Good golf can parallel a good life, according to a project to be staged
in the “golfers’ church” of St Hildeburgh's, next door to the venue of this year’s Open
Championship.
The venture will be held at St Hildeburgh's, Hoylake’s parish church,
which borders the Royal Liverpool golf course, in Wirral by the River Dee, where
the world’s top players will compete for the famous Claret Jug at the Open in
July.
A ‘prayer
labyrinth’ in the form of a nine-hole golf course – complete with greens, water,
rain and wind – will be laid out in the church. It will represent a spiritual
journey based on themes familiar in golf as in life, including Facing the
Challenge, Fear of Failure, Anger and Frustration,
Friendship, Patience, and Achievement. Actual golf incidents will
feature on the church’s audio-visual screen.
Anger and
Frustration is typified by
Doug Sanders taking a two-foot putt at St Andrew’s to win the 1970 Open – and
missing. Friendship is evoked by
memories of the 1969 Ryder Cup, when the entire competition
depended on the match between Jack Nicklaus and Tony Jacklin. On the 17th
Jacklin drew level with a 35-foot putt then, at the 18th, Nicklaus
controversially conceded Jacklin's putt, ensuring that the match ended in a
tie.
The vicar at St Hildeburgh's, Rev Paul Rossiter, said: “We decided to set
up the prayer labyrinth to coincide with the Open because in golf you face many
challenges and, as Christians, we also face challenges. Golf is accessible and
engaging and so is prayer. Both involve self-discovery – you find out a lot
about yourself and your true feelings.”
People entering the labyrinth will be given a booklet suggesting ways to
approach the theme of each hole.
They will take a yellow practice ball and walk the fairways to the first
four greens unburdening various negative emotions, reflecting on their life and
what they have read in the booklet, with the aim of developing a sense of
forgiveness. They will drop the practice ball into the fifth hole, discarding
negative thoughts along with it, and pick up a white match ball which they will
carry along the final four fairways, focusing on four points at which Christ may
have touched their lives. There are no ‘right answers’. Each person will have
different thoughts and experiences.
Mr
Rossiter explained: “A reflective journey such as this tends to trigger thoughts
– regrets, desires, resolutions, enlightenment or moments of well-being. As
people reflect as each stage of the journey, they can record their thoughts on a
card.
“At similar events, people have been surprised at their own self-discovery – their
thoughts and realisations. Some might need sympathetic counselling to help them
to think things through. Support for them will be on hand and by
phone.”
St
Hildeburgh's has been regarded as the golfers’ church since members of the Royal
Liverpool paid for the great stained-glass east window to commemorate
fellow-members who lost their lives in World War I. Plaques commemorating the
club’s fallen in both world wars are displayed in the building. The church also
has a back door, installed in 1916, which shortens the walk to the golf
course.
The prayer labyrinth has the
support of the Royal Liverpool Golf Club. A spokesman said: “The club applauds
the parish of Hoylake for marking the playing of the Open Championship over the
Hoylake links with an imaginative initiative at the parish church. The game
of golf and life have so much in common.”
The prayer labyrinth will be open from every day from Monday, July 14, to Sunday, July 20 at the following times:
Monday 14 July: 10.00am to 4.00pm
Tuesday 15 July: 10.00am to 4.00pm
Wednesday 16 July: 10.00am to 8.00pm
Thursday 17 July: 10.00am to 8.00pm
Friday 18 July: 10.00am to 4.00pm
Saturday 19 July: 10.00am to 4.00pm
Sunday 20 July: 10.00am to 4.00pm (Service of Holy Communion from 10.00am to 11.00am)
Monday 14 July: 10.00am to 4.00pm
Tuesday 15 July: 10.00am to 4.00pm
Wednesday 16 July: 10.00am to 8.00pm
Thursday 17 July: 10.00am to 8.00pm
Friday 18 July: 10.00am to 4.00pm
Saturday 19 July: 10.00am to 4.00pm
Sunday 20 July: 10.00am to 4.00pm (Service of Holy Communion from 10.00am to 11.00am)
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