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Rev Roy Jenkins - 03/10/15

Thought for the Day

It’s the stuff of nightmares for some very tough men. By ten o’clock this evening, England could have become the first host nation to be eliminated from a rugby world cup without leaving the pool stages. The arithmetic is tricky, but the stark reality is that if Australia beat them by the tiniest of margins, they’ll be gone, shredded by the critics and reduced to observer status at the party which was meant to be theirs.

Which means that for possibly the first time in my life, I’ll find myself, along with many other Welsh people, supporting the Aussies. I bear no ill will to my neighbours, but solidarity has its limits when an English defeat would guarantee that an embattled Wales team will go through.
I realise that large numbers of people ask, What’s the fuss? And there are indeed infinitely more important issues to be bothered about in an unstable world where poverty cripples, a gunman can kill randomly and millions flee war and terror. Set alongside these, talk of triumph or tragedy in a mere game can suggest a dangerous lack of proportion.

But we can be just a little too earnest about all this. Almost everything from the music which carries us through our day to our enthusiasms about food or clothes or books or whatever might be equally insignificant to the larger picture; yet they can also express something of who we are; and it’s only if we obsess on them that we’re in trouble.

Even many in Wales who get irritated by the fluctuating hysteria or gloom surrounding rugby recognise that it’s become part of the national identity: it’s something a little country can do well, and if we do, however irrationally, people feel better, walk taller.

I can still remember the days when at international games this passion blended with an even larger one. The pre-match music majored on great hymns of the Christian faith, their words familiar to large sections of the crowd. As they lifted their voices in celebration of what God had done in the past, so they seamlessly joined their thanks with hopes for what their team might shortly accomplish - though they knew full well the difference between the two.

That’s long gone, but the echo remains every time a contemporary crowd in Cardiff attempt to lift their players with a spontaneous chorus of Bread of Heaven. How many of them realise that they’re singing one of the greatest of hymns by the 18th century preacher William Williams, Pantycelyn, I don’t know - or that the words are a statement of personal weakness, and a plea for deliverance in the face of death. Bread of heaven - feed me till I want no more, they sing; but the sustenance on offer is much more than a feast of spectacular tries. I keep hoping that they’ll taste it.

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Duration:

3 minutes