This recent holiday season we had our entire family
together: 2 grandparents, 6 parents, 9 grandkids. (Oh, I forgot--and 4 granddogs!) When it came time for our
main meal, one of my sons and I loaded our plates and headed to the privacy of our basement to watch the final exciting games of the NFL season. Two of those games
had head-to-head matchups to decide which team made the playoffs and which went
home. As we were settling in, we were interrupted by my wife: “What are you
doing? You need to come join the family celebration.” I reluctantly and
grumpily agreed. During the meal our 2 year-old grandson started wishing everyone
a “Merry Christmas”. Then someone taught him to say “Happy New Year”. He
repeatedly squealed with delight with his new words and the attention that
it brought him. And think . . . if I had allowed sports to be my master, I
would have missed a memorable event that will endure far longer than any Aaron Rodgers touchdown pass.
If I love God, can I still enjoy sports? Of course. The
challenge for many of us, though, is to become more temperate about them. C.S.
Lewis defines temperance as “going the right length and no further” with our
pleasures. Though temperance has often been associated with drinking alcoholic
beverages, it should be applied to any of our pleasures. If I make golf or
televised sports or gardening or shopping the center of my life, I am being “just as
intemperate as someone who gets drunk every evening. Of course, it does not
show on the outside so easily: golf-mania does not make you fall down in the
middle of the road. But God is not
deceived by externals (my italics).” Lewis believes that God judges a
sports obsession just as negatively as he does an alcohol obsession. In both
cases I am under the control of something other than God.
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