Meet your Bishops
An Interview
with
Bishop Humphrey
The
Man Beneath the Mitre
Humphrey
Southern was installed at the Cathedral as the new Bishop of Repton
in May 2007. And he was
there before he was born! The
following is an edited extract from an interview with Derby Cathedral’s ‘Outlook’ magazine. Can you tell us a little about yourself?
I was born and lived in London until I was ten. My father was a
lawyer and my mother a teacher. We then moved to Wiltshire although
we still retained a flat in London. One of my two sisters still
lives in Wiltshire, as does my mother, and I regard myself as
a Wiltshire lad.
I went to Elstree Preparatory School in Berkshire before moving
on to Harrow. From there I went up to Oxford - Christ Church -
to read history. It was whilst I was at Oxford that I went forward
for selection for ordination. After graduation I took a year out
for experience. I went to The Sudan where, having no particular
skills, I acted as a general 'gopher' for a local Archdeacon and
also helped with teaching some English. On my return I took my theology degree at Cuddesdon just outside
Oxford. I took the degree in two years and used the third year
for more experience including a prison placement.
I was ordained Deacon in 1986 at Rochester Cathedral and spent
three years in Rainham in Kent including three months seconded
to a Zimbabwe township parish outside Harare. My next move was
to a curacy in Liverpool at St. Mary's in Walton, an inner city
parish with much unemployment and urban decay and so this was
a time of learning as well as enjoyment.
This was the post-Toxteth riots period
and an interesting time for local politics (remember ‘Militant’?)
which I remember spilling into such events as the funeral of
our local MP, Eric
Heffer. I was also Chaplain to Walton Hospital.
My next move was to become the incumbent
(Vicar, later Team Rector as the parish grew) of Hale on the
edge of Farnham in Surrey in
the Guildford Diocese. I was also Diocesan Ecumenical Officer and
I have fond memories of working closely with (the then) Roman Catholic
Bishop of Arundel and Brighton, Cormac Murphy O'Connor, who of
course is now Cardinal Archbishop of Westminster. It was at a baptism
in Hale that I met my wife-to-be Emma! She was, and is, a District
Nurse. We have
two children – Laura born in 1997 and Kate born in 1999.
My next move was back to Wiltshire where I was Team Rector in
a team serving Tisbury, a large village and seven other villages.
However, as things do, expansion took place and we finally had
a team of sixteen villages, so pastoral reorganization was a
recurrent theme, as it was of my concerns as Rural Dean of Chalke,
as I was for six and a half of the nearly eight years I was at
Tisbury.
Pastoral reorganization is not merely about deployment but how
different 'cells' of the Church relate to one another and grow.
My time in rural ministry included the foot and mouth crisis and
the area was affected along with so many others. One of my pleasures
about being here is that we are again in a rural position.
What about hobbies and relaxation?
I am keenly interested in horses and horse racing. In fact Emma
and I did a lot of our courting on racecourses! We enjoy travelling
and have a love for Africa and Europe. My reading is largely
contemporary fiction. Food and wine are also definitely on the ‘enjoyment’ agenda.
Recently I was in Western Australia and appreciated some of their
lovely wines and I highly recommend them! I would regard myself
as an enthusiastic, rather than a skilled, cook – but my
enthusiasm does not extend to shopping or washing up!
You clearly have experienced many styles of worship but what are
your preferences?
I grew up in what might be called a ‘Prayer Book Catholic’ tradition
but have always been keen to explore and learn from the wide range
of traditions that we inherit. At school I was much influenced
by the Evangelical tradition and am grateful for that experience.
I love church music and in Wiltshire I was involved with the Edington
Music Festival - a famous celebration of the richness of our tradition
and this has always been very important to me.
If you were organising a dinner party who would you like to have
at your table?
What a question! At the moment my list might include St. Augustine
of Hippo, Queen Boudicea, Shakespeare, Mozart, Florence Nightingale,
Dorothy L. Sayers, Nelson Mandela, and Tony Benn … but ask
me again another day and the line-up might be wholly different.
There would be some lively conversations!
In your new position there will be more than a few problems to
face. Are you at all anxious?
I see our problems as challenges rather than crises: challenges
to our tendencies towards both complacency and despair, neither
of which strikes me as a particularly faithful response to the
God who is himself love and faithfulness. You ask about money: it’s easy to
be anxious about money just as it is easy - complacently - to
forget that we have received
huge material blessings and to forget the responsibilities that
lays on us to be generous and open-handed. Vocation comes first
and we must engage in mission with vision.
I have long supported the ordained ministry of women and look
forward to the first female bishop! This is a matter on which there
are different views, however, and we need to learn and learn again
how to be a Church that rejoices in diversity rather than is threatened
by it. The greatest skill in theology is that of conversation and
all voices must be heard with respect and humility. The same applies
to interfaith issues.
Ageing membership and crumbling plant are not just Church problems.
The question we have to ask ourselves is not about the survival
of an institution but about how faithfully we are engaging with
society in the name of God and this engagement is more important
than "how many" and "how old" and "how
much". I would like to see much more freedom in the control
of our buildings. People should be trusted to manage their own
churches a great deal more than they are.
Are you happy to be here? We are delighted to be here in this beautiful part of England.
Today’s conversation with ‘Outlook’ is my third
visit to this Cathedral. The second was when I was appointed and
the very first visit was 'in utero' when my mother came to an aunt's
funeral! We are looking forward to our new life here with joy and excitement
and look forward to a close involvement with the Diocese. I am
particularly looking forward to working with Church schools, places
of work and places where people have fun! I want to listen to them
and, through that listening, find what God is saying to us.
More about the Bishop
of Repton >>
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