Showing posts with label football. Show all posts
Showing posts with label football. Show all posts

Monday, February 6, 2012

One last football thing. . .

. . . By Howard Bess





    In recent weeks, much has been written about Tim Tebow, the quarterback of the Denver Broncos. Until this past season, Tebow had been a back-up quarterback and did not draw much public notice.  When he was in college he had led the University of Florida to two national championships and won the Heisman Trophy in 2007.  He was drafted by the Broncos in the late first round of the 2010 draft.  Most NFL teams had passed over Tebow because there was doubt that his talents were of NFL standards.  This past season, Tebow got his chance, when the Broncos started the season with a 1-4 record.  Tebow started the next eight games, winning seven out of eight, and the Broncos rose to first place in their division.
    Tim Tebow started receiving a lot of attention.  He received a higher that usual level of attention partly because of the way he brought his religion into the spotlight of the playing field.  Tim identifies himself as a born-again Evangelical Christian, and in the best of Evangelical tradition, he wants the whole world to know that Jesus Christ is his Lord and Savior.  After key events in a ballgame, Tebow bends down on his left knee, bows his head, and raises his right hand to his forehead.  It is Tebow’s chosen way to witness to all those watching that Jesus Christ is the Lord of life.
    Because of his forthright display of his religion, he has become the idol of millions of born-again Evangelical Christians.  His practice of bending knee and bowing head has become the rage in some circles and is now referred to as “Tebowing.”  Many Evangelical Christians adore him, but many others have responses that range from mild discomfort to outrage.
    I can identify with Tim Tebow, because I too am a born-again Evangelical Christian.  I too was an athlete.  Since I was a young boy, it has been important for me to identify myself as a Christian.  I too confess that Jesus Christ is Lord.  After being a very successful high school football player, I enrolled at Illinois State University and became a two-way Freshman starter on a Conference Championship football team.  While I was never involved in anything like Tebowing, I found ways to use my status as an athlete at a State University to let people know that Jesus is Lord.  After a year at Illinois State and an Army enlistment, I returned to college at Wheaton College, a leading center of Evangelical Christianity.  I played football for Wheaton for three years.  The college motto “For Christ and His Kingdom” was the team motto.  The team members were the finest group of teammates I ever had. The Wheaton teams on which I played were championship teams, and excellence was a part of our Christian witness.  There was never a prayer to win, but we all knew that the way we played the game was a part of our witness for Christ the Lord.
    Vigorously sharing with the world that Jesus Christ is Lord is at the very heart of Evangelical Christianity.  When a highly committed Evangelical Christian walks onto the football field, he does not leave his Jesus behind.  From everything that I have read, Tim Tebow is a very fine young man.  He lives an exemplary life.  No one works harder at refining his football skills than does Tebow.  He is first on the practice field and the last to leave.
    Tebow’s religious display on the playing field ought to be respected because it is a part of who he is.  We do not call into question the practice of Albert Pujols making the sign of the cross as he walks to the plate.  Neither should we call into question the religious display of Tim Tebow on the football field.  It is as closely tied to his identity as the yarmulke worn by an Orthodox Jew.  We need to be reminded that Sandy Koufax, possibly the greatest left-handed pitcher in history, refused to pitch the opening game of the 1965 World Series because it fell on  Yom Kippur.
    There is a problem that Tim Tebow has given himself.  He is making his confession of faith very public.  How will he now live his life.   For the rest of his life the world will demand a life that lives up to his confession.
    Some years back, a leading American politician became the darling of Evangelical Christians.  He confessed that he had been born-again. He was pro-life and opposed gay rights.  He joined one of the right churches.  He was a man of wealth.  In the context of an important campaign, he was pressured to release information about his personal finances.  He did so.  According to his federal income tax return, he had not given a single penny to the church of his membership.  He lived in opulence, but his record of being charitable was almost non-existent.
Jesus is quoted as saying “Where your treasure is, your heart will be also.”
    From the day of the revelation of his finances, I knew that the politician was a fraud, and even worse.  He had used Evangelical Christianity for political purposes.
    When Tim Tebow says “Jesus is Lord,” that means that all the millions he is making as a football player belong to Jesus. What will he do with the millions of Jesus money that is being placed under his stewardship? I want Tim Tebow to be the real thing.  We need devoutly religious people in the public square.  Tim Tebow is needed just now on the football field.  I truly hope he will always be what he says he is.
                    THE END
The Rev. Howard Bess is a retired American Baptist minister, who lives in Palmer, Alaska.  His email address is hdbss@mtaonline.net.  

(Make no mistake about Howard Bess.  READ Howard Bess.)





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Monday, October 31, 2011

Normal or not? . . .

. . . who's to say?

My brother-in-law came to the house last Sunday to watch a football game. He lives on the outskirts of the metropolitan area and is does not, as a result, have the games of our local NFL franchise available on his cable television broadcast schedule. Now this may sound like a very ordinary situation to you. Brother-in-law visits brother-in-law, the guys watch the game together with a few beers, maybe a pizza and pretzels, right?

Well most of it's right. The only wrong part of the picture is the 'guys' part, at least literally. You see, the two football fans that enjoyed the game together were my brother-in-law and my wife. My wife and my two younger sons are the only football fans in the family. Our eldest and myself would rather. . . be doing just about anything else. So as my wife and her brother were screaming at the television, I walked through the room. He said, "Ray, I guess you're not really interested in this game are you?" to which I responded, "You could tell, huh?" (not rudely, mind you.) To my brilliant remark he responded, "I guess you're the only normal one here."





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Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Whenever. . .

. . . I get to feeling discouraged, or sorry for myself, I like to read things like. . .

Every part of the scheme shows that this man [George Stephenson] has applied himself to a subject of which he has no knowledge, and to which he has no science to apply. (Parliamentary Committee 1825)

Far too noisy, my dear Mozart. Far too many notes. (Emperor Ferdinand after the first performance of The Marriage of Figaro)

I liked your opera. I think I will put it to music. (Beethoven to a fellow composer)

If Beethoven's Seventh Symphony is not by some means abridged, it will soon fall into disuse. (Philip Hale, Boston music critic, 1837)

I played over the music of that scoundrel Brahms. What a giftless bastard! (Tchaikovsky's diary. 9th October 1886)

We don't like their sound. Groups of guitars are on the way out. (Decca Recording Company about the Beatles.1962)

These boys won't make it. Four-groups are out. Go back to Liverpool, Mr. Epstein, you have a good business there. (Recording Company)

I'm just glad it'll be Clark Gable who's falling on his face and not Gary Cooper. (Gary Cooper on his decision not to take the leading role in "Gone With The Wind")

They may be world famous, but four shrieking monkeys are not going to use a privileged family name without permission. (Frau Eva von Zeppelin)

He bores me. He ought to have stuck to his flying machines. (Auguste Renoir, on Leonardo da Vinci

This fellow Charles Lindbergh will never make it. He's doomed. (Harry Guggenheim, millionaire aviation enthusiast)

Very interesting, Whittle, my boy, but it will never work! ( Professor of Aeronautical Engineering at Cambridge University)

You will never amount to very much. (Munich Schoolmaster to Albert Einstein, aged 10)

Professor Goddard does not know the relation between action and reaction and the need to have something better than a vacuum against which to react. He seems to lack the basic knowledge ladled out daily in high schools. (New York Times about Goddard's revolutionary rocket work, 1921)

Stanley Matthews lacks the big match temperament. He will never hold down a regular first-team place in top class soccer. ( Unsigned football writer when Matthews made his debut at the age of 17)

Why do you necessarily have to be wrong just because a few million people think you are? (Frank Zappa)

Failed in Business, 1831. Defeated for Legislature, 1832. Sweetheart/Fiancee Died, 1835. Nervous Breakdown, 1836. Defeated in Election, 1836. Defeated for U.S. Congress, 1843. Defeated again for U.S. Congress, 1846. Defeated once again for U.S. Congress, 1848. Defeated for U.S. Senate, 1855. Defeated for U.S. Vice Presidency, 1856. Defeated again for U.S. Senate, 1858. (Abraham Lincoln, Elected President of the U.S.A., 1860)


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