Reflections for Choral Evensong
Reflections for Choral Evensong on the Occasion of the 100th Anniversary of the King’s-Edgehill School Cadet Corps
I.
Words written on the wall. As we came into Christ Church we passed under the arch of the swords of the honour guard. But we also passed under these words, “Keep thy foot when thou goest to the house of God.” None of us read these words, probably because we were watching our feet! We are probably not the only ones who missed those words! What do they mean?
The words are taken from the Book of Ecclesiastes, the most philosophical book of the Jewish Scriptures. The passage goes on to exhort us to “be more ready to hear, than to give the sacrifice of fools.” In other words, these words speak to our life as a School and a Cadet Corps. They mean, quite simply, “pay attention,” or, as Major Miles often says, “Listen up, youse guys!”
II.
Tonight we celebrate 100 years of the Cadet Programme at King’s-Edgehill School. The connection between the school and the military, of course, is much older. The commitment to leadership and public service is part of the educational project of the school. For over two hundred years, students from King’s have served in many of the great military contests throughout the world: in the wars of the Napoleonic era; in the battles of the rise and fall of the British Empire; and in the devastating wars of the twentieth century. The grandson of the Founder of our School, Sir John Inglis, for instance, was the hero of Lucknow, a battle fought in India, in 1858. The events of our past are inescapably part of our identity.

