Fun or folly? Another English cathedral installs a fairground attraction
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[August 09, 2019]
LONDON (Reuters) - When Bishop
Herbert started building a new cathedral in the English city of Norwich
in 1096, it was unlikely he ever envisaged it would play host to a
50-foot helter skelter.
But that is exactly what the cathedral in eastern England will be
housing for 10 days this month, giving visitors a rare chance to get
close-up views of its medieval roof, a fun experience and - those behind
the idea hope - a chance to think differently about the building, life
and God.
The helter skelter, part of the cathedral's "Seeing It Differently"
project, was the idea of Canon Andy Bryant who said it came to him while
on a trip to the Sistine Chapel in Rome two years ago.
Being jostled by tourists there eager to see its famous roof made him
wonder how people could get a better view of the ceiling of his home
cathedral.
"Could the playful presence of a helter skelter help to open up
conversations about the building, help open up conversations about God?
Climbing to its top, the visitor will literally see the cathedral
differently," he wrote on the cathedral's website.
For 2 pounds ($2.42), visitors can enjoy a unique view of the
architectural splendor of the building before sliding down into the
nave.
"The fun comes in the shape of a helter skelter," Bryant said. "The
serious comes in creating opportunities for reflective, God-shaped
conversations. It is the cathedral doing what it has always done –
encouraging conversations about God."
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People walk past Norwich Cathedral in Norwich, Britain, March 20,
2018. REUTERS/Hannah McKay
The helter skelter is the latest attempt by a Church of England
cathedral to attract new worshippers and follows the decision of
Rochester - England's second oldest - to house a mini-golf course in
its nave.
However, not all are impressed. Theologian Gavin Ashenden, a former
chaplain to Queen Elizabeth, said they detracted from the proper
purpose of the buildings.
"We experience a saturation of stimulation and distraction in
everyday life - it is almost as if the pace and pleasure of life set
out to make reflection and prayer impossible," he wrote on his
website. "The one place one might be free of this could be, ought to
be, a cathedral."
(Reporting by Michael Holden; editing by Stephen Addison)
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