MATCH OF THE DAY’S BACK!
What has the Christian Church to do with Match of the Day?
With the return of Match of the Day to the television screen, it is a sure sign that summer is over and we are heading into autumn and a new football season.
But what has this got to do with the Christian Church? Well, quite a lot! It is amazing how many of the top-flight football clubs in England were begun by local churches or Christian ministers and workers. They saw football as a means not only of providing opportunities for physical exercise for young lads but also of encouraging qualities of teamwork and leadership in an age when there was little for young boys to do.
Many football teams were organised from the 1870s onwards by churches or Christian organisations and, right up until the Second World War, there were Sunday School leagues in many parts of the country. By the 1890s, some of the clubs had become so well established that they attracted the backing of wealthy local men who, with an eye to business opportunities, converted them into limited companies,
establishing the professional game by paying wages to the players.
Among the Premiership clubs which first began as church teams are :
Aston Villa
: Formed by members of the Bible Class at the Wesleyan Chapel in 1874
Bolton Wanderers
: Started for boys at Christ Church Sunday School in 1874
Birmingham City
: Begun by the choirboys of Holy Trinity Church in 1875
Everton
: Formed by boys in the Bible Class at St Domingo Methodist Church in 1878 (Liverpool FC began when there was a division of
opinion in the organisation at Everton)
Fulham:
Started through the efforts of the curate at St Andrew’s Church in 1879
Manchester City
: Developed from a working men’s group at St Mark’s Church, West Gorton, in 1880
Tottenham Hotspur
: Formed by a Bible Class teacher at All Hallows Church in 1882
Originally, most of these teams were named after the churches responsible for starting them, but gradually the church names were dropped as they progressed in the professional game.
So, when you are watching Match of the Day, you are watching a heritage of Christian work, often for the poor and underprivileged in the towns and cities in the later Victorian period. It is interesting that, today, many of the top clubs now run community projects to help the disadvantaged in their localities.
Match of the Day has grown to cover all the Premier League matches of the day, with other leagues having their own television coverage. To every club, each match is vital, whether it be in championships or knock-out competitions.
The Christian background of these clubs is a reminder that the real Match of the day, or matches, is the everyday struggle between good and evil, between choosing the right or choosing the wrong. And we don’t just sit before a television screen for these matches. They are matches in which we have to take part. How often do we
win?
The greatest Match of the Day went to extra time, but Jesus triumphed over the evil of this world. From seeming defeat on the Cross, He rose victorious at the Resurrection.








