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Brother Barnabas SSF, RIP
The sudden
and unexpected death on 21st October 1991 of Brother Barnabas took
from us one who quite naturally and unaffectedly gave and received
brotherly affection, while it could never quite be forgotten that
here was Professor Lindars who, after a quarter of a century's toil
in the Divinity Faculty at Cambridge had from 1978 - 1990 held the
Rylands Chair at Manchester. He was also much loved by his relatives
and we offer our sympathy to his surviving brother, John Henry, and
sister Margaret. that death should overtake him quietly and without
fuss in the course of a country walk fits him very well - he had
been to visit Allan Wippell of St. Francis Home in a Cerne Abbas
nursing home, and was returning the four miles on foot so as not to
give anyone the trouble of collecting him.
Barnabas came
to SSF as a priest, having served his title in a Sunderland parish
(St. Luke's, Pallion) which specialised in the nurture of future
Franciscans, and almost at once found himself immersed in academic
work at Cambridge University, and living in the old St Francis house
in Lady Margaret Road - once the home of the Oratory of the Good
Shepherd and now a part of Lucy Cavendish College. He was a
Cambridge Brother from 1953 until 1978 and ministered at St Bene'ts
for the whole of that time, Brother Lothian and then Brother Martin
being the vicar. In 1967 the brothers moved to their present house
in Botolph Lane, and for a while he was their Guardian, a post he
held in plurality with that of Dean of Chapel at Jesus College (his
college as an undergraduate had been St. John's).
Our
Principles speak of brothers who, with the approval of the Minister,
'give themselves to the pursuit of learning and the writing of
books' - and when these words are read out among us on the
thirteenth of the month it is Barnabas who springs to mind as one of
the very few of us who exemplify them. His academic achievements
during those thirty seven years cannot be described here - only the
generations of students can testify to his work as a teacher, only a
colleague can pass his writings in review. His brothers - none
of whom fall into either category - can only thank God that a
significant contribution to biblical scholarship was made by a
member of SSF.
The wonder is
that he sustained two whole-hearted and unflinching commitments
simultaneously, to his work and to SSF, and that when the the time
came for the professor (who had lived away from community for twelve
years) to retire, it was to Hilfield Friary that he went. He had
retired only in a very technical sense of the word - he was writing
a major commentary on the Book of Judges as well as taking a full
part in the work and worship of the Friary - sometimes a bit dazed
by the way things happened these days, nevertheless a valued older
brother and holder of a driving licence who always seemed available
for the task of meeting trains.
His last week
was stressful - he had chaired a four hour meeting of the Governors
of St Francis School, and attended the funeral of Brother Kenneth,
in the course of it. Clearly he had overtaxed himself - and will no
doubt find himself very much at home where in Abelard's words,
There dawns no
sabbath, no sabbath is o'er,
Those sabbath
keepers have one and no more;
One and unending
is that triumph song
To which the
angels and us shall belong.
We thank God
for our Brother Barnabas.
The members of the editorial
Board of franciscan wish to express their gratitude for the
contribution Br Barnabas made during thirty years of service as our
Chairman. His good-humoured precision and direction will be greatly
missed. f |