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Monday, 09 January 2012 15:39

Liking Tim Tebow

Written by Adam Ericksen

 

Tim_Tebow_prayer

 

Chills run down my spine whenever I see athletes thank God for a victory or for a good play.  It’s because I think our God-talk matters.  Our prayers matter.  When God is thanked for a victory or a great play, it reveals something significant about the kind of God we believe in.  It reveals that we believe in the “God of Victory.”  That God sides with the powerful, with the winners.  Of course, athletes aren’t the only people who hold to this theology – many politicians, generals, business-people, and pastors believe in the God of Victory, too.

 

Here’s part of my problem – I like the “God of Victory,” too.  He (and usually it’s a He) leads us in battle against our opponents, and if we do all the right things, that God will ensure our victory.  I find this God very enticing.  Indeed, I want this God on my side.  The problem is, if I’m going to invoke this God, I have to reject the God revealed through Jesus Christ.  You can’t have the “God of Victory” and the God of Jesus at the same time.  Jesus sided with the outcasts of culture, especially the outcasts of religious culture.  He didn’t go out and bless the successful, he specifically blessed the losers, the outcasts, the marginalized.  The religious establishment claimed that if you were a loser – if you were poor, or diseased, or blind – that God had cursed you and it was your own fault because you sinned.  (See John chapter 9.)  Jesus went to those losers and he healed them.  He treated them like they were important, because, for Jesus, they were important.  Matthew chapter 4 puts this succinctly.  The first thing Jesus did in his ministry was to go, “throughout Galilee, teaching in their synagogues and proclaiming the good news of the kingdom and curing every disease and every sickness among the people.”   Here we see that Jesus stood in solidarity with the losers.

 

Adam_and_Tim_1All that being said, I love Tim Tebow.  This is more than just a Christian “you-should-love-your-neighbor-even-if-they-annoy-you” kind of love.  I’m talkin’ man-crush kind of love.  Yup.  Me and the Tebow.  He’s becoming one of my models.  Here’s why: Tobow is bold and I wish I had some of his audacious faith.  He risks his reputation by putting himself out there because of his faith.  When many fellow Christians and many non-Christians began to turn against him for praying before, during, and after football games, I felt sympathy for him.  I mean, I’m sure Tebow is concerned about what others think about him, but I think it’s pretty cool that he’s more concerned about praying.  I can tell you this: I wish I had some of his boldness.

 

Here’s the other reason I like Tebow: he’s forced me to re-think those chills that run down my spine when I see athletes pray.  Those chills mean something about my God-talk, too.  I can get pretty judgmental in my theology, turning the God who sides with the losers of culture into another “God of Victory” who uses power to defeat the winners of culture.  Indeed, there’s an important place for prophetic critique of cultural power systems, but as I break out my inner prophet, I need to acknowledge that I participate in, and benefit from, many of those cultural power systems that create losers.

 

Ultimately, I don’t know what Tebow is praying for.  Is he praying for victory?  Is he praying that no one gets hurt?  Is he praying for the six million children who die every year from hunger?  And is he using his money and influence to help solve those kinds of problems?

 

I don’t know.  And frankly, if I’m asking those kinds of questions to find out whether or not he is a “good Christian” I risk scapegoating him.  I risk putting him down as a “bad Christian” so I can feel better about my own participation in power systems, and feel better about my feeble attempts to transform those power systems.  If I’m going to ask those questions of Tebow and other athletes, I need to ask them of myself, too.  What am I doing to help solve those problems?  Not enough.  How often do I turn a blind eye to the suffering in my church?  In my neighborhood?  In my state?  In my country?  In the world?  All too often.

 

So, I’d say this to my man-crush:  keep praying, Tim.  Regardless of what you are praying for, keep praying.  Because whether you realize it or not, when you pray, you pray to the God who sides with the “losers” of our world.  Because that’s the only God there is.  If it hasn’t happened yet, that God will seize you sooner or later, and I pray that that God seizes me, too.

 

 

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7 comments

  • Comment Link Steven Dutra Thursday, 12 January 2012 11:01 posted by Steven Dutra

    Winners and losers we are all human and God loves all humans . Praying for a victory is selfish and not God like at all. God is not about side with a certain team because one member ( Tebow) is praying for victory . What about all the devote believers on the losing team ? God has more worldly problems to care about. Sports is human entertainment. If you want to for a sporting event pray no one gets hurt, or crippled.

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  • Comment Link Adam Ericksen Tuesday, 10 January 2012 11:33 posted by Adam Ericksen

    Thank you David, Susan, and Shannon. I liked that link, Shannon, especially the prayer at the end.

    And thank you for your reflections, Kathleen. That his prayers are prophetic makes sense. There is a sense in which the prophetic makes us uncomfortable. It is obvious that his teammates support and admire him, which is great to see. Your point on prayer is also excellent. I would say it does help us transcend the ego and brings us to a broader perspective than we had before. That ultimately, it's not about us, but about the God who cares about the "losers" of the world and leads others to act with that compassion and care.

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  • Comment Link Shannon Tuesday, 10 January 2012 10:39 posted by Shannon

    Interesting article Adam. I read it and then read the Daily Devotional from the UCC on the same topic. I think both resonant well together!

    http://www.ucc.org/feed-your-spirit/daily-devotional/touchdown-theology.html

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  • Comment Link Kathleen Eickwort Monday, 09 January 2012 21:28 posted by Kathleen Eickwort

    And I might add, I am not a football fan. When I lived in Gainesville, I didn't follow the Gators. My grandson was ridiculed last fall on his soccer team for not knowing who Tim Tebow was--they called him "the-boy-who-doesn't-know-who-Tim-Tebow-is." (Of course, he lives in Gainesville.) But if you read this:
    http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news?slug=ycn-10813197
    ...it is evident that he not only has the humility necessary to pray, and that in public, but he is extremely concerned about and loved by the other members of his team. Maybe praying does something to transcend ego?

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  • Comment Link Kathleen Eickwort Monday, 09 January 2012 18:21 posted by Kathleen Eickwort

    Tim Tebow's prayer is prophetic in America. He was also homeschooled which is equally counter-cultural. (Yay to both!) His parents were immigrants, he was born in the Phillipines and I suspect this has something to do with his boldness.

    I think he is probably praying to be a good witness to Jesus Christ. And he is. Even if that entails praying for excellence in whatever he does...doing it with his whole heart. That may bring victory, but there is a subtly different shift in emphasis that is very important. It seems to work.

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  • Comment Link susan drawbaugh Monday, 09 January 2012 17:47 posted by susan drawbaugh

    Great article!

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  • Comment Link David Monday, 09 January 2012 17:41 posted by David

    Excellent commentary, Adam! I'm not sure if I've ever seen a more polarizing football player. Amen to the seizing!

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Last modified on Monday, 09 January 2012 17:10

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