‘Water into Wine’ (1985), Bishop Stephen Verney’s commentary on Saint John’s Gospel, drawing on his scholarly knowledge of Greek and insights from his experiences with the resistance in Crete
Patrick Comerford
When I was writing about the sundial at Dial House on Bristle Hill in Buckingham on Thursday (29 January 2026), I noted that the Latin inscription had been provided by Bishop Stephen Verney (1919-2009), who died only a year after the dial was installed by the late Anthony Randall (1933-2021).
Bishop Stephen has been described as ‘brave, open-thinking and creative’ with a ‘strong romantic side’. He had been a conscientious objector during World War II, but later became an undercover agent in occupied Crete, working with the Greek resistance. He was as an Oxford classicist and at one time his book Water into Wine (1985) had a profound influence on my understandings of Saint John’s Gospel.
Because of a combination of so many of his interests – classical Greek, early pacifism, the resistance in Crete, the Cross of Nails in Coventry Cathedral and Saint John’s Gospel – as well as his family links with Buckinghamshire, I said at the time I should return to his story in the days or weeks to come
The Gospel reading tomorrow, in those places where it is marked as the Fourth Sunday after Epiphany, is John 2: 1-11, the story of the Wedding at Cana and changing water into wine, which inspired that book by Stephen Verney, Water into Wine (1985), and I found myself this week trying to find one of my copies of this book.
Bishop Stephen Verney (1919-2009) has been described as ‘brave, open-thinking and creative’ with a ‘strong romantic side’
Stephen Edmund Verney was the second Bishop of Repton (1977-1985) and when he retired he was an honorary assistant bishop in the Diocese of Oxford. He was born on 17 April 1919 in Anglesey at his paternal grandmother’s home. His father, Sir Harry Verney (1881-1974), 4th Baronet, of Claydon House, had been the Liberal MP for Buckingham until 1918, held a number of junior ministerial posts and won a DSO in World War I. His maternal grandfather, Victor Alexander Bruce (1849-1917), 9th Earl of Elgin, was Viceroy of India in 1894-1899, and the family was also related to Florence Nightingale.
Stephen Verney spent his childhood at Claydon House, outside Winslow in Buckinghamshire. He went to school at Harrow and then to Balliol College, Oxford, in 1937 to take a classics degree. When World War II broke out, his brothers joined the armed forces. However, Stephen was a conscientious objector and chose to interrupt his university studies to work with the Quaker-run Friends’ Ambulance Unit in in Norway, Finland, Libya and Syria.
But as the war intensified, the Nazi campaign became demonstrably more evil. An incident in Aleppo that led Verney to the agonising decision to leave the Quakers and join the army, and he became a private in the Royal Army Service Corps. This took him to Egypt, and a chance encounter at a party in Cairo with his former headmaster at Harrow, Paul Vellacott (1891-1954), then the director of political warfare in the Middle East with the Political Warfare Executive (PWE).
Aware that Verney was a classicist who could easily master modern Greek, and whose shortness of stature and often scruffy appearance might enable him to pass for a Greek peasant, Vellacott persuaded Verney to join the PWE.
The shore at Preveli on the south coast of Crete … Stephen Verney was landed in Crete on a small boat in 1944
After initial involvement in black propaganda from Cairo, he was commissioned, and in August 1944 – disguised and accompanied by a German Jewish interpreter – he was sent to Crete by night in a small boat. On landing he was met by a Cretan ‘guardian angel’, who recruited a few others to form a cell under Verney’s leadership. With his expertise in classical Greek, it was an easy step to learn modern Greek, and because he was short and naturally dishevelled, it was said he could pass for a Greek peasant.
Verney and his team operated from a base outside Chania – home to the headquarters of the German commander in Crete. With the assistance of a German sergeant major who was in love with a Cretan woman and a Cretan journalist, he printed and distributed Kreta Post, a subtle propaganda paper, in German and Greek, from a cave outside Chania.
His newssheet created a false impression of the size of the resistance movement and that the occupation forces were cracking under the strain. He wrote frequently to the German commander, General Hans-Georg Benthack (1894-1973), telling him Kapitulation was the only real option. A graffiti campaign with the letter ‘K’ was launched, local boys daubed it in on walls, bridges and sentry boxes, and acid was used to etch it on military vehicles.
Verney and his partisans targeted dissatisfied German soldiers who rejected the Nazi regime, others who had fallen in love with Cretan girls, as well as Austrians, Poles and other nationals who had been forced unwillingly into the German army. He negotiated the release of several partisan prisoners by threatening to castrate ‘his’ German prisoners.
On one occasion, Verney was responsible for the mass desertion of Italians who had been fighting with the German army. After indirect contacts with their colonel, a disguised Verney crept into the camp hospital. The meeting was conducted with Verney stretched out on an operating table, the colonel hunched by him as if hearing his confession, while another officer played the part of a surgeon. Verney negotiated the defection of the whole battalion the next morning, and he arranged their evacuation after confiscating all their weapons.
Benthag formally, but secretly, surrendered to one of Verney’s fellow-officers on 8 May, and that evening the small group of British officers in the area invited the German officers who had been hunting them to a party in a café. A jazz band from the German garrison was pressed into service, and during the festivities Verney and the others disclosed their code names and true identities to their astonished guests, including some of the most detested men in the occupying army. All were immediately taken prisoner.
Following the German surrender of Crete, Verney he set up an exhibition of photographs received from recently liberated concentration camps. These were not believed by the still armed German soldiers and a grenade was left under his car.
Verney’s exploits in Crete were recognised after the war with a military MBE. I sometimes wonder whether anyone at the time knew that the man who played such a crucial role in the liberation of Greece was a direct descendant through his mother of Thomas Bruce (1766-1841), 7th Earl of Elgin, who plundered the Parthenon Marbles or Elgin Marbles from the Parthenon and other structures on the Acropolis of Athens almost a century and a half earlier.
The Suda Bay Commonwealth War Cemetery in Crete, near Chania … Stephen Verney’s exploits in Crete were recognised after the war with a military MBE (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)
Verney returned to Baliol College in 1946 to complete his degree in Oxford and married his first wife, Priscilla (‘Scilla’) Schwerdt, in 1947. He had been drawn by his wartime experience to ordained ministry, and so trained for the priesthood at Westcott House, Cambridge.
He was ordained deacon by Bishop Russell Barry of Southwell at Southwell Minster in 1950, and priest in 1951. He was a curate at Gedling, then the priest in charge of Saint Francis Clifton, Nottingham and Vicar of Leamington Hastings, often working in tough housing estates.
He moved to the Diocese of Coventry as the diocesan missioner in 1958, as Basil Spence’s new cathedral was rising from the ashes of the old cathedral. Cuthbert Bardsley was an enthusiastic new bishop, putting together a team of gifted clergy to develop a vibrant Christian life for the new cathedral. The slogan, ‘A consecrated building requires a consecrated people’, was adopted for a three-year period of preparation, and Verney was entrusted with the project.
Verney enthused people, combining an organising vision with deep spirituality. The Cross of Nails, formed of nails from timber in the ruined cathedral, was passed from parish to parish and made the focus of prayer vigils. By the time Coventry Cathedral was ready for consecration on 26 May 1962, the diocese was in a state of high expectancy and Verney’s leadership was a vital factor.
He was appointed a residentiary canon at Coventry Cathedral in 1964, and by then had become known as an energetic and informal priest within the radical tradition in the Church of England. The gifted team he was a central part of made the Coventry Cathedral a centre of creativity and theological thinking.
To mark the 50th anniversary of the foundation of the diocese in 1968, he organised an international conference on ‘People and Cities’, celebrating the benefits of urban life and confronting the problems of depersonalisation caused by the scale of modern cities. The participants included planners, philosophers and theologians, and some of the conference’s proposals eventually led to new approaches to urban planning.
In the conference book People and Cities (1969), Verney argued that the future of the Church’s work in cities lay in the formation of small groups, what he called ‘companies of forgiveness’. The book gave rise to the term ‘megalopolis’; it was an early warning about urban conglomeration and exploitation of the natural environment, had a discernable influence on the planners of the new city of Milton Keynes, and was a precursor of the Church of England report Faith in the City (1985).
At the conference, Verney met Fred Blum (1914-1990) who had founded the New Era Centre in 1967. Blum, who had been a Jewish refugee from Nazi Germany, had become a Quaker and was later ordained an Anglican priest. They became close friends and Verney became a trustee of the New Era Centre.
The Cross of Nails is at the heart of the ministry and outreach of Coventry Cathedral (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2023)
Verney became a residentiary canon at Saint George’s Chapel, Windsor, in 1970, and was responsible for Saint George’s House, the centre for discussions and conferences in Windsor Castle, organising conferences along ‘Chatham House’ rules. But he was challenged by the traditions and protocols at Saint George’s and when he tried to introduce contemporary worship and modern music he faced opposition and a sharp clash of personalities.
He was also a confessor and friend for ordination candidates at Ripon College, Cuddesdon, near Oxford, and became a spiritual adviser to the L’Arche community, working with people with learning difficulties. Its founder, Jean Varnier, shared Verney's passion for Saint John’s Gospel.
Scilla’s death in 1974 affected him profoundly. Three years later, he became the Suffragan Bishop of Repton in the Diocese of Derby and he was consecrated bishop by Archbishop Donald Coggan of Canterbury in Westminster Abbey in 1977.
In 1981, Stephen Verney married Sandra Bailey, a divorcee whose husband was still living. He was the first bishop to marry a divorced woman. The controversy that followed became a catalyst for permanent changes in the Church of England’s policies on divorce.
As a bishop, he cared warmly for his clergy, believing the church was too restrictive and cautious in matters of morality. He accepted relationships of all sorts so long as they were not exploitative, and was vocal on issues such as nuclear disarmament, just war, trade unions and capitalism, opposed capital punishment and advocated moving away from prison as punishment towards restorative justice.
He developed a ministry to articulate ecumenical groups disillusioned by their churches because of their priorities for maintain buildings or doctrinal differences, or for ostracising gay people or people seeking divorce or remarriage. He encouraged the distinction between church and faith, arguing that God is liberating, and established the retreat centre at Sutton Courtenay near Abingdon, Oxfordshire.
After eight years as Bishop of Repton, he retired to Blewbury in Oxfordshire in1985. In retirement, he was saddened by the pressures for narrowness and judgmentalism within the Anglican Communion, and used his linguistic skills for a sharp critique of fundamentalism in all forms.
He died on 9 November 2009 and was survived by Sandra and the children of his first marriage; a son from his second marriage predeceased him.
His book Fire in Coventry (1964) tells how the people of Coventry prepared for a new cathedral after World War II. In his posthumously published Snakes And Ladders (2016), he reflects on his whole life, from his childhood, his army service, his ordination, and his time in Coventry to his time as a bishop. His ideas found expression in three other small books – Into the New Age (1976), Water into Wine (1985) and The Dance of Love (1989) – each a combination of romanticism, vision and insight.
‘Fill the jars with water … and they filled them up to the brim’ (John 2: 7) … two large jars or pithoi at the Minoan palace in Knossos, Crete (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
The Gospel reading tomorrow is Saint John’s account of the wedding at Cana (John 2: 1-11), long one of my favourite passages in the Gospels and the reading Charlotte and I chose for the blessing of our weddng in Southwark Cathedral in 2023. This story gave the title to Sttephen Verney’s commentary on Saint John’s Gospel, Water into Wine (1985). His intimate knowledge of Classical Greek served him well as a biblical commentator and the depth of his scholarship made him thoroughly familiar with New Testament Greek, so that he brought out nuances lost so often in English translations.
Water Into Wine is a beautiful book on Saint John’s Gospel, and I have lost many copies over the years, lending them to friends and students, then rummaging again in second-hand bookshops for fresh copies. It was first published in 1985, a year before Steven Verney retired as Bishop of Repton, the year of the miners’ strike and the riots in Handsworth, Brixton and Tottenham, and soon after the Falklands War in 1982 and the intense personal loss of a baby son.
In Water Into Wine, he ties his themes together well, using the Wedding at Cana as the first sign that gives context to the other signs Jesus performed. He draws on the Greek words ἄνω (ano) and κάτω (kato) as ways to understand Saint John’s Gospel. He points out how these two words are different orders, where order is the pattern and the governing principle behind the pattern.
In the order of kato, the ruling principle is me and the pattern is people competing, manipulating and trying to control each other. The order of ano, on the other hand has love as its governing principle and the pattern is one of compassion. The most urgent question confronting each of us, and humanity as a whole, he argues, is how these two orders can be reconciled.
He talks of how ‘the ruling principle is the Spirit of Love’ and of ‘people giving to each other what they really are, and accepting what others are, recognising their differences, and sharing their vulnerability.’
The insight into how Saint John’s Gospel that emerges is one of a carefully constructed narrative in which seemingly trivial details, such as the ‘third day’ in tomorrow’s Gospel reading (see John 2: 1), assume a new significance in the events of Holy Week. Verney includes vignettes from his long and varied life, including his time with the resistance in Crete, to illustrate aspects of the gospel.
He writes that ‘we can see in our world order the terrible consequences of our ego-centricity. We have projected it into our institutions, where it has swollen up into a positive force of evil. We are all imprisoned together, in a system of competing nation states, on the edge of a catastrophe which could destroy all life on our planet.’ He was writing in the 1980s but could have been describing today’s populism and nationalism.
The theme of the wedding feast at Cana at the beginning of Saint John’s Gospel points to another third day and to another marriage in eternity. This new age of eternal life begins on the third day after the death of Jesus at the Resurrection ‘and it continues in our experience.’
A new age begins with the crucifixion and resurrection, and Verney locates the new age in the ‘I AM’ sayings of Jesus and what they reveal of his relationship with God. In Jesus, there is a marriage of heaven and earth – a bringing together of ano and kato, up and down, water and wine – and we are called, by Jesus, to become part of that marriage. The marriage of heaven and earth reflects an even more astonishing union that Verney calls ‘The Dance of Love’.
Jesus does only what he sees the Father doing and the Father reveals to Jesus everything that he is doing. In that dance of love between them, says Jesus, ‘I and the Father are one.’ The Son cries, ‘Abba! Father!’ and the Father cries ‘my beloved Son’, and the love which leaps between them is Holy Spirit – the Spirit of God, God himself, for God is Spirit and God is Love.’
There is a relationship of love at the heart of the Godhead where love is constantly shared and exchanged and we are invited into that relationship of love. Becoming part of the Dance of Love through the marriage of heaven and earth is the new age into which we are born again through the death and resurrection of Jesus. To be born again in this way is to be raised from a consciousness that is really death into a quality of life that is eternal.
Stephen Verney's life is recalled in his posthumous ‘Snakes and Ladders’ (2016)
31 January 2026
The resistance in Crete,
‘Water into Wine’, the Dance
of Love, and Bishop Stephen
Verney’s reluctant pacifism
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Daily prayer in Christmas 2025-2026:
38, Saturday 31 January 2026
‘Leaving the crowd behind, they took him with them in the boat, just as he was. Other boats were with him’ (Mark 4: 36) … boats at the jetty in Bako National Park, north of Kuching (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Patrick Comerford
These are the last days in the 40-day season of Christmas, which concludes with Candlemas or the Feast of the Presentation (2 February 2026), which many parishes may mark tomorrow, which is also the Fourth Sunday of Epiphany (Epiphany IV).
The calendar of the Church of England in Common Worship today recalls John Bosco (1815-1888), priest and founder of the Salesian teaching order. Before today begins, I am taking some quiet time this morning to give thanks, to reflect, to pray and to read in these ways:
1, today’s Gospel reading;
2, a short reflection;
3, a prayer from the USPG prayer diary;
4, the Collects and Post-Communion prayer of the day.
‘Let us go across to the other side’ (Mark 4: 35) … waiting gondolas near Saint Mark’s Square in Venice (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Mark 4: 35-41 (NRSVA):
35 On that day, when evening had come, he said to them, ‘Let us go across to the other side.’ 36 And leaving the crowd behind, they took him with them in the boat, just as he was. Other boats were with him. 37 A great gale arose, and the waves beat into the boat, so that the boat was already being swamped. 38 But he was in the stern, asleep on the cushion; and they woke him up and said to him, ‘Teacher, do you not care that we are perishing?’ 39 He woke up and rebuked the wind, and said to the sea, ‘Peace! Be still!’ Then the wind ceased, and there was a dead calm. 40 He said to them, ‘Why are you afraid? Have you still no faith?’ 41 And they were filled with great awe and said to one another, ‘Who then is this, that even the wind and the sea obey him?’
The calming of the storm depicted in a window in the Chapel in Westminster College, Cambridge (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Today’s Reflections:
Chapter 4 in Saint Mark’s Gospel is the ‘parables chapter,’ recalling parables that make this chapter the central teaching section of this Gospel. Christ is in a boat beside the sea teaching a very large crowd who are listening on the shore (see Mark 4: 1-2). Now in today’s reading (Mark 4: 35-41), Christ and the disciples are leaving the crowd and crossing to the other side of the lake or sea. But a storm blows up, and the disciples show how weak they truly are, with all their doubts and fears.
As we work our ways through the storms of life, we have many questions to ask about the purpose or meaning of life. Often, we can feel guilty about putting those questions to God. Yet, should we not be able to put our deepest questions and greatest fears before God?
In today’s Gospel reading, the frightened disciples challenge Christ and ask him whether he cares that they are perishing (verse 38). But he offers them words of peace before doing anything to remedy the plight in which they have been caught, and goes on to ask them his own challenging questions: ‘Why are you afraid? Have you still no faith?’ (verses 40)? They, in turn, end up asking their own challenging question about who Christ is for them.
I enjoy being on boats, whether it is punts in Cambridge or Oxford, island hopping in Greece, or cruising on rivers from the Shannon to the Seine or Sarawak. But I also recognise the fears of the disciples in this reading, having found myself in unexpected storms on lakes on the Shannon and on the waters of the Mediterranean. In retrospect, they were minor storms each time, but those memories give me some insights into the plight of refugees crossing choppy waters every day in the English Channel and in the Mediterranean.
The plight of the disciples in this reading seems like the working out of a constant, recurring, vivid dream of the type many of us experience at different times: the feelings of drowning, floating and falling suddenly, being in a crowd and yet alone, calling out and not being heard, or not being recognised for who we are.
Christ is asleep in the boat when a great gale rises, the waves beat the side of the boat, and it is soon swamped by the waters.
Christ seems oblivious to the calamity that is unfolding around him and to the fear of the disciples. They have to wake him, and by then they fear they are perishing.
Christ wakes, rebukes the wind, calm descends on the sea, and Christ challenges those on the boat: ‘Why are you afraid? Have you still no faith?’ (verse 40).
Instead of being calmed, they are now filled with awe. Do they recognise Christ for who he truly is? They ask one another: ‘Who then is this, that even the wind and the sea obey him?’ (verse 31).
Even before the Resurrection, Christ tells the disciples not to be afraid, which becomes a constant theme after the Resurrection.
Do those in the boat begin to ask truly who Christ is because he has calmed the storm, or because he has calmed their fears?
Through the storms of life, through the nightmares, fears and memories, despite the failures of the Church, past and present, we must not let those experiences ruin our trusting relationship with God.
Despite all the storms of life, throughout all our fears and nightmares, we can trust in God as Father and trust in the soothing words of Christ, ‘Peace! Be still! Be not afraid.’
Three minutes at Mags Bridge in Cambridge (Patrick Comerford)
Today’s Prayers (Saturday 31 January 2026):
The theme this week (25-31 January 2026) in Pray with the World Church, the prayer diary of the Anglican mission agency USPG (United Society Partners in the Gospel), has been ‘Connections That Last’ (pp 22-23). This theme was introduced last Sunday with Reflections from Paula de Mello Alves, a Brazilian lawyer and theologian, Executive Secretary of the Southern Diocese, and former co-leader of the Anglican Communion Youth Network (ACYN).
The USPG Prayer Diary today (Saturday 31 January 2026) invites us to pray:
Lord, bless the Emerging Leaders Academy and all who take part. May these young leaders grow in faith, wisdom, and courage as they explore new ways to serve and live out their calling.
The Collect:
Almighty God,
whose Son revealed in signs and miracles
the wonder of your saving presence:
renew your people with your heavenly grace,
and in all our weakness
sustain us by your mighty power;
through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord,
who is alive and reigns with you,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever.
The Post-Communion Prayer:
Almighty Father,
whose Son our Saviour Jesus Christ is the light of the world:
may your people,
illumined by your word and sacraments,
shine with the radiance of his glory,
that he may be known, worshipped, and obeyed
to the ends of the earth;
for he is alive and reigns, now and for ever.
Additional Collect:
God of all mercy,
your Son proclaimed good news to the poor,
release to the captives,
and freedom to the oppressed:
anoint us with your Holy Spirit
and set all your people free
to praise you in Christ our Lord.
Collect on the Eve of Epiphany IV:
God our creator,
who in the beginning
commanded the light to shine out of darkness:
we pray that the light of the glorious gospel of Christ
may dispel the darkness of ignorance and unbelief,
shine into the hearts of all your people,
and reveal the knowledge of your glory
in the face of Jesus Christ your Son our Lord,
who is alive and reigns with you,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever.
Collect on the eve of the Presentation:
Almighty and ever–living God,
clothed in majesty,
whose beloved Son was this day presented in the Temple,
in substance of our flesh:
grant that we may be presented to you
with pure and clean hearts,
by your Son Jesus Christ 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
By the harbour in Rethymnon (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
These are the last days in the 40-day season of Christmas, which concludes with Candlemas or the Feast of the Presentation (2 February 2026), which many parishes may mark tomorrow, which is also the Fourth Sunday of Epiphany (Epiphany IV).
The calendar of the Church of England in Common Worship today recalls John Bosco (1815-1888), priest and founder of the Salesian teaching order. Before today begins, I am taking some quiet time this morning to give thanks, to reflect, to pray and to read in these ways:
1, today’s Gospel reading;
2, a short reflection;
3, a prayer from the USPG prayer diary;
4, the Collects and Post-Communion prayer of the day.
‘Let us go across to the other side’ (Mark 4: 35) … waiting gondolas near Saint Mark’s Square in Venice (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Mark 4: 35-41 (NRSVA):
35 On that day, when evening had come, he said to them, ‘Let us go across to the other side.’ 36 And leaving the crowd behind, they took him with them in the boat, just as he was. Other boats were with him. 37 A great gale arose, and the waves beat into the boat, so that the boat was already being swamped. 38 But he was in the stern, asleep on the cushion; and they woke him up and said to him, ‘Teacher, do you not care that we are perishing?’ 39 He woke up and rebuked the wind, and said to the sea, ‘Peace! Be still!’ Then the wind ceased, and there was a dead calm. 40 He said to them, ‘Why are you afraid? Have you still no faith?’ 41 And they were filled with great awe and said to one another, ‘Who then is this, that even the wind and the sea obey him?’
The calming of the storm depicted in a window in the Chapel in Westminster College, Cambridge (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Today’s Reflections:
Chapter 4 in Saint Mark’s Gospel is the ‘parables chapter,’ recalling parables that make this chapter the central teaching section of this Gospel. Christ is in a boat beside the sea teaching a very large crowd who are listening on the shore (see Mark 4: 1-2). Now in today’s reading (Mark 4: 35-41), Christ and the disciples are leaving the crowd and crossing to the other side of the lake or sea. But a storm blows up, and the disciples show how weak they truly are, with all their doubts and fears.
As we work our ways through the storms of life, we have many questions to ask about the purpose or meaning of life. Often, we can feel guilty about putting those questions to God. Yet, should we not be able to put our deepest questions and greatest fears before God?
In today’s Gospel reading, the frightened disciples challenge Christ and ask him whether he cares that they are perishing (verse 38). But he offers them words of peace before doing anything to remedy the plight in which they have been caught, and goes on to ask them his own challenging questions: ‘Why are you afraid? Have you still no faith?’ (verses 40)? They, in turn, end up asking their own challenging question about who Christ is for them.
I enjoy being on boats, whether it is punts in Cambridge or Oxford, island hopping in Greece, or cruising on rivers from the Shannon to the Seine or Sarawak. But I also recognise the fears of the disciples in this reading, having found myself in unexpected storms on lakes on the Shannon and on the waters of the Mediterranean. In retrospect, they were minor storms each time, but those memories give me some insights into the plight of refugees crossing choppy waters every day in the English Channel and in the Mediterranean.
The plight of the disciples in this reading seems like the working out of a constant, recurring, vivid dream of the type many of us experience at different times: the feelings of drowning, floating and falling suddenly, being in a crowd and yet alone, calling out and not being heard, or not being recognised for who we are.
Christ is asleep in the boat when a great gale rises, the waves beat the side of the boat, and it is soon swamped by the waters.
Christ seems oblivious to the calamity that is unfolding around him and to the fear of the disciples. They have to wake him, and by then they fear they are perishing.
Christ wakes, rebukes the wind, calm descends on the sea, and Christ challenges those on the boat: ‘Why are you afraid? Have you still no faith?’ (verse 40).
Instead of being calmed, they are now filled with awe. Do they recognise Christ for who he truly is? They ask one another: ‘Who then is this, that even the wind and the sea obey him?’ (verse 31).
Even before the Resurrection, Christ tells the disciples not to be afraid, which becomes a constant theme after the Resurrection.
Do those in the boat begin to ask truly who Christ is because he has calmed the storm, or because he has calmed their fears?
Through the storms of life, through the nightmares, fears and memories, despite the failures of the Church, past and present, we must not let those experiences ruin our trusting relationship with God.
Despite all the storms of life, throughout all our fears and nightmares, we can trust in God as Father and trust in the soothing words of Christ, ‘Peace! Be still! Be not afraid.’
Three minutes at Mags Bridge in Cambridge (Patrick Comerford)
Today’s Prayers (Saturday 31 January 2026):
The theme this week (25-31 January 2026) in Pray with the World Church, the prayer diary of the Anglican mission agency USPG (United Society Partners in the Gospel), has been ‘Connections That Last’ (pp 22-23). This theme was introduced last Sunday with Reflections from Paula de Mello Alves, a Brazilian lawyer and theologian, Executive Secretary of the Southern Diocese, and former co-leader of the Anglican Communion Youth Network (ACYN).
The USPG Prayer Diary today (Saturday 31 January 2026) invites us to pray:
Lord, bless the Emerging Leaders Academy and all who take part. May these young leaders grow in faith, wisdom, and courage as they explore new ways to serve and live out their calling.
The Collect:
Almighty God,
whose Son revealed in signs and miracles
the wonder of your saving presence:
renew your people with your heavenly grace,
and in all our weakness
sustain us by your mighty power;
through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord,
who is alive and reigns with you,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever.
The Post-Communion Prayer:
Almighty Father,
whose Son our Saviour Jesus Christ is the light of the world:
may your people,
illumined by your word and sacraments,
shine with the radiance of his glory,
that he may be known, worshipped, and obeyed
to the ends of the earth;
for he is alive and reigns, now and for ever.
Additional Collect:
God of all mercy,
your Son proclaimed good news to the poor,
release to the captives,
and freedom to the oppressed:
anoint us with your Holy Spirit
and set all your people free
to praise you in Christ our Lord.
Collect on the Eve of Epiphany IV:
God our creator,
who in the beginning
commanded the light to shine out of darkness:
we pray that the light of the glorious gospel of Christ
may dispel the darkness of ignorance and unbelief,
shine into the hearts of all your people,
and reveal the knowledge of your glory
in the face of Jesus Christ your Son our Lord,
who is alive and reigns with you,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever.
Collect on the eve of the Presentation:
Almighty and ever–living God,
clothed in majesty,
whose beloved Son was this day presented in the Temple,
in substance of our flesh:
grant that we may be presented to you
with pure and clean hearts,
by your Son Jesus Christ 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
By the harbour in Rethymnon (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
30 January 2026
Empty Chairs in a square in
Kraków recall the Jewish ghetto
and are a poignant tribute to
victims of the Holocaust
The Empty Chairs Memorial in Kraków, a powerful yet poignant tribute to the Jewish victims of the Holocaust (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Patrick Comerford
International Holocaust Memorial day this week (27 January 2026) marked the 81st anniversary of the end of the Holocaust, which began with the liberation of the concentration camps at Auschwitz Birkenau on 27 January 1945.
In a blog posting to mark the day, I posted a ‘virtual tour’ of Holocaust memorials I have visited in a dozen countries, but I also came across photographs I had taken of an unusual memorial in a square in Kraków that remembers the victims of the Holocaust who had first been forcibly squeezed into the ghetto and then murdered either in the ghetto or in the camps such as Auschwitz.
I visited Kraków and Auschwitz ten years ago, I wrote about the death camps at Auschwitz-Birkenau, and about the seven surviving synagogues in Kraków, the history and life of the old Jewish Quarter in Kazimierz, the Jewish cemeteries, the Salt Mines at Wieliczka, the churches in Kraków, and the castle and cathedralon on Wawel Hill. But I had only made a passing reference in a magazine feature to some of the monuments and memorials I had seen in the ghetto the Nazis had created in Podgórze, to Schindler’s's factory, or to an unusual sculpture in the Ghetto Heroes Square in the former ghetto. Yet, when I came across my photographs from Kraków and Auschwitz-Birkenau this week, my memories of that visit ten years ago were as traumatic and as sharp as yesterday, filled with heartache and tenderness at one and the same time.
The Empty Chairs Memorial, a powerful yet poignant tribute to the Jewish victims of the Holocaust, is in the Ghetto Heroes Square (Bohaterów Getta Square) in the Kazimierz Jewish Quarter in Kraków. This series of empty chairs symbolised the lives abandoned and the homes left empty during the mass deportation of Jews from the Kraków Ghetto in March 1943.
Bohaterów Getta Square began as a quiet, small market place, first known as Zgody Square or Plac Zgody. In the 1930s, the square also became a local bus station.
All changed in 1939 when Nazi Germany invaded Poland. Zgody Square was closed off by a large gate marked with a Star of David, confining the Jewish populations to a ghetto, segregated the rest of the people of Kraków.
The Nazis issued an edict on 3 March 1941, forcing the Jews into the ‘Jewish residential quarter’ in Podgórze, ordering them to move there by 20 March. Non-Jewish residents were force to leave the Podgórze district, and Jewish families from across Kraków were forced to move into the area.
The ghetto, which functioned in Podgórze from 1941 to 1943, became the place for the brutal and savage extermination of the Jews of Kraków. The ghetto covered am area of just 20 ha and had 320 tenement houses, previously inhabited by the 3,500 people who had been forced to leave. About 17,000 Jews were crammed into 320 buildings in the ghetto, often with four or five families in one flat. Many slept on the floor; all, including children, the elderly and the sick, were forced to work; hunger and disease prevailed; and brutal treatment was a daily experience.
The only non-Jewish business not included in the order was the sole remaining pharmacy in the ghetto, run by Tadeusz Pankiewicz, a Pole who became the only non-Jew living in the area.
An arcaded portion of the ghetto wall mockingly resembled matzevot or traditional Jewish tombstones (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
The ‘Jewish residential quarter’ was surrounded by a three-metre wall with an arcaded portion mockingly styled to resemble matzevot or traditional Jewish tombstones. Four gates led into the ghetto: the main gate had an inscription that read Jüdischer Wohnbezirk (Jewish Quarter) and stood where Limanowskiego Street enters the Main Market of Podgórze.
A tram ran along Lwowska and Limanowskiego streets, but there were no stops inside the walls, and passengers were forbidden even to look at the ghetto through the windows. Of course, that prohibition was broken, and sometimes parcels of food were dropped from a tram.
In October 1941, any departure from the ghetto without leave became punishable by death. The same penalty faced people helping fugitives. Postal services were forbidden, and all ground-floor windows on the non-Jewish side were bricked up, cutting the ghetto off from possible channels of food delivery.
Soon deportations to death camps and forced labour camps began in the ghetto. Płaszów concentration camp was originally intended as a forced labour camp, and was constructed on the grounds of the old and new Jewish cemeteries in Podgórze.
Exceedingly brutal resettlements were carried out in June and October 1942, and many people died in the streets during the roundups and transports. The painter Abraham Neuman and the folk singer and poet Mordecai Gebirtig were executed on so-called ‘Bloody Thursday’, 4 June 1942. Hospital patients and children from the orphanage were murdered on the spot or deported. Some of the deported people were executed over the mass graves already dug by the inmates in Płaszów.
The area of the ghetto was repeatedly reduced throughout 1942. Before the end of the year, it was bisected by barbed wire: precinct A was for able-bodied people capable of labour, while B was for children, the elderly, and the ailing.
Zgody Square became the site for roll-calls and selections. The police station was at the former bus terminal, the ghetto wall was nearby, and square became the place where people were selected to send from the ghetto to trains, waiting for hours for their final journey. The elderly, the sick and the young were often executed in the streets, in their homes, or even in the square.
The victims were clustered together at the west end of the square, while looted property was stacked in the centre. Tadeusz Pankiewicz, who ran the Under the Eagle Pharmacy, was an eyewitness to the horrors of daily life in the ghetto. He helped to smuggle in food and medicines, and provided fake documents to Jews living in hiding. In his memoir, The Kraków Ghetto Pharmacy, recalled ‘In Plac Zgody, an incalculable number of wardrobes, tables, sideboards and other furniture was rotting.’
Finally, on 13 and 14 March 1943, the Nazis carried out the final ‘liquidation’ of the Kraków ghetto. Around 6,000 residents of ghetto A, capable of heavy labour, were moved to the camp in Płaszów. Their children under 14 had to stay in the orphanage. On the following day, the residents of ghetto B were driven to Zgody Square. Many elderly, sick, and unemployed residents – along with children – were shot on-site, in the square or in nearby courtyards.
Around 1,000 people were shot dead on the spot, including the elderly, patients and physicians from the hospital, children and mothers who would not let them go. Many were worked to death in the camps in Płaszów and Belzec. Those who remained were taken to Auschwitz Birkenau, where they were murdered in the gas chambers. The action ended with SS officers searching the now abandoned buildings, murdering anyone who tried to hide.
Oskar Schindler’s factory, featured in ‘Schindler’s List’, is close to Ghetto Heroes Square (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
The city renamed Plac Zgody as Ghetto Heroes Square in 1948 to honour the victims. For a time, it became a hub for public transport once again, but the memory of the wartime atrocities never faded. This chapter in the square’s history is retold in Stephen Spielberg’s film Schindler’s List (1993).
Inspired by Tadeusz Pankiewicz’s memoirs, the city commissioned an installation of oversized metal chairs, symbolising what was left behind – and the absence of those who once sat there. The architects Piotr Lewicki and Kazimierz Łatak created the monument, and it was completed in 2005.
The memorial features 33 large chairs arranged in rows, reminiscent of the roll-calls, facing the former pharmacy. Three face Lwowska Street, where a fragment of the original ghetto wall survives. An additional 37 smaller chairs for sitting encircle the larger ones. Each chair represents 1,000 lives.
Many people walk past the installation or weave their way their way through and around it, while children play and sit on the chairs, and only an odd walking tour seems to pause briefly to acknowledge it. But the empty chairs are stark and bold, sparse and empty, and they carry a powerful message with their feeling of absence. They capture a moment when human life was discarded just like the furniture piled up in the square.
A paved line through the square marks the symbolic border of the ghetto. Two dates are displayed on the old bus station building: 1941 (ghetto establishment) and 1943 (ghetto liquidation).
The memorial won the European Prize for Urban Public Space in 2006 and the Gold Award for Urban Quality in 2011.
The memorial is near other sites, including Oskar Schindler’s factory, and is a focal point for Holocaust remembrance in Kraków. In the March of Memory on 13 and 14 March each year, people march from Bohaterów Getta Square to the former Płaszów camp, following the route that led the Jews of Kraków to their death.
Shabbat Shalom, שבת שלום
The Empty Chairs, installed in 2005, were inspired by Tadeusz Pankiewicz’s memoirs (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Patrick Comerford
International Holocaust Memorial day this week (27 January 2026) marked the 81st anniversary of the end of the Holocaust, which began with the liberation of the concentration camps at Auschwitz Birkenau on 27 January 1945.
In a blog posting to mark the day, I posted a ‘virtual tour’ of Holocaust memorials I have visited in a dozen countries, but I also came across photographs I had taken of an unusual memorial in a square in Kraków that remembers the victims of the Holocaust who had first been forcibly squeezed into the ghetto and then murdered either in the ghetto or in the camps such as Auschwitz.
I visited Kraków and Auschwitz ten years ago, I wrote about the death camps at Auschwitz-Birkenau, and about the seven surviving synagogues in Kraków, the history and life of the old Jewish Quarter in Kazimierz, the Jewish cemeteries, the Salt Mines at Wieliczka, the churches in Kraków, and the castle and cathedralon on Wawel Hill. But I had only made a passing reference in a magazine feature to some of the monuments and memorials I had seen in the ghetto the Nazis had created in Podgórze, to Schindler’s's factory, or to an unusual sculpture in the Ghetto Heroes Square in the former ghetto. Yet, when I came across my photographs from Kraków and Auschwitz-Birkenau this week, my memories of that visit ten years ago were as traumatic and as sharp as yesterday, filled with heartache and tenderness at one and the same time.
The Empty Chairs Memorial, a powerful yet poignant tribute to the Jewish victims of the Holocaust, is in the Ghetto Heroes Square (Bohaterów Getta Square) in the Kazimierz Jewish Quarter in Kraków. This series of empty chairs symbolised the lives abandoned and the homes left empty during the mass deportation of Jews from the Kraków Ghetto in March 1943.
Bohaterów Getta Square began as a quiet, small market place, first known as Zgody Square or Plac Zgody. In the 1930s, the square also became a local bus station.
All changed in 1939 when Nazi Germany invaded Poland. Zgody Square was closed off by a large gate marked with a Star of David, confining the Jewish populations to a ghetto, segregated the rest of the people of Kraków.
The Nazis issued an edict on 3 March 1941, forcing the Jews into the ‘Jewish residential quarter’ in Podgórze, ordering them to move there by 20 March. Non-Jewish residents were force to leave the Podgórze district, and Jewish families from across Kraków were forced to move into the area.
The ghetto, which functioned in Podgórze from 1941 to 1943, became the place for the brutal and savage extermination of the Jews of Kraków. The ghetto covered am area of just 20 ha and had 320 tenement houses, previously inhabited by the 3,500 people who had been forced to leave. About 17,000 Jews were crammed into 320 buildings in the ghetto, often with four or five families in one flat. Many slept on the floor; all, including children, the elderly and the sick, were forced to work; hunger and disease prevailed; and brutal treatment was a daily experience.
The only non-Jewish business not included in the order was the sole remaining pharmacy in the ghetto, run by Tadeusz Pankiewicz, a Pole who became the only non-Jew living in the area.
An arcaded portion of the ghetto wall mockingly resembled matzevot or traditional Jewish tombstones (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
The ‘Jewish residential quarter’ was surrounded by a three-metre wall with an arcaded portion mockingly styled to resemble matzevot or traditional Jewish tombstones. Four gates led into the ghetto: the main gate had an inscription that read Jüdischer Wohnbezirk (Jewish Quarter) and stood where Limanowskiego Street enters the Main Market of Podgórze.
A tram ran along Lwowska and Limanowskiego streets, but there were no stops inside the walls, and passengers were forbidden even to look at the ghetto through the windows. Of course, that prohibition was broken, and sometimes parcels of food were dropped from a tram.
In October 1941, any departure from the ghetto without leave became punishable by death. The same penalty faced people helping fugitives. Postal services were forbidden, and all ground-floor windows on the non-Jewish side were bricked up, cutting the ghetto off from possible channels of food delivery.
Soon deportations to death camps and forced labour camps began in the ghetto. Płaszów concentration camp was originally intended as a forced labour camp, and was constructed on the grounds of the old and new Jewish cemeteries in Podgórze.
Exceedingly brutal resettlements were carried out in June and October 1942, and many people died in the streets during the roundups and transports. The painter Abraham Neuman and the folk singer and poet Mordecai Gebirtig were executed on so-called ‘Bloody Thursday’, 4 June 1942. Hospital patients and children from the orphanage were murdered on the spot or deported. Some of the deported people were executed over the mass graves already dug by the inmates in Płaszów.
The area of the ghetto was repeatedly reduced throughout 1942. Before the end of the year, it was bisected by barbed wire: precinct A was for able-bodied people capable of labour, while B was for children, the elderly, and the ailing.
Zgody Square became the site for roll-calls and selections. The police station was at the former bus terminal, the ghetto wall was nearby, and square became the place where people were selected to send from the ghetto to trains, waiting for hours for their final journey. The elderly, the sick and the young were often executed in the streets, in their homes, or even in the square.
The victims were clustered together at the west end of the square, while looted property was stacked in the centre. Tadeusz Pankiewicz, who ran the Under the Eagle Pharmacy, was an eyewitness to the horrors of daily life in the ghetto. He helped to smuggle in food and medicines, and provided fake documents to Jews living in hiding. In his memoir, The Kraków Ghetto Pharmacy, recalled ‘In Plac Zgody, an incalculable number of wardrobes, tables, sideboards and other furniture was rotting.’
Finally, on 13 and 14 March 1943, the Nazis carried out the final ‘liquidation’ of the Kraków ghetto. Around 6,000 residents of ghetto A, capable of heavy labour, were moved to the camp in Płaszów. Their children under 14 had to stay in the orphanage. On the following day, the residents of ghetto B were driven to Zgody Square. Many elderly, sick, and unemployed residents – along with children – were shot on-site, in the square or in nearby courtyards.
Around 1,000 people were shot dead on the spot, including the elderly, patients and physicians from the hospital, children and mothers who would not let them go. Many were worked to death in the camps in Płaszów and Belzec. Those who remained were taken to Auschwitz Birkenau, where they were murdered in the gas chambers. The action ended with SS officers searching the now abandoned buildings, murdering anyone who tried to hide.
Oskar Schindler’s factory, featured in ‘Schindler’s List’, is close to Ghetto Heroes Square (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
The city renamed Plac Zgody as Ghetto Heroes Square in 1948 to honour the victims. For a time, it became a hub for public transport once again, but the memory of the wartime atrocities never faded. This chapter in the square’s history is retold in Stephen Spielberg’s film Schindler’s List (1993).
Inspired by Tadeusz Pankiewicz’s memoirs, the city commissioned an installation of oversized metal chairs, symbolising what was left behind – and the absence of those who once sat there. The architects Piotr Lewicki and Kazimierz Łatak created the monument, and it was completed in 2005.
The memorial features 33 large chairs arranged in rows, reminiscent of the roll-calls, facing the former pharmacy. Three face Lwowska Street, where a fragment of the original ghetto wall survives. An additional 37 smaller chairs for sitting encircle the larger ones. Each chair represents 1,000 lives.
Many people walk past the installation or weave their way their way through and around it, while children play and sit on the chairs, and only an odd walking tour seems to pause briefly to acknowledge it. But the empty chairs are stark and bold, sparse and empty, and they carry a powerful message with their feeling of absence. They capture a moment when human life was discarded just like the furniture piled up in the square.
A paved line through the square marks the symbolic border of the ghetto. Two dates are displayed on the old bus station building: 1941 (ghetto establishment) and 1943 (ghetto liquidation).
The memorial won the European Prize for Urban Public Space in 2006 and the Gold Award for Urban Quality in 2011.
The memorial is near other sites, including Oskar Schindler’s factory, and is a focal point for Holocaust remembrance in Kraków. In the March of Memory on 13 and 14 March each year, people march from Bohaterów Getta Square to the former Płaszów camp, following the route that led the Jews of Kraków to their death.
Shabbat Shalom, שבת שלום
The Empty Chairs, installed in 2005, were inspired by Tadeusz Pankiewicz’s memoirs (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Daily prayer in Christmas 2025-2026:
37, Friday 30 January 2026
‘The earth produces of itself’ (Mark 4: 28) … fields at Shutlanger Road in Stoke Bruerne, Northamptonshire (Photographs: Patrick Comerford)
Patrick Comerford
This is the last week in the 40-day season of Christmas, which continues until Candlemas or the Feast of the Presentation on Sunday (2 February 2025). This week began with the Third Sunday of Epiphany (Epiphany III, 26 January 2025).
The calendar of the Church of England in Common Worship today remembers Charles, King and Martyr (1649). But, before today begins, I am taking some quiet time this morning to give thanks, to reflect, to pray and to read in these ways:
1, today’s Gospel reading;
2, a short reflection;
3, a prayer from the USPG prayer diary;
4, the Collects and Post-Communion prayer of the day.
‘The seed would sprout and grow’ (Mark 4: 27) … a mulberry tree in Stoke Bruerne, Northamptonshire (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Mark 4: 26-34 (NRSVA):
26 He also said, ‘The kingdom of God is as if someone would scatter seed on the ground, 27 and would sleep and rise night and day, and the seed would sprout and grow, he does not know how. 28 The earth produces of itself, first the stalk, then the head, then the full grain in the head. 29 But when the grain is ripe, at once he goes in with his sickle, because the harvest has come.’
30 He also said, ‘With what can we compare the kingdom of God, or what parable will we use for it? 31 It is like a mustard seed, which, when sown upon the ground, is the smallest of all the seeds on earth; 32 yet when it is sown it grows up and becomes the greatest of all shrubs, and puts forth large branches, so that the birds of the air can make nests in its shade.’
Mulberry Street in Whitechapel … welcomed 400 refugees who had been trafficked by boat in 1764 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Today’s Reflections:
Chapter 4 in Saint Mark’s Gospel is the ‘parables chapter,’ recalling parables that make this chapter the central teaching section of this Gospel. Christ is in a boat beside the sea teaching a very large crowd who are listening on the shore (see Mark 4: 1-2). In this morning’s Gospel reading (Mark 4: 26-34) at the Eucharist, Christ describe the ‘kingdom of God’ by explaining the parable of sower scattering seed on the ground, which we read earlier this week, in the hope and expectation of the harvest (verses 26-29) and of the mustard seed that grows into a great tree (verses 30-32).
We may ask why Christ decides to talk about a mustard seed, or in Saint Luke’s Gospel about a mustard seed and a mulberry tree (Luke 17: 5-6), rather than, say, an olive tree. After all, as he was talking in the incident in today’s Gospel reading, he must have been surrounded by grove after grove of olive trees.
But, I can imagine, he is also watching to see if those who are listening have switched off their humour mode, if they have withdrawn their sense of humour. He is talking here with a great sense of humour, using hyperbole to underline his point.
We all know a tiny grain of mustard is incapable of growing to a big tree. So, what is Christ talking about here? Because, he not only caught the disciples off-guard with his hyperbole and sense of humour … he even wrong-footed some of the Reformers and many Bible translators who make mistakes about what sort of trees he is talking about in the Gospels.
The story of how mulberries were reintroduced to England over 400 years is a tale of how investors were wrongfooted, yet also leads to another story of how the churches helped to care refugees in London in the 1760s.
Mulberries were first introduced to England by the Romans and were commonly used for making mediaeval ‘murrey’ (sweet pottage) as well as for medicinal purposes. They were reintroduced in the early 17th century when James tried to establish native silk production in 1607-1609 when around 10,000 saplings were imported and distributed by William Stallenge and François Verton through local officials at six shillings for a hundred plants, less for packets of seeds.
The commercial project failed, black mulberries (morus nigra) being acquired rather than the white (morus alba) that silkworms tend to favour. But one of these mulberry plantations gave its name to Mulberry Street, a short quiet back street in Whitechapel, with the tall bell-tower of Saint Boniface, the German Roman Catholic Church, at one end.
There was a second mulberry garden close by, across Whitechapel Road in Mile End New Town, north of what is now Old Montague Street and east of Greatorex (formerly Great Garden) Street. Land to the east of that south of Old Montague Street appears also to have been similarly planted. Spitalfields was already at the beginning of the 17th century a centre of silk throwing and weaving.
The mulberry garden in Whitechapel became a market garden and then a pleasure ground, and was used of for a few weeks in 1764 as a temporary asylum for refugees. A tented camp was set up for around 400 deceived and destitute refugees from the Palatinate and Bohemia who had been abandoned on what they had thought was a journey to Nova Scotia. With local fundraising and charitable efforts, initiated primarily by local churches and clergy, the refugees eventually left and found homes in South Carolina.
Housing development in the area began in the 1780s and 1790s. The Mulberry Tree public house once stood on the north side of Little Holloway Street, while Union Row later became Mulberry Street.
Why did Christ refer to a mustard seed and a mulberry or sycamine tree, and not, say, an olive tree or an oak tree?
Christ first uses the example of a tiny, miniscule kernel or seed (κόκκος, kokkos), from which the small mustard plant (σίναπι, sinapi) grows. But mustard is an herb, not a tree. Not much of a miracle, you might say: tiny seed, tiny plant.
In Saint Luke’s Gospel, he then mixes his metaphors and refers to another plant. Martin Luther, in his translation of the Bible, turned the tree into a mulberry tree. The mulberry tree – both the black mulberry and the white mulberry – is from the same family as the fig tree.
As children, some of us sang or played to the nursery rhyme or song, Here we go round the mulberry bush. Another version is Here we go gathering nuts in May. The same tune is used for the American rhyme Pop goes the weasel and for the Epiphany carol, I saw three ships.
Of course, mulberries do not grow on bushes, and they do not grow nuts that are gathered in May. Nor is the mulberry a very tall tree – it grows from tiny seeds but only reaches the height of an adult person.
It is not a very big tree at all. It is more like a bush than a tree – and it is easy to uproot too.
However, the tree Christ names in Saint Luke’s Gospel (Greek συκάμινος, sikámeenos) is the sycamine tree, which has the shape and leaves of a mulberry tree but fruit that tastes like the fig, or the sycamore fig (συκόμορος, Ficus Sycomorus).
Others think the tree being referred to there is the sycamore fig (συκόμορος, Ficus Sycomorus), the big tree that little Zacchaeus climbs in Jericho to see Jesus (Luke 19: 1-10).
The sycamine tree is not naturally pollinated. The pollination process is initiated only when a wasp sticks its stinger right into the heart of the fruit. In other words, the tree and its fruit have to be stung in order to reproduce. There is a direct connection between suffering and growth, but also a lesson that everything in creation, including the wasp, has its place in the intricate balance of nature.
Whether it is a small seed like the mustard seed, a small, seemingly useless and annoying creature like the wasp, or a small and despised figure of fun like Zacchaeus, each has value in God’s eyes, and each has a role in the great harvest of gathering in for God’s Kingdom.
Put more simply, it is quality and not quantity that matters when it comes faith and love.
Mulberry Hall at 17-19 Stonegate, York, dates from 1434 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Today’s Prayers (Friday 30 January 2026):
The theme this week (25-31 January 2026) in Pray with the World Church, the prayer diary of the Anglican mission agency USPG (United Society Partners in the Gospel), is ‘Connections That Last’ (pp 22-23). This theme was introduced on Sunday with Reflections from Paula de Mello Alves, a Brazilian lawyer and theologian, Executive Secretary of the Southern Diocese, and former co-leader of the Anglican Communion Youth Network (ACYN).
The USPG Prayer Diary today (Friday 30 January 2026) invites us to pray:
Lord, we celebrate the connections built in ACYN. May these relationships carry encouragement and strength to all corners of the Anglican Communion, near and far.
The Collect:
King of kings and Lord of lords,
whose faithful servant Charles
prayed for those who persecuted him
and died in the living hope of your eternal kingdom:
grant us by your grace so to follow his example
that we may love and bless our enemies,
through the intercession of your Son, our Lord Jesus Christ,
who is alive and reigns with you,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever.
The Post-Communion Prayer:
Eternal God,
who gave us this holy meal
in which we have celebrated the glory of the cross
and the victory of your martyr Charles:
by our communion with Christ
in his saving death and resurrection,
give us with all your saints the courage to conquer evil
and so to share the fruit of the tree of life;
through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Yesterday’s Reflections
Continued Tomorrow
Willow trees by the Monastery Lakes in Shutlanger, Northamptonshire (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
This is the last week in the 40-day season of Christmas, which continues until Candlemas or the Feast of the Presentation on Sunday (2 February 2025). This week began with the Third Sunday of Epiphany (Epiphany III, 26 January 2025).
The calendar of the Church of England in Common Worship today remembers Charles, King and Martyr (1649). But, before today begins, I am taking some quiet time this morning to give thanks, to reflect, to pray and to read in these ways:
1, today’s Gospel reading;
2, a short reflection;
3, a prayer from the USPG prayer diary;
4, the Collects and Post-Communion prayer of the day.
‘The seed would sprout and grow’ (Mark 4: 27) … a mulberry tree in Stoke Bruerne, Northamptonshire (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Mark 4: 26-34 (NRSVA):
26 He also said, ‘The kingdom of God is as if someone would scatter seed on the ground, 27 and would sleep and rise night and day, and the seed would sprout and grow, he does not know how. 28 The earth produces of itself, first the stalk, then the head, then the full grain in the head. 29 But when the grain is ripe, at once he goes in with his sickle, because the harvest has come.’
30 He also said, ‘With what can we compare the kingdom of God, or what parable will we use for it? 31 It is like a mustard seed, which, when sown upon the ground, is the smallest of all the seeds on earth; 32 yet when it is sown it grows up and becomes the greatest of all shrubs, and puts forth large branches, so that the birds of the air can make nests in its shade.’
Mulberry Street in Whitechapel … welcomed 400 refugees who had been trafficked by boat in 1764 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Today’s Reflections:
Chapter 4 in Saint Mark’s Gospel is the ‘parables chapter,’ recalling parables that make this chapter the central teaching section of this Gospel. Christ is in a boat beside the sea teaching a very large crowd who are listening on the shore (see Mark 4: 1-2). In this morning’s Gospel reading (Mark 4: 26-34) at the Eucharist, Christ describe the ‘kingdom of God’ by explaining the parable of sower scattering seed on the ground, which we read earlier this week, in the hope and expectation of the harvest (verses 26-29) and of the mustard seed that grows into a great tree (verses 30-32).
We may ask why Christ decides to talk about a mustard seed, or in Saint Luke’s Gospel about a mustard seed and a mulberry tree (Luke 17: 5-6), rather than, say, an olive tree. After all, as he was talking in the incident in today’s Gospel reading, he must have been surrounded by grove after grove of olive trees.
But, I can imagine, he is also watching to see if those who are listening have switched off their humour mode, if they have withdrawn their sense of humour. He is talking here with a great sense of humour, using hyperbole to underline his point.
We all know a tiny grain of mustard is incapable of growing to a big tree. So, what is Christ talking about here? Because, he not only caught the disciples off-guard with his hyperbole and sense of humour … he even wrong-footed some of the Reformers and many Bible translators who make mistakes about what sort of trees he is talking about in the Gospels.
The story of how mulberries were reintroduced to England over 400 years is a tale of how investors were wrongfooted, yet also leads to another story of how the churches helped to care refugees in London in the 1760s.
Mulberries were first introduced to England by the Romans and were commonly used for making mediaeval ‘murrey’ (sweet pottage) as well as for medicinal purposes. They were reintroduced in the early 17th century when James tried to establish native silk production in 1607-1609 when around 10,000 saplings were imported and distributed by William Stallenge and François Verton through local officials at six shillings for a hundred plants, less for packets of seeds.
The commercial project failed, black mulberries (morus nigra) being acquired rather than the white (morus alba) that silkworms tend to favour. But one of these mulberry plantations gave its name to Mulberry Street, a short quiet back street in Whitechapel, with the tall bell-tower of Saint Boniface, the German Roman Catholic Church, at one end.
There was a second mulberry garden close by, across Whitechapel Road in Mile End New Town, north of what is now Old Montague Street and east of Greatorex (formerly Great Garden) Street. Land to the east of that south of Old Montague Street appears also to have been similarly planted. Spitalfields was already at the beginning of the 17th century a centre of silk throwing and weaving.
The mulberry garden in Whitechapel became a market garden and then a pleasure ground, and was used of for a few weeks in 1764 as a temporary asylum for refugees. A tented camp was set up for around 400 deceived and destitute refugees from the Palatinate and Bohemia who had been abandoned on what they had thought was a journey to Nova Scotia. With local fundraising and charitable efforts, initiated primarily by local churches and clergy, the refugees eventually left and found homes in South Carolina.
Housing development in the area began in the 1780s and 1790s. The Mulberry Tree public house once stood on the north side of Little Holloway Street, while Union Row later became Mulberry Street.
Why did Christ refer to a mustard seed and a mulberry or sycamine tree, and not, say, an olive tree or an oak tree?
Christ first uses the example of a tiny, miniscule kernel or seed (κόκκος, kokkos), from which the small mustard plant (σίναπι, sinapi) grows. But mustard is an herb, not a tree. Not much of a miracle, you might say: tiny seed, tiny plant.
In Saint Luke’s Gospel, he then mixes his metaphors and refers to another plant. Martin Luther, in his translation of the Bible, turned the tree into a mulberry tree. The mulberry tree – both the black mulberry and the white mulberry – is from the same family as the fig tree.
As children, some of us sang or played to the nursery rhyme or song, Here we go round the mulberry bush. Another version is Here we go gathering nuts in May. The same tune is used for the American rhyme Pop goes the weasel and for the Epiphany carol, I saw three ships.
Of course, mulberries do not grow on bushes, and they do not grow nuts that are gathered in May. Nor is the mulberry a very tall tree – it grows from tiny seeds but only reaches the height of an adult person.
It is not a very big tree at all. It is more like a bush than a tree – and it is easy to uproot too.
However, the tree Christ names in Saint Luke’s Gospel (Greek συκάμινος, sikámeenos) is the sycamine tree, which has the shape and leaves of a mulberry tree but fruit that tastes like the fig, or the sycamore fig (συκόμορος, Ficus Sycomorus).
Others think the tree being referred to there is the sycamore fig (συκόμορος, Ficus Sycomorus), the big tree that little Zacchaeus climbs in Jericho to see Jesus (Luke 19: 1-10).
The sycamine tree is not naturally pollinated. The pollination process is initiated only when a wasp sticks its stinger right into the heart of the fruit. In other words, the tree and its fruit have to be stung in order to reproduce. There is a direct connection between suffering and growth, but also a lesson that everything in creation, including the wasp, has its place in the intricate balance of nature.
Whether it is a small seed like the mustard seed, a small, seemingly useless and annoying creature like the wasp, or a small and despised figure of fun like Zacchaeus, each has value in God’s eyes, and each has a role in the great harvest of gathering in for God’s Kingdom.
Put more simply, it is quality and not quantity that matters when it comes faith and love.
Mulberry Hall at 17-19 Stonegate, York, dates from 1434 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Today’s Prayers (Friday 30 January 2026):
The theme this week (25-31 January 2026) in Pray with the World Church, the prayer diary of the Anglican mission agency USPG (United Society Partners in the Gospel), is ‘Connections That Last’ (pp 22-23). This theme was introduced on Sunday with Reflections from Paula de Mello Alves, a Brazilian lawyer and theologian, Executive Secretary of the Southern Diocese, and former co-leader of the Anglican Communion Youth Network (ACYN).
The USPG Prayer Diary today (Friday 30 January 2026) invites us to pray:
Lord, we celebrate the connections built in ACYN. May these relationships carry encouragement and strength to all corners of the Anglican Communion, near and far.
The Collect:
King of kings and Lord of lords,
whose faithful servant Charles
prayed for those who persecuted him
and died in the living hope of your eternal kingdom:
grant us by your grace so to follow his example
that we may love and bless our enemies,
through the intercession of your Son, our Lord Jesus Christ,
who is alive and reigns with you,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever.
The Post-Communion Prayer:
Eternal God,
who gave us this holy meal
in which we have celebrated the glory of the cross
and the victory of your martyr Charles:
by our communion with Christ
in his saving death and resurrection,
give us with all your saints the courage to conquer evil
and so to share the fruit of the tree of life;
through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Yesterday’s Reflections
Continued Tomorrow
Willow trees by the Monastery Lakes in Shutlanger, Northamptonshire (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
29 January 2026
Dial House on Bristle Hill
and the extraordinary story
of a hidden but very modern
sundial in Buckingham
The sundial at Dial House at 7 Bristle Hill, Buckingham, with its Latin inscription, was commissioned by Anthony Gordon Randall and designed by David Harber (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2026)
Patrick Comerford
Wandering through the streets of Buckingham, I have often gazed at Dial House at 7 Bristle Hill, and wondered about the sundial that fills the lower of two recesses above the front door, and its Latin inscription and Roman numerals.
I could find no reference to house or the sundial in architectural guides, local histories or tourist leaflets, nobody in the tourist information office in the Old Gaol in Buckingham seemed to know about the dial or the house, and so last week I began to wonder about the origins, antiquity and purpose of the dial and the story of Dial House.
Dial House is at the bottom of Bristle Hill, at its north-west end, where it meets School Lane, close to a bend on the River Great Ouse.
Across the top of this vertical declining dial on the first floor is the Latin inscription Super collem saetigerum septem / semper luceat sol. Below there is a fading translation, Upon seven Bristle Hill let the sun shine still, though this is now difficult to make out, and a peculiar sequence of letters and numbers ‘AGR 080808’ that seem to create a puzzling conundrum.
The blue painted slate dial plate is set in a recess about 30 mm deep. The hours XI to X are shown with full length hour lines originating from a sun, below may be the letters ‘GMT’. There are declination lines labelled for the solstices and equinoxes, although they may not be accurately drawn, and another dashed line that is not identified. All the remaining dial lettering appears to be gold or gold leaf.
I inquired around and eventually learned that the initials AGR are those of an interesting and creative local figure, the late Anthony Gordon Randall (1933-2021), and learned too how he erected the dial almost 18 years ago to mark his 75th birthday on 8 August 2008 – hence the puzzling numbers 080808 beside his initials.
Dial House is at the bottom of Bristle Hill, at its north-west end, where it meets School Lane, close to a bend on the River Great Ouse (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2026)
Anthony Gordon Randall, once a website developer and printing entrepreneur, was born into Quaker family in Woking on 8 August 1933, the third and youngest of three children. He was educated at Leighton Park, a Quaker-run public school in Reading, and at Trinity College Oxford (BA 1957), Insead (MBA 1962) and the University of Buckingham (MA 2012).
He moved from Richmond to Buckingham in 2007 and there, at the beginning of 2008, as he was looking forward to his 75th birthday, he began thinking of suitable ways to celebrate that milestone. He heard how the number 8 is regarded as lucky in China because the word eight sounds similar to the word that means ‘prosper’ or ‘wealth’. The date 08.08.08 would be a particularly auspicious one in China, and coincided with the opening ceremony of the Beijing Olympics.
His house on Bristle Hill was originally a couple of old two-storey cottages with a third floor probably added shortly after the canal arrived in Buckingham in the early 19th century and with a Georgian façade added to form the front of the house.
Above the front door and between the two windows on each of the upper floors are niches, probably designed to resemble windows in more stately houses that were blocked up in the 18th century to avoid Window Tax. Randall decided the lower of the niches would be a suitable place for a sundial.
An online search led him to David Harber, whose list of commissions included Oxbridge colleges, stately homes and international corporate head offices. The wording for the Latin inscription was provided by Bishop Stephen Verney (1919-2009), a former Bishop of Repton, who lived near David Harber’s workshop.
Randall wanted a motto related to the house at the bottom of Bristle Hill. He thought of the words in the funeral, Lux aeterna luceat …, ‘Let light eternal shine …’, and transformed this into ‘Let the sun always shine’ (Semper luceat sol …), ending (or beginning) with ‘upon 7 Bristle Hill’.
But he met some problems with his efforts at creating a Latin phrase. When he looked up ‘bristle’ he got saeta, and so he submitted to Bishop Verney Super collem saetae (‘of the bristle’) septem … He got back Super septem (before, not after, the street name) collem saetigerum (‘bristle-bearing’).
Meanwhile, during a visit to Naples, he thought he might find the correct position for the number seven (VII) during a visit to Pompeii. But the people of Pompeii did not use numbers for addresses: ‘this was a new-fangled Greek idea, which might be all very well in Alexandria, but really wouldn’t do for us Romans in Campania.’ And so, imagining the modern Italian method of putting the house number after and not before the street name was perhaps based on some Roman precedent, he decided to do likewise.
The bishop’s opinions about the word ‘Bristle’, however, were supported by a family member who had won a classical scholarship in Oxford college. He was convinced that forming adjectives from nouns by adding ‘-bearing’ in cases such as this was a common occurrence and was derived from Greek practice. They arrived at what they agreed was a reasonable Latin motto, adding a translation into English in small print at the bottom. There he produced a rhyming couplet to render semper (‘always’) as ‘still’, or continuing until this time, and produced: ‘Upon Seven Bristle Hill / Let the sun shine still’.
In addition, he chose the typeface Trajan for the wording on the dial.
Anthony Randall and David Harber worked with Bishop Stephen Verney to complete the inscriptions on the dial at Dial House (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2026)
At the installation of the sundial at No 7 Bristle House, David Harber and Anthony Randall discussed a follow-up project for the empty niche above, with Harber suggesting a weather cock on the chimney that would link through gears to a pointer on a compass rose in the niche: ‘This birthday you’re tracking the sun: the next big one, track the wind!’
No 7 Bristle House became Dial House, the sundial was nominated for a prize for the best recent embellishment of the town of Buckingham, and Anthony Randall began planning for his 80th birthday on 8 August 2013. But those plans never saw the light of day, and he died on 18 January 2021.
The house at the bottom of Bristle Hill was sold recently and is being refurbished. I hope the sundial is restored to its original glory, and that the new owners have a vision for the second-storey niche above.
As for Bishop Stephen Verney, he died on 9 November 2009, just over a year after the dial was installed. As a conscientious objector during World War II, he first served with Friends Ambulance Unit but later became an undercover agent in occupied Crete, working with the Greek resistance.
He was as an Oxford classicist and his Water into Wine (London: Fount Paperbacks, 1985) had a profound influence on my understanding of Saint John’s Gospel. Perhaps I should return to his story in the weeks to come.
Looking down Bristle Hill in Buckingham towards School Lane (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2026)
Patrick Comerford
Wandering through the streets of Buckingham, I have often gazed at Dial House at 7 Bristle Hill, and wondered about the sundial that fills the lower of two recesses above the front door, and its Latin inscription and Roman numerals.
I could find no reference to house or the sundial in architectural guides, local histories or tourist leaflets, nobody in the tourist information office in the Old Gaol in Buckingham seemed to know about the dial or the house, and so last week I began to wonder about the origins, antiquity and purpose of the dial and the story of Dial House.
Dial House is at the bottom of Bristle Hill, at its north-west end, where it meets School Lane, close to a bend on the River Great Ouse.
Across the top of this vertical declining dial on the first floor is the Latin inscription Super collem saetigerum septem / semper luceat sol. Below there is a fading translation, Upon seven Bristle Hill let the sun shine still, though this is now difficult to make out, and a peculiar sequence of letters and numbers ‘AGR 080808’ that seem to create a puzzling conundrum.
The blue painted slate dial plate is set in a recess about 30 mm deep. The hours XI to X are shown with full length hour lines originating from a sun, below may be the letters ‘GMT’. There are declination lines labelled for the solstices and equinoxes, although they may not be accurately drawn, and another dashed line that is not identified. All the remaining dial lettering appears to be gold or gold leaf.
I inquired around and eventually learned that the initials AGR are those of an interesting and creative local figure, the late Anthony Gordon Randall (1933-2021), and learned too how he erected the dial almost 18 years ago to mark his 75th birthday on 8 August 2008 – hence the puzzling numbers 080808 beside his initials.
Dial House is at the bottom of Bristle Hill, at its north-west end, where it meets School Lane, close to a bend on the River Great Ouse (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2026)
Anthony Gordon Randall, once a website developer and printing entrepreneur, was born into Quaker family in Woking on 8 August 1933, the third and youngest of three children. He was educated at Leighton Park, a Quaker-run public school in Reading, and at Trinity College Oxford (BA 1957), Insead (MBA 1962) and the University of Buckingham (MA 2012).
He moved from Richmond to Buckingham in 2007 and there, at the beginning of 2008, as he was looking forward to his 75th birthday, he began thinking of suitable ways to celebrate that milestone. He heard how the number 8 is regarded as lucky in China because the word eight sounds similar to the word that means ‘prosper’ or ‘wealth’. The date 08.08.08 would be a particularly auspicious one in China, and coincided with the opening ceremony of the Beijing Olympics.
His house on Bristle Hill was originally a couple of old two-storey cottages with a third floor probably added shortly after the canal arrived in Buckingham in the early 19th century and with a Georgian façade added to form the front of the house.
Above the front door and between the two windows on each of the upper floors are niches, probably designed to resemble windows in more stately houses that were blocked up in the 18th century to avoid Window Tax. Randall decided the lower of the niches would be a suitable place for a sundial.
An online search led him to David Harber, whose list of commissions included Oxbridge colleges, stately homes and international corporate head offices. The wording for the Latin inscription was provided by Bishop Stephen Verney (1919-2009), a former Bishop of Repton, who lived near David Harber’s workshop.
Randall wanted a motto related to the house at the bottom of Bristle Hill. He thought of the words in the funeral, Lux aeterna luceat …, ‘Let light eternal shine …’, and transformed this into ‘Let the sun always shine’ (Semper luceat sol …), ending (or beginning) with ‘upon 7 Bristle Hill’.
But he met some problems with his efforts at creating a Latin phrase. When he looked up ‘bristle’ he got saeta, and so he submitted to Bishop Verney Super collem saetae (‘of the bristle’) septem … He got back Super septem (before, not after, the street name) collem saetigerum (‘bristle-bearing’).
Meanwhile, during a visit to Naples, he thought he might find the correct position for the number seven (VII) during a visit to Pompeii. But the people of Pompeii did not use numbers for addresses: ‘this was a new-fangled Greek idea, which might be all very well in Alexandria, but really wouldn’t do for us Romans in Campania.’ And so, imagining the modern Italian method of putting the house number after and not before the street name was perhaps based on some Roman precedent, he decided to do likewise.
The bishop’s opinions about the word ‘Bristle’, however, were supported by a family member who had won a classical scholarship in Oxford college. He was convinced that forming adjectives from nouns by adding ‘-bearing’ in cases such as this was a common occurrence and was derived from Greek practice. They arrived at what they agreed was a reasonable Latin motto, adding a translation into English in small print at the bottom. There he produced a rhyming couplet to render semper (‘always’) as ‘still’, or continuing until this time, and produced: ‘Upon Seven Bristle Hill / Let the sun shine still’.
In addition, he chose the typeface Trajan for the wording on the dial.
Anthony Randall and David Harber worked with Bishop Stephen Verney to complete the inscriptions on the dial at Dial House (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2026)
At the installation of the sundial at No 7 Bristle House, David Harber and Anthony Randall discussed a follow-up project for the empty niche above, with Harber suggesting a weather cock on the chimney that would link through gears to a pointer on a compass rose in the niche: ‘This birthday you’re tracking the sun: the next big one, track the wind!’
No 7 Bristle House became Dial House, the sundial was nominated for a prize for the best recent embellishment of the town of Buckingham, and Anthony Randall began planning for his 80th birthday on 8 August 2013. But those plans never saw the light of day, and he died on 18 January 2021.
The house at the bottom of Bristle Hill was sold recently and is being refurbished. I hope the sundial is restored to its original glory, and that the new owners have a vision for the second-storey niche above.
As for Bishop Stephen Verney, he died on 9 November 2009, just over a year after the dial was installed. As a conscientious objector during World War II, he first served with Friends Ambulance Unit but later became an undercover agent in occupied Crete, working with the Greek resistance.
He was as an Oxford classicist and his Water into Wine (London: Fount Paperbacks, 1985) had a profound influence on my understanding of Saint John’s Gospel. Perhaps I should return to his story in the weeks to come.
Looking down Bristle Hill in Buckingham towards School Lane (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2026)
Daily prayer in Christmas 2025-2026:
36, Thursday 29 January 2026
‘Is a lamp brought in to be put under the bushel basket, or under the bed, and not on the lampstand?’ (Mark 8: 21) … evening lights at Saint Mary and Saint Giles Church, Stony Stratford (Photographs: Patrick Comerford, 2026)
Patrick Comerford
This is the last week in the 40-day season of Christmas, which continues until Candlemas or the Feast of the Presentation on 2 February 2026. This week began with the Third Sunday of Epiphany (Epiphany III, 25 January 2026).
Later this evening, I am with the Stony Playreaders in our second presentation of three new short plays by group members exploring the themes of communication and miscommunication, all Upstairs at the Library on Church Street.
It’s Good To Talk is a new play by Emma Luckhurst in which I have the role of Richard III – without the hunchback. Talking may be good for you, but it is also a risky game, loaded with approximations, misunderstandings and pitfalls for the unwary. The two shorter plays are Stony Magic by Peter Stone, in which I have the part of ‘The Widower’, and Marmalade at the Palace by Claire Kemp, a slightly longer short play for grown-ups with a fondness for dry wit, diplomatic disasters – and small talking bears – when I became a footman of impeccable behaviour.
Our first presentation was on Sunday, and this evening’s performance is at 7 pm. Admission is free, but donations will be welcome, and light refreshments are being offered.
Meanwhile, before today begins, I am taking some quiet time this morning to give thanks, to reflect, to pray and to read in these ways:
1, today’s Gospel reading;
2, a short reflection;
3, a prayer from the USPG prayer diary;
4, the Collects and Post-Communion prayer of the day.
‘Is a lamp brought in to be put under the bushel basket, or under the bed, and not on the lampstand?’ (Mark 4: 21) … a lighting lamp in the Boot and Flogger in Southwark (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Mark 4: 21-25 (NRSVA):
21 He said to them, ‘Is a lamp brought in to be put under the bushel basket, or under the bed, and not on the lampstand? 22 For there is nothing hidden, except to be disclosed; nor is anything secret, except to come to light. 23 Let anyone with ears to hear listen!’ 24 And he said to them, ‘Pay attention to what you hear; the measure you give will be the measure you get, and still more will be given you. 25 For to those who have, more will be given; and from those who have nothing, even what they have will be taken away.’
Lichnos in Piskopianó stood out as a light on a hill in Crete, visible for miles below and out to sea (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Today’s Reflections:
Chapter 4 in Saint Mark’s Gospel is the ‘parables chapter,’ recalling parables that make this chapter the central teaching section of this Gospel. Christ is in a boat beside the sea teaching a very large crowd who are listening on the shore (see Mark 4: 1-2). In this morning’s reading (Mark 4: 21-25), he compares speaking out with ensuring a light is used to its best purpose (verses 21-22) .
When I was back in Piskopianó in Crete the Easter before last, I was disappointed to see that one of my favourite tavernas, Lichnos, had been closed for some time.
The name Lichnos comes from the Greek word λύχνος (lychnos), meaning a lamp or a light. The restaurant stood on a precipice on the north side of the village, close to Mika Villas, where I stayed regularly in the 1990s. Lichnos was perched on the edge of the hill, and from its balcony and roof garden there were panoramic views across Hersonissos below and out to the Mediterranean. At night, Lichnos stood out as a light on a hill, visible for miles below and out to sea.
The parable of the lamp under a bushel is told in all three Synoptic Gospels (see Matthew 5: 14-15; Mark 4: 21-25; Luke 8: 16-18). In Saint Matthew’s Gospel, this parable continues the discourse on salt and light in the Sermon on the Mount. But Saint Mark and Saint Luke connect it with Jesus’s explanation of the Parable of the Sower.
The word λύχνος (lychnos) means a light, lamp or candle. But it is also used figuratively for a distinguished teacher, as when Jesus describes Saint John the Baptist as ‘a burning and shining lamp, and you were willing to rejoice for a while in his light’ (John 5: 35).
This parable is also the source of the aphorism about hiding one’s light under a bushel.
The original Greek in Matthew (5: 15) and Mark (4: 21) is μόδιος (modios), usually translated as ‘basket.’ A modius was a Roman measure for dry things such as grain and equivalent to about a peck or 8.75 litres.
However, Saint Luke uses the word σκεῦος (skeuos), meaning a vessel or utensil for containing anything. Saint Paul uses the same word when he refers to σκεύη ὀργῆς and σκεύη ἐλέους, vessels of wrath or vessels of mercy, when referring to individuals visited by punishment or visited by divine favour (see Romans 9: 22-23). This word is also used to describe the vessel or frame of the human individual (I Thessalonians 4: 4; I Peter 3: 7). Saint Luke also uses the word κλίνη (klinē) for a couch or bed.
The word bushel , meaning a bowl, was used in William Tyndale’s translation: ‘Neither do men light a candle, and put it under a bushel, but on a candlestick, and it lighteth all them which are in the house.’
The key idea in this morning’s parable is that light or truth is not to be hidden or concealed. This light has been understood as Jesus, as his message, and as the believer’s response to him and to his message. In their writings, Hilary, Ambrose, and Bede understood that the light of the Gospel was not to be confined to Judaea, but to illuminate all nations.
But to hide one’s light under a bushel has come to mean saying little about one’s own skills and abilities, one’s own core values and beliefs, instead of being confident and telling others about them.
When do we hide our lights under bushels, or under a bowl?
When are we reluctant to be beacons in the darkness, shining out for true values when light is needed?
Do I speak up often enough about injustice, oppression and violence and racism, war and prejudice?
Or do I keep my views to myself at those crucial moments, hiding my light under a bushel?
The view from Lichnos in Piskopianó across Hersonissos and out to the north coast of Crete and the Mediterranean (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Today’s Prayers (Thursday 29 January 2026):
The theme this week (25-31 January 2026) in Pray with the World Church, the prayer diary of the Anglican mission agency USPG (United Society Partners in the Gospel), is ‘Connections That Last’ (pp 22-23). This theme was introduced on Sunday with Reflections from Paula de Mello Alves, a Brazilian lawyer and theologian, Executive Secretary of the Southern Diocese, and former co-leader of the Anglican Communion Youth Network (ACYN).
The USPG Prayer Diary today (Thursday 29 January 2026) invites us to pray:
Lord, we give thanks for young people. Help us to celebrate all ages in our churches, learning from one another and growing together in faith.
The Collect:
Almighty God,
whose Son revealed in signs and miracles
the wonder of your saving presence:
renew your people with your heavenly grace,
and in all our weakness
sustain us by your mighty power;
through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord,
who is alive and reigns with you,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever.
The Post-Communion Prayer:
Almighty Father,
whose Son our Saviour Jesus Christ is the light of the world:
may your people,
illumined by your word and sacraments,
shine with the radiance of his glory,
that he may be known, worshipped, and obeyed
to the ends of the earth;
for he is alive and reigns, now and for ever.
Additional Collect:
God of all mercy,
your Son proclaimed good news to the poor,
release to the captives,
and freedom to the oppressed:
anoint us with your Holy Spirit
and set all your people free
to praise you in Christ our Lord.
Yesterday’s Reflections
Continued Tomorrow
‘Is a lamp brought in to be put under the bushel basket, or under the bed, and not on the lampstand?’ (Mark 4: 21) … lit candles in a church in Rethymnon, Crete, at Easter (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
‘Is a lamp brought in to be put under the bushel basket, or under the bed, and not on the lampstand?’ (Mark 4: 21) … evening in a restaurant in York (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Patrick Comerford
This is the last week in the 40-day season of Christmas, which continues until Candlemas or the Feast of the Presentation on 2 February 2026. This week began with the Third Sunday of Epiphany (Epiphany III, 25 January 2026).
Later this evening, I am with the Stony Playreaders in our second presentation of three new short plays by group members exploring the themes of communication and miscommunication, all Upstairs at the Library on Church Street.
It’s Good To Talk is a new play by Emma Luckhurst in which I have the role of Richard III – without the hunchback. Talking may be good for you, but it is also a risky game, loaded with approximations, misunderstandings and pitfalls for the unwary. The two shorter plays are Stony Magic by Peter Stone, in which I have the part of ‘The Widower’, and Marmalade at the Palace by Claire Kemp, a slightly longer short play for grown-ups with a fondness for dry wit, diplomatic disasters – and small talking bears – when I became a footman of impeccable behaviour.
Our first presentation was on Sunday, and this evening’s performance is at 7 pm. Admission is free, but donations will be welcome, and light refreshments are being offered.
Meanwhile, before today begins, I am taking some quiet time this morning to give thanks, to reflect, to pray and to read in these ways:
1, today’s Gospel reading;
2, a short reflection;
3, a prayer from the USPG prayer diary;
4, the Collects and Post-Communion prayer of the day.
‘Is a lamp brought in to be put under the bushel basket, or under the bed, and not on the lampstand?’ (Mark 4: 21) … a lighting lamp in the Boot and Flogger in Southwark (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Mark 4: 21-25 (NRSVA):
21 He said to them, ‘Is a lamp brought in to be put under the bushel basket, or under the bed, and not on the lampstand? 22 For there is nothing hidden, except to be disclosed; nor is anything secret, except to come to light. 23 Let anyone with ears to hear listen!’ 24 And he said to them, ‘Pay attention to what you hear; the measure you give will be the measure you get, and still more will be given you. 25 For to those who have, more will be given; and from those who have nothing, even what they have will be taken away.’
Lichnos in Piskopianó stood out as a light on a hill in Crete, visible for miles below and out to sea (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Today’s Reflections:
Chapter 4 in Saint Mark’s Gospel is the ‘parables chapter,’ recalling parables that make this chapter the central teaching section of this Gospel. Christ is in a boat beside the sea teaching a very large crowd who are listening on the shore (see Mark 4: 1-2). In this morning’s reading (Mark 4: 21-25), he compares speaking out with ensuring a light is used to its best purpose (verses 21-22) .
When I was back in Piskopianó in Crete the Easter before last, I was disappointed to see that one of my favourite tavernas, Lichnos, had been closed for some time.
The name Lichnos comes from the Greek word λύχνος (lychnos), meaning a lamp or a light. The restaurant stood on a precipice on the north side of the village, close to Mika Villas, where I stayed regularly in the 1990s. Lichnos was perched on the edge of the hill, and from its balcony and roof garden there were panoramic views across Hersonissos below and out to the Mediterranean. At night, Lichnos stood out as a light on a hill, visible for miles below and out to sea.
The parable of the lamp under a bushel is told in all three Synoptic Gospels (see Matthew 5: 14-15; Mark 4: 21-25; Luke 8: 16-18). In Saint Matthew’s Gospel, this parable continues the discourse on salt and light in the Sermon on the Mount. But Saint Mark and Saint Luke connect it with Jesus’s explanation of the Parable of the Sower.
The word λύχνος (lychnos) means a light, lamp or candle. But it is also used figuratively for a distinguished teacher, as when Jesus describes Saint John the Baptist as ‘a burning and shining lamp, and you were willing to rejoice for a while in his light’ (John 5: 35).
This parable is also the source of the aphorism about hiding one’s light under a bushel.
The original Greek in Matthew (5: 15) and Mark (4: 21) is μόδιος (modios), usually translated as ‘basket.’ A modius was a Roman measure for dry things such as grain and equivalent to about a peck or 8.75 litres.
However, Saint Luke uses the word σκεῦος (skeuos), meaning a vessel or utensil for containing anything. Saint Paul uses the same word when he refers to σκεύη ὀργῆς and σκεύη ἐλέους, vessels of wrath or vessels of mercy, when referring to individuals visited by punishment or visited by divine favour (see Romans 9: 22-23). This word is also used to describe the vessel or frame of the human individual (I Thessalonians 4: 4; I Peter 3: 7). Saint Luke also uses the word κλίνη (klinē) for a couch or bed.
The word bushel , meaning a bowl, was used in William Tyndale’s translation: ‘Neither do men light a candle, and put it under a bushel, but on a candlestick, and it lighteth all them which are in the house.’
The key idea in this morning’s parable is that light or truth is not to be hidden or concealed. This light has been understood as Jesus, as his message, and as the believer’s response to him and to his message. In their writings, Hilary, Ambrose, and Bede understood that the light of the Gospel was not to be confined to Judaea, but to illuminate all nations.
But to hide one’s light under a bushel has come to mean saying little about one’s own skills and abilities, one’s own core values and beliefs, instead of being confident and telling others about them.
When do we hide our lights under bushels, or under a bowl?
When are we reluctant to be beacons in the darkness, shining out for true values when light is needed?
Do I speak up often enough about injustice, oppression and violence and racism, war and prejudice?
Or do I keep my views to myself at those crucial moments, hiding my light under a bushel?
The view from Lichnos in Piskopianó across Hersonissos and out to the north coast of Crete and the Mediterranean (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Today’s Prayers (Thursday 29 January 2026):
The theme this week (25-31 January 2026) in Pray with the World Church, the prayer diary of the Anglican mission agency USPG (United Society Partners in the Gospel), is ‘Connections That Last’ (pp 22-23). This theme was introduced on Sunday with Reflections from Paula de Mello Alves, a Brazilian lawyer and theologian, Executive Secretary of the Southern Diocese, and former co-leader of the Anglican Communion Youth Network (ACYN).
The USPG Prayer Diary today (Thursday 29 January 2026) invites us to pray:
Lord, we give thanks for young people. Help us to celebrate all ages in our churches, learning from one another and growing together in faith.
The Collect:
Almighty God,
whose Son revealed in signs and miracles
the wonder of your saving presence:
renew your people with your heavenly grace,
and in all our weakness
sustain us by your mighty power;
through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord,
who is alive and reigns with you,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever.
The Post-Communion Prayer:
Almighty Father,
whose Son our Saviour Jesus Christ is the light of the world:
may your people,
illumined by your word and sacraments,
shine with the radiance of his glory,
that he may be known, worshipped, and obeyed
to the ends of the earth;
for he is alive and reigns, now and for ever.
Additional Collect:
God of all mercy,
your Son proclaimed good news to the poor,
release to the captives,
and freedom to the oppressed:
anoint us with your Holy Spirit
and set all your people free
to praise you in Christ our Lord.
Yesterday’s Reflections
Continued Tomorrow
‘Is a lamp brought in to be put under the bushel basket, or under the bed, and not on the lampstand?’ (Mark 4: 21) … lit candles in a church in Rethymnon, Crete, at Easter (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
‘Is a lamp brought in to be put under the bushel basket, or under the bed, and not on the lampstand?’ (Mark 4: 21) … evening in a restaurant in York (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
28 January 2026
Pulls Ferry and the mediaeval
Ferry House by the river in Norwich,
saved by a bequest from a poet
Pulls Ferry by the banks of the River Wensum, once the water gate to Norwich Cathedral (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2026)
Patrick Comerford
As we were strolling around the Cathedral Quarter in Norwich during our recent visit, we came to Pulls Ferry by the banks of the River Wensum, one of the ‘signature’ views of the city and the riverside. The channel running up to the ferry point is far older than the ferry house and was built even before the cathedral.
The ferry and the ferry house are a picturesque part of the Cathedral Quarter and cherished landmarks in Norwich, still closely linked with the cathedral, and they were saved almost 80 years ago through a bequest to the cathedral from the Norwich-born poet and artist Camilla Doyle and fundraising by the Norwich Girl Guides.
Pulls Ferry was once the water gate to Norwich Cathedral and its story goes back to the 12th century, when the monks cut a canal from the River Wensum that ran under the arch, so that building materials could be unloaded on the spot.
Heavy building materials were difficult to transport in the Middle Ages. Roads were poor and building materials were often transported by boat. Before work began on Norwich Cathedral in the 12th century, a narrow chance or canal was cut from the River Wensum to the building site to bring in stone, timber, and iron used in building the cathedral.
The stone from Caen was brought up the rivers Yare and Wensum to the canal and from there to the cathedral site, along with timber from the Baltic and iron from Sweden, as well as peat from the fens in East Anglia, which uses as fuel in the priory kitchens.
An arched gateway guarding the approach to the cathedral was built across the canal in the 15th century, and the gateway remains the most obvious historical feature of Pulls Ferry today.
An arched gateway guarding the approach to the cathedral was built across the canal in the 15th century (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2026)
The Priory at Norwich Cathedral was dissolved along with other monastic houses at the Tudor Reformation in the 16th century. The current Ferry House, a flint building, was built in 1647, incorporating the earlier gateway. The house was both an inn and a home for a ferryman carrying people across the Wensum.
Thomas Howes, or Holmes, was the first ferryman, and the building was once known as Sandling’s after an early ferryman. The 12th century canal was filled in ca 1772-1780, and the only reminder of it is the course of the modern slipway leading from the river to the mediaeval arch.
The name Pulls Ferry comes from John Pull, who ran the crossing from 1796 until he died in 1841 at the age of 73. He was probably the last licensee to run the Ferry House as a pub.
The ferry continued to operate until 1943, when the buildings had fallen into dilapidation. The ferry house and the watergate were saved in 1947 thanks to a bequest from the poet and painter Camilla Doyle and fundraising by the Norwich Girl Guides.
The poet and artist Honor Camilla Doyle (1888-1944) is best-known for her poem ‘The Town Rabbit in the Country’ published in volume of poetry, Poems, in 1923. She was born into a family of Irish descent in the Cathedral Close in Norwich and lived there for most of her life.
Her books include 16 New Poems (London, 1920), Poems (Oxford, 1923), and The ‘General Shop’ and other poems (London, 1937). She was also known as an artist and craft designer, and her paintings and furniture were exhibited widely. Her painting ‘Lock 75, Cassiobury Canal’ is in Norwich Castle Museum.
The 12th century canal was filled in ca 1772-1780, and the only reminder of it is the slipway leading from the river to the mediaeval arch (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2026)
Camilla Doyle died in Norwich in 1944 and in her will she left half her estate for the maintenance of Norwich Castle Museum. Both the Ferry House and the archway were restored in 1948-1949 by the architect Cecil Upcher (1884-1972), who was involved in all aspects of restoration in churches around Norfolk. His other works include the World War I Memorial Cottages at Mousehold, to provide support for wounded soldiers and a Chinese-style boathouse in Cawston Park.
The restored Ferry House at first became offices for Upcher’s architectural practice and the watergate became the headquarters of Norwich Girl Guides Association in 1949.
Pulls Ferry and Ferry House are a five-minute walk from Norwich Railway Station and are privately owned. The only real reminder of the history of the site is a small plaque at the top of the drive leading down to the ferry. The Watergate Room can be hired for a variety of activities including meetings, parties, award presentation ceremonies, sing songs and picnics by the river. A footpath leads along the river from Bishop Bridge, but perhaps the best view of the ferry is from the facing side of the river, off Riverside Road.
The ferry house and the watergate were saved in 1947 thanks to a bequest from Camilla Doyle and fundraising by Norwich Girl Guides (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2026)
Patrick Comerford
As we were strolling around the Cathedral Quarter in Norwich during our recent visit, we came to Pulls Ferry by the banks of the River Wensum, one of the ‘signature’ views of the city and the riverside. The channel running up to the ferry point is far older than the ferry house and was built even before the cathedral.
The ferry and the ferry house are a picturesque part of the Cathedral Quarter and cherished landmarks in Norwich, still closely linked with the cathedral, and they were saved almost 80 years ago through a bequest to the cathedral from the Norwich-born poet and artist Camilla Doyle and fundraising by the Norwich Girl Guides.
Pulls Ferry was once the water gate to Norwich Cathedral and its story goes back to the 12th century, when the monks cut a canal from the River Wensum that ran under the arch, so that building materials could be unloaded on the spot.
Heavy building materials were difficult to transport in the Middle Ages. Roads were poor and building materials were often transported by boat. Before work began on Norwich Cathedral in the 12th century, a narrow chance or canal was cut from the River Wensum to the building site to bring in stone, timber, and iron used in building the cathedral.
The stone from Caen was brought up the rivers Yare and Wensum to the canal and from there to the cathedral site, along with timber from the Baltic and iron from Sweden, as well as peat from the fens in East Anglia, which uses as fuel in the priory kitchens.
An arched gateway guarding the approach to the cathedral was built across the canal in the 15th century, and the gateway remains the most obvious historical feature of Pulls Ferry today.
An arched gateway guarding the approach to the cathedral was built across the canal in the 15th century (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2026)
The Priory at Norwich Cathedral was dissolved along with other monastic houses at the Tudor Reformation in the 16th century. The current Ferry House, a flint building, was built in 1647, incorporating the earlier gateway. The house was both an inn and a home for a ferryman carrying people across the Wensum.
Thomas Howes, or Holmes, was the first ferryman, and the building was once known as Sandling’s after an early ferryman. The 12th century canal was filled in ca 1772-1780, and the only reminder of it is the course of the modern slipway leading from the river to the mediaeval arch.
The name Pulls Ferry comes from John Pull, who ran the crossing from 1796 until he died in 1841 at the age of 73. He was probably the last licensee to run the Ferry House as a pub.
The ferry continued to operate until 1943, when the buildings had fallen into dilapidation. The ferry house and the watergate were saved in 1947 thanks to a bequest from the poet and painter Camilla Doyle and fundraising by the Norwich Girl Guides.
The poet and artist Honor Camilla Doyle (1888-1944) is best-known for her poem ‘The Town Rabbit in the Country’ published in volume of poetry, Poems, in 1923. She was born into a family of Irish descent in the Cathedral Close in Norwich and lived there for most of her life.
Her books include 16 New Poems (London, 1920), Poems (Oxford, 1923), and The ‘General Shop’ and other poems (London, 1937). She was also known as an artist and craft designer, and her paintings and furniture were exhibited widely. Her painting ‘Lock 75, Cassiobury Canal’ is in Norwich Castle Museum.
The 12th century canal was filled in ca 1772-1780, and the only reminder of it is the slipway leading from the river to the mediaeval arch (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2026)
Camilla Doyle died in Norwich in 1944 and in her will she left half her estate for the maintenance of Norwich Castle Museum. Both the Ferry House and the archway were restored in 1948-1949 by the architect Cecil Upcher (1884-1972), who was involved in all aspects of restoration in churches around Norfolk. His other works include the World War I Memorial Cottages at Mousehold, to provide support for wounded soldiers and a Chinese-style boathouse in Cawston Park.
The restored Ferry House at first became offices for Upcher’s architectural practice and the watergate became the headquarters of Norwich Girl Guides Association in 1949.
Pulls Ferry and Ferry House are a five-minute walk from Norwich Railway Station and are privately owned. The only real reminder of the history of the site is a small plaque at the top of the drive leading down to the ferry. The Watergate Room can be hired for a variety of activities including meetings, parties, award presentation ceremonies, sing songs and picnics by the river. A footpath leads along the river from Bishop Bridge, but perhaps the best view of the ferry is from the facing side of the river, off Riverside Road.
The ferry house and the watergate were saved in 1947 thanks to a bequest from Camilla Doyle and fundraising by Norwich Girl Guides (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2026)
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