Ship of Fools: St Nicholas, Bristol, England
Ship of Fools: St Nicholas, Bristol, England
Moved by their kindness, appalled by their music
Read the full Mystery Worshipper report here
Ship of Fools: St Nicholas, Bristol, England
Moved by their kindness, appalled by their music
Read the full Mystery Worshipper report here
Comments
The Hogarths have their own Wikipedia page: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sealing_the_Tomb
Apparently £3.8 million to be spent over six years
Incidentally, it was intended for st Mary Redcliffe, but was too big for the space (a lucky escape)
My thoughts exactly. Rock concert as church is not to my taste.
From the Diocese of Bristol web site:
The overall cost of refurbishing the church and funding its local and city-wide work over six years is £3.8m. As part of this, the Diocese of Bristol has been awarded £1.5m of Strategic Development Funding by the Church of England to support the costs across the first four years.
My suspicion is that a good deal of the money comes from the Parish Share/Quota, or whatever it's called these days - IOW, the money paid into the Dioceses each month by individual parishes.
I'm sure we've had threads on this subject before, as there is sometimes some angst amongst poorer parishes, trying hard to meet their quota, but apparently paying for these 'flagship' enterprises (some of which are of the South Sea Bubble nature...).
I know of Shipmates who feel strongly about this sort of thing (even though they may not be members of the C of E!), but I realise that this is, perhaps, not the place to explore the subject further.
@Baptist Trainfan speaks for me, too.
'There is room for all in my Father's house,
In my Father's house, in my Father's house!
There is room for all in my Father's house, where there's joy, joy, joy!'
(I never did get to 'go out with Joy', though...).
I'll get me coat...
Around my neck of the woods, it is the pulpit, but I have basically the same question.
Now, where can I obtain a Tiger, not to frighten the Vicar, but an egregious couple known, at Our Place, as The Glums?
I now recall having seen Whistler's portrait of her at the Frick, and can well believe that she had a tiger at hand to deal with the vicar.