One of my new found joys about living here in Amersham is the
opportunity of popping into London on an occasional Sunday for evening
service. So after last Sunday’s
Pentecost Communion at AFC and an afternoon trip to see the splendidly
re-furbished Chesham URC I caught the tube to Baker Street en route to
Westminster Abbey.The Metropolitan Line runs through Wembley Park and as it was
about 4.30pm when my train arrived there it was inevitable that we picked up
hundreds of fans coming out of the stadium after the F.A. ‘Play Off’
match. My near empty Sunday afternoon
carriage suddenly became full of green and white football supporters all in
good humour because their team had won and so earned promotion to the
Championship League. Now normally,
because of my less than enthusiastic following of the ‘beautiful game’, such joy
passes me by – but not on Sunday - because the winners of that crucial match were
Yeovil! Having lived there for six
years, virtually next to the football ground, I know just how dedicated the
town is to its team; indeed I’m told 25,000 Yeovilians (that’s out of a
population of 40,000!) made their way to Wembley on Sunday. So ‘well done’ to the ‘Glovers’ – I can
imagine that parking near the Manse will be even more horrific come September!
Meeting up with these ‘green and white’ supporters on the
train from Amersham was something of a weird collision between my two worlds –
an odd juxtaposition between the recent past and only just beginning
present. It made me smile and realise
the metaphor of life as a journey, although over used, is still relevant.So – on Pentecost Sunday, when we remember the Jerusalem crowd witnessing ‘something of God’ breaking out – these were my two crowds. A bunch of loud and happy football supporters – a congregation of silent, yet I think sincere, Abbey worshippers. I dare to hope something of the spark of Pentecost was to be found in both.
With best wishes,
Ian
Ps a Blog holiday next week!
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