Ship of Fools: Manchester Cathedral, England

Scolded by the dean for mumbling our way through the responses, but his sermon was excellent.
Read the full Mystery Worshipper report here
Scolded by the dean for mumbling our way through the responses, but his sermon was excellent.
Read the full Mystery Worshipper report here
Comments
Sounds like a wonderful sermon.
No wonder there was such a small congregation, Climacus....
Re Manchester Cathedral, I believe it was at one time, at any rate, quite Low Church, so perhaps there's a long tradition of a sermon at every service. Common Worship Order One is quite easy to abbreviate, if time is pressing.
IJ
I didn't appreciate that the RCC did it, so I stand duly admonished, and corrected.
IJ
Who did the scolding? I'd be very surprised if it were either the present rector or the (now departing for his own parish) senior associate. Did you perhaps stumble into a choir rehearsal?
This was 20+ years ago. And I think, the memory is hazy, the leader of this Evening (or Afternoon...I was between classes at a nearby university) Prayer was not the rector but a man in minor orders. It did leave a sour taste tbh, but not so much I did not return for Parish Masses or Evensongs.
I am not sure who it may have been at that time, but I'll ask around quietly.
The last time I was at Manchester Cathedral was for Ascension Day and they swung the incense with a vengeance.
/tangent/
I suspect incense is used more often these days in English cathedrals than was the case a generation ago.
/tangent ends/
IJ
I enjoyed a chat with a verger (who I could tell was a verger because I had worked as a verger not long before), and really enjoyed seeing the Virgin of Vladimir-based icon in the Lady Chapel. (I was in town to present a paper on the Vladimir icon, so that was a lovely bonus for me!)
On a point of interest, there are three side chapels: the Regimental Chapel, the Fraser Chapel, and the Chapel of the Holy Name (referred to informally as "the Jesus chapel"), in addition to the Lady chapel at the east end. There was, at one time, a restored St Nicholas chapel, as well. It was a children's chapel on the site of what had been the mediaeval St Nicholas altar against the south wall of the nave, but this hasn't been in evidence recently.
Is there a decent photograph that is more recent? The one in the report is somewhat dated now. The cathedral doesn't look like that anymore.
In the case of the cathedral, the photo that the reporter submitted was, as I remember, portrait oriented and could not be cropped successfully into landscape orientation. I searched high and low on the Web for a landscape-oriented photo. I found several, but they were all protected by copyright and so we could not use them. The photo that was used is the only one I could find that appeared not to be copyrighted.
If someone in the area would be so kind as to snap a landscape photo of the cathedral and e-mail it to me at abrmweditor@gmail.com, I would be happy to substitute it for the current one. You'll understand, I'm sure, that I am not free to travel to Manchester.