Rule.

This visit to Kuching comes to an end today, and later this morning we fly to Singapore, beginning the long journey back to England and Stony Stratford.

But, before we leave, I am taking some quiet time in these early hours of the morning to give thanks, and for reflection, prayer and reading 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.

The healing of the blind man depicted in a Byzantine-style fresco in Analipsi Church or the Church of the Ascension in Georgioupoli, Crete … those looking on can hardly believe what they see (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

Luke 18: 35-43 (NRSVA):

35 As he approached Jericho, a blind man was sitting by the roadside begging. 36 When he heard a crowd going by, he asked what was happening. 37 They told him, ‘Jesus of Nazareth is passing by.’ 38 Then he shouted, ‘Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!’ 39 Those who were in front sternly ordered him to be quiet; but he shouted even more loudly, ‘Son of David, have mercy on me!’ 40 Jesus stood still and ordered the man to be brought to him; and when he came near, he asked him, 41 ‘What do you want me to do for you?’ He said, ‘Lord, let me see again.’ 42 Jesus said to him, ‘Receive your sight; your faith has saved you.’ 43 Immediately he regained his sight and followed him, glorifying God; and all the people, when they saw it, praised God.

What does the blind man at the roadside near Jericho see that the 12 have passed by? (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

Today’s reflection:

The story of a blind man or blind men at the gate of Jericho is told in all three Synoptic Gospels (see: Matthew 20: 29-34, Mark 10: 46-52 and Luke 18: 35-43).

In Saint Matthew’s account, there are two, unnamed blind men sitting by the roadside outside Jericho. In Saint Luke’s version, the blind man is sitting by the roadside begging as Christ approaches Jericho. In all three accounts, the location of Jericho is important. It claims to be the oldest inhabited and the oldest walled city in the world.

The Battle of Jericho is the first battle in the conquest of Canaan in the Book of Joshua. The walls of Jericho fall after Joshua’s Israelite army marches around the city blowing their trumpets (Joshua 6: 1-27).

In later times, Jericho was a private estate of Alexander the Great and then a garden city in the royal estates of the Hasmoneans, the priestly ruling dynasty. Mark Anthony gave Jericho to Cleopatra as a gift, but Herod leased it back again and the Herodians had their winter palace here, with their winter gardens.

By the time of Christ, Jericho is an important commercial city, a crossroads, the winter resort for Jerusalem’s aristocracy and the ruling priestly class. Which explains why, in the parable of the Good Samaritan earlier in this Gospel, a priest and a Levite were regular passers-by on the road from Jericho to Jerusalem (Luke 10: 30-37).

In Saint Luke’s Gospel too, Jericho is the home of Zacchaeus, the repentant tax collector, as we hear in the Gospel reading at the Eucharist tomorrow (Luke 19: 1-10).

Christ and his disciples are now near the end of their journey from Caesarea Philippi in the north to Jerusalem: Jericho is about 25 km from Jerusalem. On their journey, the disciples have misunderstood the message of Jesus and have been blind to who he truly is. But in this Gospel reading, it is a blind man who sees who Christ truly is.

The blind man cries out to ‘Son of David, have mercy on me!’ This cry is one of the Biblical foundations of the Jesus Prayer, ‘Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me, the sinner.’

Until now, the disciples have been blind to who Jesus truly is. It takes a blind man to see the truth, and he calls Jesus is ‘Son of David,’ King of the Jews, and the Messiah. In other places, Christ orders silence on the matter, but not here. His time is approaching.

The blind man gives up all he has, leaves everything behind to follow Christ.

The question Christ now puts to the blind man – ‘What do you want me to do for you?’ (verse 41) – is the same question Jesus also puts to James and John when they seek status in the kingdom: ‘What is it you want me to do for you?’ (Mark 10: 36). James and John asked to be seated at his right hand and his left hand, symbolising power and prestige (see Mark 10: 37). But this blind man is humble in his reply: ‘Lord, let me see again’ (Luke 18: 41).

Christ tells him simply that his faith ‘Receive your sight; your faith has saved you.’ He is not only cured immediately, but he follows Jesus on the way (verse 43).

‘Christ Healing the Blind’ (ca 1570) by El Greco (Domenikos Theotokopoulos) … in the Met, New York

Today’s Prayers (Monday 18 November 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 ‘Coming Together for Climate Justice’. This theme was introduced yesterday with Reflections by Linet Musasa, HIV Stigma and Discrimination Officer, Anglican Council of Zimbabwe.

Today is the World Day for the Prevention of and Healing from Child Sexual Exploitation, Abuse, and Violence, and the USPG Prayer Diary today (Monday 18 November 2024) invites us to pray:

Lord, we know you love all children, and we pray for protection over them. Please keep them safe and ensure they have freedom and innocence in their childhoods to grow and flourish in your love.

The Collect:

Lord God,
who taught Elizabeth of Hungary
to recognize and reverence Christ in the poor of this world:
by her example
strengthen us to love and serve the afflicted and the needy
and so to honour your Son, the servant king,
who is alive and reigns with you,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever.

Post-Communion Prayer:

Faithful God,
who called Elizabeth of Hungary to serve you
and gave her joy in walking the path of holiness:
by this eucharist
in which you renew within us the vision of your glory,
strengthen us all to follow the way of perfection
until we come to see you face to face;
through Jesus Christ our Lord.

Yesterday’s Reflection

Continued Tomorrow

The blind man’s cry is one of the Biblical foundations of the Jesus Prayer, ‘Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me, the sinner’ … an image from Crete (Photograph: Patrick Comerford) image from Crete

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

Saint James’s Church in
Quop, built of belian in
1865, is one of the oldest
church buildings in Sarawak

Saint James’s Church, Quop, was built in 1863-1865 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2024)

Patrick Comerford

Standing on a hill at the edge of Kampung Quop, 20 km from Kuching, Saint James’s Church has been virtually unchanged since it was built almost 160 years ago, in 1863-1865. It is one of the oldest church buildings in Sarawak, and although it is in need of much restoration and repair work, it is still part of life in the Bidayuh community it has served for many generations.

It is one of the many churches Father Jeffry Renos Nawie of Saint Augustine’s Church, Mambong, brought us to visit on whirlwind tours of over a dozen Anglican churches and chapels in his part of the Diocese of Kuching over the past few weeks.

The old church was built through the efforts of Father Frederic William Abe, the second SPG missionary priest to live in Quop. He came to Quop with the Anglican mission agency SPG (now USPG, the United Society Partners in the Gospel), and his vision for a new church may have been inspired by an earlier church at Banting, built of belian or ‘iron-wood’ for the first Iban community to become Anglican.

Quop may be Sarawak’s earliest organised village, thanks to the work of Anglican missionaries. The Quop mission was the first successful mission to reach out to the Bidayuh people after an earlier mission in Singai failed.

The modern Saint James’s Church, Quop, in the Bidayuh heartland south of Kuching (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2024)

The Bidayuh heartland south of Kuching was originally called Kuap by its first settlers in the mid-1800s. They had migrated from old Siburan’s Gunung Sintah. Led by the warrior-chief Bai Mandai, they were in search of greener pastures and wanted to escape marauding pirates.

After a long trek through the rain forest and the jungle, Bai Mandai’s exhausted followers cooked up a colossal meal, ate and slept – but not before each of them simultaneously gave out a long, stretched-out yawn from complete utter fatigue. That is how Bai Mandai’s first hilltop settlement came to be called Kuap, which means ‘yawn’ in Bidayuh and Malay. Later missionaries spelt it as Quop.

The SPG mission in area was started about 1859 by the Revd William Chalmers (1833-1901), the first missionary to work amongst the Bidayuh or ‘Land Dayaks’ of Sarawak. His industry and energy enabled him to acquire and reduce the difficult Bidayuh language to writing, and to instruct many of the Quop people who offered themselves as catechumens.

Because of health problems, Chalmers moved to Victoria, Australia, in 1861, and later became Bishop of Goulburn (1892-1901). He was followed in his work among the Bidayuh in Quop by the Revd Frederic William Abe (1829-1876) and the Revd John Lewis Zehnder (1827-1892), who were sent to Borneo by SPG in 1861. Abe and Zehnder were German and Swiss born and had studied as Lutherans.

By 1863, the chiefs of Quop and Murdang had been baptised and within six years, the entire population of Quop had become Christian, with the exception of four elderly people.

An archival image of the original Saint James’s Church, Quop, from 1902

Father Frederic William Abe initiated building a new church in Quop, one of a few churches of its kind built in Sarawak in the early years of Anglican mission work and the only one still standing.

Like many of the out-station forts built of belian during the Brooke Rajah, Saint James’s was a pre-fabricated church. Work on assembling the prefabricated parts of the church began in 1863. The walls, roof and truss were made in Kuching, 20 km away, under the supervision of the master carpenter, TA Stahl. The pieces were then shipped upriver along the Sarawak and Quop rivers. Villagers carried the heavy woodwork on their shoulders from the jetty at the Quop River through dense jungle to a small hill at the edge of the village, where the church was assembled on site.

The church was built in the Gothic style but is made entirely of belian – the local ‘iron wood’ that substitutes for stone. Yet it blends European and Asian styles and cultures. Even the one and only stained glass window is still intact with its belian mouldings.

The striking interior, which I caught only a tiny glimpse of, is a step back in time. The church measured 46 ft by 16 ft. A huge shell, the symbol of Saint James, served as the fount. Later, a font, cast from imported stone, was installed, and metal altar rails were put in place.

A glimpse inside the original Saint James’s Church, Quop, built 160 years ago (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2024)

As the church was being put together, Bishop Francis McDougall wrote to a friend in England: ‘I am hard at work overseeing the construction of the church for Quop Hill … It is very pretty and all ironwood. I want three church bells of 100 cwt each. I hope you could persuade some good people to bring them. Bells, we must have.’

Two other churches were being built in Sarawak at the time, and the English banking heiress Angela Burdett-Coutts (1814-1906) donated the silver and nickel bell to the church in Quop. She was one of wealthiest women in 19th century England and a close friend of Sir James Brooke, the first White Rajah. Bishop McDougall consecrated Saint James’s Church, Quop, on 7 December 1865.

From Quop, SPG mission work expanded to Bunuk and Taee and later to Padawan and the Jagoi areas. When some of the older people returned to earlier religious traditions and rites in 1873, the young Christians refused to join them.

Meanwhile, Abe worked from in Kuching from 1874, and died there on 11 June 1876, while Zehnder moved in 1866 to work in Lundu and died there in 1892.

Saint James’s Church, Quop, still uses the bell donated by the banking heiress Angela Burdett-Coutts (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2024)

Saint James’s Church, Quop, was extended in 1890 with the addition of a north aisle. Belian frames holding glass panes were added to stream in the daylight. At the same time, the church’s entire porch was refurbished with belian.

The Revd FW Nicholls moved to Quop in 1893 and with the Revd Chung Ah Luk maintained the pastoral work in the large mission area with many villages are many. In Quop, it was said at the time, ‘the work is similar to that of a small English parish, all the people being Christians.’ There was a school and the Gospels, the liturgy and hymns were being translated into local languages.

The silver candlesticks were designed by the silversmith Omar Ramsden (1873-1939), one of England’s leading designers and makers of silverware, and are used in the new church. A painting by the English artist Emma Irlam Briggs (1867-1950) still hangs in the old church building.

Over the years, the village grew up around the church, and a graveyard was laid out below the church. Baroness Burdett-Coutts owned a house in Kampong Quop and land and a plantation in the area. She wandered deep in the jungle and it is said that whenever she got lost she relied on the toll of the church bell for the Angelus, ringing at 6 am, 12 noon and 6 pm, to find her way home.

Saint James’s Church, Quop, was built of belian and is now in need of restoration (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2024)

Bishop Francis Septimus Hollis (1884-1955), who went to Sarawak with SPG in 1916, was the Priest-in-Charge of the mission of Saint James, Quop, in 1923–1928. Later he was the Principal of Saint Thomas’s School, Kuching (1928-1938), Archdeacon of Sarawak (1934-1938), and was consecrated Bishop of Labuan and Sarawak (1938-1948).

Hollis was interned by the Japanese at Batu Lintang camp near Kuching from 1942 to 1945, and this period of internment seriously undermined his health. He resigned in 1948 and was an Assistant Bishop of Leicester until he died in 1955.

Bishop Peter Howes (1911-2003), who spent who spent 44 years with SPG in Borneo, was the Priest-in-Charge of Quop in 1940-1950. During those 10 years he was interned by the Japanese at Batu Lintang in 1941-1945. He translated the New Testament from Greek into Bidayuh. Later he was the first Warden of the House of the Epiphany Theological School, Kuching (1952-1956), its principal (1971-1976), and Assistant Bishop of Kuching (1976-1981).

The parts of Saint James’s Church that are built of belian survived in all weathers. But those parts made of softer wood succumbed to old age, termites and water damage. A second, bigger church was built beside the old Saint James was built in 1986 and consecrated in 1987. The bell donated by Angela Burdett-Coutts was moved to the turret of the new church and is still in use today. Some items, including a silver tray and two chalices, were stolen from the church in 1990s.

The parish community has grown to 3,000 members and serves 10 outstation churches, chapels and worship centres. The Revd Handi Ipoh retired as Vicar two months ago (20 September 2024).

Batu Tipire, a geological phenomenon known as the ‘Split Rock of Kampong Quop’, beside Saint James’s Church (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2024)

The old church and a nearby split rock are the two landmarks in Quop. Batu Tipire is a geological phenomenon known in English as the ‘Split Rock of Kampong Quop’. It has a distinct fissure in the middle, as if it was neatly sliced into two parts by someone with a knife.

Tradition says the stone was not actually sliced but is a heavenly couple – with the male on the and his female companion on the right. It is 17 ft high and 18 ft across, and both boulders tilt about 20 degrees to the right.

According to local lore, after Bai Mandin and his followers established a settlement on Quop Hill, one of his descendants, Bai Rimau, strayed away deep into the jungle. As he realised he was lost, a torrent of hujan panas (hot rain) poured out of the skies. In tribal lore, this is seen as an unfavourable moment when bad spirits come out to cause mischief. Bai Rimau hurriedly sought shelter and ended up face to face with the two huge boulders. He took shelter under the concave underside of Batu Tipire’s right half.

When he found his way home, Bai Rimau dreamt that night that the friendly guardian spirits (penunggu) of Batu Tipire wanted him to establish a new settlement near their abode. In the months that followed, two disasters struck Quop, when a cholera outbreak was followed by a smallpox epidemic. Taking this as a bad omen, Bai Rimau led his remaining followers to the site near Batu Tipire, where they set up their first longhouse from which Kampong Quop came to be.

With the arrival of the SPG missionaries and Christianity, the people of Quop stopped revering the guardian spirits of Batu Tipire. But strange happenings were experienced in the village. During funeral processions, the pallbearers carrying the corpse on a wooden bier felt the dead person became unusually heavier as they neared Batu Tipire. So much so, extra hands were needed to carry the body to the burial site.

The cemetery below Saint James’s Church, Quop (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2024)

Bishop Peter Howes, in his autobiography In a Fair Ground, records some of his experiences as a young priest at Saint James: ‘Sometimes at night, there were domestic echoes from the site, such as the clink of pots and pans, the chopping of wood, the sound of gongs and snatches of people in conversation. Each sound made a distinct impact, with a curious resonance as though reflected from a cave.

‘It was so clear, so normal that one felt certain that it must come from a house near the site, perhaps someone hosting a private party. Yet there was never a glimmer of a light to be seen and no sound of activity from the living, as one looked out from the mission house verandah.

‘When you asked the following morning if there had been a party in the village, the answer was always: “No, it was our grandparents you heard.” This was in every sense an alarming experience. It was a phenomenon to which a great many can bear witness.’

Sometimes, he recalled, when he heard sounds from the direction of Saint James’s Church, he would walk around the church with a torch only to find nothing.

Inside the new Saint James’s Church, Quop, built in 1986-1987 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2024)

The old church has been used recently for youth activities, a Sunday school and as a multi-purpose hall. Its woodwork, its tabernacle, the crafted decorative embellishments and one lone stained glass remain in place.

The original church is in need of restoration and a programme of continued maintenance, and restoration work is being carried out bit by bit, preserving and maintaining the church and replacing parts that are rotten or broken. The building has been gazetted since 2007, meaning any refurbishment work needs the approval of the Sarawak Museum Department.

The former Bishop of Kuching, Bishop Bolly Lapok, wrote some years ago: ‘Not many of our institutions have the vintage of Saint James Quop, and fewer still have such impact on the life of the community as to have given it a reputation which is synonymous with education and progress and a musical tradition that is the envy of all our parishes.’

‘Not many of our institutions have the vintage of Saint James QuopSaint James’s Church, Quop’ (Bishop Bolly Lapok) (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2024)