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Posts Tagged ‘football’

God Under the Goalposts

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009

WilsonnflfootballLet me be honest: I’m still reeling from the Denver Broncos 30-7 loss Sunday to the Baltimore Ravens. I’ve been a Bronco fan since I was old enough to put on a plastic helmet, and my weeks always start a little more miserably during football season when we — I mean they — lose. And, after a loss like the one that took place on Sunday, even reading the word “football” can be painful.

Which made Time magazine’s story titled “God and Football: The NFL’s Chaplains Give Advice” particularly agonizing to read. But such are the sacrifices I make to write this blog.

The story details the work of the volunteers that minister to those in the National Football League. For a violent game played on Christianity’s traditional day of rest, football is surprisingly steeped in faith, and chaplains can play a pretty integral role in how their teams function, on some level. And sometimes they’re called to answer some pretty ticklish theological questions: “Does God want us to lose? Does he favor the Steelers? What makes Lambeau Field sacred? Is it right to pray for first downs when people are suffering? And who caused that fumble, Jesus or Julius Peppers?”

And then there’s this:

But the chaplains believe their real value is more long term than game-day ministering. Through teaching Scripture and individual counseling, they attempt to bolster the players’ values, so that their priorities, especially when they leave the regulated world of football, do not lead them down the path of self-destruction. At the same time, the chaplains help the players understand the acceptability of being forceful on the field, even as good Christians.

“The popular perception of Christianity in America, prior to the last 10 to 15 years, has been that being a Christian meant you were soft — you were considered weak, kind of a pushover,” says Pastor Trapp. “You’re the guy who was going to turn the other cheek. But you read in the Bible that some of those guys were brash and bold and forceful but still had a heart and a desire for God.”

The idea of fostering a more muscular form of Christianity is nothing new. Pastors who minister primarily to men know that a traditional church service, full of its romance-tinged worship music and touchy-feely vibe, can be a tough sell amongst the spitting, grunting set. It’s kinda nice for us Christians laden with XY chromosomes to have role models that, if given an excuse, could knock your block off.

A Faith of Steel

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009

 

photo by Andy

photo by Andy

 For a football player best known for taking the heads off his opponents, Pittsburgh Steeler Troy Polamalu seems to have his own screwed on pretty straight.

 

Polamalu, one of the National Football League’s most respected and feared players, recently talked with Gina Mazza for Pittsburgh magazine about football, family … and faith.

“If anybody believes in God and believes in the Holy Bible, how can you be in any grey area?” he says. “I’m talking about myself here, how can ‘I’ think one way and do another way? To me, Christianity is very black and white. Either you take it serious or you don’t take it serious at all.”

Polamalu talks at length on how monks from the Greek Orthodox church — the wing of Christianity to which Polamalu belongs — express their theology right down to their clothes and facial hair. The monks wear beards to steer clear of vanity; they rarely talk to avoid arrogance; they turn their eyes down to stay away temptation. While he says not everyone was meant to be a monastic — and Polamalu, with his flowing hair and propensity for highlight-reel hits, doesn’t strike me as a particularly retiring soul — the NFL safety does seem to have a great appreciation of humility, saying that you can’t have an “experience of God” without it.

Thanks to Steve Beard’s Thunderstruck for steering me to this story. It’s worth a read.

O.J. Award: Tim Tebow

Friday, July 24th, 2009

 

Tim Tebow on the cover of SI

Tim Tebow on the cover of SI

Let me make a confession: I don’t like the Florida Gators. I’m sick of them, frankly. I’m sick of their national championships, sick of their uniforms, sick of the way Gators fans scissor their arms up and down in mimicry of an alligator chomp. Nothing personal against the school, really … it just seems unfair that one university would be sooooo good all the time, while others — like those that I root for — aren’t. 

 

 

But while I’m not a Florida U. fan, I can’t help but like Gators’ quarterback Tim Tebow, who crawled onto the July 27 cover of Sports Illustrated bearing, on his eye black, a Bible verse: Philippians 4:13. 

I can do all things through him who strengthens me.

Sports Illustrated has some of the best writers in the world, so Austin Murphy’s story on the QB is, of course, outstanding. But oddly, it has very little to do with football. That’s because the story’s about Tebow’s real passion: faith. He’s the son of a missionary who takes the word of God on the road with him everywhere — from hotels to prisons to far-flung countries around the world. “He wants people to see what he believes through his actions,” says David Nelson, a Gators wide receiver. “He wants them to say, ‘I see the way you live your life, the passion you have, the fun you have, and I want what you’ve got.’” 

A snippet from the story:

At a time when Americans are leaving organized religion in large numbers, according to a 2008 Pew Research poll, Tebow is leading his own personal counterinsurgency. “Every Sunday we have a service for our players and their families,” says Meyer, who remembers when “three or four kids would show up. Now the room’s full.” Since Tebow’s arrival on campus, and in large part because of him, Florida has launched a series of community-service initiatives. Even as the football program has suffered an embarrassing string of arrests, the number of hours players devote to charitable causes has dramatically increased. “Our community service hours are completely off the charts,” says Meyer, who describes his quarterback’s influence on the team as “phenomenal.”

The O.J. Award doesn’t seem like it’d be designed for a guy like Tebow. The whole point of the thing, really, is to honor those who labor for Christ without the expectation of a lot of attention — and Tebow, obviously, gets a lot of attention. 

But while Tebow gets plenty of accolades, it’s for his football. And that, in turn, allows him to serve God with a certain level of success, but also in modesty and humility. It’s not Tebow’s way with a football that’s changing the world around him: It’s his commitment to something greater than himself.

So, Tim Tebow, have an O.J. on me. And here’s hoping you might wind up on the roster of an NFL team I do root for.