Thursday, March 26, 2020

Back in the Saddle

Wow. Ten years. Who would have thought it would take a global pandemic to get me to use this thing again. I have not blogged in that long, but I have been writing and teaching and pastoring and living. We are currently on week two of the quarantine for me and I write this from a bedroom on Lake Yawkey. I am not entirely alone, but I am at a great distance from my family. I suspect that largely no one will see this, so this is sort of a test. Things I am currently pondering: why is social distancing difficult? The knee jerk impulse is because we are wire for community. we need each other. This seems true, but really I don't think it really gets at it all the way. The other aspect of social distancing is that we dont get to choose our communities anymore. The communities we chose for ourselves have vanished. Its not simply the isolation, but the forced isolation that really puts us over the top. thats all for now.

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Why Myron Rolle is morally superior...

My brother in law and I have had an ongoing discussion about what it would mean to be a pro athlete and a Christian. Part of the discussion stems from our own crushed dreams, and part of it stems from a comment a professor made to me once, “I am not sure a person can be a Christian and a professional athlete.” Being raised in a sports addicted family, this sounded like anathema to me, and I have been trying to parse it out ever since. I will avoid the whole discussion of positives and negatives, though that may show up some day, and rather point out two unique stories from this year’s NFL draft. Consider the case of Tim Tebow and Myron Rolle. The coverage and questions of Rolle have been fascinating to me. If you don’t know, Rolle is a Rhodes Scholar who has hopes of becoming a doctor and wants to model scholarship and professionalism to young urban students. He gave up his last year of eligibility to study in England and has now returned to try his hand as an NFL safety. The major question is whether Rolle can take the NFL seriously enough to play for a long time and stay committed. Here’s a great blog post that spells this out (http://blogs.orlandosentinel.com/sports_college_fsu/2010/04/former-florida-state-safety-myron-rolle-too-smart-for-the-nfl.html). Now Tebow. There are also a ton of questions about Tim Tebow, the mechanics of his throwing motion, his ability to take snaps, how quickly he can release the ball, how accurate can he be, etc… Not once though has anyone mentioned his Christianity as a possible drawback. No one has said, “Doesn’t your commitment to Christ make this game a bit irrelevant? How do we know that you are going to play like football is the most important thing in your life, especially when you claim to follow Christ?” In short, if scholarship and medical missions can get in the way of a productive NFL career, why can’t Jesus?