Bicester Methodist Church on the corner of Sheep Street and Bell Lane was built in 1927 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
Patrick Comerford
During my recent walkabouts in Bicester, I have visited both Saint Edburg’s Church, the Church of England parish church, and the Church of the Immaculate Conception, the Roman Catholic parish church.
I also went in search of the site of the pre-Reformation Augustinian priory in the Oxfordshire market town. Little remains of the original Priory but excavations and written accounts have provided a picture of the priory and what life was like there.
Old Place Yard with its turreted dovecote, is believed to occupy part of the site of the 12th century priory. The present dovecote at Old Place Yard was heavily altered in the 1960s after the original structure and stable buildings were damaged in a fire in the 1960s.
But as I walked around I found four other churches or chapels in Bicester: two Methodist churches, one still active and the other now a shop on Sheep Street; a former Congregational church on Chapel Lane; and the unusual Dissenters’ chapel in the cemetery beside Saint Edburg’s Church.
A cross embedded in the brick work on the north side of Bicester Methodist Church (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
Bicester Methodist Church in the centre of the town is at the end of Sheep Street on the corner with Bell Lane. It was built in 1927 to replace the original Methodist church on the opposite side of Sheep Street, and was originally known as the Grainger Hargreaves Memorial Church.
Methodism in Bicester began after a Mrs J Bowerman was ‘awakened’ while she heard John Wesley preaching in Brackley in Northamptonshire, close to Banbury, Bicester and Buckingham, in 1748. When she and her husband settled in Bicester, they first attended Saint Edburg’s Church, but they soon arranged for the Methodist minister in Brackley to visit Bicester. A room in a farmhouse on what became the site of the later Wesley Hall was used for those early services, and a building in Sheep Street was licensed as a chapel in 1816.
As the Methodism grew in Bicester, it was threatened with schism. In May 1843, preachers of the Primitive Methodists or ‘Ranters’ in Oxford began to preach in the Market Square and attempts by local people to stop them preaching created a disturbance.
Over time, two separate branches of Wesleyanism emerged in Bicester. One stayed on the site of the farmhouse and eventually built what became the Wesley Hall; the other bought a site in North Street and built a chapel there in 1840. A schoolroom was added 40 years later. The chapel was enlarged, new seats were installed in 1892 and the gallery was added, and an organ was installed in 1904.
The two separate churches eventually outgrew their buildings and outgrew their differences. They came together in 1890 and formed the United Methodist Free Church. They decided to build one shared church, a site was acquired by 1919 and a row of cottages at 72-78 Sheep Street was demolished to clear the site for the church. The old chapel in North Street was sold in 1925 to the Jersey Lodge of Masons and became the Masonic Weyland Hall.
Wesley Hall on Sheep Street, Bicester, is now a bedding and furniture shop (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
The Wesley Hall in Sheep Street continued to be used as a church until the new one was built. It was then used as a church hall and as a Sunday School until a new hall was built behind the new church. Wesley Hall was sold to Woolworths in 1955. It later became Coxeters furniture shop and is now Home Comforts.
When the new church opened in 1927, it was named the Grainger Hargreaves Memorial Church in memory of the Revd Grainger Hargreaves (1855-1923) who had spent many years of his ministry in China and then in Australia and New Zealand. He was chair of the Oxford District and Superintendent of Wesley Memorial Church for 18 years. He moved to Bicester in 1921 but died on Christmas Day 1923.
The foundation stone was laid on 23 September 1926, and new church was opened by Mrs J Vanner Early of Witney on 23 June 1927. The builders were Cannon, Green and Co of Aylesbury.
The name Wesley Hall and the date 1863 can still be seen on the Sheep Street facade (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
The architectural historian Sir Niklaus Pevsner, has described Bicester Methodist Church as ‘an extraordinary mixture’ of architectural styles and motifs. The three tall lancet windows in the centre of the front façade harken back to the earliest mediaeval Gothic design, the flowing curvilinear tracery at their heads is typical of art nouveaux, while the central fielded panel with its very unusual flanking geometric pilasters has art deco styling.
Methodist churches were often built as rather simple chapels, with a single main entrance opening into an open meeting hall. The form of the building in Bicester, however, is much more complex with small projecting wings on the side elevations and an imposing façade with decorative stone and brickwork. A tower was originally planned for one corner.
Inside, the central hall or nave faces a raised platform with pointed arches and carved foliate capitals and it looks like a Victorian gothic revival chancel in all but name. The ceiling is fashioned like a Tudor hammer-beam roof. The curvilinear motif outside is repeated in the pierced wooden panels between the collar beams. The windows have domestic Edwardian stained glass flower motifs, but great swags of art nouveau tracery.
A two-manual organ by Albert Keates of Sheffield installed in 1942 was a gift from George Layton, one of the church the organist for 50 years. He had opened the first garage in London Road in Bicester in 1910.
The planned tower was never built, but an extension, built at the rear in Victoria Road in the 1950s, hosts many community events.
The Revd Jocelyn Bennett is the minister of Bicester Methodist Church. Sunday services are usually at 10:45 am and 6:15 pm, and the church provides opportunities through the week for times of prayer and worship. The church is also used by Bicester Elim Church on Sunday afternoons.
The former Bicester Congregational Church on Chapel Street, Bicester (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
The story of Dissenters in Bicester goes back to the reign of Elizabeth I, when a dispute over doctrinal matters broke out between the vicar and his parishioners. Order was restored, but Nonconformity resurfaced in 1654 when the Cromwellian commissioners appointed as vicar William Hall, a ‘godly and painful’ preacher who had been the curate in Bicester for some years.
The Bicester Congregational Church emerged after Presbyterians and ‘Independents’, the heirs of the Puritan tradition, were ejected from parish churches in 1662.
A Presbyterian congregation met secretly before being formally licensed in 1672 after a meeting in Bicester with John Troughton, who had been ejected from Saint John’s College, Oxford. Troughton was licensed as a preacher under the Declaration of Indulgence, and when he died in 1681 he was buried at Bicester parish church.
By 1669, ‘separatists’, said to be 100 to 200 in number, met in the barn of a baker, Thomas Harris. Samuel Lee, an eminent Puritan divine who lived at Bignell in 1664-1678, also ‘sometimes kept conventicles at Bicester’. Nevertheless, the Compton Census of 1676 and Bishop Fell in a report ca 1685 recorded no dissenters.
Henry Cornish became the first pastor of the congregation in 1690. A contemporary, critical pamphlet said he preached ‘for profit’s sake to silly women and other obstinate people’. Cornish died in 1698.
A chapel was first built Water Lane, now Chapel Street, and was licensed for public worship in 1728. The chapel became an important centre for Nonconformists in the surrounding area and a Sunday school was established in 1794. The chapel was enlarged and licensed for marriages in 1839 and a schoolroom was added in 1873.
A Presbyterian congregation met secretly in Bicester before being legally licensed in 1672 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
The exterior front of the chapel is built of chequer brick with a hipped roof and broken pediment. There are some ashlar dressings and Welsh-slate roofs. There are tall round-arched windows and the left bay has been altered to form a rose window above an added pedimented porch, with a round-arched doorway surrounded by rusticated stone blocks. The arched windows in the front gable walls have wooden Gothic-style tracery.
The denominational labels used by the Bicester congregation are interesting. After the Toleration Act of 1689, Presbyterians and Independents in England formed what was known as the ‘Happy Union’ until it ended in acrimony in 1694.
In Bicester, on the other hand, Presbyterians and Independents continued to work together late into the 18th century. In 1738 and 1759, the vicar described them as Presbyterians; in 1808, he said they described themselves as Independents. The earliest surviving minute-book, from 1771, refers to ‘the Congregation or Society of Protestant Dissenters from the Church of England commonly called Presbyterians’.
John Ludd Fenner, who was the pastor in 1771-1774, was a Unitarian, but later returned to the Congregationalists; Edward Hickman, who died in 1781, was a Calvinist; another minister was from the Countess of Huntingdon’s Connexion; while other preachers and ministers included Calvinists, Arminians, Arians, Socinians, Baptists and Methodists.
In the 19th century, the church was served by Independents or Congregationalists, as they were beginning to be called. The seven young men who entered the ministry from Bicester chapel in 1810-1855 included three became Baptists.
Some of the colourful pastors from the past included: Samuel Park (1739-1766), who was ‘gay and light in his practices, fond of convivial company’; David Davis (1768-1771), ‘a slave to his ale and pipe’, who absconded with unpaid debts; and TH Norton (1899-1902), who abandoned his wife and ran away with the wife of one of the deacons.
The Revd SG Burden was appointed to a part-time post in Bicester in 1952 and was also the pastor of Launton. When the Presbyterians and Congregationalists united, it became Bicester United Reform Church in 1972.
The church closed in 1978, the building was converted into a private house, and the war memorial was moved to Bicester Methodist Church. The building was later used as a snooker hall and is now a restaurant.
The Dissenters’ Chapel in the cemetery beside Saint Edburg’s Church, Bicester (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
The Dissenters’ Chapel in the cemetery beside Saint Edburg’s Church in Bicester, was built in 1861 to accommodate non-conformists in the town. The ground was separate to the main Anglican churchyard, but the Bicester Herald reported concerns among some residents that dissenters would be allowed access through the main churchyard entrance.
To mollify the parishioners and the congregation of Saint Edburg’s, it was agreed that the dissenters would instead use the Piggy Lane entrance.
The turreted dovecote on Old Place Yard is believed to occupy part of the site of the 12th century priory (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
04 October 2025
Daily prayer in Ordinary Time 2025:
145, Saturday 4 October 2025,
Saint Francis of Assisi
A sculpture at Gormanston College, Co Meath, marking the 800th anniversary of the birth of Saint Francis of Assisi in 1982 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Patrick Comerford
We are continuing in Ordinary Time in the Church Calendar, and tomorrow is the Sixteenth Sunday after Trinity (Trinity XVI, 5 October). Today, the calendar of the Church of England in Common Worship remembers (1182-1226), Friar, Deacon and founder of the Friars Minor (4 October).
Today is also the last day of Creationtide or the Season of Creation in the Church Calendar, which began on 1 September, the beginning of the Church Year in the Orthodox Church, and ends today on the feast of Saint Francis of Assisi.
Later today, I plan to drop in to Το Στεκι Μας (‘Our Place’), the ‘pop-up’ Greek Café at the Swinfen Harris Church Hall, beside the Greek Orthodox Church on London Road, Stony Stratford. This café opens every first Saturday of the month, between 10:30 am and 5 pm. Before today begins, however, I am taking some quiet time this morning to give thanks, and for reflection, prayer and reading in these ways:
1, today’s Gospel reading;
2, a reflection on the Gospel reading;
3, a prayer from the USPG prayer diary;
4, the Collects and Post-Communion prayer of the day.
A mediaeval carved statue of Saint Francis of Assisi in the ruins of the Franciscan Friary in Askeaton, Co Limerick (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Luke 12: 22-34 (NRSVA):
22 He said to his disciples, ‘Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat, or about your body, what you will wear. 23 For life is more than food, and the body more than clothing. 24 Consider the ravens: they neither sow nor reap, they have neither storehouse nor barn, and yet God feeds them. Of how much more value are you than the birds! 25 And can any of you by worrying add a single hour to your span of life? 26 If then you are not able to do so small a thing as that, why do you worry about the rest? 27 Consider the lilies, how they grow: they neither toil nor spin; yet I tell you, even Solomon in all his glory was not clothed like one of these. 28 But if God so clothes the grass of the field, which is alive today and tomorrow is thrown into the oven, how much more will he clothe you – you of little faith! 29 And do not keep striving for what you are to eat and what you are to drink, and do not keep worrying. 30 For it is the nations of the world that strive after all these things, and your Father knows that you need them. 31 Instead, strive for his kingdom, and these things will be given to you as well.
32 ‘Do not be afraid, little flock, for it is your Father’s good pleasure to give you the kingdom. 33 Sell your possessions, and give alms. Make purses for yourselves that do not wear out, an unfailing treasure in heaven, where no thief comes near and no moth destroys. 34 For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.’
The former Saint Francis Church … once the most important church in the Venetian town and now the Archaeological Museum of Rethymnon (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
Today’s Reflection:
A year ago, I was with former schoolfriends, celebrating 55 years since we left school at Gormanston College in Co Meath. Over 30 or more 70-somethings gathered together for a long and lingering lunch in Peploe’s restaurant at Saint Stephen’s Green, Dublin, at a lunch organised mainly by Frank Hunt and Russell Shannon.
We had last gathered for a previous lunch like that five years earlier, in 2019, when we marked 50 years since leaving Gormanston. There were sad but grateful memories last year of those who could not join us for lunch, and we remembered those we know who died in the previous year, including John McCarthy and Tom Lappin.
Since then, Father Louis Brennan, a former Rector of Gormanston and the most inspirational and encouraging teacher I had in my schooldays, has also died.
That afternoon was also filled with memories of what were largely happy school days, and how well we were prepared to go out into the world. Some of us also remembered, with gratitude, the Franciscan values that were shared with us by the friars at Gormanston in the 1960s.
Today is the feast of Saint Francis of Assisi. This day is popular for blessing the animals and also marks the end of ‘Creation Time’ in many parts of the Church.
I was reminded of Saint Francis and his values when I lived close to the Friary in Wexford, and during my time at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, which was founded on the site of a Franciscan friary.
Throughout my five years when I lived in Askeaton, Co Limerick, as priest-in-charge of the Rathkeale Group of Parishes, I regularly visited the ruins of the Franciscan friary and its beautiful cloisters, with a mediaeval carved image of Saint Francis of Assisi. Earlier this year, during my Easter retreat or holiday in Crete, I visited again – as I have done so many times since the 1980s – the former Saint Francis Church, once the most important church in the Venetian town and now the Archaeological Museum of Rethymnon.
Apart from figures in the Biblical figures, Saint Francis may be the most popular saint in the Church, and he is loved in the all the churches. He inspired Pope Francis, who took the saint’s name when he was elected Pope in 2013. Like Saint Francis, Pope Francis washed the feet of women prisoners each year on Maundy Thursday and he visited a soup kitchen in Assisi.
Saint Francis was born in Assisi in Italy ca 1181-1182, and he was baptised with the name Giovanni (for Saint John the Baptist). But his father changed the boy’s name to Francesco because he liked France.
As a young boy and a teenager, Francesco di Bernardone was a rebel. He dressed oddly, spent much of his time alone and quarrelled with his father.
His father expected him to take over the family business. But young Francis was too much of a rebel. All that began to change when he was taken prisoner in 1202 during a war. When he was freed, he was seriously ill, and while he was recovering he had a dream in which he was told ‘to follow the Master, not the man.’
He turned to prayer, penance and almsgiving. One day while praying, he said, God called him to ‘repair my house.’ In 1206, he sold some valuable cloth from his father’s shops to rebuild a run-down church of San Damiano.
His father dragged the young man before the religious authorities, and that was that, finally, for Francis and his father.
Francis turned his back on all that wealth, became a friar, put his complete trust in God, and made his home in an abandoned church. He wore simple clothes, looked after the lepers, made friends with social outcasts and embraced a life of no possessions.
Others joined him, and so began the story of the Franciscans.
Saint Francis is said to have once told his followers, ‘Preach the gospel, and if necessary, use words.’ In other words, people are more likely to see what we believe in what we do rather than believe us because of what we say.
The widely known ‘Prayer of Saint Francis’ has also been attributed to Saint Francis:
Lord, make me an instrument of your peace;
where there is hatred, let me sow love;
where there is injury, pardon;
where there is discord, union;
where there is doubt, faith;
where there is despair, hope;
where there is darkness, light;
and where there is sadness, joy.
O Divine Master,
grant that I may not so much seek to be consoled, as to console;
to be understood, as to understand;
to be loved, as to love;
for it is in giving that we receive,
it is in pardoning that we are pardoned,
and it is in dying that we are born to eternal life. Amen.
Saint Francis celebrated God’s creation, and his most famous poem is his ‘Canticle of the Sun.’ He also organised the first Crib to celebrate Christmas.
Two years before his death, the Franciscan friars first arrived in England in 1224, and they soon spread to Ireland.
Saint Francis was 44 when he died on the evening of 3 October 1226. By then, his order had spread throughout western Christendom. Next year marks the 800th anniversary of his death.
I recall 79 names from my school year in Gormanston in 1969, and since then 19 have died – almost 1 in 4 or 24 per cent. That class year, remembered fondly by all of us, are:
William Barrett, + Hillary Barry, Michael Bolger, Brian Brady, Aidan Brosnan, + Derek Browne, Henry Browne, Peter Burke, + Patrick Cassidy, Seamus Claffey,
Patrick Comerford, Justin Connolly, Breen Coyne, Thomas Delaney, David Dennehy, Michael Dervan, Gerald Dick, Frank Domoney, Paul Egan, + Donal Geaney,
Michael Geraghty, John Grogan, Richard Hayes, Michael Hickey, Liam Holmes, John Horgan, Frank Hunt, Stephen Kane, + Paul Keatings, Noel Keaveney,
Thomas Keenan, Bernard Kelly, John Kelly, David Kerrigan, + Tom Lappin, Malachy Larkin, + Cyril Lynch, David Lynch, Liam Lynch, + John McCarthy,
Alfred McCrann, Brian McCutcheon, + Harold McGahern, Pat McGowan, + Donal McGrath, + Joe McGuinness, + Niall McMahon, Kieran McNamee, James Madden, Seamus Moloney,
Francis Moran, + James Moran, Peter Morgan, + Raymond Murphy, Paul Nolan, Kevin O’Brien, Dermot O’Callaghan, Dessie O’Connor, William O’Connor, James O’Dea,
Dermot O’Donoghue, + Tim O’Driscoll, Dermott O’Flanagan, Joseph O’Keeffe, Donal O’Mahony, + Michéal O Morain, + Sean O’Meara, Joe O’Neill, John O’Reilly, + Cian O'Shea,
George Pratt, Dermot Rainey, Sean Regan, Noel Reilly, Russell Shannon, Paul Smith, + Maurice Sweeney, Donagh Tierney, Michael Walsh.
Gormanston College, Co Meath … in among the 6C year on 27 June 1969, 56 years ago
Today’s Prayers (Saturday 4 October 2025):
The theme this week (28 September to 4 October) in Pray with the World Church, the prayer diary of the Anglican mission agency USPG (United Society Partners in the Gospel), has been ‘One Faith: Many Voices’ (pp 42-43). This theme was introduced last Sunday with Reflections from Rachel Weller, Communications Officer, USPG.
The USPG Prayer Diary today (Saturday 4 October 2025) invites us to pray:
Father, thank you that you are unbound by language and all people can come to know you.
The Collect:
O God, you ever delight to reveal yourself
to the childlike and lowly of heart:
grant that, following the example of the blessed Francis,
we may count the wisdom of this world as foolishness
and know only Jesus Christ and him crucified,
who is alive and reigns with you,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever.
The Post Communion Prayer:
Merciful God,
who gave such grace to your servant Francis
that he served you with singleness of heart
and loved you above all things:
help us, whose communion with you
has been renewed in this sacrament,
to forsake all that holds us back from following Christ
and to grow into his likeness from glory to glory;
through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Collect on the Eve of Trinity XVI:
O Lord, we beseech you mercifully to hear the prayers
of your people who call upon you;
and grant that they may both perceive and know
what things they ought to do,
and also may have grace and power faithfully to fulfil them;
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.
Yesterday’s Reflections
Continued Tomorrow
Saint Francis at the gates into Gormanston College, Co Meath (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
Patrick Comerford
We are continuing in Ordinary Time in the Church Calendar, and tomorrow is the Sixteenth Sunday after Trinity (Trinity XVI, 5 October). Today, the calendar of the Church of England in Common Worship remembers (1182-1226), Friar, Deacon and founder of the Friars Minor (4 October).
Today is also the last day of Creationtide or the Season of Creation in the Church Calendar, which began on 1 September, the beginning of the Church Year in the Orthodox Church, and ends today on the feast of Saint Francis of Assisi.
Later today, I plan to drop in to Το Στεκι Μας (‘Our Place’), the ‘pop-up’ Greek Café at the Swinfen Harris Church Hall, beside the Greek Orthodox Church on London Road, Stony Stratford. This café opens every first Saturday of the month, between 10:30 am and 5 pm. Before today begins, however, I am taking some quiet time this morning to give thanks, and for reflection, prayer and reading in these ways:
1, today’s Gospel reading;
2, a reflection on the Gospel reading;
3, a prayer from the USPG prayer diary;
4, the Collects and Post-Communion prayer of the day.
A mediaeval carved statue of Saint Francis of Assisi in the ruins of the Franciscan Friary in Askeaton, Co Limerick (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Luke 12: 22-34 (NRSVA):
22 He said to his disciples, ‘Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat, or about your body, what you will wear. 23 For life is more than food, and the body more than clothing. 24 Consider the ravens: they neither sow nor reap, they have neither storehouse nor barn, and yet God feeds them. Of how much more value are you than the birds! 25 And can any of you by worrying add a single hour to your span of life? 26 If then you are not able to do so small a thing as that, why do you worry about the rest? 27 Consider the lilies, how they grow: they neither toil nor spin; yet I tell you, even Solomon in all his glory was not clothed like one of these. 28 But if God so clothes the grass of the field, which is alive today and tomorrow is thrown into the oven, how much more will he clothe you – you of little faith! 29 And do not keep striving for what you are to eat and what you are to drink, and do not keep worrying. 30 For it is the nations of the world that strive after all these things, and your Father knows that you need them. 31 Instead, strive for his kingdom, and these things will be given to you as well.
32 ‘Do not be afraid, little flock, for it is your Father’s good pleasure to give you the kingdom. 33 Sell your possessions, and give alms. Make purses for yourselves that do not wear out, an unfailing treasure in heaven, where no thief comes near and no moth destroys. 34 For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.’
The former Saint Francis Church … once the most important church in the Venetian town and now the Archaeological Museum of Rethymnon (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
Today’s Reflection:
A year ago, I was with former schoolfriends, celebrating 55 years since we left school at Gormanston College in Co Meath. Over 30 or more 70-somethings gathered together for a long and lingering lunch in Peploe’s restaurant at Saint Stephen’s Green, Dublin, at a lunch organised mainly by Frank Hunt and Russell Shannon.
We had last gathered for a previous lunch like that five years earlier, in 2019, when we marked 50 years since leaving Gormanston. There were sad but grateful memories last year of those who could not join us for lunch, and we remembered those we know who died in the previous year, including John McCarthy and Tom Lappin.
Since then, Father Louis Brennan, a former Rector of Gormanston and the most inspirational and encouraging teacher I had in my schooldays, has also died.
That afternoon was also filled with memories of what were largely happy school days, and how well we were prepared to go out into the world. Some of us also remembered, with gratitude, the Franciscan values that were shared with us by the friars at Gormanston in the 1960s.
Today is the feast of Saint Francis of Assisi. This day is popular for blessing the animals and also marks the end of ‘Creation Time’ in many parts of the Church.
I was reminded of Saint Francis and his values when I lived close to the Friary in Wexford, and during my time at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, which was founded on the site of a Franciscan friary.
Throughout my five years when I lived in Askeaton, Co Limerick, as priest-in-charge of the Rathkeale Group of Parishes, I regularly visited the ruins of the Franciscan friary and its beautiful cloisters, with a mediaeval carved image of Saint Francis of Assisi. Earlier this year, during my Easter retreat or holiday in Crete, I visited again – as I have done so many times since the 1980s – the former Saint Francis Church, once the most important church in the Venetian town and now the Archaeological Museum of Rethymnon.
Apart from figures in the Biblical figures, Saint Francis may be the most popular saint in the Church, and he is loved in the all the churches. He inspired Pope Francis, who took the saint’s name when he was elected Pope in 2013. Like Saint Francis, Pope Francis washed the feet of women prisoners each year on Maundy Thursday and he visited a soup kitchen in Assisi.
Saint Francis was born in Assisi in Italy ca 1181-1182, and he was baptised with the name Giovanni (for Saint John the Baptist). But his father changed the boy’s name to Francesco because he liked France.
As a young boy and a teenager, Francesco di Bernardone was a rebel. He dressed oddly, spent much of his time alone and quarrelled with his father.
His father expected him to take over the family business. But young Francis was too much of a rebel. All that began to change when he was taken prisoner in 1202 during a war. When he was freed, he was seriously ill, and while he was recovering he had a dream in which he was told ‘to follow the Master, not the man.’
He turned to prayer, penance and almsgiving. One day while praying, he said, God called him to ‘repair my house.’ In 1206, he sold some valuable cloth from his father’s shops to rebuild a run-down church of San Damiano.
His father dragged the young man before the religious authorities, and that was that, finally, for Francis and his father.
Francis turned his back on all that wealth, became a friar, put his complete trust in God, and made his home in an abandoned church. He wore simple clothes, looked after the lepers, made friends with social outcasts and embraced a life of no possessions.
Others joined him, and so began the story of the Franciscans.
Saint Francis is said to have once told his followers, ‘Preach the gospel, and if necessary, use words.’ In other words, people are more likely to see what we believe in what we do rather than believe us because of what we say.
The widely known ‘Prayer of Saint Francis’ has also been attributed to Saint Francis:
Lord, make me an instrument of your peace;
where there is hatred, let me sow love;
where there is injury, pardon;
where there is discord, union;
where there is doubt, faith;
where there is despair, hope;
where there is darkness, light;
and where there is sadness, joy.
O Divine Master,
grant that I may not so much seek to be consoled, as to console;
to be understood, as to understand;
to be loved, as to love;
for it is in giving that we receive,
it is in pardoning that we are pardoned,
and it is in dying that we are born to eternal life. Amen.
Saint Francis celebrated God’s creation, and his most famous poem is his ‘Canticle of the Sun.’ He also organised the first Crib to celebrate Christmas.
Two years before his death, the Franciscan friars first arrived in England in 1224, and they soon spread to Ireland.
Saint Francis was 44 when he died on the evening of 3 October 1226. By then, his order had spread throughout western Christendom. Next year marks the 800th anniversary of his death.
I recall 79 names from my school year in Gormanston in 1969, and since then 19 have died – almost 1 in 4 or 24 per cent. That class year, remembered fondly by all of us, are:
William Barrett, + Hillary Barry, Michael Bolger, Brian Brady, Aidan Brosnan, + Derek Browne, Henry Browne, Peter Burke, + Patrick Cassidy, Seamus Claffey,
Patrick Comerford, Justin Connolly, Breen Coyne, Thomas Delaney, David Dennehy, Michael Dervan, Gerald Dick, Frank Domoney, Paul Egan, + Donal Geaney,
Michael Geraghty, John Grogan, Richard Hayes, Michael Hickey, Liam Holmes, John Horgan, Frank Hunt, Stephen Kane, + Paul Keatings, Noel Keaveney,
Thomas Keenan, Bernard Kelly, John Kelly, David Kerrigan, + Tom Lappin, Malachy Larkin, + Cyril Lynch, David Lynch, Liam Lynch, + John McCarthy,
Alfred McCrann, Brian McCutcheon, + Harold McGahern, Pat McGowan, + Donal McGrath, + Joe McGuinness, + Niall McMahon, Kieran McNamee, James Madden, Seamus Moloney,
Francis Moran, + James Moran, Peter Morgan, + Raymond Murphy, Paul Nolan, Kevin O’Brien, Dermot O’Callaghan, Dessie O’Connor, William O’Connor, James O’Dea,
Dermot O’Donoghue, + Tim O’Driscoll, Dermott O’Flanagan, Joseph O’Keeffe, Donal O’Mahony, + Michéal O Morain, + Sean O’Meara, Joe O’Neill, John O’Reilly, + Cian O'Shea,
George Pratt, Dermot Rainey, Sean Regan, Noel Reilly, Russell Shannon, Paul Smith, + Maurice Sweeney, Donagh Tierney, Michael Walsh.

Today’s Prayers (Saturday 4 October 2025):
The theme this week (28 September to 4 October) in Pray with the World Church, the prayer diary of the Anglican mission agency USPG (United Society Partners in the Gospel), has been ‘One Faith: Many Voices’ (pp 42-43). This theme was introduced last Sunday with Reflections from Rachel Weller, Communications Officer, USPG.
The USPG Prayer Diary today (Saturday 4 October 2025) invites us to pray:
Father, thank you that you are unbound by language and all people can come to know you.
The Collect:
O God, you ever delight to reveal yourself
to the childlike and lowly of heart:
grant that, following the example of the blessed Francis,
we may count the wisdom of this world as foolishness
and know only Jesus Christ and him crucified,
who is alive and reigns with you,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever.
The Post Communion Prayer:
Merciful God,
who gave such grace to your servant Francis
that he served you with singleness of heart
and loved you above all things:
help us, whose communion with you
has been renewed in this sacrament,
to forsake all that holds us back from following Christ
and to grow into his likeness from glory to glory;
through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Collect on the Eve of Trinity XVI:
O Lord, we beseech you mercifully to hear the prayers
of your people who call upon you;
and grant that they may both perceive and know
what things they ought to do,
and also may have grace and power faithfully to fulfil them;
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.
Yesterday’s Reflections
Continued Tomorrow
Saint Francis at the gates into Gormanston College, Co Meath (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
03 October 2025
‘Our grudges are no longer our grudges,
Our silent resentments are no longer silent,
Our eternal vows of vengeance are no more’
‘And we pray for those children whose nightmares occur in the daytime’ (Ina J Hughes) … street art seen in Buckingham this week (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
Patrick Comerford
Thursday was a horrific day for the Jewish community in Britain, Britain at large, and the Jewish community throughout the world, with the frightening attack on Heaton Park synagogue in Manchester. May the memories of those who were killed be a blessing and may those who were injured recover quickly and fully.
Feelings of safety within the Jewish community in the UK have declined sharply in the last couple of years, according to the largest survey of British Jews since 7 October 2023. The Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood said this morning that antisemitism has been rising in the UK.
The local synagogue in Milton Keynes has had several telephone calls and messages since the attack from local people wanting to express solidarity with the Jewish community, trying to reassure Jewish people that they are not alone. It was reassuring that the police were at the synagogue in Milton Keynes yesterday morning even before anyone there had heard of the attack in Manchester, and they continued to do regular patrols by the synagogue throughout the day.
Yom Kippur or the Day of Atonement is the most solemn day in the Jewish calendar, the climax of the Ten Days of Awe or the High Holy Days. I spent some of these days, including Rosh HaShanah, the Jewish New Year Day, and Kol Nidrei, the beginning of Yom Kippur, in my local synagogue in Milton Keynes, where the services were led by Rabbi Roberta Harris-Eckstein, who used the new Reform Judaism High Holy Days Machzor.
The revised and modernised prayer book has been 10 years in the making. It was produced by an editorial group of clergy – including Rabbi Mark Goldsmit, who chaired the group, and the joint editors Rabbi Paul Freedman and Rabbi Professor Jonathan Magonet – along with inputs from rabbinic and cantorial colleagues and local congregations.
As a companion to the renewed Reform Siddur for daily and Shabbat use, the High Holy Days Machzor incorporates changes and improvements that were needed to reflect today’s Progressive Jewish society and those of the next 30 to 40 years. These changes and improvement include gender neutral language, reflected in the introduction of the Matriarchs: Sarah, Rebecca, Rachel and Leah were missing on the High Holy Day. One key aim was to demystify the principles, customs and practices of the Yamim Noraim or Days of Awe.
In many places in this two-volume resource, the usual liturgy on the right-hand page is creatively complemented by readings and poetry in a blue typeface on the facing page, either for congregational use or to give permission to the individual to ‘wander’ and find new meaning during a service.
The hope is that the new Machzor allows everyone to take part in Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur in a way that addresses their personal needs and reflects today’s Reform and Progressive values and place in Jewish tradition.
The Torah scrolls in Milton Keynes and District Reform Synagogue (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
The services for Rosh haShanah, Kol Nidrei and Yom Kippur in Milton Keynes this week and last were led by Rabbi Roberta Harris-Eckstein. She has been part-time rabbi of Eastbourne Liberal Jewish Community and has taught the Hebrew Bible, History of the Ancient Near East and Biblical History, as well as courses in Judaism for non-Jews.
The Torah readings for Rosh haShanah are a tapestry of stories about children – the rescue of Ishmael, the birth of Isaac, and the birth of Samuel. One engaging reading introduced by Rabbi Roberta is an adaptation of the poem ‘A Prayer for the Children’ by Ina J Hughes:
We pray for the children who put chocolate fingers on everything,
who love to be tickled,
who stomp in puddles and ruin their new pants,
who eat candy before supper,
and who can never find their shoes in the morning.
And we also pray for those who stare at photographers from behind barbed wire,
who never bound down the street in a new pair of shoes,
who never played ‘one potato, two potatoes’,
and who are born in places where we would not be caught dead in and they will be.
We pray for the children who give us sticky kisses and fistfuls of dandelions,
who sleep with their dog and bury their goldfish,
who hug us so tightly and who forget their lunch money,
who squeeze toothpaste all over the sink,
who watch their fathers shave,
and who slurp their soup.
And we also pray for those who will never get dessert,
who have no favourite blanket to drag behind them,
who watch their fathers suffer,
who cannot find any bread to steal,
who do not have rooms to clean up,
whose pictures are always on milk cartons instead of dressers,
and whose monsters are real.
We pray for the children who spend their allowance before Tuesday,
who pick at their food,
who love ghost stories,
who shove dirty clothes under the bed,
who never rinse out the bathtub,
who love visits from the Tooth Fairy, even when they find out who it really is,
who do not like to be kissed or hugged in front of the school bus,
and who squirm during services.
And we pray for those children
whose nightmares occur in the daytime,
who will eat anything,
who have never seen a dentist,
who are not spoiled by anybody,
who go to bed hungry and wake up hungry,
who live and move and have no address.
We pray for the children who like to be carried
and for those children who have to be carried,
for those who give up on and for those who never give up;
for those who will grab the hand of anyone kind enough to offer it
and for those who will find no hand to grab.
For all these children, Adonai, we pray today,
for they are all so precious. Amen.
‘We pray for the children … who live and move and have no address’ (Ina J Hughes) … street art in Waterford (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
As I pored over the new Machzor in moments of silence and reflection, I was taken by many of the resources it offers ‘All Our Grudges’ by Trisha Arlin is described as an ‘Alternative Kol Nidrei’:
All grudges, resentments, and vows of vengeance and bitterness,
All undying hatreds or annoyances that we may hold onto
Or talk endlessly about, boring our friends,
Or lose sleep obsessing over
Or write bad poetry about
Or bring up at family dinners to the consternation of all present;
From the previous Day of Atonement until this Day of Atonement
For the benefit of our mental health
And the peace of mind of all who surround us;
Regarding all of this that we have refused to let go,
Despite the fact that they are long past
Or pointless
Or one-sided
Or ridiculous
Or destructive of the innocent
Or hurting ourselves more than anyone else;
Regarding all of them, these intrusions on the Holy Wholeness,
we repudiate them.
All of them, we let them go,
Give up
Wave away
Acknowledge as stupid
Declare null and void
Because we are done.
Our grudges are no longer our grudges,
Our silent resentments are no longer silent,
Our eternal vows of vengeance are no more.
The entire community acknowledges and takes action
So that everyone we have been angry at is forgiven,
Every hurt we did not speak about will be dealt with,
Every relative will be loved for who they are rather than who they are not,
Every change in the world that needs to be made will be made rather than contemplated.
Holy Wholeness!
We need help to step back into connection with the One.
We look for the compassion and mercy
That is always there
If we but pay attention.
‘Anyone who puts on a tallit when young will never forget’ (Yehuda Amichai)
Wearing a tallit at the evening service is a tradition associated with Kol Nidrei. Normally, a tallitis worn at services during daylight hours, and tradition says the tallitis not worn at night. The exception to this rule is the night of Yom Kippur or Kol Nidre, and it is customary for those who wear the tallitto wear it throughout Yom Kippur, for all prayer services, including Kol Nidrei.
‘A Tallit Poem’ by the late Israeli poet Yehuda Amichai depicts some of the symbolism, feelings and emotions captured by memories of the tallit:
Anyone who puts on a tallit when young
will never forget:
taking it out of the soft velvet bag,
opening the folded shawl,
spreading it out,
kissing the length of the neckband
(embroidered
or trimmed in gold).
Then
swinging it in a great swoop
overhead
like a sky,
a wedding canopy,
a parachute.
And then winding it
around your head
as in hide-and-seek,
then wrapping
your whole body in it, close and slow,
snuggling into it like the cocoon
of a butterfly,
then opening would-be wings to fly.
And why is the tallit striped
and not checkered black and white
like a chessboard?
Because squares are finite
and hopeless.
Stripes come from infinity
and to infinity they go
like
airport runways
where angels land and take off.
Whoever has put on a tallit
will never forget.
When stepping out of a swimming pool
or the sea,
wrapping yourself in a large towel,
and spreading it out again
over your head,
then you snuggle back into it
close and slow,
still shivering a little,
then you laugh
then you say a blessing.
The prayer Vidui Zuta, also known as the Short Confession or the Ashamnu, is recited during the High Holy Days, particularly on Yom Kippur, when it is recited ten times. It is a familiar acrostic in which the first letter of each sin named corresponds to a letter of the Hebrew alphabet, with the final letter of the alphabet repeated, for a total of 23 sins. Many people, as they confess these sins, beat their chests with their hands to signify the admission of their misdeeds.
But the new Machzor includes an interpretation of Vidui Zuta, with an English-language acrostic from A to Z:
We have abused and betrayed. We were cruel.
We have destroyed and embittered other people’s lives.
We were false to ourselves.
We have gossiped about others and hated them.
We have insulted and jeered. We have killed. We have lied.
We have misled others and neglected them.
We were obstinate. We have perverted and quarrelled.
We have robbed and stolen.
We have transgressed through unkindness.
We have been both violent and weak.
We have been xenophobic.
We have yielded to wrong desires, our zeal was misplaced.
Shabbat Shalom, שבת שלום
A selection of tallitot or prayer shawls in the Synagogue Kadoorie Mekor Haim in Porto (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Patrick Comerford
Thursday was a horrific day for the Jewish community in Britain, Britain at large, and the Jewish community throughout the world, with the frightening attack on Heaton Park synagogue in Manchester. May the memories of those who were killed be a blessing and may those who were injured recover quickly and fully.
Feelings of safety within the Jewish community in the UK have declined sharply in the last couple of years, according to the largest survey of British Jews since 7 October 2023. The Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood said this morning that antisemitism has been rising in the UK.
The local synagogue in Milton Keynes has had several telephone calls and messages since the attack from local people wanting to express solidarity with the Jewish community, trying to reassure Jewish people that they are not alone. It was reassuring that the police were at the synagogue in Milton Keynes yesterday morning even before anyone there had heard of the attack in Manchester, and they continued to do regular patrols by the synagogue throughout the day.
Yom Kippur or the Day of Atonement is the most solemn day in the Jewish calendar, the climax of the Ten Days of Awe or the High Holy Days. I spent some of these days, including Rosh HaShanah, the Jewish New Year Day, and Kol Nidrei, the beginning of Yom Kippur, in my local synagogue in Milton Keynes, where the services were led by Rabbi Roberta Harris-Eckstein, who used the new Reform Judaism High Holy Days Machzor.
The revised and modernised prayer book has been 10 years in the making. It was produced by an editorial group of clergy – including Rabbi Mark Goldsmit, who chaired the group, and the joint editors Rabbi Paul Freedman and Rabbi Professor Jonathan Magonet – along with inputs from rabbinic and cantorial colleagues and local congregations.
As a companion to the renewed Reform Siddur for daily and Shabbat use, the High Holy Days Machzor incorporates changes and improvements that were needed to reflect today’s Progressive Jewish society and those of the next 30 to 40 years. These changes and improvement include gender neutral language, reflected in the introduction of the Matriarchs: Sarah, Rebecca, Rachel and Leah were missing on the High Holy Day. One key aim was to demystify the principles, customs and practices of the Yamim Noraim or Days of Awe.
In many places in this two-volume resource, the usual liturgy on the right-hand page is creatively complemented by readings and poetry in a blue typeface on the facing page, either for congregational use or to give permission to the individual to ‘wander’ and find new meaning during a service.
The hope is that the new Machzor allows everyone to take part in Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur in a way that addresses their personal needs and reflects today’s Reform and Progressive values and place in Jewish tradition.
The Torah scrolls in Milton Keynes and District Reform Synagogue (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
The services for Rosh haShanah, Kol Nidrei and Yom Kippur in Milton Keynes this week and last were led by Rabbi Roberta Harris-Eckstein. She has been part-time rabbi of Eastbourne Liberal Jewish Community and has taught the Hebrew Bible, History of the Ancient Near East and Biblical History, as well as courses in Judaism for non-Jews.
The Torah readings for Rosh haShanah are a tapestry of stories about children – the rescue of Ishmael, the birth of Isaac, and the birth of Samuel. One engaging reading introduced by Rabbi Roberta is an adaptation of the poem ‘A Prayer for the Children’ by Ina J Hughes:
We pray for the children who put chocolate fingers on everything,
who love to be tickled,
who stomp in puddles and ruin their new pants,
who eat candy before supper,
and who can never find their shoes in the morning.
And we also pray for those who stare at photographers from behind barbed wire,
who never bound down the street in a new pair of shoes,
who never played ‘one potato, two potatoes’,
and who are born in places where we would not be caught dead in and they will be.
We pray for the children who give us sticky kisses and fistfuls of dandelions,
who sleep with their dog and bury their goldfish,
who hug us so tightly and who forget their lunch money,
who squeeze toothpaste all over the sink,
who watch their fathers shave,
and who slurp their soup.
And we also pray for those who will never get dessert,
who have no favourite blanket to drag behind them,
who watch their fathers suffer,
who cannot find any bread to steal,
who do not have rooms to clean up,
whose pictures are always on milk cartons instead of dressers,
and whose monsters are real.
We pray for the children who spend their allowance before Tuesday,
who pick at their food,
who love ghost stories,
who shove dirty clothes under the bed,
who never rinse out the bathtub,
who love visits from the Tooth Fairy, even when they find out who it really is,
who do not like to be kissed or hugged in front of the school bus,
and who squirm during services.
And we pray for those children
whose nightmares occur in the daytime,
who will eat anything,
who have never seen a dentist,
who are not spoiled by anybody,
who go to bed hungry and wake up hungry,
who live and move and have no address.
We pray for the children who like to be carried
and for those children who have to be carried,
for those who give up on and for those who never give up;
for those who will grab the hand of anyone kind enough to offer it
and for those who will find no hand to grab.
For all these children, Adonai, we pray today,
for they are all so precious. Amen.
‘We pray for the children … who live and move and have no address’ (Ina J Hughes) … street art in Waterford (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
As I pored over the new Machzor in moments of silence and reflection, I was taken by many of the resources it offers ‘All Our Grudges’ by Trisha Arlin is described as an ‘Alternative Kol Nidrei’:
All grudges, resentments, and vows of vengeance and bitterness,
All undying hatreds or annoyances that we may hold onto
Or talk endlessly about, boring our friends,
Or lose sleep obsessing over
Or write bad poetry about
Or bring up at family dinners to the consternation of all present;
From the previous Day of Atonement until this Day of Atonement
For the benefit of our mental health
And the peace of mind of all who surround us;
Regarding all of this that we have refused to let go,
Despite the fact that they are long past
Or pointless
Or one-sided
Or ridiculous
Or destructive of the innocent
Or hurting ourselves more than anyone else;
Regarding all of them, these intrusions on the Holy Wholeness,
we repudiate them.
All of them, we let them go,
Give up
Wave away
Acknowledge as stupid
Declare null and void
Because we are done.
Our grudges are no longer our grudges,
Our silent resentments are no longer silent,
Our eternal vows of vengeance are no more.
The entire community acknowledges and takes action
So that everyone we have been angry at is forgiven,
Every hurt we did not speak about will be dealt with,
Every relative will be loved for who they are rather than who they are not,
Every change in the world that needs to be made will be made rather than contemplated.
Holy Wholeness!
We need help to step back into connection with the One.
We look for the compassion and mercy
That is always there
If we but pay attention.
‘Anyone who puts on a tallit when young will never forget’ (Yehuda Amichai)
Wearing a tallit at the evening service is a tradition associated with Kol Nidrei. Normally, a tallitis worn at services during daylight hours, and tradition says the tallitis not worn at night. The exception to this rule is the night of Yom Kippur or Kol Nidre, and it is customary for those who wear the tallitto wear it throughout Yom Kippur, for all prayer services, including Kol Nidrei.
‘A Tallit Poem’ by the late Israeli poet Yehuda Amichai depicts some of the symbolism, feelings and emotions captured by memories of the tallit:
Anyone who puts on a tallit when young
will never forget:
taking it out of the soft velvet bag,
opening the folded shawl,
spreading it out,
kissing the length of the neckband
(embroidered
or trimmed in gold).
Then
swinging it in a great swoop
overhead
like a sky,
a wedding canopy,
a parachute.
And then winding it
around your head
as in hide-and-seek,
then wrapping
your whole body in it, close and slow,
snuggling into it like the cocoon
of a butterfly,
then opening would-be wings to fly.
And why is the tallit striped
and not checkered black and white
like a chessboard?
Because squares are finite
and hopeless.
Stripes come from infinity
and to infinity they go
like
airport runways
where angels land and take off.
Whoever has put on a tallit
will never forget.
When stepping out of a swimming pool
or the sea,
wrapping yourself in a large towel,
and spreading it out again
over your head,
then you snuggle back into it
close and slow,
still shivering a little,
then you laugh
then you say a blessing.
The prayer Vidui Zuta, also known as the Short Confession or the Ashamnu, is recited during the High Holy Days, particularly on Yom Kippur, when it is recited ten times. It is a familiar acrostic in which the first letter of each sin named corresponds to a letter of the Hebrew alphabet, with the final letter of the alphabet repeated, for a total of 23 sins. Many people, as they confess these sins, beat their chests with their hands to signify the admission of their misdeeds.
But the new Machzor includes an interpretation of Vidui Zuta, with an English-language acrostic from A to Z:
We have abused and betrayed. We were cruel.
We have destroyed and embittered other people’s lives.
We were false to ourselves.
We have gossiped about others and hated them.
We have insulted and jeered. We have killed. We have lied.
We have misled others and neglected them.
We were obstinate. We have perverted and quarrelled.
We have robbed and stolen.
We have transgressed through unkindness.
We have been both violent and weak.
We have been xenophobic.
We have yielded to wrong desires, our zeal was misplaced.
Shabbat Shalom, שבת שלום
A selection of tallitot or prayer shawls in the Synagogue Kadoorie Mekor Haim in Porto (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Daily prayer in Ordinary Time 2025:
144, Friday 3 October 2025
‘Whoever listens to you listens to me, and whoever rejects you rejects me’ (Luke 10: 16) … listening ears in street art on Tottenham Court Road, London (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
Patrick Comerford
We are continuing in Ordinary Time in the Church Calendar, and the week began with the Fifteenth Sunday after Trinity (Trinity XV, 28 September). Today, the calendar of the Church of England in Common Worship remembers George Bell (1881-1958), Bishop of Chichester, Ecumenist, Peacemaker (3 October).
I may have a lengthy return journey to Heathrow Airport later today. The choir of Saint Mary and Saint Giles Church begins a new term later this evening, with rehearsals in Stony Stratford. But, before today begins, I am taking some quiet time this morning to give thanks, and for reflection, prayer and reading in these ways:
1, today’s Gospel reading;
2, a reflection on the Gospel reading;
3, a prayer from the USPG prayer diary;
4, the Collects and Post-Communion prayer of the day.
‘They would have repented long ago, sitting in sackcloth and ashes' (Luke 10: 13)’ … could the disciples have expected the same rejection in Galilean towns and in Phoenician towns? (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Luke 10: 13-16 (NRSVA):
[Jesus said:] 13 ‘Woe to you, Chorazin! Woe to you, Bethsaida! For if the deeds of power done in you had been done in Tyre and Sidon, they would have repented long ago, sitting in sackcloth and ashes. 14 But at the judgement it will be more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon than for you. 15 And you, Capernaum,
will you be exalted to heaven?
No, you will be brought down to Hades.
16 ‘Whoever listens to you listens to me, and whoever rejects you rejects me, and whoever rejects me rejects the one who sent me.’
‘Whoever listens to you listens to me, and whoever rejects you rejects me’ (Luke 10: 16) … the Ear of Dionysius, near Syracuse in Sicily, where legend says the tyrant Dionysius I eavesdropped on prisoners (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Today’s Reflections:
We have been reading in Saint Luke’s Gospel this week how Jesus set his face to go to Jerusalem, and a Samaritan village had refused to welcome his messengers (Luke 9: 51-62). But Christ rebuked James and John for their response to this rejection, and he then sent out 70 (or 72) disciples on a mission of healing and proclaiming the coming of the Kingdom of God.
In this morning’s readings, Christ tells the Seventy to expect but not to be dejected when they meet hostility, and to leave rejection to God’s own judgment and God’s own time.
The term ‘woe’ (Greek: ου̉̀αὶ, ouai) is often used in prophetic literature to express divine displeasure and impending judgment, and it appears frequently in prophetic writings, such as Isaiah, Jeremiah, and in Christ’s teachings.
Could the disciples could have expected to face rejection in these familiar Galilean town or even similar rejections in the Phoenician towns of Tyre and Sidon?
Chorazin was about 3 km (two miles) north of the Sea of Galilee, and archaeological excavations suggests the small town had a thriving Jewish community. Bethsaida, on the north-east shore of the Sea of Galilee, was the hometown of apostles Peter, Andrew and Philip, and the town where Jesus healed a blind man (Mark 8: 22-26). Capernaum is often called Jesus’ own city (Matthew 9: 1), it served as the centre for his Galilean ministry, and he taught and healed in the synagogue.
Tyre and Sidon were ancient Phoenician coastal cities, known for their wealth and maritime trade. Prophets often denounced them for their pride and wickedness (Ezekiel 26-28, Isaiah 23). Sodom was infamous for its wickedness and destroyed by God in the time of Abraham (Genesis 19), and became a byword for divine judgment and extreme sinfulness among Jews and Christians.
But Jesus and the disciples often retreated to Tyre and Sidon, the Syrophoenician woman in Tyre begged for healing for her daughter (Matthew 15: 21-28; Mark 7: 24-37), and the deaf man was healed in Sidon (Mark 7: 31-36).
The woes serve as both a lament and as a warning, expressing sorrow over the cities’ current state and educating those who are listening about the future consequences of such a state.
They are a challenge too to think of how the very threats we face in life are not always the ones we fear, and those who offer us comfort and support in life may be those we least expect to offer it.
‘Lord God, as we reflect on the history of the Council of Nicaea, renew us afresh with the beautiful truths of who you are’ (USPG Prayer Diary) … ‘Receiving Nicaea’ is a two-day conference at Pusey House, Oxford, on 12-13 November 2025
Today’s Prayers (Friday 3 October 2025):
The theme this week (28 September to 4 October) in Pray with the World Church, the prayer diary of the Anglican mission agency USPG (United Society Partners in the Gospel), is ‘One Faith: Many Voices’ (pp 42-43). This theme was introduced on Sunday with Reflections from Rachel Weller, Communications Officer, USPG.
The USPG Prayer Diary today (Friday 3 October 2025) invites us to pray:
Lord God, as we reflect on the history of the Council of Nicaea, renew us afresh with the beautiful truths of who you are.
The Collect:
God, who in generous mercy sent the Holy Spirit
upon your Church in the burning fire of your love:
grant that your people may be fervent
in the fellowship of the gospel
that, always abiding in you,
they may be found steadfast in faith and active in service;
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:
Keep, O Lord, your Church, with your perpetual mercy;
and, because without you our human frailty cannot but fall,
keep us ever by your help from all things hurtful,
and lead us to all things profitable to our salvation;
through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Additional Collect:
Lord God,
defend your Church from all false teaching
and give to your people knowledge of your truth,
that we may enjoy eternal life
in Jesus Christ our Lord.
Yesterday’s Reflections
Continued Tomorrow
The choir of Saint Mary and Saint Giles Church resumes rehearsals this evening (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
Patrick Comerford
We are continuing in Ordinary Time in the Church Calendar, and the week began with the Fifteenth Sunday after Trinity (Trinity XV, 28 September). Today, the calendar of the Church of England in Common Worship remembers George Bell (1881-1958), Bishop of Chichester, Ecumenist, Peacemaker (3 October).
I may have a lengthy return journey to Heathrow Airport later today. The choir of Saint Mary and Saint Giles Church begins a new term later this evening, with rehearsals in Stony Stratford. But, before today begins, I am taking some quiet time this morning to give thanks, and for reflection, prayer and reading in these ways:
1, today’s Gospel reading;
2, a reflection on the Gospel reading;
3, a prayer from the USPG prayer diary;
4, the Collects and Post-Communion prayer of the day.
‘They would have repented long ago, sitting in sackcloth and ashes' (Luke 10: 13)’ … could the disciples have expected the same rejection in Galilean towns and in Phoenician towns? (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Luke 10: 13-16 (NRSVA):
[Jesus said:] 13 ‘Woe to you, Chorazin! Woe to you, Bethsaida! For if the deeds of power done in you had been done in Tyre and Sidon, they would have repented long ago, sitting in sackcloth and ashes. 14 But at the judgement it will be more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon than for you. 15 And you, Capernaum,
will you be exalted to heaven?
No, you will be brought down to Hades.
16 ‘Whoever listens to you listens to me, and whoever rejects you rejects me, and whoever rejects me rejects the one who sent me.’
‘Whoever listens to you listens to me, and whoever rejects you rejects me’ (Luke 10: 16) … the Ear of Dionysius, near Syracuse in Sicily, where legend says the tyrant Dionysius I eavesdropped on prisoners (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Today’s Reflections:
We have been reading in Saint Luke’s Gospel this week how Jesus set his face to go to Jerusalem, and a Samaritan village had refused to welcome his messengers (Luke 9: 51-62). But Christ rebuked James and John for their response to this rejection, and he then sent out 70 (or 72) disciples on a mission of healing and proclaiming the coming of the Kingdom of God.
In this morning’s readings, Christ tells the Seventy to expect but not to be dejected when they meet hostility, and to leave rejection to God’s own judgment and God’s own time.
The term ‘woe’ (Greek: ου̉̀αὶ, ouai) is often used in prophetic literature to express divine displeasure and impending judgment, and it appears frequently in prophetic writings, such as Isaiah, Jeremiah, and in Christ’s teachings.
Could the disciples could have expected to face rejection in these familiar Galilean town or even similar rejections in the Phoenician towns of Tyre and Sidon?
Chorazin was about 3 km (two miles) north of the Sea of Galilee, and archaeological excavations suggests the small town had a thriving Jewish community. Bethsaida, on the north-east shore of the Sea of Galilee, was the hometown of apostles Peter, Andrew and Philip, and the town where Jesus healed a blind man (Mark 8: 22-26). Capernaum is often called Jesus’ own city (Matthew 9: 1), it served as the centre for his Galilean ministry, and he taught and healed in the synagogue.
Tyre and Sidon were ancient Phoenician coastal cities, known for their wealth and maritime trade. Prophets often denounced them for their pride and wickedness (Ezekiel 26-28, Isaiah 23). Sodom was infamous for its wickedness and destroyed by God in the time of Abraham (Genesis 19), and became a byword for divine judgment and extreme sinfulness among Jews and Christians.
But Jesus and the disciples often retreated to Tyre and Sidon, the Syrophoenician woman in Tyre begged for healing for her daughter (Matthew 15: 21-28; Mark 7: 24-37), and the deaf man was healed in Sidon (Mark 7: 31-36).
The woes serve as both a lament and as a warning, expressing sorrow over the cities’ current state and educating those who are listening about the future consequences of such a state.
They are a challenge too to think of how the very threats we face in life are not always the ones we fear, and those who offer us comfort and support in life may be those we least expect to offer it.
‘Lord God, as we reflect on the history of the Council of Nicaea, renew us afresh with the beautiful truths of who you are’ (USPG Prayer Diary) … ‘Receiving Nicaea’ is a two-day conference at Pusey House, Oxford, on 12-13 November 2025
Today’s Prayers (Friday 3 October 2025):
The theme this week (28 September to 4 October) in Pray with the World Church, the prayer diary of the Anglican mission agency USPG (United Society Partners in the Gospel), is ‘One Faith: Many Voices’ (pp 42-43). This theme was introduced on Sunday with Reflections from Rachel Weller, Communications Officer, USPG.
The USPG Prayer Diary today (Friday 3 October 2025) invites us to pray:
Lord God, as we reflect on the history of the Council of Nicaea, renew us afresh with the beautiful truths of who you are.
The Collect:
God, who in generous mercy sent the Holy Spirit
upon your Church in the burning fire of your love:
grant that your people may be fervent
in the fellowship of the gospel
that, always abiding in you,
they may be found steadfast in faith and active in service;
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:
Keep, O Lord, your Church, with your perpetual mercy;
and, because without you our human frailty cannot but fall,
keep us ever by your help from all things hurtful,
and lead us to all things profitable to our salvation;
through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Additional Collect:
Lord God,
defend your Church from all false teaching
and give to your people knowledge of your truth,
that we may enjoy eternal life
in Jesus Christ our Lord.
Yesterday’s Reflections
Continued Tomorrow
The choir of Saint Mary and Saint Giles Church resumes rehearsals this evening (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
02 October 2025
The Church of the Immaculate
Conception in Bicester was
designed by the modern church
architect Desmond Williams
The Church of the Immaculate Conception in Bicester is a fine example of the work of the church architect Desmond Williams (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
Patrick Comerford
I have been in Bicester in Oxfordshire a few time in recent weeks. I often pass through the market town on my way to and from Oxford, but these were my first times to see its streets, architecture and church buildings, including Saint Edburg’s, the Church of England parish church, which dates back to a Saxon foundation.
The Church of the Immaculate Conception, the Roman Catholic parish church in Bicester, was built in the 1960s, and is a fine example of the work of the church architect Desmond Williams. He is one of the foremost interpreters of the Liturgical Movement, known for his striking modernist church buildings in the late 1950s and early 1960s.
The church, close to where Causeway meets Church Street and almost opposite Saint Edburg’s Church, also has a large, powerful statue of the Virgin Mary on the façade, the work of the sculptor Mark Delf of Stafford.
The Church of the Immaculate Conception was built in the 1960s at the time of great liturgical reform and change (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
There are few records of Roman Catholicism in Bicester until the 19th century, and its revival in Bicester has been attributed to the Hon William Henry John North (1836-1932), of Wroxton Abbey, near Banbury. North was the Master of the Bicester Hunt, and he made a concerted effort in 1869 to revive Roman Catholicism in Bicester.
North was a great-grandson of Lord North, George III’s Prime Minister during the American War of Independence, and he eventually became the 11th Lord North, through his mother’s inheritance. But he had immediate Irish ancestry on his father’s side of the family, and was descended from a week-known Doyle family in Co Kilkenny and Co Wexford, while his wife was directly related to a branch of the Comerford family in Ireland.
The future Lord North was born William Henry John Doyle in 1836. His father was Colonel John Doyle (1804-1894), MP for Oxfordshire (1852-1885), and his paternal grandfather was General Sir Charles William Doyle (1770-1842) from Bramblestown, Co Kilkenny.
Colonel John Doyle married Lady Susan North (1802-1884) in 1835. She was a daughter of George North (1757-1802), 3rd Earl of Guilford, and a granddaughter of the Prime Minister Lord North. She was also a niece of Frederick North (1766-1827), 5th Earl of Guilford, who secretly converted to Greek Orthodoxy in Corfu in 1791, and in 1824 established the Ionian Academy in Corfu, the first university in modern Greece.
When the fifth earl died in 1827, his estates, including Wroxton Abbey in Oxfordshire, devolved on Lady Susan North as his niece. She married John Doyle in 1835, and to perpetuate her family name and line, John Doyle, Lady Susan Doyle, and their children changed their name from Doyle to North in 1838. Three years later, one of her family titles was called out of abeyance and she became a peer in her own right in 1841 as the 10th Baroness North.
The 19th century Roman Catholic revival in Bicester has been attributed to William Henry John North (1836-1932), born William Doyle and later 11th Lord North
Lady Susan’s son and heir, William Henry John North, married Frederica Cockerell on 12 January 1858. Frederica’s mother, Teresa (Newcomen) Cockerell, was descended from a well-known banking family in Dublin and she was a second cousin of the Revd Patrick Comerford Law (1797-1807), while Frederica’s grandfather, Thomas Gleadowe-Newcomen (1776-1825), 2nd Lord Newcomen, was a first cousin of the poet Mary (Comerford) Boddington (1776-1840) and of Belinda Comerford who married the Revd Francis Law (1768-1807).
North kept in touch with his paternal Irish roots as an aide-de-camp to his wife’s stepfather, Archibald Montgomerie (1812-1861), 13th Earl of Eglinton, when he was Lord Lieutenant of Ireland in 1858-1859.
To the surprise of their neighbours and family, Frederica and William North became Roman Catholics in 1867 and from then on, it is said, he divided his time between prayer, business and hunting – he was Master of the Bicester Hunt – and he encouraged the beginnings of the Roman Catholic parish in Bicester.
At North’s suggestion in 1869, Father Joseph Robson from Hethe, halfway between Bicester and Buckingham, celebrated Mass in the home of an Italian jeweller, Rocco Tenchio, whose wife took four children for catechism classes on Sunday afternoons.
The High Altar and sanctuary in the Church of the Immaculate Conception, Bicester (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
Saint Mary’s, the first Catholic chapel and school in Bicester, opened with North’s support in Piggy Lane in 1883. When North inherited his mother’s title and estates as the 11th Lord North a year later in 1884, he introduced Catholic tenants, hired Catholic domestic staff, and started a Catholic orphanage.
The Revd Dr Philip Sweeney, also from Hethe, acquired land in King’s End in 1882, a Catholic school and chapel were opened on 19 March 1883, and the first Mass was celebrated there on Easter Day 25 March 1883.
Religious orders returned to Bicester in the early 20th century. Eight Benedictine nuns who fled religious persecution in France, settled in ‘South View’ in 1904. They later moved to Priory House in Priory Lane, and when they left in 1920 their chapel become Bicester’s Catholic church. Another French group, the Sacred Heart Fathers, lived at ‘The Limes’, and they too returned to France in 1920.
During the years leading up to World War II, the Servite Fathers in Hethe and the Franciscans in Buckingham served Bicester’s Catholics and in 1931 Bicester was again served from Hethe with Father Ignatius McHugh.
Meanwhile, Lord North died in 1932 at the age of 96. His family was unable to bear the costs of maintaining Wroxton Abbey and its staff, the lease was surrendered to Trinity College Oxford and its contents, including its art and furnishings, were sold at auction.
Inside the Church of the Immaculate Conception, Bicester, facing the west end (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
Bicester became a separate Catholic parish in September 1943, and Father Stephen Webb SJ, then the parish priest of Hethe, became the first parish priest of Bicester.
In the post-war expansion of Bicester, Father Thomas Foynes started a new Catholic school off Queen’s Avenue in 1958, and introduced Presentation Sisters from the Diocese of Kildare and Leighlin as teachers. He also planned to build a new church beside the old school, but there were problems with buying the necessary land.
When the site occupied by Bonner’s Stables became available, it was bought, and works begun in 1961. The adjacent property, Henley House, became the new Presbytery.
The tower has a pyramidal roof with windows on all sides (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
The Church of the Immaculate Conception was designed by Desmond Williams & Associates. Desmond Williams specialised in church architecture and was influenced by the Liturgical Movement and Vatican II. He is known for his striking modernist church buildings in the late 1950s and early 1960s.
He first worked with Arthur Facebrother, before setting up his own practice, Desmond Williams and Associates, in Manchester in the early 1960s. This practice amalgamated in 1968 with W and JB Ellis to become Ellis Williams Architects.
Williams is regarded as one of the key British architects in the Roman Catholic Liturgical Movement who used contemporary design and construction methods to deliver the liturgical changes introduced by Vatican II. Other architects who shared this approach included Gillespie, Kidd & Coia, Gerard Goalen, Francis Pollen and Austin Winkley.
A number of buildings by Desmond Williams have been listed, including four churches: Saint Mary, Dunstable (1964), where his ceiling was inspired by King’s College Chapel, Cambridge; Saint Augustine, Manchester (1966-1968); Saint Dunstan, Birmingham (1966-1968); and Saint Michael, Penn, Wolverhampton (1967-1968).
Historic England describes Williams as ‘an architect notable for his innovative church buildings at a time of great change in ecclesiastical architecture.’ One of his guiding principles was being to bring as many of the congregation near the altar.
His church in Bicester was also deliberately designed to be deferential to its historic context, in particular to Saint Edburg’s Church, 100 metres away on the other side of the street and more than 1,000 years older.
Internally the tower is open to the roof line, creating a lantern effect of natural light over the sanctuary (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
The church is designed in a modern Gothic style, more overtly expressed internally. It is built of load-bearing brick of a pale colour chosen to blend with the Cotswold stone of the surrounding buildings. There is some sparing use of stone for the dressings and the steeply pitched roofs are clad with interlocking clay pantiles.
It is T-shaped, and with a three-bay nave, narrow passage aisles, a baptistry that is now the Lady Chapel, confessionals and sacristies giving, a west-end narthex, a square-ended sanctuary with a raised tower crossing and shallow projecting transepts-cum-side chapels.
The tower has a pyramidal roof with windows on all sides. Internally the tower is open to the roof line, creating a lantern effect of natural light over the sanctuary.
The most striking feature inside the church is the full height transverse arches – made entirely of rustic brick – that hold up the roof. This design of arch was also used in many Arts and Crafts churches in the late 19th century and mimics the mediaeval timber cruck structures of the earliest timber churches.
At their bases, the arches are pierced with small circulatory openings that harken back to the side aisles of mediaeval churches. The walls between these imposing arches are plastered and plain and incorporate simple tall lancet-style windows that flood the nave with natural light. There is a black and white chequerboard floor throughout. Plain oak benches complete the effect of a simply organised but reverential space.
At the west end, the gallery over the narthex is placed in a pointed arched recess. On the west wall, on the north side, the foundation stone has a Latin inscription.
The 11 ft bronze statue above the main entrance is by Mark Delf of Stafford and was put in placee in 1993 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
The front elevation is plain, the brickwork relieved only by the segmental arched entrance, where the doors have been renewed, and a large bronze statue of the Immaculate Conception.
The 11 ft bronze statue above the main entrance is by Mark Delf of Stafford, and was put in place on 20 August 1993. The statue weighs about half a ton and was lifted into position by crane. It replaces a small statue of Our Lady of Lourdes that stood in a niche above the front door. The new statue was paid for from a bequest from a former parishioner, Margaret McCann.
The church was opened and blessed by Archbishop Francis Grimshaw of Birmingham on 23 March 1963. Since then, it has been altered on a number of occasions. The most recently alterations involved the introduction of the present altar, which came from Saint Chad’s Cathedral, Birmingham, along with new stone seating, ambo and font.
The painted Crucifixion in Primitive Italian style by the Prior of Farnborough Abbey has replaced the earlier reredos and crucifix (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
The painted Crucifixion in Primitive Italian style by the Prior of Farnborough Abbey, was installed in place of the former reredos and crucifix.
New furnishings in the north chapel include a new tabernacle and above this, set within an arch, an unusual stone carved tympanum of folded arms carrying wheat sheaves with vines, symbolising the Eucharist, and stained glass windows by Jane Campbell ca 2000.
The 1960s font, with a veined black marble bowl on a stone base, was moved to the narthex, where it is now used as a large holy water stoup. Statues in the nave include the Sacred Heart, a signed work by Ferdinand Stuflesser of Ortisei in Italy.
These alterations were completed in time for the solemn consecration of the church by Archbishop Vincent Nichols of Birmingham on 10 July 2000.
The Foynes Memorial Garden was laid out in 2010 on the south side of the church as a columbarium, designed by Robert James Landscapes.
The modern parish and community centre behind the church is known as the Pope John Paul II Centre. Archbishop Bernard Longley of Birmingham laid the foundation stone for the centre in 2010 and it was opened by Princess Anne in 2011.
The north chapel, once the Baptistry, is now the Lady Chapel (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
• Father Craig Davies has been the parish priest of the Church of the Immaculate Conception, Bicester, since August 2024, and the parish deacon is the Revd Michael Panejko. Sunday Masses are: 6 pm (Saturday Vigil) and 9 am and 11 am.
The Pope John Paul II Centre behind the church was opened in 2011 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
Patrick Comerford
I have been in Bicester in Oxfordshire a few time in recent weeks. I often pass through the market town on my way to and from Oxford, but these were my first times to see its streets, architecture and church buildings, including Saint Edburg’s, the Church of England parish church, which dates back to a Saxon foundation.
The Church of the Immaculate Conception, the Roman Catholic parish church in Bicester, was built in the 1960s, and is a fine example of the work of the church architect Desmond Williams. He is one of the foremost interpreters of the Liturgical Movement, known for his striking modernist church buildings in the late 1950s and early 1960s.
The church, close to where Causeway meets Church Street and almost opposite Saint Edburg’s Church, also has a large, powerful statue of the Virgin Mary on the façade, the work of the sculptor Mark Delf of Stafford.
The Church of the Immaculate Conception was built in the 1960s at the time of great liturgical reform and change (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
There are few records of Roman Catholicism in Bicester until the 19th century, and its revival in Bicester has been attributed to the Hon William Henry John North (1836-1932), of Wroxton Abbey, near Banbury. North was the Master of the Bicester Hunt, and he made a concerted effort in 1869 to revive Roman Catholicism in Bicester.
North was a great-grandson of Lord North, George III’s Prime Minister during the American War of Independence, and he eventually became the 11th Lord North, through his mother’s inheritance. But he had immediate Irish ancestry on his father’s side of the family, and was descended from a week-known Doyle family in Co Kilkenny and Co Wexford, while his wife was directly related to a branch of the Comerford family in Ireland.
The future Lord North was born William Henry John Doyle in 1836. His father was Colonel John Doyle (1804-1894), MP for Oxfordshire (1852-1885), and his paternal grandfather was General Sir Charles William Doyle (1770-1842) from Bramblestown, Co Kilkenny.
Colonel John Doyle married Lady Susan North (1802-1884) in 1835. She was a daughter of George North (1757-1802), 3rd Earl of Guilford, and a granddaughter of the Prime Minister Lord North. She was also a niece of Frederick North (1766-1827), 5th Earl of Guilford, who secretly converted to Greek Orthodoxy in Corfu in 1791, and in 1824 established the Ionian Academy in Corfu, the first university in modern Greece.
When the fifth earl died in 1827, his estates, including Wroxton Abbey in Oxfordshire, devolved on Lady Susan North as his niece. She married John Doyle in 1835, and to perpetuate her family name and line, John Doyle, Lady Susan Doyle, and their children changed their name from Doyle to North in 1838. Three years later, one of her family titles was called out of abeyance and she became a peer in her own right in 1841 as the 10th Baroness North.
The 19th century Roman Catholic revival in Bicester has been attributed to William Henry John North (1836-1932), born William Doyle and later 11th Lord North
Lady Susan’s son and heir, William Henry John North, married Frederica Cockerell on 12 January 1858. Frederica’s mother, Teresa (Newcomen) Cockerell, was descended from a well-known banking family in Dublin and she was a second cousin of the Revd Patrick Comerford Law (1797-1807), while Frederica’s grandfather, Thomas Gleadowe-Newcomen (1776-1825), 2nd Lord Newcomen, was a first cousin of the poet Mary (Comerford) Boddington (1776-1840) and of Belinda Comerford who married the Revd Francis Law (1768-1807).
North kept in touch with his paternal Irish roots as an aide-de-camp to his wife’s stepfather, Archibald Montgomerie (1812-1861), 13th Earl of Eglinton, when he was Lord Lieutenant of Ireland in 1858-1859.
To the surprise of their neighbours and family, Frederica and William North became Roman Catholics in 1867 and from then on, it is said, he divided his time between prayer, business and hunting – he was Master of the Bicester Hunt – and he encouraged the beginnings of the Roman Catholic parish in Bicester.
At North’s suggestion in 1869, Father Joseph Robson from Hethe, halfway between Bicester and Buckingham, celebrated Mass in the home of an Italian jeweller, Rocco Tenchio, whose wife took four children for catechism classes on Sunday afternoons.
The High Altar and sanctuary in the Church of the Immaculate Conception, Bicester (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
Saint Mary’s, the first Catholic chapel and school in Bicester, opened with North’s support in Piggy Lane in 1883. When North inherited his mother’s title and estates as the 11th Lord North a year later in 1884, he introduced Catholic tenants, hired Catholic domestic staff, and started a Catholic orphanage.
The Revd Dr Philip Sweeney, also from Hethe, acquired land in King’s End in 1882, a Catholic school and chapel were opened on 19 March 1883, and the first Mass was celebrated there on Easter Day 25 March 1883.
Religious orders returned to Bicester in the early 20th century. Eight Benedictine nuns who fled religious persecution in France, settled in ‘South View’ in 1904. They later moved to Priory House in Priory Lane, and when they left in 1920 their chapel become Bicester’s Catholic church. Another French group, the Sacred Heart Fathers, lived at ‘The Limes’, and they too returned to France in 1920.
During the years leading up to World War II, the Servite Fathers in Hethe and the Franciscans in Buckingham served Bicester’s Catholics and in 1931 Bicester was again served from Hethe with Father Ignatius McHugh.
Meanwhile, Lord North died in 1932 at the age of 96. His family was unable to bear the costs of maintaining Wroxton Abbey and its staff, the lease was surrendered to Trinity College Oxford and its contents, including its art and furnishings, were sold at auction.
Inside the Church of the Immaculate Conception, Bicester, facing the west end (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
Bicester became a separate Catholic parish in September 1943, and Father Stephen Webb SJ, then the parish priest of Hethe, became the first parish priest of Bicester.
In the post-war expansion of Bicester, Father Thomas Foynes started a new Catholic school off Queen’s Avenue in 1958, and introduced Presentation Sisters from the Diocese of Kildare and Leighlin as teachers. He also planned to build a new church beside the old school, but there were problems with buying the necessary land.
When the site occupied by Bonner’s Stables became available, it was bought, and works begun in 1961. The adjacent property, Henley House, became the new Presbytery.
The tower has a pyramidal roof with windows on all sides (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
The Church of the Immaculate Conception was designed by Desmond Williams & Associates. Desmond Williams specialised in church architecture and was influenced by the Liturgical Movement and Vatican II. He is known for his striking modernist church buildings in the late 1950s and early 1960s.
He first worked with Arthur Facebrother, before setting up his own practice, Desmond Williams and Associates, in Manchester in the early 1960s. This practice amalgamated in 1968 with W and JB Ellis to become Ellis Williams Architects.
Williams is regarded as one of the key British architects in the Roman Catholic Liturgical Movement who used contemporary design and construction methods to deliver the liturgical changes introduced by Vatican II. Other architects who shared this approach included Gillespie, Kidd & Coia, Gerard Goalen, Francis Pollen and Austin Winkley.
A number of buildings by Desmond Williams have been listed, including four churches: Saint Mary, Dunstable (1964), where his ceiling was inspired by King’s College Chapel, Cambridge; Saint Augustine, Manchester (1966-1968); Saint Dunstan, Birmingham (1966-1968); and Saint Michael, Penn, Wolverhampton (1967-1968).
Historic England describes Williams as ‘an architect notable for his innovative church buildings at a time of great change in ecclesiastical architecture.’ One of his guiding principles was being to bring as many of the congregation near the altar.
His church in Bicester was also deliberately designed to be deferential to its historic context, in particular to Saint Edburg’s Church, 100 metres away on the other side of the street and more than 1,000 years older.
Internally the tower is open to the roof line, creating a lantern effect of natural light over the sanctuary (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
The church is designed in a modern Gothic style, more overtly expressed internally. It is built of load-bearing brick of a pale colour chosen to blend with the Cotswold stone of the surrounding buildings. There is some sparing use of stone for the dressings and the steeply pitched roofs are clad with interlocking clay pantiles.
It is T-shaped, and with a three-bay nave, narrow passage aisles, a baptistry that is now the Lady Chapel, confessionals and sacristies giving, a west-end narthex, a square-ended sanctuary with a raised tower crossing and shallow projecting transepts-cum-side chapels.
The tower has a pyramidal roof with windows on all sides. Internally the tower is open to the roof line, creating a lantern effect of natural light over the sanctuary.
The most striking feature inside the church is the full height transverse arches – made entirely of rustic brick – that hold up the roof. This design of arch was also used in many Arts and Crafts churches in the late 19th century and mimics the mediaeval timber cruck structures of the earliest timber churches.
At their bases, the arches are pierced with small circulatory openings that harken back to the side aisles of mediaeval churches. The walls between these imposing arches are plastered and plain and incorporate simple tall lancet-style windows that flood the nave with natural light. There is a black and white chequerboard floor throughout. Plain oak benches complete the effect of a simply organised but reverential space.
At the west end, the gallery over the narthex is placed in a pointed arched recess. On the west wall, on the north side, the foundation stone has a Latin inscription.
The 11 ft bronze statue above the main entrance is by Mark Delf of Stafford and was put in placee in 1993 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
The front elevation is plain, the brickwork relieved only by the segmental arched entrance, where the doors have been renewed, and a large bronze statue of the Immaculate Conception.
The 11 ft bronze statue above the main entrance is by Mark Delf of Stafford, and was put in place on 20 August 1993. The statue weighs about half a ton and was lifted into position by crane. It replaces a small statue of Our Lady of Lourdes that stood in a niche above the front door. The new statue was paid for from a bequest from a former parishioner, Margaret McCann.
The church was opened and blessed by Archbishop Francis Grimshaw of Birmingham on 23 March 1963. Since then, it has been altered on a number of occasions. The most recently alterations involved the introduction of the present altar, which came from Saint Chad’s Cathedral, Birmingham, along with new stone seating, ambo and font.
The painted Crucifixion in Primitive Italian style by the Prior of Farnborough Abbey has replaced the earlier reredos and crucifix (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
The painted Crucifixion in Primitive Italian style by the Prior of Farnborough Abbey, was installed in place of the former reredos and crucifix.
New furnishings in the north chapel include a new tabernacle and above this, set within an arch, an unusual stone carved tympanum of folded arms carrying wheat sheaves with vines, symbolising the Eucharist, and stained glass windows by Jane Campbell ca 2000.
The 1960s font, with a veined black marble bowl on a stone base, was moved to the narthex, where it is now used as a large holy water stoup. Statues in the nave include the Sacred Heart, a signed work by Ferdinand Stuflesser of Ortisei in Italy.
These alterations were completed in time for the solemn consecration of the church by Archbishop Vincent Nichols of Birmingham on 10 July 2000.
The Foynes Memorial Garden was laid out in 2010 on the south side of the church as a columbarium, designed by Robert James Landscapes.
The modern parish and community centre behind the church is known as the Pope John Paul II Centre. Archbishop Bernard Longley of Birmingham laid the foundation stone for the centre in 2010 and it was opened by Princess Anne in 2011.
The north chapel, once the Baptistry, is now the Lady Chapel (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
• Father Craig Davies has been the parish priest of the Church of the Immaculate Conception, Bicester, since August 2024, and the parish deacon is the Revd Michael Panejko. Sunday Masses are: 6 pm (Saturday Vigil) and 9 am and 11 am.
The Pope John Paul II Centre behind the church was opened in 2011 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
Daily prayer in Ordinary Time 2025:
143, Thursday 2 October 2025
‘After this the Lord appointed seventy others and sent them on ahead of him in pairs’ (Luke 10: 1) … 70 on a front door in Cambridge (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Patrick Comerford
We began a new month yesterday (1 October) and we are continuing in Ordinary Time in the Church Calendar. The week began with the Fifteenth Sunday after Trinity (Trinity XV, 28 September).
These are the Days of Awe, or the High Holy Days in the Jewish calendar. The Kol Nidre service was last night and today is Yom Kippur, the last of the Ten Days of Awe or High Holy Days, the Day of Atonement and the holiest and most solemn day for Jews. The fast of Yom Kippur, which began with Kol Nidre last night, continues today and concludes this evening (Thursday 2 October).
I am involved with an amateur dramatic group in Stony Stratford later this evening. But, before today begins, I am taking some quiet time this morning to give thanks, and for reflection, prayer and reading in these ways:
1, today’s Gospel reading;
2, a reflection on the Gospel reading;
3, a prayer from the USPG prayer diary;
4, the Collects and Post-Communion prayer of the day.
Tradition says the degrees of Jacob’s Ladder were 72 in number
Luke 10: 1-12 (NRSVA):
1 After this the Lord appointed seventy others and sent them on ahead of him in pairs to every town and place where he himself intended to go. 2 He said to them, ‘The harvest is plentiful, but the labourers are few; therefore ask the Lord of the harvest to send out labourers into his harvest. 3 Go on your way. See, I am sending you out like lambs into the midst of wolves. 4 Carry no purse, no bag, no sandals; and greet no one on the road. 5 Whatever house you enter, first say, “Peace to this house!” 6 And if anyone is there who shares in peace, your peace will rest on that person; but if not, it will return to you. 7 Remain in the same house, eating and drinking whatever they provide, for the labourer deserves to be paid. Do not move about from house to house. 8 Whenever you enter a town and its people welcome you, eat what is set before you; 9 cure the sick who are there, and say to them, “The kingdom of God has come near to you.” 10 But whenever you enter a town and they do not welcome you, go out into its streets and say, 11 “Even the dust of your town that clings to our feet, we wipe off in protest against you. Yet know this: the kingdom of God has come near.” 12 I tell you, on that day it will be more tolerable for Sodom than for that town.’
The Number 72 on a garden fence in the Coffee Hall estate in Milton Keynes (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Today’s Reflections:
The Gospel reading at the Eucharist today (Luke 10: 1-12) tells of the sending out of the 72, or the 70, depending on which translation we are reading and which manuscripts the translations give greater weight to. In the Eastern Christian traditions, they are known as the 70 or 72 apostles, while in Western Christianity they are usually described as disciples.
The number 70 may derive from the 70 nations in Genesis 10, but the number 72 may represent the 12 tribes, as in the significance of the number of translators of the Septuagint, the symbolism of three days (24 x 3), and understanding the meaning of 144 (12 x 12), to appear again in the 144,000 in the Book of Revelation.
In translating the Vulgate, Jerome selected the reading of 72. In modern translations, the number 72 is preferred in the NRSV, NIV, ESV and the New Catholic Bible, for example, but 70 figures in the NRSV Anglicised (NRSVA) and the Authorised or King James Version.
In number theory, 72 is the natural number after 71 and before 73, prime numbers. It is a pronic number, as it is the product of 8 and 9, it is the smallest Achilles number, as it is a powerful number that is not itself a power.
The number 72 is an abundant number. With exactly 12 positive divisors, including 12 (one of only two sublime numbers), 72 is also the twelfth member in the sequence of refactorable numbers. It has a Euler totient of 24, which makes it a highly totient number, as there are 17 solutions to the equation φ(x) = 72, more than any integer below 72. It is equal to the sum of its preceding smaller highly totient numbers, 24 and 48, and contains the first six highly totient numbers 1, 2, 4, 8, 12 and 24 as a subset of its proper divisors.
The number 144, or twice 72, is also highly totient, as is 576, the square of 24. While 17 different integers have a totient value of 72, the sum of Euler’s totient function φ(x) over the first 15 integers is 72. It also is a perfect indexed Harshad number in decimal (28th), as it is divisible by the sum of its digits (9).
In addition, 72 is the second multiple of 12, after 48, that is not a sum of twin primes. It is, however, the sum of four consecutive primes (13 + 17 + 19 + 23), as well as the sum of six consecutive primes (5 + 7 + 11 + 13 + 17 + 19). Also, 72 is the first number that can be expressed as the difference of the squares of primes in just two distinct ways: 112 − 72 = 192 − 172.
In science, 72 is the atomic number of hafnium, and in degrees Fahrenheit 72 is 22.22 Celsius and is considered to be room temperature.
Biblically, tradition says 72 is the number of languages spoken at the Tower of Babylon. The degrees of Jacob’s Ladder (Genesis 28:10-19) were 72 in number, according to the Zohar, a foundational work of Kabbalistic literature.
The conventional number of scholars involved in translating the Septuagint was 72, not 70, with six Hebrew scholars drawn from each of the 12 tribes. According to tradition, Ptolemy II Philadelphus sent 72 Hebrew scholars and translators from Jerusalem to Alexandria to translate the Tanakh from Biblical Hebrew into Koine Greek, for inclusion in his library.
According to Kabbalah, 72 is the number of names of God. In Kaballah, the Shem HaMephorash (שֵׁם הַמְּפֹרָשׁ) or ‘the explicit name’ of God is composed of 72 letters. The 72-fold name is derived from a reading of Exodus 14:19-21. Kabbalist legend says the 72-fold name was used by Moses to cross the Red Sea, and that it could grant later holy men the power to cast out demons, heal the sick, prevent natural disasters, and even kill enemies. This, of course, relates directly to the commission of the 72 in Saint Luke’s Gospel.
So, when I turned 72 last year, I wondered whether I had arrived at my prime – or, at least, between two prime numbers – perhaps I am best served at room temperature. I was then a powerful number, suited to translation, ready to be sent out.
I once stayed at the Tamworth Arms at 71-72 Lichfield Street, almost directly across the street from the Moat House, the former Comberford family home. where The choir of Saint Mary and Saint Giles Church, Stony Stratford, which resumes its rehearsals tomorrow evening, regularly adjourns after rehearsals to the Cock Hotel, which is at 72 High Street.
But what is there to look forward to after 70 or even 72?
When the long-serving Labour MP for Rochdale Sir Tony Lloyd died last year, the Guardian reported him as saying some years ago: ‘There’s this recognition that you only have a certain time left … I’m 70, and as such you think, “Well, I’m probably not going to be around in X years’ time, so use these years wisely. Use these days wisely.” That’s good advice for us all.’
Of course that’s good advice for us all. But surely, whether we are counting beyond 70 or 72, no matter how we translate or count numbers, there is more to look forward to than merely counting the X number of years ahead, to something that has more meaning than what is left of my mere temporal existence.
‘After this the Lord appointed seventy others and sent them on ahead of him in pairs’ (Luke10: 1) … No 70 Bridge Street, Cambridge (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Today’s Prayers (Thursday 2 October 2025):
The theme this week (28 September to 4 October) in Pray with the World Church, the prayer diary of the Anglican mission agency USPG (United Society Partners in the Gospel), is ‘One Faith: Many Voices’ (pp 42-43). This theme was introduced on Sunday with Reflections from Rachel Weller, Communications Officer, USPG.
The USPG Prayer Diary today (Thursday 2 October 2025) invites us to pray:
Gracious God, thank you for the presence of Christians in the Middle East who trust in the powerful work of your Holy Spirit.
The Collect:
God, who in generous mercy sent the Holy Spirit
upon your Church in the burning fire of your love:
grant that your people may be fervent
in the fellowship of the gospel
that, always abiding in you,
they may be found steadfast in faith and active in service;
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:
Keep, O Lord, your Church, with your perpetual mercy;
and, because without you our human frailty cannot but fall,
keep us ever by your help from all things hurtful,
and lead us to all things profitable to our salvation;
through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Additional Collect:
Lord God,
defend your Church from all false teaching
and give to your people knowledge of your truth,
that we may enjoy eternal life
in Jesus Christ our Lord.
Yesterday’s Reflections
Continued Tomorrow
The Cock Hotel at 72 High Street, Stony Stratford … the choir of Saint Mary and Saint Giles Church regularly adjourns there after rehearsals (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
Patrick Comerford
We began a new month yesterday (1 October) and we are continuing in Ordinary Time in the Church Calendar. The week began with the Fifteenth Sunday after Trinity (Trinity XV, 28 September).
These are the Days of Awe, or the High Holy Days in the Jewish calendar. The Kol Nidre service was last night and today is Yom Kippur, the last of the Ten Days of Awe or High Holy Days, the Day of Atonement and the holiest and most solemn day for Jews. The fast of Yom Kippur, which began with Kol Nidre last night, continues today and concludes this evening (Thursday 2 October).
I am involved with an amateur dramatic group in Stony Stratford later this evening. But, before today begins, I am taking some quiet time this morning to give thanks, and for reflection, prayer and reading in these ways:
1, today’s Gospel reading;
2, a reflection on the Gospel reading;
3, a prayer from the USPG prayer diary;
4, the Collects and Post-Communion prayer of the day.
Tradition says the degrees of Jacob’s Ladder were 72 in number
Luke 10: 1-12 (NRSVA):
1 After this the Lord appointed seventy others and sent them on ahead of him in pairs to every town and place where he himself intended to go. 2 He said to them, ‘The harvest is plentiful, but the labourers are few; therefore ask the Lord of the harvest to send out labourers into his harvest. 3 Go on your way. See, I am sending you out like lambs into the midst of wolves. 4 Carry no purse, no bag, no sandals; and greet no one on the road. 5 Whatever house you enter, first say, “Peace to this house!” 6 And if anyone is there who shares in peace, your peace will rest on that person; but if not, it will return to you. 7 Remain in the same house, eating and drinking whatever they provide, for the labourer deserves to be paid. Do not move about from house to house. 8 Whenever you enter a town and its people welcome you, eat what is set before you; 9 cure the sick who are there, and say to them, “The kingdom of God has come near to you.” 10 But whenever you enter a town and they do not welcome you, go out into its streets and say, 11 “Even the dust of your town that clings to our feet, we wipe off in protest against you. Yet know this: the kingdom of God has come near.” 12 I tell you, on that day it will be more tolerable for Sodom than for that town.’
The Number 72 on a garden fence in the Coffee Hall estate in Milton Keynes (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Today’s Reflections:
The Gospel reading at the Eucharist today (Luke 10: 1-12) tells of the sending out of the 72, or the 70, depending on which translation we are reading and which manuscripts the translations give greater weight to. In the Eastern Christian traditions, they are known as the 70 or 72 apostles, while in Western Christianity they are usually described as disciples.
The number 70 may derive from the 70 nations in Genesis 10, but the number 72 may represent the 12 tribes, as in the significance of the number of translators of the Septuagint, the symbolism of three days (24 x 3), and understanding the meaning of 144 (12 x 12), to appear again in the 144,000 in the Book of Revelation.
In translating the Vulgate, Jerome selected the reading of 72. In modern translations, the number 72 is preferred in the NRSV, NIV, ESV and the New Catholic Bible, for example, but 70 figures in the NRSV Anglicised (NRSVA) and the Authorised or King James Version.
In number theory, 72 is the natural number after 71 and before 73, prime numbers. It is a pronic number, as it is the product of 8 and 9, it is the smallest Achilles number, as it is a powerful number that is not itself a power.
The number 72 is an abundant number. With exactly 12 positive divisors, including 12 (one of only two sublime numbers), 72 is also the twelfth member in the sequence of refactorable numbers. It has a Euler totient of 24, which makes it a highly totient number, as there are 17 solutions to the equation φ(x) = 72, more than any integer below 72. It is equal to the sum of its preceding smaller highly totient numbers, 24 and 48, and contains the first six highly totient numbers 1, 2, 4, 8, 12 and 24 as a subset of its proper divisors.
The number 144, or twice 72, is also highly totient, as is 576, the square of 24. While 17 different integers have a totient value of 72, the sum of Euler’s totient function φ(x) over the first 15 integers is 72. It also is a perfect indexed Harshad number in decimal (28th), as it is divisible by the sum of its digits (9).
In addition, 72 is the second multiple of 12, after 48, that is not a sum of twin primes. It is, however, the sum of four consecutive primes (13 + 17 + 19 + 23), as well as the sum of six consecutive primes (5 + 7 + 11 + 13 + 17 + 19). Also, 72 is the first number that can be expressed as the difference of the squares of primes in just two distinct ways: 112 − 72 = 192 − 172.
In science, 72 is the atomic number of hafnium, and in degrees Fahrenheit 72 is 22.22 Celsius and is considered to be room temperature.
Biblically, tradition says 72 is the number of languages spoken at the Tower of Babylon. The degrees of Jacob’s Ladder (Genesis 28:10-19) were 72 in number, according to the Zohar, a foundational work of Kabbalistic literature.
The conventional number of scholars involved in translating the Septuagint was 72, not 70, with six Hebrew scholars drawn from each of the 12 tribes. According to tradition, Ptolemy II Philadelphus sent 72 Hebrew scholars and translators from Jerusalem to Alexandria to translate the Tanakh from Biblical Hebrew into Koine Greek, for inclusion in his library.
According to Kabbalah, 72 is the number of names of God. In Kaballah, the Shem HaMephorash (שֵׁם הַמְּפֹרָשׁ) or ‘the explicit name’ of God is composed of 72 letters. The 72-fold name is derived from a reading of Exodus 14:19-21. Kabbalist legend says the 72-fold name was used by Moses to cross the Red Sea, and that it could grant later holy men the power to cast out demons, heal the sick, prevent natural disasters, and even kill enemies. This, of course, relates directly to the commission of the 72 in Saint Luke’s Gospel.
So, when I turned 72 last year, I wondered whether I had arrived at my prime – or, at least, between two prime numbers – perhaps I am best served at room temperature. I was then a powerful number, suited to translation, ready to be sent out.
I once stayed at the Tamworth Arms at 71-72 Lichfield Street, almost directly across the street from the Moat House, the former Comberford family home. where The choir of Saint Mary and Saint Giles Church, Stony Stratford, which resumes its rehearsals tomorrow evening, regularly adjourns after rehearsals to the Cock Hotel, which is at 72 High Street.
But what is there to look forward to after 70 or even 72?
When the long-serving Labour MP for Rochdale Sir Tony Lloyd died last year, the Guardian reported him as saying some years ago: ‘There’s this recognition that you only have a certain time left … I’m 70, and as such you think, “Well, I’m probably not going to be around in X years’ time, so use these years wisely. Use these days wisely.” That’s good advice for us all.’
Of course that’s good advice for us all. But surely, whether we are counting beyond 70 or 72, no matter how we translate or count numbers, there is more to look forward to than merely counting the X number of years ahead, to something that has more meaning than what is left of my mere temporal existence.
‘After this the Lord appointed seventy others and sent them on ahead of him in pairs’ (Luke10: 1) … No 70 Bridge Street, Cambridge (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Today’s Prayers (Thursday 2 October 2025):
The theme this week (28 September to 4 October) in Pray with the World Church, the prayer diary of the Anglican mission agency USPG (United Society Partners in the Gospel), is ‘One Faith: Many Voices’ (pp 42-43). This theme was introduced on Sunday with Reflections from Rachel Weller, Communications Officer, USPG.
The USPG Prayer Diary today (Thursday 2 October 2025) invites us to pray:
Gracious God, thank you for the presence of Christians in the Middle East who trust in the powerful work of your Holy Spirit.
The Collect:
God, who in generous mercy sent the Holy Spirit
upon your Church in the burning fire of your love:
grant that your people may be fervent
in the fellowship of the gospel
that, always abiding in you,
they may be found steadfast in faith and active in service;
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:
Keep, O Lord, your Church, with your perpetual mercy;
and, because without you our human frailty cannot but fall,
keep us ever by your help from all things hurtful,
and lead us to all things profitable to our salvation;
through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Additional Collect:
Lord God,
defend your Church from all false teaching
and give to your people knowledge of your truth,
that we may enjoy eternal life
in Jesus Christ our Lord.
Yesterday’s Reflections
Continued Tomorrow
The Cock Hotel at 72 High Street, Stony Stratford … the choir of Saint Mary and Saint Giles Church regularly adjourns there after rehearsals (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
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