After
an uncharacteristic outburst of frustration, the unanimous 2016 NBA MVP had to
watch the closing moments of the Finals game 6 from the locker room. In a quick
series of events, Steph Curry received his sixth personal foul, a technical
foul, and was subsequently ejected from the game for throwing his chewed up
mouth piece into the stands. It was the first time all season he had fouled out
of a game, and the first ejection of his entire career. The Warriors went on to
lose the game, meaning there will be a winner-take-all game 7 on Sunday night
in Oakland.
So
what happened? What caused this fun loving fan favorite to lose his cool? While
Curry isn't one to shove his faith in your face, you usually don't see him
throwing things or directing four letter words at the officials, either.
What
happened is simple: He got angry. He was angry at the ref for calling a foul.
He was probably angry that his team was losing, and had been for the entire
game, by as much as 24 at one point. If he knew about it, he might have been
angry that his wife and other family members weren't let into the arena until
less than 10 minutes prior to tip-off.
How
am I, as a believer and a Steph Curry fan, supposed to digest the less than Christ-like
actions he displayed on national television? I want to be frustrated with him.
I want to write him off as another star athlete who talks the talk but doesn't
walk the walk. But I know that's not right, that's not the answer.
What
I know is that he's a sinner, but so am I. I've been angry before. I've thrown
things before. I've cussed before. I just didn't do it in front of a nationally
televised audience during the NBA Finals.
But
to God, the time and place doesn't matter. What he did and what I have done is
exactly the same in His eyes. Yet because NBA superstars are constantly viewed
under a microscope, I'm sure he will be scrutinized. I'm sure people will call
him out and question his motives and wonder how a professing Christian could
act in such a way. That's really unfortunate for Steph, because if some bench
player no one knows about had done the same exact thing, or acted even worse,
there probably wouldn't be that much conversation and I probably wouldn't be
writing this.
We
have to remember that, even though he often times looks like a machine on the
basketball court, Stephen Curry is a human being. His flesh and Spirit do
battle just as much as mine and yours. The only difference is that when my
flesh wins out, only a handful of people know. But when Steph loses it for fifteen
seconds at the end of a hard fought game, the whole world knows.
Good words. What a difference it would make if we could see ourselves as God sees us. "Sinners, saved by grace."
ReplyDeleteI think we often see ourselves as God sees us, but fail to see others that way. We need to remove the plank in our own eye before we talk about the speck in our brother's.
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