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WCoFF NEWS

Past Master Geoff Morgan

Carol Concert Homily

Carol Concert Raises £458

for Homeless Charity

As many of you are aware, Past Master Geoff

Morgan collapsed with chest pains while

attending a committee meeting at the

Ironmongers Hall and had to be rushed into

hospital. The good news is that, following a spell

in hospital, he has recovered well and is now

recuperating at home. Geoff has been a great

supporter and contributor to the newsletter as

well as being a wonderful proof reader. We all

wish him good speed with getting back to full

fitness.

On 14th December 2012, at the Company’s

annual Carol Service at St Mary-le-Bow, the

‘homily’ was delivered by Past Master James

Blott (2008-2009), who was licenced by the

Bishop of Portsmouth as a Lay Minister in the

Church of England in September 2010. This is a

summary of what James said:

James took as his message the relevance that the

Christmas story has for us in the Company in

2013, looking to the challenges ahead.

He started by referring to the ‘St John’s Bible’

project, the first illuminated Bible produced with

a goose quill on vellum since the invention of the

printing press. The depiction of the Christmas

story is of a huge red Bible in the manger, in place

of the baby Jesus. This challenges us to think

about the meaning of the famous passage in St

John’s gospel, read at so many Carol Services:

‘And the Word was made flesh and dwelt among

us’. The strangeness of this image, of the baby

Jesus shown as a Bible, encourages us to think of

the real meaning of the Christmas story, which

lies in the enormity of the gift that God has given

us, by coming among us as a vulnerable baby.

James went on to say that Christmas has a wide

appeal, which enables us to reach out to those of

other faiths and none, but it’s also a time when

we need to acknowledge our responsibility to

reflect Christ’s values in our lives; His care for

the oppressed, His concern for the powerless

and voiceless, His commandment that we should

love one another and His non-violent, self-

sacrificial offering of himself. In coming to us in

the form of a baby, God makes himself

intentionally vulnerable, and in doing so He calls

us to mirror that vulnerability in our dealings with

each other. The Christmas message shows us a

model for our own relationships with each other;

it calls us to shine as a light in an increasingly dark

world, and to see each other as gifts from God to

each other. James quoted the great Civil Rights

leader and Baptist minister, Martin Luther King,

who said that all life is interrelated and we can

only be what we ought to be when those with

whom we come into contact become what they

ought to be.

At the end of a memorable year for the

Company, in which we’ve experienced another

successful Fire Lecture, the triumph of the River

Pageant and the continued success of our Ball,

James concluded that looking on the Christmas

message this way would enable us to look

forward to a happy and successful 2013.

The WCoFF carol concert

held at St. Mary le Bow was

well attended and enjoyed

by all who came, company

members, family friends,

children and even some

visitors to London who

happened to be passing.

The singing was excellent,

there were some fine readings and our Past

Master James Blott gave the homily - a summary

of which can be seen on the left. There were

some tasty eats and drinks afterwards and a good

time for enjoying each other’s company in the

run-up to Christmas in the heart of the city. The

really good news was a generous collection for

the homeless which was much appreciated.

Past Master James Blott (2008-2009)