Prayer at a sporting event

Prayer at a sporting event

Spirituality

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ka
The Axe man

Brisbane,QLD

Joined
11 Apr 09
Moves
102876
25 Dec 14

Originally posted by KellyJay
I'd say it is worse than that!

Since it is clear that all of us have sinned none of us are good enough on
our own. So it isn't a threat to toe the line it is a warning.
"none of us are good enough on our own"


Sooo sick of this sort of rubbish. I'm good enough on my own (to my understanding anyway).
Go on, test me.

btw I only smoke weed for a greater political cause 😉

Quiz Master

RHP Arms

Joined
09 Jun 07
Moves
48793
26 Dec 14

Originally posted by CalJust
Against the All Blacks the 'Boks need all the help they can get!

I forget which famous statesman said during WW1 (when both sides were praying to the same God) that "God is on the side with the biggest guns".
I think Wellington was once asked "Is God on our side"
to which he replied "I sincerely hope we are on his."

C
It is what it is

Pretoria

Joined
20 Apr 04
Moves
66979
26 Dec 14
1 edit

Originally posted by wolfgang59
I think Wellington was once asked "Is God on our side"
to which he replied "I sincerely hope we are on his."
Good quote.

What gets my goat in these "praying at sports events" things is the hypocrisy of it all. And Christian sports heros "giving God all the glory" when it just means that they were more skilful or practiced harder than the other guy.

You never see or hear middle-or-lower-ranked sportsmen "testifying" at Christian meetings saying: "OK, I lost, but God was with me all the way and I give him the glory!"

RBHill, have you ever witnessed such an event, and if not why do you think these don't happen?

Cape Town

Joined
14 Apr 05
Moves
52945
26 Dec 14

Originally posted by BigDoggProblem
No, we will just discover which team is the most righteous! 😀
If God rewards righteousness buy helping a team win, isn't that cheating?

F

Joined
28 Oct 05
Moves
34587
26 Dec 14

Originally posted by twhitehead
If God rewards righteousness buy helping a team win, isn't that cheating?
God already knows which team will win, surely?

Walk your Faith

USA

Joined
24 May 04
Moves
157807
26 Dec 14

Originally posted by karoly aczel
"none of us are good enough on our own"


Sooo sick of this sort of rubbish. I'm good enough on my own (to my understanding anyway).
Go on, test me.

btw I only smoke weed for a greater political cause 😉
If you wish to judge yourself righteous by your own thinking so be it.
I doubt you will pass even that when the time comes.

Walk your Faith

USA

Joined
24 May 04
Moves
157807
26 Dec 14

Originally posted by CalJust
Good quote.

What gets my goat in these "praying at sports events" things is the hypocrisy of it all. And Christian sports heros "giving God all the glory" when it just means that they were more skilful or practiced harder than the other guy.

You never see or hear middle-or-lower-ranked sportsmen "testifying" at Christian meetings saying: "OK, I lost, ...[text shortened]...
RBHill, have you ever witnessed such an event, and if not why do you think these don't happen?
You can be the most skilled and well practiced and still lose.
Anyone who prays for wins, wealth, power, and such things has completely
missed what is important in this life.

F

Joined
28 Oct 05
Moves
34587
26 Dec 14

Originally posted by KellyJay
If you wish to judge yourself righteous by your own thinking so be it.
If you wish to judge yourself as not righteous by your own thinking, so be it. What's with the broad-brush "none of us are good enough on our own" judgemental thing on your part? Doesn't your religion enable you just to introspect and judge yourself rather than judge everyone?

C
It is what it is

Pretoria

Joined
20 Apr 04
Moves
66979
26 Dec 14

Originally posted by KellyJay
Anyone who prays for wins, wealth, power, and such things has completely
missed what is important in this life.
Agreed.

So why do they still do it? At sporting events, I mean.

Or what else do they pray for? (Did you see me hypothetical "coach prayer" above?) do you agree with it?

ka
The Axe man

Brisbane,QLD

Joined
11 Apr 09
Moves
102876
26 Dec 14

Originally posted by KellyJay
If you wish to judge yourself righteous by your own thinking so be it.
I doubt you will pass even that when the time comes.
And I have full faith that you will enter buddhahood eventually .... or even suddenly 😉

Walk your Faith

USA

Joined
24 May 04
Moves
157807
27 Dec 14

Originally posted by CalJust
Agreed.

So why do they still do it? At sporting events, I mean.

Or what else do they pray for? (Did you see me hypothetical "coach prayer" above?) do you agree with it?
When I used to play safety, a clean game, to play honorably, watch over us.

Infidel

Joined
24 Apr 10
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15242
29 Dec 14

Originally posted by KellyJay
When I used to play safety, a clean game, to play honorably, watch over us.
How would god make any of that happen?

R
Acts 13:48

California

Joined
21 May 03
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227331
02 Jan 15

Tebow (Part 2): How to Lose a Game without Losing Your Testimony
Posted by Nathan Busenitz
Well … the Denver Broncos lost on Saturday.

It was a decisive loss (45-10), as the New England Patriots took a quick lead and never looked back.

As a football fan, I was admittedly a bit disappointed, even though the Tebow-led Broncos made it much farther this season than any analyst ever thought possible.

However, as a Christian, I was pleased with one particular aspect of Denver’s loss: the way Tim Tebow handled himself after the game.



Last Thursday, I wrote an article in which I tried to separate Tim Tebow – the person, from Tim Tebow – the cultural phenomenon. I did my best to affirm Tim as an individual, while also expressing some concerns about the media-driven hype that surrounds him.

From all I know of him, Tim Tebow, the person, is a man of character, conviction, and compassion. The cultural phenomenon (or “Tebow-Mania” as I called it) is the popular hype that has centered on the young quarterback’s unique season this year.

After defeating the Pittsburgh Steelers, Tebow-Mania was running at its peak level last week, and probably the number one question being asked was, Does God give supernatural assistance to Tim Tebow to help him win big football games?

The obvious follow up question was, What will happen if he loses?

When the Broncos failed to mount another “miraculous” comeback on Saturday, it was inevitable that someone in the media would raise that issue. It didn’t take long. In the press conference after the game, one reporter cut right to the chase:

There’s been a lot of talk this year about faith and winning. As Solomon said, ‘Victory belongs to the Lord.’ What about losing? How do you make sense of what’s the end of your season?

So how would Tim Tebow, the person, respond to a question that clearly highlighted one of the main theological misconceptions surrounding Tim Tebow, the cultural phenomenon?

I thought the Denver quarterback’s response was excellent and worth noting. He said this:

Well, something I pray before games, during games, and after games is regardless whether I win, whether I lose, whether I’m the hero or the goat — it doesn’t matter — that I still honor the Lord and give Him the glory because He’s deserving of it. And just like my effort shouldn’t change, neither should that. So that’s how I try to approach it. Sometimes even in a loss you can honor Him more. And so, for me I just pray that my character and who I am doesn’t change. Even though you can be dejected, you can still feel hurt, you can be disappointed; but you can still honor the Lord with how you handle things.

For a professional athlete who just lost the biggest game of his pro-football career in a landslide defeat on a national stage, that was an admirable response. He didn’t cry, as though football were more important than it really is. He didn’t blame his teammates or his coaches. He didn’t make excuses. He didn’t fault God or say something silly about not having enough faith. Instead, he gave an answer that was theologically sound and inherently God-honoring. In essence, Tim was telling the media that they were missing the point: Christianity is not about winning football games; it’s about honoring the Lord in every situation, even when you lose the football game.

His answer flew in the face of the theologically-inaccurate media hype. It was Tim Tebow, the person, providing correction to a misconception fueled by the cultural phenomenon.

Since, in my previous article, I suggested that perhaps Tim Tebow could do more to correct the popular misconceptions the media buzz has created, I wanted to be quick to applaud what I thought was a job well done.

In the end, losing a football game (even in the playoffs) is nothing compared to losing one’s testimony. I’m thankful Tim Tebow didn’t forfeit his on Saturday. In fact, when it came to winning respect and maintaining dignity in the midst of defeat, I thought he excelled.

I, for one, believe the Lord was glorified by his response. And that’s something I can celebrate — even if my beloved Broncos lost the game.

http://thecripplegate.com/tebow-part-2-how-to-lose-a-game-without-losing-your-testimony/