Sports are a substantial part of our daily lives. Consider
the statistics:
·
88% of kids (ages 8-17) watch televised sports
·
75% of all Americans watch sports weekly
·
70% of adults read about, discuss or participate
in sports daily
But when a sports
hobby becomes an obsession, people (like me!) become enslaved. Knowing that the
best way to break an addiction is to starve it, I chose to cut myself off from
excessive sports information. For many years we did not subscribe to cable
T.V. or the daily newspaper. We also turned down a long-standing offer from my
Dad to purchase a satellite T.V. system for our family. I made these choices
because I wanted to limit the daily temptations to indulge in sports. Today, I
infrequently use my computer to chase down sports statistics and rarely watch
ESPN’s Sports Center because both feed my craving.
Televised sports try to hook us with the illusion that
outcomes are critical. Thus, the Game of the Week is hyped as the Game of the
Century. When Michigan State ’s basketball team qualified to play in the 2009
NCAA championship game and that game would be played in economically depressed Detroit , much was written
about what a great boost this was to the state. But what difference did it
actually make in the lives of the Michigan
residents? Were they any better off a day later? a month later? a year later?
How was that game more than a temporary diversion from their struggles?
I bought into this
myth that results matter. Therefore, the games took precedence over people and
other callings. But a strange thing happened when I adopted God’s
perspective: that results are relatively unimportant; that success and winning
are not the same; that I won’t care who won a week from now, etc. When I
engaged in this self-talk, I found my zeal subsiding. It didn’t happen all at
once—I had to persist with this self-talk. But I now find that I am more
interested in a close game, excellent play, and good sportsmanship than seeing
my team win.
I have other strategies to help me control my addiction:
·
I often don’t tune in until a game is half over.
If the game is a blowout, I don’t waste time on it.
·
I mute the sound so I can perform other
tasks—sorting through a closet, paying bills, grading papers.
·
I record an event so I can watch it quickly later.
Finally, and most important, I am less attracted to my alternate god when I practice the priority of loving God more through study, prayer,
fellowship and worship. As the Apostle Peter wrote: Like newborn babies, crave pure spiritual
milk... now that you have tasted that the Lord is good. As I tasted the
sweetness of my God, sports soured in comparison. And with my addiction broken,
I was in a healthier condition to help my boys love the things of God also.
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