When
you retire you hear a lot about ‘legacy’. ‘What are you most proud of from your
time in Durham?’ I’m asked. I am proud
of many things, but not for myself: it’s all the colleagues past and present
who have brought energy and flair for us to do so much together. It’s not ‘I’
but ‘we’ in the plural.
For
example. I am proud that we have nearly completed our great project ‘Open
Treasure’ which will open next year. The exhibitions are a celebration of our
North East Christian heritage, but they’re much more. By opening our doors to
more visitors, and by telling our story, we are doing a serious piece of Christian
mission and outreach. I am very proud that we admitted girls to the Cathedral
choir in 2009. I am proud of arts projects like the Transfiguration Window
which, like the music, enrich our spirituality so profoundly. I am proud that
with the University and the County, we brought the Lindisfarne Gospels back to
Durham in 2013. I am proud of Lumière,
Durham’s great winter light festival in which the Cathedral plays a large part.
I’m proud of the day to day ministry of this Cathedral in its worship, music
and preaching, this community and its welcome to guests, its intellectual and
spiritual contribution to this region.
I’ve
also been asked: ‘what will you miss most?’ How do I begin to answer that in
this place of gifts? This amazing building, our Deanery that has been such a
happy home, the saints both living and departed who have been companions in
faith and prayer. County Durham people are so warm, genuine and hospitable. And
at the heart of it all is the Benedictine rhythm of prayer day in, day out. How
shall I live without evensong, the psalms of the day, the evening canticles,
the rhythms and cadences of the liturgy?
I
have some particular thanks tonight:
the four diocesan Bishops I have worked with,
two suffragans, their senior colleagues and to clergy and lay people across the
diocese for their generous invitation to contribute to the life of this great
diocese;
the Cathedral Chapter who have held to the
highest standards in the oversight and leadership of this Cathedral and have been
wonderful travelling companions;
our magnificent staff, committee members, volunteers
and the Cathedral community itself who all love this place and give so much to it;
colleagues in the University and at St Chad’s
where it has been a privilege to contribute to the academic life and governance
of this great institution;
the Lords Lieutenant of our two counties (and
for the honour of serving as a DL in this one), to civic leaders, and those in all
sectors for so much friendship, encouragement and support;
those who support us through their financial giving;
without you we could never undertake
what we aspire to do and to become;
the Chorister School where I’ve chaired the
governors and have always been warmly welcome in that lovely community;
those who in personal and intimate ways have
been there for us. You have enriched our lives and added to our happiness more
that you know;
and my family. Jenny has travelled the whole
journey with me; our children joined us on the way. I couldn’t have got to today
without them.
Someone once said that cathedrals are ‘asylums for amiable gentlemen with indistinct convictions’. If that was ever true, it isn’t now. They stand for lively Christian faith in its profoundest aspects, lived out on the thresholds of church and world where disciples are made. These great places are flagships of worship and mission. You feel the force of religion here. I’ve learned in three cathedrals how vital it is that Cathedral and Diocese are in partnership as we bear witness to the kingdom of God. When the synergy is good, the opportunities are endless.
Someone once said that cathedrals are ‘asylums for amiable gentlemen with indistinct convictions’. If that was ever true, it isn’t now. They stand for lively Christian faith in its profoundest aspects, lived out on the thresholds of church and world where disciples are made. These great places are flagships of worship and mission. You feel the force of religion here. I’ve learned in three cathedrals how vital it is that Cathedral and Diocese are in partnership as we bear witness to the kingdom of God. When the synergy is good, the opportunities are endless.
Hensley
Henson was Dean here one hundred years ago during the Great War. When he
arrived at the station to leave Durham, as he thought for good, the station
master recognised him and said goodbye ‘with much feeling’, says his diary. That
Dean, a complex man beset by self-doubt, was moved by this show of affection
and wondered if it was sincere. This Dean, not a stranger to self-doubt, is in no doubt at all about the love and affection
we have found here. It has been outstanding, unforgettable. Thank you to Isaac,
Lilian, Margaret and the Bishop for putting it into words that have touched us.
So:
you are in our hearts as we cross the Tyne and go back to Northumberland. We’re
still in North East England: far enough not to haunt the Cathedral; near enough
to stay in touch. If you can’t stay in a medieval Deanery, the next best place
to live is within sight of a level crossing with its comforting sound of trains.
You know where we are. Thank you again. God be with you.