I am on the record saying I don’t think God cares about the outcome of football games, and that I am skeptical of much “spiritual talk” that comes from the mouths of athletes [see my blog from November, 2010 titled "God + football = silliness"]. Maybe that’s why I haven’t blogged about Tebow until now. But I feel like I want to add my two cents to this tsunami of opinion flooding sports media the last few months. So here are a few brief thoughts as a sports fan, a parent, and then as a Christian…
As a sports fan, I like watching Tebow play. It’s great to see a quarterback run over a linebacker rather than slide five yards before he gets hit. I like the passion on the sidelines and the optimism at the postgame podium. But I recognize Tebow’s (current) limitations as an NFL quarterback. Tebow specifically, and the Broncos offense more generally, were hard to watch at times this season. It was just ugly. But of course there were glimpses of brilliance too – the 4th quarter comebacks, much of the Pittsburgh playoff game, etc. Given another offseason of work, maybe that gets better and more consistent. I hope so…
As a parent, I’m absolutely thrilled with Tebow. In a professional sports world filled with self-absorbed egomaniac millionaires….Tebow is known for praying and inviting special needs guests on to the field. In an NFL that features QBs imprisoned for dogfighting and charged with sexually assaulting young women…Tebow doesn’t even curse, lol. So if my boys want to be like Tebow – want to be clean cut and self-effacing and grounded in faith….want to be a great athlete and good teammate with an incredible work ethic who starts a foundation that grants wishes to teenagers with life-threatening illnesses and builds hospitals in the Philippines – then that’s great with me as a Dad…
As a Christian (and pastor), there are so many aspects of Tebow-mania that have been fascinating to me. I’ve never heard so much spiritual conversation on sports radio – commentators and personalities talking about religion in the locker room, athletes believing in God, and even sharing their own religious affiliations and experiences. It’s been incredible, even if the constant Tebow-talk gets a little annoying. I also can’t remember ever seeing the Christian community be so excited about an athlete…maybe even too excited. There have been moments when I have been concerned about the reverent esteem some Christians hold him in, and the blind vehemence with which they defend him against perceived attack. I’m also concerned for the height of the pedestal he is being placed upon and the weight of hope and expectation he is being asked to carry. In some strange way, Tebow seems to have become a leading Christian warrior in a culture war many Christians feel the church is losing. That’s a lot of pressure to put on a young guy in his mid-twenties…and a huge distance to fall if (or when – he is human, after all) Tebow ever has a moral slip-up…
But maybe most significantly, I think Tebow has challenged Christians everywhere to look at their own lives, their own faith, their own spheres of influence….and ask, “Am I being a good witness for Jesus?” Christians are called and commanded to share their faith with the world; it’s an expectation of everyone who claims to follow Jesus. Tebow is doing that. When you listen to him, he talks about having a “platform” from which to make a difference. And he is making a difference. Jesus is more of a part of the cultural conversation right now because of Tebow. As a world-class athlete, he has tremendous visibility and thus a very significant sphere of influence – and he is using it intentionally to share the love of Jesus. He’s taking seriously the call to be a witness. And as a Christian, he should…
So what about the rest of us? Are we being intentional in our spheres of influence to share our faith, to share Jesus with others?
It would actually be great if we all talked about Jesus as much as we are talking about Tebow. I think Tim would approve of that…