J. E. M. Cameron

John Stott’s Right Hand


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not, much of who he was, and of a life spent (‘poured out’ might be a more descriptive phrase) in the service of his Master, Jesus Christ, is to be found in the pages that follow. They also contain a description of Dr Billy Graham’s first major Greater London Crusade at Harringay in 1954, in which John Stott played a significant part, and of the lifelong friendship forged between the two men. I remember having to make a train journey on the morning after the opening night of the Crusade, and avidly buying up a selection of newspapers at the station bookstall, to read the press accounts. Paper after paper carried the story on the front page – not normally given to anything ‘religious’ – and Billy Graham’s name was in every headline. That railway journey came to my mind when I heard Billy Graham, on some later occasion, raise the question of whether there would be newspapers in heaven. It was not a very serious supposition, but it was to make a serious point. ‘If there are newspapers in heaven,’ he told his audience, ‘it won’t be my name that is in the headlines.’ By the values of the world, the values of the kingdom of heaven will always seem topsy-turvy, as Jesus had to explain to his disciples at that Last Supper.

      It would be no surprise to find that many readers who know the names of John Stott and Billy Graham know little, if anything, of Frances Whitehead, who is the subject of this book. I like to think that if there should be a ‘New Jerusalem Daily Press’, the names of Billy Graham and John Stott would indeed be in the headlines, and ‘Frances Whitehead’ up there beside them. I do not need to elaborate this, for all that follows in these pages makes crystal clear that John Stott could not have achieved the work he did without Frances at his elbow.

      You will read, quite early on, of her conversion to Christ, for which her younger days were to leave her not unprepared. By the age of 18 she had known two close bereavements; she must also be one of the last generation to learn the outline of her faith from the Catechism in the Prayer Book! From secret work in the war as a young mathematician, she came in the providence of God to work for the BBC, just across the street from All Souls Church, which was to become the centre, not just of her work, but of her life, for the rest of her days. Support for John Stott, as she looked back on it, was indeed ‘a life, not a job’. But this Introduction is not really the place to cherry-pick incidents and episodes from that job and life. For that, you will want to move quickly on into Julia Cameron’s thoroughly-researched account, from an insider’s privileged viewpoint, in the chapters that follow.

      But you must allow me to endorse, from my own experience, all that Julia writes and all that she quotes from John Stott, from his study assistants – indeed from all who knew Frances – of her gifts, pastoral and personal, as well as financial, administrative, editorial. In everything that touched John Stott and his work, she was enabler, supporter, adviser, encourager, as well as – to borrow terms from the media – gatekeeper and anchorman. With Frances in control, no one was going to disturb John Stott’s prayerfully planned programme without due cause; and any crisis that might dare to raise its head would quickly and resolutely be resolved.

      This book, therefore, is much more than a personal tribute. It is that, of course. The late Penelope Fitzgerald, biographer and Booker prize novelist, gave it as her opinion that novels should be about those whom you think are sadly mistaken, but that ‘you should write biographies of those you admire and respect.’ This is clearly such a work. But it is also an important addition to the history of a period in which the evangelical stewardship of the gospel was undergoing expansion and renewal, written from the perspective of those involved. And that makes this biography a shining exception to the opening sentence of this Introduction. Later in the book you can read of how, when All Souls rectory was a bachelor establishment of curates, students and other residents, some wag combined the words ‘rectory’ and ‘vicarage’ to name it ‘The Wreckage’. It would have been better to combine them another way, so that all who lived and worked there in the days of John Stott and Frances were sharers in ‘The Victory’!

      Timothy Dudley-Smith

      Ford, Wiltshire

      Part I

      London, 13 January 2012

      CHAPTER ONE

      Memorial service at St Paul’s Cathedral

      They passed the City Thameslink Station on their right, with the Old Bailey off to the left. From the top of the hill they could see that hundreds of people had already begun to arrive and were queuing outside the Cathedral; it was clear that the seating would be full to capacity. Eighteen hundred places had been booked online very quickly after they were made available; a further two hundred had been kept back for people queuing on the day. The queues were abuzz with conversations and reunions.

      St Paul’s Cathedral is where John Stott aged 24, having just finished at Cambridge, was ordained in December 1945. He was then about to begin his ministry as assistant curate at All Souls Church, Langham Place, in London’s West End. He had grown up in Harley Street, the son of a consultant, and from his early years, he and his younger sister were taken to All Souls Church by their nanny. His earliest memory of the All Souls rectory at 12 Weymouth Street, where he himself would later live for over 50 years, was of his Sunday school days in the mid 1920s, when he spent more time outside the classroom than inside it, excluded for terrorizing the girls with his toy guns and plastic daggers. A very different John Stott would emerge twenty years later as he stood in this great Cathedral to take serious and weighty ordination vows.

      It was in the mid-1950s, as a young Rector, that he invited Frances Whitehead, a member of the congregation, to become his secretary. As history will bear witness, it would be hard now to imagine John without Frances; ‘Uncle John’ without ‘Auntie Frances’, as they became known. On this January morning in 2012, at the Memorial Service for one of the twentieth-century giants of the faith, Frances Whitehead was, at John Stott’s stated request, to give the opening tribute.

      No stoles. No mitres

      There was a sense of reverence, of thankfulness, and of awe at Christopher Wren’s marvellous imagination, and at the beauty of craftsmanship brought to its execution. For those who had watched the wedding of Prince Charles and Diana Spencer on television, or the Queen’s 80th birthday and Diamond Jubilee, the striking black-and-white floor with its stark starburst mosaic under the dome held a strange familiarity.

      What aesthetic richness in the stately Corinthian pillars, intricate artwork and massive memorials; and for those who looked up, in the gloriously-painted dome ceiling, depicting scenes from the life of St Paul. Few looked up for very long. For, for all the grandeur of the setting, and formality of the occasion, there was no sense of stuffiness. Here was an historic gathering of friends from around the world; there was news to share, there were questions to ask, and greetings to be sent to people too frail to attend. Those taking part soon left their seats on the front row to greet old friends. Then, as the start of the service drew close, the All Souls Orchestra began to play, filling the Cathedral with works by Handel, Elgar and Guilmant. Frances once more took her seat, next to Jane Williams, the wife of the Archbishop of Canterbury.

      The congregation