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There is a great temptation in today’s world to ‘throw out the baby with the bath water’ or in the jargon ‘mash up and build back’. As the blogmaster was traversing St. Michael’s Row last week one could not help to be overwhelmed by sadness viewing the relatively dilapidated state of St. Michael’s Cathedral. It is a historical building located in a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Specifically the state of disrepair of the church tower signals for many the current slide in societal stability. We observe it in the lawlessness witnessed daily on the roads.There is increasing reported cases of violent crimes and murders. The lack of poor governance affecting delivery of justice by the courts, inability to hold elected and appointed public officers accountable. Not to forget the government coverup taking place under our eyes at the renamed NISS formerly NIS.

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St. Michael’s Cathedral Tower

Notwithstanding the myriad of concerns about poor governance the free fall from grace of the Anglican Church should command a case study. Of course there is credence in the obvious rebuttals, the Anglican Church is a vestige of a sordid past established in a majority Black country. There was the disestablishment of the Church in 1969, why should the rest of society care if the Anglican Church is falling short in the role it once played in a Barbados society.

One does not have to be an anglican or overly religious to appreciate the role the Anglican Church contributed to shaping Barbados in its early development. What we can agree is that the Anglican Church was the fulcrum for concretising norms undergirded by traditional values. What we have witnessed in the last twenty to thirty years is the lack of adequate alternatives to fill the role of the once influential Anglican Church.

Typically when there is an effort to discuss matters that involve the role of the Church, we get the predictable debate that will ensue, religious people quoting the bible, atheists levelling personal attacks at all and sundry and agnostics happy to sit on the fence like the proverbial deer in headlights. In the meantime the problem caused by the stabilising influence the once mighty Anglican Church had on local culture and social norms remain a worry issue given current state.

It is no secret the significant influence the parish priest exerted in surrounding communities. The 64k question is what have we seen since the decline in the influence of the ubiquitous ‘parish priest’? Although there has been attempts by other denomination to serve local communities in different ways, in the opinion of the blogmaster there is a wide disparity in what the Anglican Church delivered back in the day.

The blogmaster can recall the fiery sermons delivered from the pulpit of the St. Michael’s Cathedral by Dean Harold Crichlow, many were broadcast on the defunct Barbados Rediffusion. He commented without faith or favour about political, labour and other non religious matters. His comments helped to stoke public commentary and had to be considered by civil society leaders given the influence of the Anglican Church membership at that time.

Given the current worrying state of affairs, what are good non economic options we need to consider to repurpose our small country? Looking to a political leader for 100% of our solutions is a simpleton’s way.


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114 responses to “A failing Anglican church”


  1. Donna
    December 29, 2024 at 12:41 pm
    Rate This

    This jackass known as TLSN! I OWE ALLEGIANCE TO NO POLITICAL PARTY!

    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    B and D are the same political elites.

    Uncle Cammies’s father, James A. Tudor married a Miller.

    You are just a member of the political elite, no membership card needed.


  2. The more you protest, the more obvious it becomes.


  3. I see that there is a Chinese expert who is challenging the fondly held belief that human life began in Africa … and he can prove it, life began in East Asia.

    It is only the foolish albino centric trained experts that believe human life came out of Africa.

    Maybe they could all read the Bible and find out the truth!!

    https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/world/scientist-challenges-out-of-africa-theory-with-new-origin/ar-AA1wIUps?ocid=msedgntp&pc=W069&cvid=b9b05d5506324922ab8edfdc2ed81acf&ei=8


  4. Johnny Possel

    Keep clutching at straws until weee can get the big, mishroom-headed, deckie in yuh crutch.


  5. @John December 30, 2024 at 7:39 pm “I see that there is a Chinese expert who is challenging the fondly held belief that human life began in Africa.”

    Some Chinese or the other is always “challenging” because they see Africa and Africans as less than, and don’t want to believe that they too came out of the belly of Mother Africa.


  6. @John December 30, 2024 at 7:39 pm “and he can prove it, life began in East Asia”

    No, he cannot.

    Human life did NOT, repeat NOT begin in China, nor in East Asia.


  7. There is a place far far away called the land of demons aka Serendipity aka Sri Lanka where there is a Big Mountain called Adam’s Peak with Adam’s Footprint when he touched down on Earth in The Garden of Eden
    Happy 2025 All You Old People
    Big Ben Emojis | 💂💂🕰️🇬🇧🕰️🇬🇧 |


  8. Cuhdear Bajan
    December 31, 2024 at 6:47 pm
    Rate This

    @John December 30, 2024 at 7:39 pm “and he can prove it, life began in East Asia”

    No, he cannot.

    Human life did NOT, repeat NOT begin in China, nor in East Asia.

    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    It began in Pangea long before there was an Africa or China or East Asia.

    Then God sent the flood and destroyed it all except for Noah’s family.

    So, you wrong and he wrong.


  9. https://youtu.be/YeMa7yFqm40?si=YHoiE8JDwrCXfAGk

    When God created
    Man at the dawn of time there were no White People, only black people.

    Even some racist albino European historian admits this.
    “it is my conviction that a white skin is not natural to man, and that by nature he has either a black or brown skin like our forefathers, the Hindoos, and that the white man was never originally created by nature; and that, therefore, there is no race of white people, much as it is talked about, but every white man is a bleached one. Driven up into the north, where he was a stranger, and where he existed only like an exotic plant, in need of a hothouse in winter, man in the course of centuries became white. ”

    Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)


  10. Proof that European Albinos are Pathological liar, Fabricators of False history & are responsible for the destruction of Black Civilizations:

    Meroitic-Roman War: #1 For >3,000 years, three Kushite Kingdoms—Kerma, Napata & Meroë—ruled the Middle Nile Valley of Nubia, & for long periods of this rule, women were in charge. Queen Amanirenas’ ascension to the throne began with the death of her husband Teriteqase in 25 B.C., five years into the Roman occupation of lower Nubia. Queen Amanirenas ruled during the reign of Cleopatra in Egypt & Mark Antony in Rome, until they were deposed in 30 B.C. by Augustus Caesar.

    #2: Nubian Queen Who Fought Rome:

    Queen Amanirenas commanded soldiers of the ancient Kingdom of Kush & successfully resisted Roman rule. From 25 to 21 B.C. Queen Amanirenas managed to do what many male leaders in her time could not: push back a Roman invasion. Under Queen Amanirenas’ command, some 30,000 soldiers of the ancient Kingdom of Kush (located in modern-day Sudan) took to arms and fought back the ROMAN INVADERS who had advanced from Egypt.

    Nubian Queen Who Fought Rome #3:

    Following the annexation of Egypt, the Roman army attempted to push the border south. But kingdom of Kush fought back, & captured the Roman-occupied cities of Aswan, Philae and Elephantine. The Kush forces plundered the cities and enslaved the Romans, before retreating to El-Dakkeh , forcing Rome to abandon its plans for good. The head of a statue Augustus Caesar was found buried beneath the steps of a temple dedicated to Victory at the Kushite capital Meroë.

    Meroitic – Roman War #4:

    The location of the head of Augustus Caesar suggests it was broken off a statue & deliberately placed at the feet of its captors as a constant reminder of the queen’s victory over the powerful Roman ruler. After Queen Amanirenas, Queen Amanishaketo & Amanitore inherited her powerful legacy in protecting lower Nubia from the Romans.

    More evidence that European Albinos invaded the Black Civilization in the Nile Valley to loot, plunder & enslaved Africans .

    Proof that European Albinos are fabricators of history & responsible for destruction of Black Civilizations.

    Scholar Baron V. Denon confirmed Count de Volney’s views in his book, > “Journey and Travels in Egypt and Assyria.” He too, spoke of the > greatness of the Negroes. His hand drawing of the Sphinx of Giza > sketched in 1798, shows us the way the statue looked before it was > disfigured. According to eyewitness Baron V. Denon, Napoleon’s soldiers > blew its nose and lips apart with cannon fodder during the French > invasion of Egypt.

    1830s, Giuseppe Ferlini, an Italian thief, blew off the tops of 40 pyramids in Meroe , Sudan in search of the riches buried within them. Having destroyed much of the structure of the pyramids, Ferlini found treasure in only one of them. He then smuggled these stolen treasures back to Europe and tried to sell them.

    Clear proof that European Albinos came to Africa to steal & loot treasures to fill their museums, enslaved Africans & destroy African monuments.

    https://images.app.goo.gl/wfcsbTdCxdBhBKRy7

    Wild Men and Moors Tapestry: The tapestry measures over 3′ x 16′. It is held at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, Massachusetts, USA. The museum calls it Wild Men and Moors and it was created in Strasbourg, Germany around 1440. The museum bought it for $95k in 1954. The tapestry depicts moors defending their castle from WHITE MEN. The white men are covered from head to toe in hair, barefoot and fighting with sticks and stones. The moors have an established kingdom. The king and queen can be seen in the keep, or central tower of the castle. The queen wears a large white wig and both royals are crowned. The architecture of the castle is distinctly European and equipped with multiple levels, lookout towers, moat and drawbridge. The soldiers, dressed in Roman garb and chainmail, are fighting primarily with bow and arrow. At the opposite end of the tapestry, more wild men are depicted at their abode. This dwelling is depicted within the forest, built onto the trees. It is a stark contrast to the more advanced architecture of the so-called moors. This 14th century tapestry captures the events of the European Migration period when the Black -a – Moors of Europe (a African people) lost the effort in defending their villages, towns & way of life in Italy, Spain, England ,France and Germany to White People who replaced them and at the time attacked with rocks & clubs .

    This Tapestry confirms the Albino invasion of Europe & the destruction of Black Civilizations.

    Many “Pork Chop” pastors continue to mislead & brain wash the local population with these FAKE images of an European Albino.
    Remember at the dawn of time when God created man there were no white people anywhere on the planet.

    https://youtu.be/VMQbZjGhLCM?si=ND6hI7yRb05bLEl8


  11. Dean Crichlow passes at 90

    DEAN EMERITUS HAROLD EDMUND CRICHLOW passed away peacefully yesterday at age 90 after a brief illness.

    Anglican Bishop Michael Maxwell reflected on his last moments with the man who became the first black person to be Dean of St Michael’s Cathedral.

    “I had the opportunity to celebrate with Dean Harold at his home early this year for his 90th birthday on January 20, where I conducted a communion service with him and his immediate family,” Maxwell said in a statement.

    “More recently, I had the opportunity then to visit and pray with him last week Wednesday when I was notified by the family of his hospitalisation. And so on behalf of the diocesan family, we do thank God for Dean Harold’s lengthy years of service, and not only within the church, but on a national level. We will be uplifting his wife Margot, daughters Grace-Anne and Gloria, and other members of the family in prayer, and we do extend our deepest sympathy to all of them.”

    Grace-Ann said the family was still processing his death, but the telephone was ringing all day with messages of sympathy. She deferred comment until later.

    Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley said her heart sank yesterday when she learnt of the passing of the man she described as “a father figure, a national personality, a man who, it would appear, knew no fear when it came to his dealings with other mortals”.

    Never afraid to speak

    Crichlow was the first black Dean of St Michael’s Cathedral when he was appointed by Bishop Drexel Gomez in 1972. He was never afraid to speak from the pulpit, a trait noted by Mottley, who said Barbados could do with a few more Dean Crichlows today.

    “I never once got the impression that Dean Crichlow saw his role as restricted to the church. His approach to life did not allow for the separation of the spiritual side of man from the temporal. He challenged leaders from every segment of this society on their duties and responsibilities to ordinary Barbadians – but had a special place in his sermons for politicians,” she said.

    “Many would recall how he kept then Prime Ministers Errol Barrow and JMGM ‘Tom’ Adams, and their Cabinets, on their toes in the 1970s and early ‘80s. For years, his Sunday sermons dominated the front pages of the Monday newspapers. Then, when the big debate in the country was about the future of the sugar industry, Dean Crichlow took to the cane fields with his ‘bill’ in a show of leadership from the front – again taking the premier place in the newspapers.”

    Yet, Mottley added: “Dean Crichlow remained a soft-spoken priest with a calming voice – a man who could cut to the core of the issue, yet never display an ounce of spitefulness or disrespect to the personalities involved, always predicating his comment on some Bible verse.”

    Independent Senator

    Maxwell said Crichlow was ordained in 1961 and did his curacy and a term of service at Christ Church Parish Church. He then served as headmaster of the Christ Church High School until 1969 before he was appointed by the Archbishop of the West Indies to become the chaplain of the University of the West Indies Mona Campus in Jamaica until 1972. He taught at his alma mater Combermere School and was awarded the Gold Crown of Merit in 1999 in recognition of his service to religion.

    After retirement, Crichlow was selected by then Governor General Sir Clifford Husbands to serve as an Independent Senator. He took his message from the pulpit to Parliament, a new platform to reach the people.

    At his swearing in, he said: “I will be speaking on all issues, but my feelings have always been the relationship of the church to the society. I think the church is involved in everything. The church has to do with life here and life hereafter. I will continue to speak as I see things.”

    He was appointed Deputy President of the Senate in March 2012 after the resignation of Sir Branford Taitt as President which paved the way for then 38-year-old Kerryann Ifill to become first woman and first blind person to hold the office of President.

    Some of the words of Crichlow’s final sermon at St Michael’s Cathedral are as relevant today as they were on January 30, 2000.

    Speaking on the issue of crime, he said: “Every person living in Barbados must feel free to go about their business without being molested, and their homes should be thought of as being private.

    “Those who cannot use their freedom in the proper manner should be deprived of it. There must be greater respect for law, which is there to ensure the freedom of all members of society,” he added.

    Crichlow also served as programme manager for gospel station Faith 102.1 and was a keen photographer. His works were once displayed at the Barbados Embassy in Washington.

    “I felt called to be a priest from the time I was a boy. I dabbled with photography from the time I was 11 or 12 years old when I started with an old box camera, but I always knew I wanted to be a priest,” he said in a March 2001 interview with the NATION. (SAT)

    Source:Nation


  12. @Hants

    This is an interesting development.

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