Monday, February 4th, 2008
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The following post was written for PFB by Jason Boyett, author of the Pocket Guides to the Bible, the Apocalypse, and Adulthood (among other books). Jason, a lifelong Chicago Cubs fan, is currently NOT working on a book titled “The Pocket Guide to Dumb Baseball Curses”. His thoughts on David Tyree’s miraculous catch and subsequent comments are after the jump.
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When Tyree made the catch — that crazy, backbreaking, hand-to-helmet miracle reception with less than a minute to go in the game — I thought it might happen.
When the Giants ended up scoring and securing the win, I absolutely KNEW it would happen.
I just knew that Tyree, a religious guy who’s had his share of personal hardship (his mom died suddenly in December), would refuse to take credit for the catch but would, instead, give all the credit to God. “That wasn’t me, man,” I imagined him saying in the post-game press conference. “That was all God. Gotta give big ups to the Almighty for that one.” Because athletes have a well-documented history of attributing great plays, great games, and great seasons to God, who apparently takes great interest in the outcomes of American sporting events.
But Tyree, to his credit, kept it subtle. He sort of leaned in the direction of “it was God,” but didn’t fully camp there. Here’s his exact quote: “My opportunities are too far and few to let that one go. It was supernatural, you know? Some things just don’t make sense, and that catch is a good example.”
Thank you, Tyree. Thank you for not resorting to a cliche. Thank you for actually taking personal credit for having made an incredible 32-yard catch to rival Dwight Clark’s “The Catch” (TM) back in 1981. Because it saved the drive. And you made the catch. You. David Tyree. No person alive — not Randy Moss, not Lynn Swann, not Spiderman — should be able to jump three feet in the air, catch a ball with one hand against the back of his helmet, then hold onto that ball while being folded in half backwards by Rodney Harrison after appearing to float parallel to the ground. It just shouldn’t happen. It doesn’t make sense. It seems a little…supernatural.
But it probably didn’t have much to do with God, so I’m glad you didn’t just come right out and say that. Because when it come to pro athletes, it’s always “God” when they make a great catch, or return a punt for a touchdown, or throw a pinpoint game-winning pass. But it’s never “God” when they get tackled on the previous play, or when they fumble in the first quarter. And what if they guy on the opposite team who caused the fumble also gives credit to God? What you end up having is God causing Himself to fumble, and at that point the theology gets so circular and weird that N.T. Wright can’t even make sense of it.
I’m all for more spirituality in the sporting world when it comes to being good examples for the children and saying no to performance-enhancing drugs and doing something with your millions of dollars other than buying blingy toys and overly big homes. But when it comes to the winning and losing of games, it’s probably better to leave God off the scoreboard.
Thanks, David Tyree, for taking a good step in that direction. May “supernatural” become the new “it was God.”
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Jason could be contributing more to PFB in the future, so if you haven’t added this site to your feedreader yet, now might be the time to do it.
Tags: God, post-game interviews, Super Bowl
Posted in Christianity, NFL | 2 Comments »
Thursday, October 11th, 2007
With the Colorado Rockies one of only four teams left in the MLB playoffs, and the media looking for storylines in a completely unglamorous NLCS, you can bet that the Rockies’ organization is going to be getting some attention for the way they run their ball club.
It’s already started actually. Will at Deadspin has a new post up today referencing this article from the UK rag, The Independent. And of course, there’s the article from USA Today in June of 2006 when shed the first national light on the values and beliefs that permeate the Rockies organization from top to bottom.
According to the articles, the Rockies’ CEO, General Manager, President, Manager, and many players all profess to be Christians. They have clubhouse rules that are a bit more strict than other clubs: No nudie mags, no obscenity-drenched music, and no sacrificing of small woodland creatures to Beelzebub in this locker room.
How is their faith coming across in interviews and articles? I’ve heard worse, that’s for sure. But there were a few things bothered me. For instance, CEO Charlie Monfort said:
“I don’t want to offend anyone, but I think character-wise we’re stronger than anyone in baseball. Christians, and what they’ve endured, are some of the strongest people in baseball. I believe God sends signs, and we’re seeing those.”
When you have to qualify a statement with “I don’t want to offend anyone” it usually means you’re about to offend someone. The notion that Christians as a people group have endured things that make the Rockies the strongest team in baseball? I’m not really sure what that means, but I’m guessing African-Americans might take umbridge with that statement. What exactly have they endured?
And consider this: even before the Rockies’ finished the season with that amazing run 14 wins in 15 games, their GM Dan O’ Dowd said,
“You look at some of the games we’re winning. Those aren’t just a coincidence. God has definitely had a hand in this.”
I always cringe a bit when i hear team’s suggest that God has had a hand in their winning of games. While I believe God is capable of intervening, and while I believe He does have a hand in our lives more than we probably know, to say that He was helping your team win and the other lose reeks of piety and arrogance to me. I know the statements are meant to give God glory for something they feel he is doing, but they almost never come across as intended. To me, it’s always better to thank God for your talent and opportunity to play and to leave it at that, but what do i know?
That said, I have never agreed with the logic that The Independent uses in a tongue-in-cheek manor to suggest that God wouldn’t intervene in a baseball game because there are more important things to deal with:
“Anyone who fancies the Almighty has better things to do than determine the outcome of baseball games might want to consider just what the Rockies have achieved.”
The notion that God has “better things to do” suggests that he is capable of doing a limited number of things at one time. While I don’t claim to know more about God than anyone else, I don’t think God is up there saying, “Gee, I’d love to help the Christian Rockies win that game tonight but it’s #4,767,809 on my list of important things to do and I’m stuck here on #3 and I keep wasting time reading my email.”
I don’t think God acts in situations based on how important we think they are, and I don’t think He acts in situations based on how tied up He is with other things. I think He does what He does, and we can’t even pretend to understand the how’s and why’s.
It will be interesting to see how much play the faith of the Rockies’ gets over the next week or two. We’ll be sure to pass along everything we hear.
(h/t: Deadspin.com)
Tags: Colorado Rockies, God, MLB
Posted in Christianity, MLB | No Comments »