I love sports,
and I always have. I enjoy playing them, and I also enjoy watching them. My
wife often makes fun of me, saying that I skipped my childhood because I woke
up on Saturday mornings to watch SportsCenter and not cartoons.
Whether it’s
college or the pros (or even your local high school), we sports fans have our
favorite teams. As a native of north Texas, I grew up rooting for the Dallas
Mavericks and the Texas Rangers. As the grandson of an Okie, I am a huge
Oklahoma Sooners fan (Boomer!).
But besides
having “my” teams, I admit to having several favorite players over the years as
well.
Kobe and Shaq
Tiger Woods
McGwire and Sosa
Blake Griffin
Adrian Peterson
Stephen Curry
Jordan Spieth
My best friend
and I would pretend to be Kobe and Shaq when we played basketball on the goal
that hung on my bedroom door. Inside that room I had framed posters of McGwire,
Sosa, and Woods on the wall. I used to wear a shirt with Blake Griffin on it.
Currently I find myself rooting for Steph and the Warriors to repeat as NBA
champs. To be honest, I was a little torn up when Spieth made a 7 on #12 at
Augusta during the final round of the Masters.
Have I made it
clear that I have always been a fan of sports?
I don’t know
that I would ever stop watching sports or stop rooting for my favorite
teams/athletes, but for a long while I have been pondering a question in the
back of my mind: As a believer, and
especially as someone in ministry, should I root an athlete who doesn’t believe
and behave as I do?
I’m not sure
when this thought first crossed my mind. Maybe it was when the scandalous
lifestyle of my childhood hero Tiger Woods was exposed. Can I honestly root for someone who tore his family apart and cheated
on his wife multiple times?
Let me give you
some other examples…
McGwire and Sosa
had a magical season back in 1998. I followed their chase to break the home run
record very closely. But then Sammy Sosa had a corked bat and McGwire was
accused of using steroids. They were cheaters. Should I be proud that I rooted for them?
A more recent
example that bothered me is that of Peyton Manning. Going into Super Bowl 50
there was some talk about the legendary quarterback’s faith and spirituality.
He wound up playing an okay game and leading the Broncos to victory, which provided
him with a huge platform to speak. So what does he do? He thanks God and then
talks about how he’s going to go drink a bunch of Budweiser, all in the same
sixty seconds! I can’t tell you how much that bothered me.
Is it absolutely
wrong to have a few beers? No. Is it
wrong to get drunk and lose self-control? Yes.
Now, which Peyton did, I have no clue. But
either way, how can you mention God and drinking alcohol in the same minute?
And then there
is the curious case of one Josh Hamilton. After recovering from a serious drug
addiction and making his way back to the MLB, he had multiple All-Star and MVP
caliber seasons with the Texas Rangers. He used this platform to share his
testimony and make his faith well known. He wrote an autobiography and spoke at
FBC Dallas, among other places.
But then he had
a few relapses and eventually wound up divorced from his wife. After a short
stint with the Angels, he is now back on the Rangers, but you never hear anything about his faith anymore.
Other athletes
currently in the spotlight, such as two-time major winner Jordan Spieth, try to
keep as low a profile as possible, making it hard to know much about their
personal lives. I know that Spieth attended a Catholic high school in Dallas,
but that doesn’t necessarily mean he is a devout Catholic. So when it comes to
athletes like this, it’s hard to know.
Then there are
the Tim Tebows of the sports world who make their faith as obvious as possible.
When it comes to athletes like this, fans
have no choice but to know they profess faith in Christ and attempt to live a
life that pleases him.
So who can I root for? Who do I root for? To be honest, I root for pretty much all of the
athletes mentioned above. I still hope to see Tiger win another PGA Tour Event.
I rooted for Peyton and the Broncos in Super Bowl 50. Even though his on-field
impact has been slim to nothing lately (mainly due to health reason), I still
pull for Josh Hamilton.
Does this mean
that I condone the off-field/court/course behavior of these individuals? Absolutely not. In fact, I disapprove of
much of it. But there are always a couple things I keep in mind:
First of all, I am a sinner just like them. Their sin
might be more open and blatant and even unrepentant, but before God we are all
sinners.
Secondly,
whoever they are and however they behave, the
feats these men accomplish in their respective games are incredible. Even
if I can’t root for them as individuals, I can root for their God-given
abilities to succeed.
In the end, who
I root for really makes no difference. Me rooting for them is not going to have
an impact on their success. I don’t pray for Spieth to win the Masters or Curry
to repeat as an NBA champ. I just root for them and love to see them do well.
And if they don’t, oh well. There will always be someone else to root for, and
who knows, maybe he or she will be a follower of Jesus Christ.
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