The Portal June 2017 | Page 5

ragon THE P RTAL June 2017 Page 5 Flaming June Snapdragon on international cricket I t was all the fault of a computer malfunction. When I was asked to provide some notes for those German bishops, a careless slip of my finger must have introduced into my text an old archived paragraph of unknown origin. I had warned Mgr Lefebvre, the Vicar General, that I am not very IT-savvy. I had better explain. The German Episcopal Conference (known for short as the Bischop-lischekonferenzg rossdeutschland) had been invited to spend a few relaxing days in England discussing strategies for encouraging adultery and so on, and the Ordinariate was honoured by being given a role in their entertainment. I was tasked with producing some notes on the English Way of Life. “Tell them all about Cricket”, said the VG, himself a keen spin bowler. That is how a rogue paragraph crept in. Here is what it said. “CRICKET. At each end of the Cricket Ground you will notice a large white screen. This is designed to encourage the participation of foreigners. You should stand in front of one of these screens. All the players will turn and wave at you. You should wave back. When you have done this for four or five minutes, the players will start to walk towards you. As soon as you see this happening, remove your trousers and turn round. After a moment or two, some clowns disguised as policemen will rush towards you. Etiquette demands that you engage in a mock battle with these functionaries, especially by giving each one of them a friendly punch on the nose.” of Portsmouth, aided by some effective sledging. (Colour was also contributed by one of the umpires, an Ordinariate priest wearing a Canterbury Cap, who said “Qu ack quack” each time he sent a Westminster batsman off for being Leg Before.) I shall always regret that I was not actually in the stands as such when our German guests made their Cultural Gesture … I think I may have fortified myself with one or two free drinks at The Tablet’s expense in the Hospitality Tent and was by then lying reposefully under one of the tables. The first I heard of the fracas was when I learned that the Nuncio had needed to stand bail for quite a large sum of money to get the Germans out of Pentonville. We decided to cheer them up by having a little party to explain our English sense of humour. It did not go too well. One of the Westminster auxiliaries was trying to elucidate the phrase “The bowler’s Holding, the batsman’s Willey” when Cardinal Marx, who seemed to have got quite seriously bruised in his encounter with the Metropolitan Police, looked dyspeptically at his damaged 400,000 Euro watch and growled “Und Zis is funny?” Even so, things might have been glossed over but for The game chosen for the German hierarchs to the Ordinary’s newly appointed Vicar for International attend was a qualifier for The Tablet Interdiocesan Accord, Fr ffetherstonhaugh-ffawlty. Cricket Cup. The slack and clumsy batting order of the Archdiocese of Westminster was being routed by He was heard to murmur in a not-very-sotto voce the highly professional pace bowlers of the Diocese “Don’t mention the War”. Honour your freedom ... continued from page 4 was a standard part of life in half of Europe and all of what is now Russia and the adjoining republics. today: we uphold truths that challenge standard ideas in all sorts of ways: our understanding that marriage is the lifelong union of one man and one woman, our So we do well to remember that, and to cherish our commitment to upholding the sanctity of human life freedom by making good use of it. And one certain including that of unborn babies...and more… way of doing that is not only to hold our traditional outdoor processions, carol-singing, and similar However, we do have the right to celebrate our faith activities, and not to claim that “we’re all persecuted in public and in private and, making due allowance today” when we aren’t. for whatever is sensible, with regard to road traffic and neighbourliness and general concern for the common In many ways, it is tough being a Christian in Britain good, we must and shall continue to do just that.