Announcing the Appointment
At the Parish Communion Service on Sunday, January 18, 1981 Mr. L.R.
Rockliffe announced that the churchwardens have now been informed by
the Patron, The Rev. John Rogers, Vicar of St. Mary the Virgin, Hampton
that The Rev. J. Nicholas Chubb, at present Vicar of All Saints, Brixworth,
Northampton, in the Diocese of Peterborough, had been offered the living
of St. James’s Church, Hampton Hill, and that it had been accepted
by him. Mr. Chubb and his wife Susan, have three children, Andrew who
is seventeen, Sarah who is fifteen and Naomi who is twelve. Due to the
children’s schooling Mr. Chubb will not take up the appointment
until July.
Mr. Rockliffe repeated the arrangements during the interregnum, namely
that our services will be conducted with the help of the Area Dean
and his staff and our licensed readers. Anyone with problems in which
they need help should contact, initially, Miss Hannah Stanton.
We extend our most warm and hearty greetings to our new Vicar and
his family and we look forward to an article for a forthcoming magazine
from him, just as was received by us from Rupert 30 years ago, part
of which we reprint in this issue.
Source: The Spire Magazine - 1981 February
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Our new vicar and his family the Rev. J. Nicholas
Chubb and his wife susan with their children, from left to right,
Andrew, Naomi and Sarah. Andrew is hoping to start at university in
the autumn and the two girls will be going to Bishop Wand School in
September. The family are keen musicians and will be continuing their
studies as soon as possible. Work has now started on modernisation
of the vicarage, so the summer holidays will be spent to good effect
trying to get everything straight.
Source: The Spire Magazine - 1981
May
The Institution and Induction
The Institution by the Bishop of Kensington and the Induction by the
Archdeacon of Middlesex of the Rev. John Nicholas Chubb to St. James's,
Hampton Hill, took place on Monday 13 July. Toby Jessel MP. and Mrs.
Jessel were present, as well as the Mayor and Mayoress of Richmond,
and about 300 others, including 60 parishioners from Brixworth, near
Northampton, Mr. Chubb's former parish.
The Bishop talked very movingly in his sermon about community and,
as the occasion was very near tthe time of the inner city riots, he
brought in references to those who feel excluded from communities:
the outsiders, the misfits, the lonely. We must re-examine the role
of CCG with these comments in mind.
Nicholas Chubb and his wife, Susan, have three children: Andrew, who
is starting at university in the autumn, and Sarah and Naomi, who
will be going to Bishop Wand School. We greatly hope that they will
all be very happy among us.
Source: Hannah Stanton, Community Care
News - 1981 September
An air of excitement and expenctancy filled the church on the evening
of the institution and induction of our new vicar.
The processional hymn, “Angel voices ever singing,” always
makes me want to sing out and gave a sense of majesty to the beginning
of the service. I was impressed by the collect, particularly the phrase
“and give to your servant, Nicholas, now to be instituted the
needful gifts of grace;” how true it is that we all, clergy
and laity alike need God’s gifts especially this gift of grace.
It is equally important what we do with God’s gift of grace
when we receive it. According to the dictionary grace used in the
theological terminology means the ‘unmerited favour of God,
divine regenerating, inspiring and strengthening influence’.
We prayed that Nicholas would have this gift of grace to inspire and
strengthen him and from that must surely ensue that he would wish
to inspire and strengthen us.
This thought tied up with the Bishop’s illuminating address.
He spoke about being a community and because a community is by its
very nature a sharing fellowship he stressed that we should not close
the doors to outsiders but invite them to share in our lives and make
them welcome. Whoever these outsiders are they need strength and inspiration
just as much as we committed Christians do - and we must be prepared
to accept them. If as the Bishop thought being an outsider, a non-accepted
member of a community could be the breeding ground for violence and
anti-social behaviour are we not the more committed to prevent this
from happening? It was an impressive sermon and I would have liked
to have recorded it for times when we feel threatened by and are not
to open to outsiders.
The institution was grandiose, but when the Bishop addressed the individual
members of the congregation saying “The care of a Parish and
its people is a great and sacred trust. I ask for YOU to join with
me in prayer for Nicholas, that God may be present in this church
and congregation and that God may continue to be made known to the
people of this parish,” I felt the solemnity of the occasion
and I am sure there were many earnest prayers for us all.
Our Church during my time at St. James has never been without its
humour and the unco-operativeness of the bell at one stage brought
smiles and laughter to many faces. Not only did Nicholas make promises
but we too took our part in promising to “be faithful in reading
God’s word, in hearing it proclaimed and in prayer, both public
and private. Renewed in Jesus Christ we are all called to love one
another and to make this love known to all.”
Do we see this as a challenge, a union and working together of our
community and our new vicarage family? Let us then endeavour each
one of us to go forward with them in faith, hope and love.
I could not end these thoughts without congratulating and thanking
all who were responsible for the service and evening celebrations
on the lawn. Monday 13 July will long remain in my mind as in many
others as a day to remember and build upon.
Source: Janet Jeffries, The Spire Magazine
- 1981 August