A TASTE OF GLORY
There are
many reasons to celebrate the victory of South Africa in the Rugby World Cup in
Japan. Rugby was the game of the whites in South Africa before Freedom Day in
1994 and now it has been transformed into something the whole country can
relate to. Also, the euphoria following the win on October 2 echoed those
scenes in 1994 when the country celebrated the end of the old divided world and
the beginning of a new united country. Many
words, most famously those of Captain Siya Kolisi, express the hope that this
event will bring the country together anew. Many South Africans, aware of the
tensions arising from the unfulfilled dreams of a quarter of a century ago,
fervently hope so.
These
thoughts express the release of joy the victory brought but we can also
celebrate the sheer quality of the game itself. It was ‘awesome’ – this time
the word is appropriate – to watch the South African defence in the last
quarter of the first half. The English mounted fierce attacks time and time
again and for ten unrelenting minutes were within a few feet of the score line. But the Boks stood their ground in a dazzling
display of defence. My mind strayed to
the Battle of Waterloo when the French repeatedly assailed the British lines but
could not break them!
What thrills
us is to see people stretch themselves to the limit. You could see they gave everything and were
struggling for breath when there was a pause in the game. We long to give all
of ourselves in life and in love. And it is agony to keep falling short. It is
the sorrow of being human, as the fourteenth century author of the Cloud of
Unknowing tells us.
Perhaps what
we are really celebrating in this victory is to glimpse what human beings are
capable of. That is the message of Jesus. Each of us is capable of
greatness. ‘You will see greater things
than this’. It will show itself in a multitude of different ways. For some it will be on the sports field. For
others it will be in a hospital bed where a person reaches beyond the pain and
the frailty and suffers ‘in the right way’. Viktor Frankl, who endured the
concentration camps in World War II wrote:
I understood how a man who has nothing left in the world may
still know bliss … In utter desolation, when man cannot express himself in
positive action, when his only achievement may consist in enduring his
sufferings in the right way, man can achieve fulfilment.
So, thank you
Siya Kolisi and your team, you have shared with us a precious taste of
glory. May we relish it!
10 November 2019 Sunday 32 C
2 Maccabees 7:1…14 2 Thessalonians 2:16-3:5 Luke 20;27-38
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