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This is the previous version of
the entry for Gazeley on this site, written in 2006. It
has since been replaced and you can read the proper
version here. The 2006 version incorporated the original
text from 2003, now greatly superceded. All Saints at Gazeley, near Newmarket, was
the first church that I visited after an international
team of scientists conclusively proved that God did not
exist. Thus begins the original article about Gazeley
parish church that I wrote for the Suffolk Churches site,
back in May 2003. At that stage, I had visited more than
600 Suffolk churches, and the site was moving towards a
kind of completion. The entries were becoming longer and
tending more towards the philosophical. The acquisition
of a digital camera meant that I could already see I
would need to do the whole lot again, but that would be
in the future. For now, I had Norfolk in my sights, and
there was an end-of-term feel to what I was writing about
Suffolk. I am afraid that All Saints, Gazeley, took the
full brunt of it.
The article generated a fair amount of correspondence, as
you may imagine. It was discussed on BBC Radio Suffolk. I
was questioned rather cautiously about it by someone in
the Diocese.
The parish themselves took it rather well. To be honest,
I had caught them at a low ebb, and they welcomed the
publicity. I had also visited them immediately before a
time of great change, when heads had fallen, but loins
were about to be girded, and the Church of England was
stirring itself again in that lovely village. One of the
advantages of visiting every parish church in East Anglia
is that you also get to see every parish, of course, and
I soon fell in love with these sleepy, fat villages along
the Cambridgeshire border. I would move there tomorrow,
quite happily.
However, the article still makes the point I was
originally trying to make, and the contrast between then
and now shows this special place in a light it thoroughly
deserves, for this is one of East Anglia's loveliest
churches, and deserves all the visitors it can get.
Anyway, I thought so then, and I certainly think so now.
Here is what I wrote in 2003: 'All Saints at Gazeley,
near Newmarket, was the first church that I visited after
an international team of scientists conclusively proved
that God did not exist. I was intrigued to know how a
wealthy, reasonably large Suffolk village would respond
to this challenge. What would they do with their church?
I had a theory. I suspected that the old church buildings
would continue to find a community use. Small groups of
people would still congregate on a Sunday mornings to
sing comforting songs and feel good about each other. The
churches would still be used by secular couples wanting a
fancy wedding, and the local villagers would still want
to be buried in the graveyard. But the building would no
longer have a Christian use.
It was with some dismay, however, that I arrived in
Gazeley to discover that the rot had already set in. The
first sign of this was the way in which the large windows
facing onto the road had holes the size of small rocks in
them. This was disturbing, especially because the east
window at Gazeley is one of the most remarkable Decorated
windows in East Anglia. The head of the window consists
of two elegant overlapping trefoils, but there is no head
to the arch, the head itself having cusps. You can see it
in the left hand column; Cautley thought it was unique.
I went and tried the door, but of course it was locked.
Ever since the announcement of God's non-existence, heads
have dropped in the Anglican community, and many of them
no longer have the will to welcome strangers and
visitors. I went next door to the Rectory. I knocked on
the door, rang the bell. Nobody came. Perhaps the Rector
had fled town. I had tried phoning several numbers I had
taken from the Diocesan website, but nobody had answered.
There were keyholders listed in the church porch, but no
phone numbers. Gazeley is a fairly large village, and we
didn't have a street map, but by driving around (sorry
about the carbon monoxide, folks) we tracked some of the
houses down. Several cars were on the driveways outside
(as I said, this is a wealthy village) but nobody came to
the door. Perhaps they had given up in despair. I felt
Gazeley's strange torpor beginning to settle on me like
snow.
We found the house where the last address was supposed to
be. I went to the side door, and eventually someone
answered. "Yes?" he was very curt, so I don't
know who he was expecting. I, however, was a model of
charm and good manners, and explained my mission to see
inside Gazeley church, and that I understood he was a
keyholder, a churchwarden in fact. His wife came to the
kitchen door behind him, to see who it was. I could smell
cooking, and I assumed that they were both about to eat,
the time being 5pm on a Saturday.
"The church is locked", he said. I agreed that
this was the case, and wondered if access was possible.
"It was open earlier today, you should have come
then", he observed. I concurred that it would have
been better, but that we had been visiting other
churches, and had only just arrived in Gazeley. He
thought for a second. "I'll have to come with
you." The man checked that the twenty minutes I had
suggested would not deprive him of his tea, and walked
with me up to the church. On the way, the man explained
how he and his wife had spent the day preparing the
church for the harvest festival. I made a mental note
that this was another event that had survived the death
of God, as would Christmas probably.
We walked across the wide open graveyard, and I looked up
at the great ship of Gazeley church. There is no doubt
which county you are in; here, the complete rebuilding of
the nave with clerestory and aisles was at the start of
the 16th century, and as at Blythburgh they didn't get
around to rebuilding the tower before the Protestant
Reformation intervened. The huge chancel had been built
on the eve of the Black Death, and has similarities with
the one at Mildenhall. Perhaps a rebuilding was planned,
but it never happened. The tower was largely
reconstructed in the 19th century.
To my surprise, he took us not to either south or north
porch, but to the great west door. This led us beneath
the tower and behind the organ, and we stepped into
darkness. Daylight was fading, but here it must be always
gloomy, among the broom cupboards and stacks of junk. The
churchwarden found the light switches, and we walked
around the organ into the body of the church.
Back in the days when God still existed, I had been to
Gazeley church before. It had been a bright, cold
February morning in 1999, and I was cycling from
Newmarket to Ipswich. I'd arrived in Gazeley to find the
church open, and had thought it lovely. There was a
delicate balance between respect for the medieval and the
demands of the modern liturgy. It felt at once a house of
prayer and a spiritual touchstone to the long
generations. However, the slight crimp in all this was
that, at the time, the regular Sunday congregation of
Gazeley church had been reduced to single figures. The
same was true of neighbouring Kentford. The Rector may
not have been to blame; he was very energetic in in his
pastoral activities in the village, and people still
turned up for the big occasions. But I wondered what
effect all this had had, and asked the churchwarden.
He was very candid. He told me that they had had a
terrible time of it. The electoral roll had fallen to
just three people, and this is not a small village.
Nobody wanted to come to church any more. He had lived in
the village for years, and had seen all this happen. It
was only in the last year or so that he felt the church
had been turned around by the new Rector (the one I had
suspected of leaving town). Now, there were more than
twenty of them, and they felt like a proper community
again, he said.
I found this interesting. The previous Rector had been a
Forward in Faith-supporting Anglo-catholic, and such a
tradition was not terribly popular with the suits at
Diocesan House. The new Rector had moved the church back
towards the mainstream.
I looked around the vast open nave. All Saints is one of
the biggest churches in the west of the county, and it
must take a good five hundred people to make it feel
full. I tried to imagine what it must have been like
here, just three in the congregation.
The warden and his wife had tried hard to decorate the
church for the harvest festival, and it looked
particularly lovely towards the east. The greenery on the
tombchest and piscina was very well done. But inevitably
the fruit and vegetables were sparse, and there was no
disguising the general air of shabbiness and decay
underneath the decoration. I felt a bit sorry for the
churchwarden, for he had stuck with the place through
thick and thin, and clearly loved it. The chancel and
central eastern part of the nave were clean and tidy, but
all around were the encroaching shadows, and here lurked
the dust and dirt.
The higher you looked, the filthier it became. The
clerestory windows were coated in grime, and the lower
parts cloaked in decades of cobwebs. The medieval cross
beams are still in place, but the Victorian roof above is
leaky, and areas of damp showed above the high arcades.
It seemed unlikely that all this could have happened in
the short time since the Geneva declaration of 2007
announced all faith in a Supreme Being to be 'utterly
null and void'. Mortlock had commented on the poor
condition of the royal arms as long ago as 1988. Could it
be that they were in this state when this building was
still in use for Christian worship?
Having seen the stone holes in the windows, I was
mightily relieved that the Victorians had reset the
medieval glass up in the clerestory. This seems a curious
thing to have done, since it defeats the purpose of a
clerestory, but if they had not done so then we might
have lost it. The glass matches the tracery in the north
aisle windows, so that is probably where they came from.
I had seen them on my previous visit, but could not
remember where they were, and when I asked the keyholder
he did not seem aware that the church had any medieval
glass. Eventually I found it. There are angels, three
Saints and some shields, most of which are heraldic but
two show the instruments of the passion and the Holy
Trinity. I would not be surprised to learn that some of
the shields are 19th century, but the figures are all
original late 15th or early 16th century. The Saints are
an unidentified Bishop, the hacksaw-wielding St Faith and
one of my favourites, St Apollonia. She it was who was
invoked by medieval people against toothache.
It struck me as I gazed up that many parish churches had
much less to lose than Gazeley. At one time, these places
were vibrant hubs of spiritual communities, but now they
would be left to wither and die. Some would become houses
of course, but Gazeley's church is much too big. Some
might be kept as examples of our redundant belief
systems, but here at Gazeley there would be too much to
tidy up and sort out. So All Saints at Gazeley must be
considered merely as a treasure house. Here, then, is a
guide to why it must survive the 2007 Geneva Declaration.
Firstly, the chancel. Here, the space created by the
clearing of clutter makes it at once mysterious and
beautiful. Above, the early 16th century waggon roof is
Suffolk's best of its kind. Mortlock points out the
little angels bearing scrolls, the wheat ears and the
vine sprays, and the surviving traces of colour. The low
side window on the south side still has its hinges, for
here it was that updraught to the rood would have sent
the candles flickering in the mystical church of the 14th
century. On the south side of the sanctuary is an
exquisitely carved arched recess, that doesn't appear to
have ever had a door, and may have been a very rare
purpose-built Easter sepulchre at the time of the 1330s
rebuilding. Opposite is a huge and stunningly beautiful
piscina, and beside it are sedilia that end in an arm
rest carved in the shape of a beast. It is one of the
most significant Decorated moments in Suffolk.
On the floor of the chancel there is a tiny, perfect
chalice brass, one of only two surviving in Suffolk. The
other is at Rendham. Not far away is the indent of
another chalice brass - or perhaps it was for the same
one, and the brass has been moved for some reason. There
are two chalice indents at Westhall, but nowhere else in
Suffolk. Chalice brasses were popular memorials for
Priests in the 15th and early 16th centuries, and thus
were fair game for reformers. Heigham memorials of the
late 16th century are on the walls. Back in the south
aisle there is a splendid tombchest in Purbeck marble. It
has lost its brasses, but the indents show us where they
were, as do other indents in the aisle floors. Some
heraldic brass shields survive, and show that Heighams
were buried here. Brass inscriptions survive in the nave
and the chancel, dating from the late 16th and early 17th
centuries.
Piled up and decrepit in the south west corner are some
extraordinary 14th century benches with pierced tracery
backs. Some of them appear to spell out words, Mortlock
thought one might say <i>Salaman Sayet.</i>
The block of benches to the north appear to have been
made using sections of the 15th century rood loft.
Further north, the early 17th century benches may appear
crude, but were almost certainly the work of the village
carpenter.
The 14th century font is a stunning example of the
tracery pattern series that appeared in the decades
before the Black Death. They may have been intended to
spread ideas at that time of great artistic and
intellectual flowering before it was so cruelly snatched
away. The cover is 17th century.
The place is absolutely glorious, but few people seem to
know about it, and fewer seem to care. If it had been
clean, tidy and open, Simon Jenkins England's
Thousand Best Churches would not have been able to
resist it. Should the survival of such a treasure store
depend upon the existence of God or the continued
practice of the Christian faith? Or might there be other
reasons to keep this extraordinary building in something
like its present integrity? It needs thousands spent on
it, hundreds of thousands, but is this something that we
as a nation or culture should consider worth doing? Will
it be sufficient to photograph it all and then let it
fall, or do we need to rescue this building before it is
too late?
Increasingly, it seemed to me that what the parish needed
was not condemnation for the state the building was in,
but encouragement to put it right. I pointed out several
of the features outlined above, but I think the poor man
was beginning to register quite what a task he had on his
hands, so I fell quiet. I did reassure him that the
building really was the responsibility of us all, and not
just the Church of England; it was the heart and
touchstone of the whole village, and not just of his
faith community.
We'd been there for nearly an hour. I took pity, and
offered to lock up and return the key to his house. He
thought about it for a moment. I guessed he was weighing
up whether or not he trusted us to make the church
secure, but he just said "you don't need to bring
the key back, it's a yale lock. Just let yourself out,
and let the door close behind you." And he said
goodbye and went home - rather more thoughtfully, I fear,
than he had left it.
It was dark. I put out the lights, and stood for a moment
in the wide gloom, in the infinite stillness. I listened
to the sound of my own breathing. I knew this was the
most endangered building I had visited so far on my
travels. But I'm determined we won't lose it.'
And that was that. At the end of the original article, I
had pointed out that the 2007 Geneva Declaration on the
non-existence of God was, of course, entirely fictitious.
This was partly to reassure the good people of Gazeley,
but also to save confusing any excitable Dawkinsites.
Gazeley church was, after all, still in use for Christian
worship. I also pointed out that the rest of the article
was completely true as things had stood in May 2003.
However, over the next few months I received a number of
e-mails from people in the parish telling me how the
church was being taken to task, tidied up, cleaned out,
and, even more important, made accessible. Coming back in
May 2008 I was delighted to discover than both the south
and north doors were now open, and I stepped out of the
sunlight into an interior which positively shouted its
welcome to pilgrims and strangers. Perhaps it helped that
it was such a beautiful day, for the interior was full of
light falling across ancient stone and woodwork.
Everything shone with love and care. Quite frankly, it
lifted the heart. Perhaps the most moving sight was of
the brightly coloured children's table and chairs, which
have been given pride of place at the east end of the
south aisle, rather than being tucked away under the
tower or behind the font. Having once almost lost its
congregation altogether, the community at Gazeley now
puts its children's corner in a prominent position, where
everyone can see it.
The wide open space of the chancel was still one of the
loveliest interiors I knew in Suffolk, but now it had
something else, a feeling of hope. Great things had
happened here. I mentioned it afterwards to a Catholic
Priest friend of mine, and he said he hoped I knew I'd
seen the power of the Holy Spirit at work. And perhaps
that is so. Certainly, the energy and imagination of the
people here have been fired by something. I wanted to
find someone to ask about it, to find out how things
stood now. But there was no one, and so the building
spoke for them.
Back outside in the graveyard, the dog daisies clustered
and waved their sun-kissed faces in the light breeze. The
ancient building must have known many late-May days like
this over the centuries, but think of all the changes
that it has known inside! The general buffeting of the
winds of history still leaves room for local squalls and
lightning strikes. All Saints has known these, but for
now a blessed calm reigns here. Long may it remain so.
Simon Knott, May 2006 (see the 2019
version here)
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