The Trusty Servant Nov 2019 No.128 | Seite 6

No.128 However, we tend to forget that we are not God. We are Adam and Eve. For Adam and Eve, by contrast, their first complete day of life was a day of rest, from which they then proceeded to work and live. We work from rest; not rest from work. I wonder whether that perspective might be a welcome and vital corrective to our increasingly frenetic working lives. The day of rest is essential in the Judeo-Christian tradition, for it leads us to worship, and, through that, reveals more about God. And the same must be said of sport. I am reminded of the film Chariots of Fire, the story of Eric Liddell, Christian athlete and later missionary, who famously refused the opportunity to win a gold medal in the 100m race at the 1924 Olympic Games because his race was on a Sunday. ‘God made me for a purpose’, says Liddell in the film, ‘but he also made me fast, and, when I run, I feel his pleasure.’ Our sport, our leisure, our rest, played with the right attitude, are things that can bring pleasure to God. They can be as much a part of the daily round of thanks and praise of this College as The Trusty Servant what goes on here in Chapel. Now, sermons are like Winkies games: everything can be won or lost in the dying moments. In a bid for a muscular Christianity, I had thought of getting you all to your feet to sing my favourite sporting hymn: Dropkick me Jesus through the goalposts of life End over end, neither left nor the right Straight through the heart of them righteous uprights Dropkick me Jesus through the goalposts of life. Make me, oh make me, Lord, more than I am Make me a piece in your master game plan Free from the earthly temptation below I’ve got the will Lord if you’ve got the toe. But, we’re not a rugby school, so that won’t do. So, perhaps, Alan Bennett’s great sermon from Beyond the Fringe: When that One Great Scorer comes To mark against your name, It matters not who won or lost, But how you played the game. Actually, no jokes are required. For sport is man’s joke on God. You see, God says to man, ‘I’ve created a universe where it seems like everything matters; where you’ll have to grapple with life and death and mortality and, in the end, you’ll die and see that your frenetic labours mattered little.’ So, in reply, man says to God, ‘Well then … within your universe we’re going to create a sub-universe called sports, one that absolutely doesn’t matter, and we’ll follow everything that happens in it as if it were a matter of life and death.’ The last word should go to Dr Moberly and his ‘Isthmian Games’: ‘We have reached the end of another season of refreshment and leisure, and are again girding ourselves up for a long course of industry and labour … God has also allowed us to reach a new beginning of our Christian course, a time of new prayers, a time of repeated communions, a time of fresh duty, a time for pressing forward in all the holy activity of early piety … Let us think of God’s unspeakable mercy, who still bears with us, gives us time and space for repentance, calls us by every motive that can prevail on man, not to despise the riches of His goodness and long-suffering, but to repent of our childish and youthful sins, and yield ourselves up in soul and body to His service!’ Patrick Maclure (I, 52-57; Secretary of Wykehamist Society, 88-04; Aide to the Warden and Headmaster, 04 – 14) died on 28 th September 2019 Charles Sinclair (B, 61-66; Warden, 14- 19) gave this address at a dinner to mark PSWKM’s retirement in June 2015: It may surprise you to know, Patrick, that you have spent 52 years of your life connected with this place. I have excluded your years before Win Coll, your years of National Service in the prestigious KRRC and your Bursarship of Downe House. I have included 19 years as Master and Bursar at Horris Hill, on the grounds that it was (and still is) one of the great feeder schools to Win Coll. In fact, you brought on so many Wykehamists at Horris Hill that we have a well-triangulated picture of you from those days. ‘Terrifying’ and ‘scary’ are words that occur often. ‘He had a loud, booming voice and if he shouted out your name in the 6 corridor, it was enough to stop your heart.’ You were known as Pesky after your many initials, and a ‘Pesky Rocket’ for having annoyed you was to be avoided at all costs. It wasn’t only the boys that suffered: legend has it that one of your booms was launched so successfully on a clutch of swifts making too much noise