Professional Documents
Culture Documents
A number of years ago I was a speaker at a camp for young people. When the first group game time
came, one of the leaders began by telling a parable based on Genesis 1-3. He described the joys of
playing games in the Garden of Eden where the emphasis was simply on the joy of play. But one day
the serpent entered the garden and tempted the Eden-dwellers with the idea of points. They gave in
to the temptation and began keeping score in their games and this led to all kinds of evils competition, lust for winning, cheating, anger and fights. They lost the simple joy of play.
The leader told this parable to let the young people know that this week at the camp they would be
introduced to non-competitive games. There were no points, no winners or losers, just the joy of
play. But there was one serious problem - the games were totally and completely boring. Day after
day less and less of the young people showed up for the game time so that at the last one there were
only a handful of young people there.
Is this an accurate portrayal of a theology of sports? Obviously, I don't think so. I'd like to present a
brief and broad theology of sports. If you don't like that title you can think of it as, "Why we should
watch the Super Bowl!"
History can be summed up in three words: creation, fall, redemption. So when you are looking at the
theology of an issue you need to ask: What is its relation to or reflection of creation, of the fall, of
redemption? In considering the issue of sports, I have added two further words to expand our
consideration - incarnation and salvation (both which are, of course, tied to creation, fall and
redemption).
Creation - God could have created everything to be gray and serviceable. Rather, He created a great
diversity of color, size, shape, smell, texture, sounds, and tastes. Why did He do this? He did it so
that the creation would be a reflection of His person and, in particular, His beauty. It is a
masterpiece of function and form. The creation is a work of art. TT Tape
which they operate. Just as there are consequences for rebelling against the created order (such as
disregarding gravity), so there are consequences for not following the rules in sports. Sports reflect
the nature and principles of the creation. As in nature, this reflection, when done well, honors the
Lord and gives the fan joy.
Fall - In the fall, man rebelled by sin and the curse which resulted from that fall touches every part
of every thing - there is nothing that escapes. This means that we would expect to see evidence of
the fall in sports and, of course, we do. There are sins of attitude as well as sins of action.
The deadliest of these sins is the idolatry of sports - when it holds the highest place in the affection
of the heart and in the thinking of the mind. When life is planned around when games are played or
when a person's entire outlook is impacted by whether his team wins or loses, he has crossed the
line into an unhealthy and sinful obsession.
There are also other wrong attitudes - when winning becomes the only thing that matters, when a
person will do whatever it takes to be successful, when personal glory becomes the end-all, when
people become arrogant or angry. These are all sins of the fall. The fall is reflected in sports by
actions such as the use of steroids, of fixing games, of corking bats, of bench-emptying brawls, and a
host of other things.
Incarnation - We are embodied beings and the incarnation validates that our bodies are more than
merely containers for our souls. Even our eternal state will consist of bodies - glorified bodies but
bodies nevertheless. The Christian life is not about condemning the body but bringing it into
subjection to honor the Lord.
Sports are one of the things that help us to do that. Playing a sport requires discipline and the
disciplining of the body for sports can carry over into our spiritual lives. Sports require
determination, delayed gratification, a toughening-up of the body. Sports can also teach how to work
with a team, how to submit to authority, how to encourage those not as naturally gifted as others,
how to hit hard. And they teach patience. Even time on the bench can be sanctifying.
Sports are one way that we honor the truth and reality of the incarnation and glorify God by using
our bodies in God-honoring ways.
Salvation - The history of salvation is a drama. A drama, to be effective, depends at the least on
knowledge, motion and timing. In the drama of salvation, the Lord had a game-plan, knowledge,
before the beginning of time. At the creation this game-plan was put in motion, what we know as the
people and events of unfolding history. And it was all done according to God's timing - Galatians tells
us that Christ came in the fullness of time. That drama continues today. It is what C.S. Lewis called
the true myth.
Today, actors/actresses in drama need to know their lines (knowledge), they need to know where
they are supposed to be in a scene (motion) and they need to know when they are to play their part
and say their lines (timing). Great drama also has that sense of being a true myth.
This dramatic notion of knowledge, motion and time is reflected in sports. The knowledge is seen in
the plays and strategies that are a part of sports. The motion is seen in the carrying out of those
strategies and they are only successful if the timing of everyone involved is correct. Sports portray
drama action and also have that mythic aspect to them. It may be that part of sports appeal comes
from the fact that they are universal in being part of human life. Some would say that sports
transcend entertainment and take on a meaning that is significant and important in the lives of