For
Parents on the Go:
1. Dixie Classic Fair, Wednesday October 7th from 4:30 pm-10:15 pm. Admission to the fair is free with a donation of 5 cans of Lowes Food Product. We will be eating, riding rides and attending a Christian concert. The 5 cans get you into the fair and concert but your teenager will need money if they want to eat or ride rides.
1. Dixie Classic Fair, Wednesday October 7th from 4:30 pm-10:15 pm. Admission to the fair is free with a donation of 5 cans of Lowes Food Product. We will be eating, riding rides and attending a Christian concert. The 5 cans get you into the fair and concert but your teenager will need money if they want to eat or ride rides.
Dear Parents,
School and activities are in full swing. Julia, Piper
and I have enjoyed attending several of your son or daughters sporting events
at their school and we look forward to attending many more. (If you would
please have your son or daughter bring a schedule of their events on Sunday
morning we will try and attend). As many of you know I love sports as I’m sure
most of you do as well. If you don’t love sports, I bet you enjoy watching your
son or daughter compete and do well in sports. Have you ever wondered how God
views sports? Below is an answer to how I believe God views sports.
A Common Grace
Though we
usually credit humans for creating sports, God ultimately created sports as a
common grace—described by Wayne Grudem as “the grace of God by which he gives
people innumerable blessings that are not part of salvation.” We don’t believe
God set the world in motion and then stepped away to let humans do their thing,
nor do we believe He elevates the spiritual and separates it from the material.
Through Scripture, we know that God, out of love, established and maintains a
world that we are to enjoy and cultivate—for His glory. He gives us every good
and perfect gift (James 1:17)—often through human ingenuity—including sports.
So, first
and foremost, we have to stop seeing sports as purely a human creation, outside
the rule and reign of the sovereign Creator. And, as a result, we have to stop
feeling apologetic for caring about—and sometimes even spending time and money
on—sports, as if it were all futile. God gives sports to Christians and
non-Christians alike as a free gift to embrace and enjoy, and for that reason,
they’re intrinsically sacred and meaningful.
The Imago Dei
As beings
created in His image, God gives many men and women the physical, intellectual
and emotional capabilities to play sports. Sure, animals are smart and
physically adept, but they can’t do sports in the same sense that humans can.
The imago dei doesn’t just distinguish humans spiritually but in other
capacities, as well, specifically those required for sports.
When we
watch and play sports, we see the image and glory of God reflected in all the
extraordinary aspects and feats. Whether it’s in a sophisticated basketball
offense or the unique throws of a pitcher in baseball or softball, the imago
dei comes on full display, and the great and glorious nature of our God is
showcased for the world to see.
Growth and Formation
There’s a
reason we have so many sports cliches, like “There’s no ‘I’ in team”: Sports
provide unique training grounds for growth and maturity. As we interact with
sports, especially as our children participate, we’re given opportunities to
practice selflessness, giving up our preferences and pride for a bigger
purpose. We’re also given opportunities to learn self-discipline and perseverance.
Even as
mere spectators, we can benefit from observing athletes. As we recognize the
hard work and drive of others, we can look inwardly to consider where we lack
self-discipline, where we are putting ourselves before others, hurting the
health of our families, churches, workplaces and communities. This is why, in 1
Corinthians 9, Paul likens the self-discipline of sports to that required of
believers in their faith.
Sports
also function as what James K. A. Smith calls “cultural liturgies,” artifacts
and rituals that shape us and instill in us a true, good and beautiful vision
of human flourishing. For many of us, sports can stir up a greater delight in
the Lord; as a common grace stewarded responsibly, they can form us more into
the likeness of Christ.
Signposts and Shadows
All of
God’s creation reflects His glory, and this includes sports; they function as
signposts and shadows of greater realities. For example, the fandom of sports
points to the innate desire in every human to be part of something bigger than
ourselves—a bigger story, a bigger purpose, a bigger community. In the many
moments of awe and excitement that we experience when watching sports, fandom
also offers a foretaste of the sort of worship we were created for, the sort of
worship we will fully experience in the new heaven and new earth.
But
probably the most overt of these signposts is the concept of a team and all
that it mirrors. NBA hall-of-famer Isiah Thomas once said that “the secret to
basketball is that it’s not about basketball.” He was pointing to the fact that
the greatest sports teams succeed when the athletes put their egos and
differences aside for the greater good of the team, working collectively toward
the same end. When we see a team doing this well, in any sport, it paints a
compelling picture of community and the Church and, even more, the greater
community of the triune God, allowing us to see His beauty and character in a
whole new light.
Worship, Sin and Eternity
Of
course, like any cultural artifact or activity, sports are affected by the
presence of evil in the world. They are corrupted and tainted by sin, from the
human ego to the greedy corporations that monetize them. It’s also easy to make
sports a god, putting our hopes in them, trying to fill a void.
Nevertheless,
we can’t let the reality of sin warp our view of sports. We need to be careful,
for sure, always using discernment, always aware of our tendency to drift away
from the gospel and to make things other than God ultimate in our lives. But we
can’t forget that, in the end, sin doesn’t win. One day, we will live in a
kingdom void of sin and corruption—everything that robs sports of all they
might be. And it is our role now to usher in and live in this kingdom, making
it on earth as it is in heaven—and that includes the way in which we see and
interact with sports.
Reaching,
Teaching & Releasing,
Pastor T
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