It’s a long time since I visited Florence - once in the height of summer, dodging from patch of shade to patch of shade and once at Christmas when it was bitterly cold but we managed to get into the Uffizi without queuing. It was quite crowded in the summertime with queues to get into all places of interest but I imagine it’s even more crowded now. Like so many places it’s the victim of its own tourist success. I read that Florence is one of Europe’s most-visited and overcrowded cities, attracting roughly 16 million tourists a year. Wow!
This week I read that a tourist has been charged with criminal damage to a 16th century statue of Neptune. In what was described as a “pre-wedding prank” she tried to climb the statue to touch Neptune’s genitals. (It’s strange how stag-dos, which once meant the groom’s friends taking him out and getting him drunk on the night before his wedding, and hen-parties have developed onto expensive group visits to somewhere foreign where you do daft things for a dare.)
The monument was inspected and it was found that the prank had caused “minor but significant damage to both the legs of the horses she had walked on and to the frieze she held on to in order to avoid slipping”. They say it could €5,000 (£4,340) to repair it and the woman has been charged with defacing an artistic and architectural asset. That will make it a very expensive hen-party!
The statue was created by the sculptor Bartolomeo Ammannati, commissioned by Cosimo I de’ Medici in 1559 to celebrate the marriage of his son, Francesco I de’ Medici, to grand duchess Joanna of Austria. This seems like an odd way to celebrate a wedding but then, so is climbing up an ancient monument.
The closest we have to an ancient monument in our village is an old church, a rather fine building which has been closed for years and years. There also used to be a fine old lych gate at the entrance to the churchyard, where I was once told couples could be married if for some reason they couldn’t avail themselves of the whole church ceremony. Some time after the church closed, the lynch gate was demolished. There used to be a notice informing people about how to arrange for burials in the connected graveyard but even that has gone now. For some years the church was boarded up but then the window blockages disappeared and birds flew in and out, as did the weather! Rumours abounded that there was a conspiracy to reduce it to a poor condition, facilitating its conversion to a new use. And then this year, eventually, work began on converting it into flats and building several houses on the adjoining land. So the shell of the building will be preserved, better than just falling into ruins I suppose.
Such may be the fate of many churches apparently. “According to the National Churches Trust, there are about 38,500 churches, chapels and meeting houses in the UK, approximately half of which are listed buildings. In a survey last year by the trust, in which 3,628 churches took part, one in 20 of those surveyed said they felt they will “definitely” or “probably” not be used as a place of worship in five years’ time.”
Here’s a link to an article about an abandoned church in Wales.
As a child I went to Sunday School, as a teenager I was quite devout but that’s all in the past. And yet I still feel, it’s rather sad for the old churches to be completely abandoned.
Meanwhile in the United States this week they are having an evangelical event: America Reads the Bible.
“Discover the Bible again or for the first time, join us in Washington, D.C. or on the live stream for the national event and movement. Together we can inspire others to interact with God's Word during this crucial time in America's history.”
Even the president has been involved (naturally!) reading to camera in the Oval Office on Tuesday: “If my people, which are called by my name, shall humble themselves, and pray, and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then will I hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin, and will heal their land.” 2 Chronicles 7:14
The organiser of the America Reads the Bible event is someone called Bunni Pounds, President and Founder of Christians Engaged, an author, podcast show host, former political consultant and former congressional candidate.
Hmm! It seems that the separation of church and state has got a little lost in the USA!
Life goes on. Stay safe and well, everyone!



















