Vigo
Village was once the author's family home. While he lived there he
shared in the experience of creating a church where none existed already.
Almost 25 years after leaving the village he was asked to write this
retrospective article for the local newsletter, "Culverstone
Village News"
Vigo Visions
I saw a red squirrel just once in my life. Sitting on the end of
a horizontal bough, it could not have known how soon its race would
become extinct in Kent. This was 1951, and I was just eight and
enjoying my first real experience of the countryside. I had travelled
less than thirty miles from my London home to a tiny Kentish village
called Vigo, but it seemed as if I had journeyed to another world.
We would gather wild strawberries as we walked along Whitepost Lane.
Glow-worms shone in the undergrowth beside Rhododendron Avenue.
As we walked back to the cottage in the evenings, bats would swoop
low over our heads. Entering a field we would set uncountable hordes
of rabbits scattering in all directions. This was Kent, just before
the page turned to a new era of mechanical farming and chemical
controls. Country was still different from town.
Vigo was a village in name, but scarcely existed at all. The village
centre consisted of a few Nissen huts (the remains of an army camp)
one of which served as the General Store and Post Office, where
we could buy milk that had hardly travelled since it left the cow.
Such houses as there were hid shyly behind brambles and bushes.
Nothing could be less like the crowded streets of my home borough.
I was entranced.
Twenty years later, whilst out for a Sunday afternoon drive, a
nostalgic urge turned me back toward Vigo. The warm Spring day had
drawn us out to enjoy the countryside as a therapeutic relief following
a long, hard Winter. As I rounded a bend, half expecting to see
the corrugated outline of the old General Store, I was startled
to see a modern estate-village nestling in the woods. Though obviously
new, it snuggled inoffensively among the trees and looked inviting.
"Fancy moving?" I said to my wife, as we turned in and pulled up
in front of the Croudace show-house. Six months later we were residents.
Nostalgia certainly played a part in our decision to move to Vigo,
but we also had a strong sense of 'calling'. It is hard to explain
what that feels like, so you'll have to take my word for it. What
is certain is that, during that six month period, a significant
number of professing Christians felt a similar call to settle in
the village, forming a core around which Vigo's first church would
form. The new Vigo Village was a world away from the hamlet I stayed
at during 1951. This was no longer a working, rural community, but
a commuter dormitory where at least half of the population spends
their days working in distant towns and cities. In such a context
it was hard to see how we could form effective relationships and
establish a workable community of faith. But it was a challenge
worth facing, and we wasted no time before locating like-minded
people and making friends. A Christian fellowship began to emerge.
Croudace (the village's builders) always intended their model village
to include a church, and named one of the roads "Churchside" in
anticipation. But the traditional denominations showed no interest
in setting up there. The Church of England went as far as to commission
a survey amongst the new villagers, and concluded that there was
"not enough interest". I wondered where Christianity would have
been if the early apostles had backed off from regions where they
were not wanted! We had no grand plans, no formal credentials, nor
powerful preaching gift. We simply believed that this was the right
place to be and that something good would develop as we just lived
in the community and made friends.
Our little fellowship was not overly ambitious, but tentatively
began meeting from house to house in Chestnut Lane and, later, in
Churchside on a couple of evenings a week. We avoided the regular
church times, so that people who had connections with traditional
churches outside the village could preserve their loyalties by attending
their normal meetings. There was no pressure to conform. This approach
worked and we quickly achieved a closeness of fellowship that attracted
others. One of our most successful ventures was to form our own
Sunday School, which soon attracted 30-40 children. That's quite
a house-full on a regular basis! We started each Sunday morning
with an opening session of group singing in the living room, followed
by age-group classes split around every available room in the house.
At a time of increasing secularisation it was the only way many
of those children were going to hear the stories that lie at the
centre of our faith, and our culture. Jesus has not gone out of
fashion.
By 1975 the fellowship was well established, but our growing family
was on the move again. We relocated to Lincolnshire, satisfied that
we had played our part in starting something of value. Since then
we have moved again, to Bristol, and our family has grown up and
moved across the world. Our time in Vigo was a long while ago and
was, in truth, quite brief, but it still feels like a major part
of our life. We remember the bluebells, and the foggy nights; we
remember the rhododendrons and the damp windows. We remember Vigo's
unique micro-climate - carpeted in snow while the rest of Kent was
clear. And we remember the fellowship we had with people who were
happy just to be Christians, without regard to pointless divisions
inherited from the past.
My Vigo red squirrel was among the last of a disappearing breed,
but twenty years on Christianity was able to reinvent itself for
a new community and culture. Now, another twenty-eight years later,
it is still vital, versatile and alive.
©Derrick
Phillips
April 1999
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