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Whats
wrong with sports? Dont they teach us fair play?
n todays world, competitive
sports have become a ubiquitous cultural institution, and so, on the surface,
it may seem that they are all for fun and that they teach
fair play.
Loveor
Pride?
Nevertheless, the underlying
values of competitive sports derive from the ancient pagan Greek adoration
of athletic strength, prowess, and glory. But look closely: these are all
ideals based in the sin of pride. And look again:
pride stands completely opposed to the virtue of
love.
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If morality requires
respect for the life of the body, it does not make it an absolute value.
It rejects a neo-pagan notion that tends to promote a cult of the body,
to sacrifice everything for its sake, to idolize physical perfection and
success at sports. By its selective preference of the strong over the weak,
such a conception can lead to the perversion of human
relationships. |
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Catechism of the Catholic
Church (2289) |
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God is love. And because God
is love, a genuine Christian life does nothing but represent Gods love
to the world. I mean that literally: as God presents his love to us, we in
turn must re-present it to the world.
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Finally, all
of you, be of one mind, sympathetic, loving toward one another, compassionate,
humble. Do not return evil for evil, or insult for insult; but, on the contrary,
a blessing. . . . |
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1 Peter 3:8-9a |
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Imagine, for example, playing
ping-pong without hitting the ball back, so that the other person can accumulate
all the points he wants. Imagine playing bridge without doing anything to
obstruct the other players in claiming all the points they want. Imagine
two teams of men joyfully walking from one end of a field to the other, helping
each other to accumulate all the touchdowns they want. In the eyes of the
world, it would be boring, wouldnt it? Well, in the eyes of the world,
Christianity is boring. Thats why the Roman Empire made a sport
out of killing Christians: it made Christianity into something
exciting.
The Scandal of
Pride
When the Greeks built a gymnasium
in Jerusalem during the Maccabean Dynasty, the Jews were scandalized (see
2 Maccabees 4:7 ff.), and it holds even more true today that competitive
sports are a scandal to Christianity because you simply cannot present
love to the world through the evil-for-evil and
insult-for-insult nature of strife and
competition.
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Love is patient,
love is kind. It is not jealous; [love] is not pompous, it is not inflated,
it is not rude, it does not seek its own interests, it is not quick-tempered,
it does not brood over injury. . . . |
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1 Corinthians 13:4-5 |
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Now, when parents kill each other over
arguments about childrens sports, you know something is seriously wrong
under the surface; so just imagine the corruptionnot to mention organized
crimeunderlying professional and amateur sports.
Do you think you will find in
competitive sports any hint of holiness? Where is
humility,
patience, or
kindness? Instead the playing fields are
strewn with jealousy, pomposity, inflation, rudeness, self-interest, quick
temper, and brooding over injury.
Our cultural adoration of competitive
sports teaches us to put our trust in power, mastery, and competitive
strategyand to kill, whip, trounce, or trample anyone who gets in our
way. And all of this sportsman frenzy stands completely opposed
to true Christian conduct, as lovingly described by Saint Paul:
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Let us never
be boastful, or challenging, or jealous toward one another. Help carry one
anothers burdens; in that way you will fulfill the law of
Christ. |
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Galatians 5:26; 6:2 |
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Saint Paul, moreover, who not
only clearly understood the truth about Christian life but also lived it
right into martyrdom, had no use for puffing
up his ego by boasting about a favorite sports team:
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I will rather
boast more gladly of my weaknesses, in order that the power of Christ may
dwell with me. Therefore, I am content with weaknesses, insults, hardships,
persecutions, and constraints, for the sake of Christ; for when I am weak,
then I am strong. |
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2 Corinthians 12:9b-10 |
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The Real
Crown
Saint Paul, in his merciful
attempt to become all things to all (1 Corinthians 9:22) for
the sake of preaching the gospel, often used the metaphor of running
the race (1 Corinthians 9:2427; Hebrews 12:1) to illustrate
the virtues of discipline and perseverance in grace.
If you read his words carefully,
however, you will realize that, in contrast to the vain, perishable prize
of human glory sought by athletes, Saint Paul sought the eternal, unperishable
crown of Gods glory. It is a crown given only to the
humble, as Saint Paul knew and as the Blessed
Virgin before him attested: For He has regarded the humility of His
servant; behold, therefore, from this day all generations will call me
blessed.
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If you were to
pray the Litany of Humility as it should be
prayedthat is, not just saying the words but yearning
for their fulfillment in your very beingyou would find it impossible
to play competitive sports. |
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Now, it often happens that high
school and university students will pray before a game. Ironically, this
only reveals the fundamental fraud of their
faith: if they really trusted in God to protect them in all things, they
would not be using competition with others to make themselves feel strong
and powerful.
Going for the
Gold?
The truth is, if you learn to
love others as God loves us, it will simply break your heart to compete with
anyone for any reason. And until you do learn this
love, and as long as you cling to the
illusions of your own athletic prowess, you
will be like the rich man who walked away from Christ. Whereas Christ demanded
humble self-sacrifice, the rich man wanted to
go for the gold.
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Jesus in most appropriate language
treated . . . of trade and commerce with foreign nations,
taking occasion at the same time to censure severely the various fashions
and frivolities lately introduced from Athens. He condemned likewise the
games and juggling now in use among them, and which were also spreading
throughout Nazareth and other places. These games were likewise a product
of their intercourse with Athens. Jesus stigmatized them as unpardonable
since they that indulge in them look upon them as no sin; consequently, they
do no penance for them, and therefore they cannot be pardoned. |
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The Life of Jesus
Christ
as told by the Venerable Anne Catherine Emmerich |
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The Wisdom of
Non-competition
Christianity is fundamentally
a religion that values non-competition because Christ taught us to place
all our trust in God while seeking our spiritual hope in His Kingdom. Therefore,
all the Catholic mystics have realized that the ways of the social world
are useless distractions to the spirit.
Moreover, this wisdom of
non-competition and detachment from worldly success is so profound that even
non-Christian philosophers have sought it.
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THEREFORE, the sage holds in
his embrace the one thing (of humility) and manifests it to all the world.
He is free from self-display, and therefore he shines; from self-assertion,
and therefore he is distinguished; from self-boasting, and therefore his
merit is acknowledged; from self-complacency, and therefore he acquires
superiority. It is because he is thus free from striving that therefore no
one in the world is able to strive with him. |
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Lao Tzu
The Tao Te Ching, 22.2. |
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Think about that. If you are
free from striving, no one in the world is able to strive with you. Thats
the first step to the real peace that everyone asks for yet rarely finds.
Yes, you askbut you do not receive, because you ask wrongly,
to spend it on your passions (James 4:3).
No
advertisingno sponsorjust the simple truth . . .
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