Kurt Warner asks family for prayer
October 15, 2007 – 11:30 am Posted by bryan in » Christianity, NFL
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According to Michael Silver of Yahoo! Sports, Kurt Warner has torn ligaments in his non-throwing elbow. Silver also said that Warner informed friends and family of the injury via email, reporting that:
Warner, scheduled for an MRI Monday, wrote in the email he believed that through the power of prayer he would be miraculously healed before undergoing the exam.
Michael Florio, editor of the always informative ProFootballTalk.com, seemed awfully perturbed at Warner’s request, saying in his Rumor Mill post this morning:
Frankly, I’ve got no remaining patience for these athletes who think that their God-given talents automatically qualify them for miracles that the rest of us don’t get. God’s will is just that, and His will isn’t going to be changed simply because Brenda Warner says “pretty please.”
The most common prayer in Christianity is the ultimate proof of this. It’s “thy will be done,” not “my will be done.” And the use of prayer as a vehicle for asking God to do anything other than provide us with the bare necessities of life and the strength to adapt to the changes in our lives that His will brings about is, in my own personal opinion and not the opinion of Football Talk, LLC or its sponsors, a direct contradiction of the way that we were taught to pray by the guy that God sent to teach us stuff like that.
I’m not saying that it’s useless to try to persuade God to exercise His will in a manner that meets our own perceived needs and wishes. But should a football player who has already seen more than his own fair share of blessings be asking for God to heal an injury that presents no threat to his life?
A few thoughts on Florio’s beef.
1. When did Kurt Warner say that he was qualified for “for miracles that the rest of us don’t get”? Answer: he didn’t (unless he did and I missed it). I bet Kurt Warner would tell Florio that prayer would be just as effective for him as well.
2. Florio argues that prayers “for asking God to do anything other than provide us with the bare necessities of life and the strength to adapt to the changes in our lives that His will brings about” is a direct contradiction of how Jesus taught us to pray. It’s an interesting point, though i know that elsewhere in the Bible it says “Be anxious for nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God.” (Philippians 4:6). I think bodily injuries would fall under the umbrella of “everything”, but again, this is just my take on it.
3. Florio says “[God's] will isn’t going to be changed simply because Brenda Warner says ‘pretty please’.” Again, not to get all biblical on you, but James 5:16 says, “Therefore, confess your sins to one another, and pray for one another so that you may be healed. The effective prayer of a righteous man can accomplish much.” I’m guessing that Kurt is going to go with the Bible’s advice over Florio’s on this one.
4. Florio also asks, “But should a football player who has already seen more than his own fair share of blessings be asking for God to heal an injury that presents no threat to his life?” Answer: Why not? Is there some sort of limit on blessings I’m not aware of? Is Kurt hogging all the blessings that God doles out? Does God have a quota? What exactly is a “fair share” of blessings? And since when is “life-threatening injury” the line where it’s okay for a blessed athlete to ask for prayer?
My Take:
I appreciate Florio’s passion and honesty about the subject, but I think he jumped a little offsides on this one. Nothing Warner apparently said in his email struck me as arrogant, pious, or overly wacky (though admittedly I haven’t seen the whole thing). Seems like he’s a guy with a lot of faith and a strong belief in prayer reaching out to those around him for support. Would you or I send out an email like that? Maybe. Maybe not. But I don’t think it was wrong of him to do. (Though again, I give kudos to Florio for being honest and for airing his issues with the email.)
Speaking of which, this was an email sent to friends and family, not to the press. If Kurt would have used his post-game press conference to solicit prayer from fans across the country, I would have had an issue with that. But asking those you love to pray for you and showing faith that it will help your situation? I don’t think that’s anything to throw a penalty flag for. Your thoughts?
Of course, we’ll keep tabs on the MRI and see if the prayers actually changed the situation.
(h/t: Profootballtalk.com, Yahoo! Sports)
Tags: healing, Kurt Warner, prayer

7 Responses to “Kurt Warner asks family for prayer”
By Jordan on Oct 15, 2007 | Reply
I’m with you Bryan. While Warner’s beliefs are charismatic at root and something I just don’t get, he’s not horribly theologically off-base.
Do I believe a miraculous healing will take place? No. Do I think praying for miraculous healing is okay? Sure…all prayer is ultimately communicating with your Creator, and that’s a good thing.
By Chad Gibbs on Oct 15, 2007 | Reply
God didn’t even make Job play for the Cardinals.
By Aaron on Oct 15, 2007 | Reply
I’m with you guys. I think what he said is fine and backed by scripture.
Bryan - I wanted to recommend another tremendous blog. It is occasionally vulgar, but intellectually astute and extremely well written. It centers upon baseball, however, which I am yet to notice is your cup of tea. From the research I have done with their blogger profiles, these guys are linked to writers for The Office, The Simpsons, and collegehumor.com. It is hilarious, to boot.
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By bryan on Oct 16, 2007 | Reply
@Jordan - i agree with you. i think prayer often does more to change us than it does to change the situation…but i think it can change the situation.
@chad - good call. when God told Satan not to kill Job, Satan must have knew that playing football for Arizona would be a fatal blow.
@aaron - thanks for the tip. i’ve definitely seen fjm linked to from deadspin on numerous occasions, but i’ve never subscribed. i’ll do that. the red sox are my only real team, so baseball is right up there with football as my favorite sport. (and i don’t like being down in this series with wakefield taking the hill tonight.)
By Laura on Dec 14, 2007 | Reply
I agree with him asking for prayer. Ultimately, God hears every prayer, whether it is said out loud, or even not said out loud. I know a friend who has three books published, and in one of them he told the story of a man, not believing in God, had pain in his back. One day, when he bent over, it acted up and he cursed. The next instant he was healed, and he said, “If You heal me because I cursed Your Son’s name, then I’m giving my life to You right now.” He did. So, God hears every prayer, but sometimes He answers them in ways that don’t make sense to us in the moment. Obviously, Kurt’s prayer for healing for his elbow was not answered, but instead God has given him the chance to show just how tough he is. Yes, I believe in miracles, I am one, living when I had no chance to live, in a way that the neurologist said, “I’ve never seen that in my 19 years of practice.” But sometimes, the real miracle happens over the long haul. Look at Joseph, he had to go down into a pit before he could be brought up and given the information to save the entire world. But I’ll bet that in the time it took when he had the dream when he was a teenager and seeing it fullfilled was a long time, and it was bigger than he ever thought. God does things like that. He gives dreams, and then he works on you till your ready. He then moves in a much bigger way than you could have ever expected.
By Bryan on Dec 14, 2007 | Reply
thanks for sharing that, Laura