Main content
Sorry, this episode is not currently available

The Lindisfarne Gospels

Bill Turnbull takes the ancient pilgrims' path to the island of Lindisfarne, where one of the world's most beautiful books was created over 1,200 years ago.

Bill Turnbull takes the ancient pilgrims' path to the Holy Island of Lindisfarne, where one of the world's most beautiful books was created over 1,200 years ago.

St Mary's Parish Church is the setting for congregational hymns including Lord Of Beauty, Thine The Splendour, There Is A Gospel To Proclaim and O Splendour Of God's Glory Bright.

35 minutes

Last on

Sun 4 Aug 2013 15:55

Music Played

Timings (where shown) are from the start of the programme in hours and minutes

  • We Have A Gospel To Proclaim - Congregation of The Parish Church of St Mary The Virgin

    ARRANGER: Paul Leddington Wright, TUNE: Fulda, WORDS: Edward J Burns (b1938)

  • O Trinity Of Bl├¿ssed Light - Durham University Chamber Choir

    COMPOSER: Traditional, TUNE: O Lux Beata, WORDS: Traditional from the Latin

  • O Splendour Of God's Glory Bright - Congregation of The Parish Church of St Mary The Virgin

    ARRANGER: Geoff Ellerby, TUNE: Melcombe, WORDS: St Ambrose c340-97

  • Our Blest Redeemer Ere He Breathed - Congregation of The Parish Church of St Mary The Virgin

    COMPOSER: Rev John B Dykes (1861), WORDS: Harriet Auber (1839) TUNE: St Cuthbert

  • Lord You Sometimes Speak In Wonders - Soloist Sarah Woon & Congregation of The Parish Church of St Mary The Virgin

    COMPOSER: Paul Leddington Wright, WORDS: Christopher Idle (b1938) TUNE: Piha

  • Christus Est Stella Matutina - Durham University Chamber Choir

    COMPOSER: Iain Quinn, WORDS: The Venerable Bede, 672-735, CONDUCTER: Calum Zuckert

  • Lord Of Beauty, Thine The Splendour - Congregation of The Parish Church of St Mary The Virgin

    ARRANGER: Paul Leddington Wright, WORDS: C A Alington (1872-1955), TUNE: Regent Square

Factsheet for Sunday 4th August 2013

Bill Turnbull takes the ancient pilgrims' path to the Holy Island of Lindisfarne where one of the world's most beautiful books was created over 1200 years ago. St Mary's Parish Church is the setting for congregational hymns including Lord Of Beauty, Thine The Splendour, There Is A Gospel To Proclaim and O Splendour Of God's Glory Bright.

Interviewees

Professor Richard Gameson - Professor Of The History Of The Book, Durham University.

Professor Gameson specializes in ancient medieval and early modern books. He talks to Songs of Praise about the creation of the Lindisfarne Gospels, how long it took to complete the work, the conditions in which Eadfrith, the monk who created the Lindisfarne Gospels, would have been working, and how it didn’t matter to the monks how long it took to complete the work - the important thing was that it was an act of faith on the part of the whole Lindisfarne community. Richard also talked about his own personal emotional connection with the ancient manuscripts with which he works.

Mary Fleeson - Lindisfarne Scriptorium

Mary is an artist who is originally from Shropshire. Her first visit to Holy Island was such a profoundly moving and spiritual experience that she ended up relocating to the island in the 1990s. She now runs a small business which aims to offer art intended to draw the viewer into an experience of prayer or meditation. She has a great interest in Celtic knots inspired by the Lindisfarne Gospels, and regards Celtic knots as being conducive to prayer and meditation because they are so thoroughly absorbing to create.

Dr Fenwick Lawson - Sculptor

Fenwick is a North East Sculptor based in Durham, and he is the creator of a work called ‘The Journey’, carved from wood, which depicts the monks carrying St Cuthbert’s body from Lindisfarne to Durham. Fenwick talked to Songs of Praise about the metaphors which emerged as he worked on ‘The Journey’ – he began to see the work as a metaphor for human community and interdependence, and coming from a mining community, Fenwick realized the sculpture could equally be 6 miners carrying a dead colleague. Much of Fenwick’s work is of a religious nature, but Fenwick believes the work transcends religion and is fundamentally about humanity and the human condition.

Professor Martin Ward - Lindisfarne Gospels Community Choir

Martin was first encouraged to try singing when he was a student at Oxford, and has been in choirs ever since. When he heard about the Lindisfarne Gospels Community Choir, a choir set up to celebrate the Lindisfarne Gospels’ visit to Durham this summer, Martin jumped at the chance of joining. One of the attractions of the choir for Martin was the fact that there is no audition to join, and therefore the choir is not exclusive, there is no ‘required standard’ to join. Martin believes that a choir, at its best, offers the kind of cooperation and mutual support that represents the Christian community. He is opposed to the kind of ‘competition’ that he sees as endemic in our culture and only serves to create winners and losers. He believes that cooperation is a much more Biblical way of living, and the choir is a great example of this.

Sandy Duff - Graffiti artist

Sandy is one of the two founding members of “Ghetto Method Collective” – a loose affiliation of about 40 (primarily North-East-based) artists and musicians. They are more commonly called “The Crew”.

Sandy has a particular interest in graffiti as an art form and when watching a film about the Book of Kells, was struck by the similarity between the monks who did that artwork, and modern-day graffiti artists. Realising the Lindisfarne Gospels were coming to Durham in 2013, he came up with an idea to do a graffiti version of the Lindisfarne Gospels. One of Sandy’s colleagues, Toby Heaps, spray painted “Luke” from The Crew’s “Grafitti Gospels” project.

Sandy works with young people trying to engage them in arts and music. He is based at The Sage in Gateshead, where he established the largest legal graffiti wall in England.

Locations

The Parish Church of St Mary The Virgin

Other Information

Dr Fenwick Lawason's Sculptures:

A Cry for Freedom (hostage) – Durham University

Prisoner of Conscience – Northumbria University Law School

The Journey – in wood at The Parish Church of St Mary The Virgin, Holy Island and in bronze is in Millenium Square Durham City.

A Cry for Justice – (The Running girl/children)

The Pieta – Durham Cathedral

Hidden Life (baby going into woman’s heart/body) at St Wilfred’s Church in Preston.

Richard GamesonBook details:

From Holy Island to Durham the contexts and meanings of the Lindisfarne Gospels - Richard Gameson

Lindisfarne Gospels Exhibition details:

Lindisfarne Gospels Durham – One Amazing Book One Incredible Journey

1 July -30 Sept 2013 / Palace Green Library, Durham

Credits

Role Contributor
Presenter Bill Turnbull
Producer Sian Salt
Series Editor David Taviner
Executive Producer Tommy Nagra

Broadcast