Looking out from Frenchay Chapel, photo by Ian Jones.
A Two-Hundred year old tradition with its roots in Christianity and its modern practice in:
Multi-faith learning.
Exploring your own spiritual path.
Free thinking.
Dissent and social justice.
Unbound by creed, doctrine, belief or dogma.
United in a search for truth, however it may reveal itself.
Values of kindness and celebrating diversity.
Fun fact: The name 'Unitarian' comes from the belief of the original founders of the movement, about the 'oneness' of God, as opposed to God being the Holy Trinity, as was taught by the mainstream church.
Nowadays this issue does not define the Unitarian movement, as you can be free to believe that God is one, two, three, four, five, any number that makes sense to you, or no number at all!
Pioneers in women's ministry and celebrating same-sex relationships!
First Church in England to ordain a woman minister in 1904!!!
Come and have your same-sex marriage in one of our Bristol chapels! Both chapels fully registered!
When do we meet?
Sundays at 10.30am for an hour Gathering at Frenchay Chapel, Beckspool Road, Frenchay Common, Bristol, BS16 1ND
5pm on 2nd and 4th Sunday of the monthly only at Unitarian Meeting Hall, Brunswick Square, Bristol, BS2 8PE
What happens at our gatherings?
We gathering for services of reflection, prayer, meditation, inspiration, learning, sharing of joys and concerns, story and song.
We have our own Unitarian hymn books, with many tunes you might recognise, but with words which reflect the Unitarian approach to open-minded and -hearted spiritual enquiry.
Please feel free to stay afterwards for tea, coffee and chat.
Frenchay Chapel
Unitarian Meeting Bristol
For further details and listings of other events see services and events listings.
We are small but busy loving community. Welcome if you are coming to us for the first time, and welcome still if you are visiting once or again. We’d like to let you know that our doors are open as you look to explore faith, spirituality, religion and belief. Welcome to you if have come from another faith tradition or from no faith tradition at all.
Bristol and Frenchay Unitarian community has two places of meeting: our inner city meeting just off the city centre, and our rural chapel situated in the beautiful surroundings of Frenchay Common and the picturesque Village of Frenchay, just outside of Bristol.
We as Unitarians believe that there is a search for the meaning of the divine, and that we seek the divine in all people together as we search for the answers. Here in our Unitarian community we are not a dogmatic or prescriptive faith. We search in a way best understood by you, and we welcome each other’s questions and hold in sacred value all that we find together.
Here is what we have open to you - not only do we have a Sunday form of gathering and worship - we have a little more than that, with the hope that all will feel that they can grow in religious and spiritual dignity.
We believe that creating a time and space that is different and accessible from what we have on a Sunday is important for the growth of people, so we can broaden our spiritual realties. We also have a programme of different gatherings led by people from both of our meeting places. Whether it’s a discussion group, yoga, meditation or times of ritual and celebration from other traditions, we have something for you, we hope.
We also have an annual retreat in the beautiful and picturesque surroundings of the Llangasty Retreat Centre in South Wales. This is also led by facilitators from both our gatherings. We believe safe sacred space is important in all that our community is and can be, as we search for meaning together.
At Bristol Unitarians we believe everyone has a unique voice and a special vision. We are all different ages and backgrounds and all are welcome.
The leaders of the sessions are experienced people who have not only been in the community for a long time, but some our members are also facilitators as part of their paid work and from teaching backgrounds within education.
Some have come from other faith denominations and some from a ministry background.
We have an inclusive ministry whereby we believe in embracing and nurturing faith one to another and being there to sow and cultivate a place of sacred hospitality.
We are proud to a place where we celebrate same-sex union.
We also have national events that are held around the country, where many congregations meet at an annual conference called the General Assembly. We have various meetings in different regions too. Our communities are part of the Southwest Region, known at The Western Union (nothing to do with money transfers).
We also have a national Unitarian Conference Centre in Derbyshire called the Nightingale Centre. One annual event which takes place here is the Unitarian Summer School, which is a week of sacred community and engagement in a conference setting. We gather there together in an environment that is crafted to foster exploration and discussion in faith and belief. The conference centre is set in the picturesque countryside village of Great Hucklow in the Derbyshire Peak District.
Our governance
Unitarians as a group
The group is a joint committee of representatives from both meetings. All our meetings are open to observers. These meetings are part of the formal business aspect of finances, forward planning and the growth or our community and worship.
The chapels as individual meetings
Unitarian meeting Bristol and Frenchay Chapel are two separate charities. Therefore, we have several meetings during the year as we are a charity and handle money. Both charities are registered with the Charity Commission. Our accounts are published and submitted to the Commission.
Both chapels have a Chair, Secretary, and Treasurer. This is a legal requirement to satisfy our charitable status . This doesn’t represent a hierarchy.
Trustees
We have a committee of trustees for both chapel buildings. Having trustees is part of the Charity Commission requirements. The trustees are there to ensure the buildings are kept up and maintained, kept in a safe state of repair and are kept in keeping with their listed status. This is also supervised where needed by English Heritage.
Chapel Committees
Both chapels have a committee to ensure the general running of the meeting and to oversee finances and guide the growth of the congregation, its worship, and its spiritual learning and development.
Safeguarding
We have a safeguarding contact in both congregations. If there was a concern, they are the point of contact.
Our Worship and Music
First and foremost we do not have a creedal or denominational practice, therefore we do not have a Vicar, Priest, Deacon or Bishop. We are a non-hierarchical community.
We have a gathering (service) every Sunday morning at 10:30am at Frenchay and on the 2nd and 4th Sundays in the month at 5pm at Unitarian Meeting Bristol (also known as UMB). Our gatherings (services) are not like a traditional Christian service or Mass. At Unitarians this is where we differ - our gatherings are usually taken on a theme for instance “stepping through faith – living in truth.”
This will be assembled by the leader for worship that day and might contain material from other faith traditions, and include a unitarian insight to make it tangible. Our gatherings (services) are taken by congregational members, visiting worship leaders from the region, or a current or retired Unitarian Minister. There are occasions where we have visiting speakers from other denominations, schools of thought and faith traditions too.
We have two hymn books: Hymns for Living and Sing your Faith. This is where we differ again - our hymn books contain a rich variety of Unitarian theology through song, as well as hymns from other faith traditions. They explore a variety of subjects, looking, for example, at nature and humanity. What might be familiar is the tunes - some will be familiar form schooldays or where you may have been to church before. Many of our hymns also have their own original tunes though. We have a variety sung responses, gathering chants and introits. These may be used every so often. We also have some music composed and hymns written in-house.
Engagement and discussion groups
Growth is something that is important to us. As mentioned above, there are separate times to Sunday worship throughout the month when various groups, which are led by members, help us to grow in our individual spiritual explorations as well as together as community. These groups will usually focus on a subject as a theme, for example “how does nature speak with us and our faith?”. Engagement groups are another way to connect with each other, and it is also a space for people to meet who cannot make or do not come to Sunday worship. It is important to us that us that we create and cultivate a place where all can access joining in community.
These times of meeting are held in a safe and gentle way, where you take part in as much or as little as feels comfortable. All of these are announced in the weekly email.
Text for this page was kindly written by our UMB Chair Karl Stewart, January 2024.
everyone has the right to seektruth and meaning for themselves.
the fundamental tools for doing this are your own life experience, your reflection upon it, your intuitive understanding and the promptings of your own conscience.
the best setting for this is a community that welcomes you for who you are, complete with your beliefs, doubts and questions.
We can be called religious ‘liberals’:
religious because we unite to celebrate and affirm values that embrace and reflect a greater reality than self.
liberal because we claim no exclusive revelation or status for ourselves; because we afford respect and toleration to those who follow different paths of faith.
We are called ‘Unitarians’:
because of our traditional insistence on divine unity, the oneness of God.
because we affirm the essential unity of humankind and of creation.
BOTH CHAPELS ARE NOW FULLY REGISTERED TO CONDUCT SAME-SEX WEDDINGS AND CIVIL PARTNERSHIPS
Without the need for a separate civil ceremony.
Today more and more couples want to make both a civil and spiritual commitment to each other on their wedding day. This includes couples of the same gender, those who have been married before, couples who come from two different faith traditions, or who do not belong to a religious institution.
The Unitarian approach to marriage and religious beliefs may be able to help those who want more than a civil ceremony. We believe that there are many sources of truth, and that no-one has the right to impose their beliefs on another. We respect other faith traditions and gain enrichment from their literature and wisdom. We know that many people do not belong to any particular faith, but are following their own spiritual path.
We feel that it is important that there should be a place where couples can celebrate their union within their local community. Our chapel is steeped in local history, as it is one of the oldest in the area. This adds to the value of the occasion.
A marriage ceremony is a very personal thing, and should reflect and express what is significant and important to the couple. The couple can gain a lot by planning the ceremony with the minister. There is very little about a wedding ceremony that is required by law, so it's a wonderful opportunity to be creative with words and music. It can be a very individual occasion as well as including time-honoured traditions.
Please get in touch via the website if you wish to consider a wedding or if you want more information.
Otherwise you are welcome to attend any of our services.
Karl and Mark's Wedding / Civil Partnership at UMB, 13.7.2013, with Frenchay Congregation
Funerals
A Unitarian funeral is always dignified and fitting. We work hard to create a service that reflects and celebrates the life of the person. When planning such services, we will not impose any set liturgy and will make certain that you are happy with the form that the service will take.
Baptisms and Child Naming
A meaningful welcome to any new additions to your family!
Photos kindly provided by Vicky from her wedding at Frenchay Chapel in 2017
Is it spring yet? Well not so you’d think, but again there are daffodils. I saw some in January - the seasons have taken to following no rule, rhyme or reason. We had a quick sprinkle of snow, a frosty morning or several and a good few downpours.
Although the cycle of the seasons is so familiar to us, I wonder if there’s something new we can discover in the morphing of each season into the next. Every winter tells a new story, as it connects to a new story within us, each time it comes around. With the return of each season, there will always been new facets it brings out in us, new things for us to learn, a new lesson in each day of the season and some new delight for us to discover.
I’m looking forward to slowly returning to the time we can gather again and hopefully it isn’t too far off. Although we are only meeting and seeing one another on screens at the moment, we can still gather the spirit together in community.
It’s a real blessing that we can join others in meeting, and we can welcome others from different places around the region and the country. Looking forward I hope we’ll continue making of all our sacred travels, and meeting together to make a real tapestry of exploration and growth, to welcome the new.
Thank you all for all you have done to keep us walking in the light.
Yours with care.
Karl Stewart. Chair UMB.
Reflecting on Lent.
From Karl.
Looking at Lent probably changes its perspective, something I find myself looking back at is the basic teaching of what it was, as taught in school perhaps even Sunday School. We may well know form this earlier lesson, being told of the story of Jesus in the wilderness; knowing the tale of the searching, watching and waiting; knowing the anguish that Jesus went through. This of course is just one example of a wilderness teaching. Though I don’t particularly feel that this the only literal example, there are of course many different perspectives in the many faiths around the world; and those that don’t mark it may have an acceptance that it is part of a journey for others.
Looking at Lent the sole ritual is sacrifice, this surrender to allowing the strength somewhere within oneself to say I’ll go without this, change that, abstain from. We will have heard many times the question, “what are you going to give up for Lent”? It’s a question that will never cease to be uttered, nor shall it change how ever many times one hears it. But with that does the tone of the question change depending who asks it. I can honestly say, I’ve been asked this by people with a tone of proud glee. To which I’ve often replied, well what are you going start for Lent. It’s with that I feel that we actually do start something, for Lent.
One perspective on the sacrifice of the thing or things you give up, could be that it’s a time to stand aside and look at a part of your being, that you have cultivated for the ritual forty day and nights. There is a stripping back of a small patch of soul that you have weeded, raked over, taken out those small bulbs of nice bits. These little things that are going to sit aside, whilst you take this journey without into the wilderness. For the ritual forty days and nights watching and waiting, on this body holiday. This is a time to at least say I may have this for these days ahead, but while look inside at the wilderness, I can meet the many to will come from all the paths, and meet to replant the sacred.
As we travel Lent together in the way of all we feel and believe, let it be that we all rejoin and greet Easter together and celebrate the newness of the field and all that will grow together.
A prayer for Lent.
Loving God of all creation cool for us the ashes, and anoint the soles of our feet, so that we may walk together. As we travel the journey that all our sacred foot prints will be those that meet together again. May they never fade. Amen.
From our Minister John.
In memoriam. Mary Cowley. 01.06.43-31.01.21.
Our very dear friend and member of Frenchay Chapel. Mary Cowley passed away on Sunday the 31st January. During the past five years Mary and Colin attended the Chapel and UMB. It is with much appreciation for everything, Mary did in her time as secretary, leading worship and the work she as a session leader to the Rainbow Path group. May we give thanks for the last five years of Mary exploring with great courage and question, in the exploration of faith as she spent it with us.
Our condolences to Colin and the family at this sad time. Colin would greatly appreciate a phone call, any offers of help are also welcome. The phone Number is: (0117) 239 0735.
A little wooden house
A 'Hygge' meditation by Karl Stewart
It's a dark day in knotty tree wood.
And it's chilly, cold and wet I'm off to my little wooden House. I've been out walking in all directions, but now it's time to rest.
Winter comes and goes, there's a little fire place in there with a stone hearth ready and waiting with the wood I collected in summer.
I'm off to my little wooden House to stay warm and rest a little, I'll know I'm on the way. I'll know it when I see it there's a little candle lamp in the window.
On my way to the little wooden House the light of the fallen snow lights the way. As the sun goes down over knotty tree wood, the snowy white light, is soft and still. It lights my path to the little wooden House.
Where the fire is going to light and warm the heart of the home that loves you, me and all in this world. Bless this little wooden House.
Amen.
Joy to the World with verses written by attendees at Bristol Unitarians Rainbow Path 17.12.2020
Jennifer Nicholson
Joy to the Earth, we're still alive!
When all was looking grim
We've dug down deep,
we've faced our fears…
And now it's time to shine!
And now it's time to live!
And now, oh now ... it's time to love!
Peter Bruce
Joy to all living, upon this earth
We are all... from the... same source
We eat and drink and sleep,
We dance and play and laugh
Let all enjoin in our space
Let all enjoin in our space
Let all…. enjoy our peace and space.
Anna Sweetham
Joy to the World, a new day dawns,
This virus has done its work.
With pain and loss
And suffering
Let's look at life afresh,
Let's look at life afresh
Let's see... how love has helped us through
John Harley
Joy to all those in leadership
Politicians, kings and queens
may they not….
Forget... our children
Let's give them space to grow
Let's give them space to grow
Let's give them space to grow and thrive
Karl Stewart
Joy grace and light, the day is new.
May…. we all... give thanks,
As we step
the journey,
Wondering the path ahead,
wandering the path ahead,
Seeking truth and joy and love this day.
Mark Stewart
Joy to the world, take a deep breath
Step back and look around
You are safe and sound
In this moment now
Your fear has flown away
Your shackles on the ground
Jump for joy for true freedom you have found
Christmas Tree Dressing Video
at Brunswick Square (UMB)
By Karl Stewart with Mark Stewart, December 2020
From The Desk
Karl Stewart, Chair Bristol Unitarian Meeting
Dear all,
We have this year seen many dramatic changes; some we’d never even thought possible. We have been faced with having to make many unforeseen decisions, taken many different navigations, listened to a lot of new information on things we probably would have ever envisaged knowing. For us all in our Unitarian communities and church families we will have been challenged by the twists and turns of all the realities this year has brought us. Speaking for myself, it’s somehow allowed me a treasury of strengths that were unknown to me. That said, there has amid this been not only for me, but all of us, a type of grief. I’m considering this in what has been called National Grief Week, this of course is a week that looks at how we process that very emotion. This on the one hand may be a “lets give something else a title – as if things don’t have enough titles already moment” type of scenario - grief is never confined to just one week. However, by calling grief by its name, it at least gives grief a space to be just what it is, although we know that grief lays in all our lives and in all our days, as many of you will know only too well.
So here we are just approaching Christmas and on our way through the Advent season, leading to the birth of the child in the stable, a story told a number of ways, and spoken in many languages: the familiar story of Christmas or Yule. As we enter the festival days I hope that we can make all of the days special, and still filled with the meaning of what they are for you. We have been taken en-route through a change or two this year. However, I believe we will rekindle as we did before, within the light of the sacred flame that keeps us joined. Let it be so that the flame will be the strength it was and will be stronger still, while love continues to be the beacon of hospitality we all share in gratitude with each other.
While we wait in the shadows of hope, may we walk each step in compassion with ourselves and one another. As we journey on the path to the stable so bare, I hope we will see the candle flame to bring us together when we are miles off, to that open door. When we meet again may we see one another through the divinity of all that’s beyond our knowing.
Wishing you all a good and soul-filled Christmas, with peace as we replant the sacred.
Yours with love and care.
Karl Stewart, Bristol Unitarians.
Waiting...
Rev. Lindy Latham, December 2020
This is the season of anticipation,
of expecting, of hoping, of wanting.
This is the time of expecting the arrival
of something – or someone.
We are waiting.....
When I was working in a Day Centre for people with disabilities, I asked a group of older members what they spent most of their time doing.
“Waiting” replied Peggy. “Waiting for the bus to bring me here, waiting for my dinner, waiting for the phone to ring, waiting for my friend to pop round.”
The memory of Peggy's words have come to me several times recently. They were not said with any kind of resentment...more of a calm acceptance that that was how things were for her.
Many of us now are experiencing a deeper and longer sense of waiting than we usually do in this time of Advent.
So what are we waiting for?
What is the world waiting for?
The Christian focus is of course waiting for the coming of the Saviour, Mary was waiting for the birth of Jesus..
...and with all these kinds of waiting, there is a sense of unknowing..
The bus might not come, our friends might not phone, and possibly more powerfully for all of us at the moment, we don't know for sure about the availability and efficacy of the much longed for vaccine for Covid 19.
In the meantime we are left waiting in a state of uncertainty, but this space also gives us an opportunity to reflect on what matters most of all to us.
Waiting for a world which might know true justice,
Waiting for a lasting sense of peace,
respite and renewal
Waiting for a sense of hope
For all of this – we are waiting.
Wishing you all a peaceful and joyful Christmas.
With love, Lindy
Words in italics by Universalist Unitarian minister Leslie Takahashi [adapted]
Don’t surrender your loneliness so quickly
Rev. John Harley, December 2020
Loneliness has been in the headlines recently. I spotted an article on the BBC News website: ‘Lockdown loneliness reaches record levels’ – it explored the experience of isolation many people have been feeling during the pandemic lockdowns. This hardship is now being intensified by the darker evenings and colder weather and added to this we have heard the scaremongering claims of this Christmas being cancelled! I know that some people within our congregations have been struggling with a sense of isolation and solitude over these strange, stressful months. In the first lockdown I certainly had some moments of renewal but also some difficult times of overwhelm and exhaustion.
The truth is that whatever the state of the restrictions and whichever tier we find ourselves in, the spirit of Christmas and Hanukkah can never be postponed. The heart of these festivals does not depend on shops being open or even physical journeys being made. The warm glow of Christmas celebrates the intimacy and love at the centre of the human experience when faced with poverty and darkness. We can get into contact with one another and reach out despite distances and disappointments. Hanukkah is the festival of lights for Jewish people who remember the miracle of hope and freedom in a time of threat and fear. Perhaps we are invited to rediscover the spiritual riches at the heart of these festivals in these recent challenging times. Can the Covid restrictions on partying and travelling and limits on the commercialisation of this festive period bring some of us closer to the profound and magical core of these ancient celebrations and rituals?
And maybe even loneliness itself can bring us gifts if we are brave enough not to run away from it but see what lessons can be learned. Hafiz, the Persian poet and mystic from the Fourteenth century wrote:
Don't surrender your loneliness
So quickly.
Let it cut more deep.
Let it ferment and season you
As few human
Or even divine ingredients can.
Something missing in my heart tonight
Has made my eyes so soft,
My voice
So tender,
My need of God
Absolutely
Clear.
At Frenchay and UMB we will certainly not be cancelling Christmas or any of the other winter festivals. We may have to approach these festivals differently though and we may even get fresh insights into their true meaning and value. Wishing you all flickers of gold and light in these winter months of uncertainty. Happy Christmas/Hanukkah/Winter Solstice!!
With blessings and cheer
John
What matters most
Mark Stewart, December 2020
For our Bristol Unitarians retreat weekend this year, if it had gone ahead, we were going to have spent some time considering the question ‘what matters most?’
In planning for the retreat we talked about the ways in which the pandemic had forced us all to strip life back to its essentials, and how it had brought into sharp focus the things that really matter to us.
As we approach the end of the year, at the darkest time of the year, it’s a time when we traditionally reflect on the past twelve months, giving rise to new year’s resolutions, or catching up with people we might not have spoken to since last Christmas.
So along with the usual reflecting we do around this time of year, we have perhaps been particularly reflecting on with the way that Covid has affected so many parts of our lives.
So what matters most?
The first thing that comes to my mind is FOOD! The strangeness of queueing down the side of Aldi, keeping two metres apart. Whilst everything else was shutting down, the supermarkets remained open. And that reminded me of Maslow’s ‘Hierarchy of Needs’. The most basic needs of keeping body and soul together are towards the bottom of Maslow’s pyramid: food, water, air, warmth, sleep, shelter and health. These were the things that suddenly became our priorities.
We quickly learnt what didn’t matter as much: education, employment, travel, leisure, socialising, entertainment and even religion! These were the things we had to give up in service to the basic needs of life.
And many of us rediscovered some of the things that mattered that we’d forgotten about: spending time in nature, going for walks, a slower pace of life.
But as the pandemic restrictions rolled on, more and more we began to find that some of the ‘higher’ needs mattered as much as the ‘lower’ ones: the need to spend time with friends, to hug and shake hands, to be able to move around freely, to be able to congregate and celebrate. Loneliness and mental health issues have definitely increased because of the pandemic.
So in this time of reflection, I’m asking myself, what really does matter most from the ‘lower’ and the ‘higher’ needs. What can we do without and what have we realised we really do need?
I often think of our nomadic tribal ancestors. What did they manage with? What was essential to their lives?
Could we live without an economic system that isn’t dependent on climate-crisis fuelling consumerism? Could we live without the need to feel busy, important and stressed out all of the time? Could we embrace scientific and technological innovation without turning ourselves into slave-drones and destroying the planet? Can we have aspirations and strive for goals, without turning everything into a competition and treading on each other?
Can we return to the simplicity and essentialism of a nomadic, tribal, ‘travel light’ existence, and yet still find purpose and meaning in life? I hope so. So may it be!
Amen.
November 2020
Bristol Unitarians Strategy Group
Volunteers required for new Strategy Group to evaluate Frenchay and UMB congregation's vision, strengths and goals
We are in changing times so aim to review our plans. We will be following and exploring a model for congregational development created by John Bates, a Unitarian based at New Unity, London. This model is being followed by a number of Unitarian congregations around the country. Our strategy group will be facilitated by Peter Bruce and will be covered in around 4 zoom meetings each one lasting 90 minutes. The group will then present some proposals and action points for both congregations to take up in their own time and in their own way.
If you would like to take part in this strategy working group please let Peter know on peter.a.bruce@gmail.com or 07527118586 if you want to talk about what's needed - we are looking for around 6 people representing the diversity of our congregations. We will then find an evening slot that all of us can attend.
Many Thanks,
John Harley, Mark Stewart, Angela Bufton
Wednesday Check-In's and Candle Lighting
Usually 2nd and 4th Wednesdays in the month, 7-8pm on Zoom
(Apply to info@bristolunitarians.co.uk for Zoom joining details).
Sharing news, lighting candles of joy and concern, caring for each other as community. All welcome!
October 2020
Reset The Debt
Request from our member Paul Wheeler to forward this to our membership and publish here on our website.
Reset The Debt is a united call from several UK church organisations for the Government to set up a fund to pay off debts that low income families have been driven in to as a result of the Covid-19 lockdown. This would be a practical way for the Government to help those whose lives have been most severely worsened by the lockdown and ongoing restrictions.
Those who support this call are invited to email their MP. The Reset The Debt website provides a template email, which can be amended if desired.
Putting to rest the exhausted branches of Summer's leaves,
So strong, the trees holding.
The new day
Again and again.
Just as the sun rises as it's able,
Over the houses and office blocks.
The crisp morning air that passes undaunted,
Again, find ourselves coming full circle,
Walking the path through the season.
Autumn hasn't a promise or oath,
It just is.
This Autumn sun
Different in its purity;
Not that of Summer -
It has a new message.
Every walking and waking second
A falling leaf passes by again.
Whilst these days put to rest the summer,
We know it'll come again,
But first let us see the beauty of each season as it arises,
It has no wish from now to the next.
The season just is,
Winter isn't far - that'll tell us another story.
For now we can enjoy the leaves
And the work that we see squirrels doing:
Feasting and searching with each other,
As they, like us, harvest for Winter's coming.
May we all remain present as will the seasons,
As the Autumn days turn straw-like in the fading sun
And the sepia light,
As it finds its way to the joyful dark of sunset.
Weekly Emails
We're trying to limit these weekly emails to one per week, so that people don't get bored of them and start sending them to junk. I will try to send these emails out on a Saturday to include the next two weeks of service joining details, so please let me have any information you'd like distributed here in good time. I can always update the NEWS page of the website as your bulletins come in. Many thanks, Mark.
September 2020
Celebrating Raja Rammohan Roy
Brigid Benson
Dear friends,
The website below this text refers to a ceremony in 2018 but gives good brief synopsis of Raja Rammohan Roy, & this remarkable man’s life. Highly respected in his lifetime then honoured by others inc Gandhi since his death.
Until I moved to Bristol in 2014, I had never heard of this special, spiritual social activist, credited with creating the term Hindu, as described below. He lived at Beech House, just opposite our flat at Linden House and was originally buried in the gardens outside there. There is a path from the road Barkleys Hill towards Beech House, named after him and I sometimes walk it just to keep him in mind, a slight detour on my way back.
When the house & land was sold, the decorative tomb and remains were transferred to
Arnos Vale Cemetary - a more fitting place to visit & pay homage. In his lifetime, he was apparently a wellknown & colourful figure as he walked about the streets of Bristol.
He was interested in & sought to accomplish many things, including syncretism and the oneness of creation & our spiritual being. This led him to a close association with the Unitarians who had a significant presence in Bristol at the time. Other Unitarians today certainly know much more about him than I do.
There is still a Raja committee in Bristol which seeks to keep his memory alive, principally by an annual comemmoration at the Cemetary. Unitarians have traditionally been part of this committee & event. There is still a lovely statue of Raja between Bristol Townhall & The Cathedral but otherwise, I fear the profile is not being kept alive in the way it deserves. This man achieved so much that has endured, both in the UK & India, including the right for women to receive education, the law to abolish the Sati system, burning of widows on funeral pyre.
So, wherever you are this Sunday, I hope you will join me in remembering this wonderful man.
This is an initiative developed by John's cousin Rupert Taverner - he asked if we could pass this onto Bridport and Bristol congregations. John is aiming to attend.
"We are a new initiative in the Alton area that aims to create a welcoming and informal space for people to connect with others around a range of social and political themes, issues or challenges of our age."
Our visit to the chapel on Sunday for the first in-person service since lockdown was very special. We have not walked further than short walks from our flat since March and the only outings by taxi in that time have been to hospital or doctor. So, finding ourselves (suitably masked of course) in the chapel garden, looking at its best with the front path lined with colourful geraniums, was quite overwhelming. Andrew, acting as steward, took our temperatures (with a non-touch thermometer), pointed us to where we needed to sanitise our hands and directed us to our well spaced out seats.
We felt very safe throughout, with everyone at least 2 metres from us and at the end we did not linger inside but went out into the garden, where we were able to chat with several people, all very aware of socially distancing. John did the actual lighting of candles of joy and concern, as requested by members of the congregation (those present and also those on Zoom), so we did not need to move from our positions. Readings by members of the congregation were done from our seats. This did not work for those on Zoom, who could not hear but technical wizard Peter is looking at rectifying that. No hymn books were used but we were given printed sheets, so that we could gently hum or mouth the words, as the music was played on Peter’s computer.
There was also very beautiful music for us to listen to. Our drive home also felt significant, as the taxi driver was extremely interested in what Unitarians believe - we could have gone on for hours but he had work to do! After weeks of Zoom meetings and services, being with real people in a real place was momentous. It was an historic day for the chapel and we felt honoured to be part of it. The theme of the service was the Beatitudes and we certainly came home, feeling very blessed. If you are unsure about venturing out to the next in person service, I hope you can see that is being made as safe as possible and we would love to see you there.