Monday, February 2, 2015

remember the sabbath, to keep it football











Well the Super Bowl is behind us finally, and the season is finally over.  The promised entertainment of the ads at $4.5 million for 30 seconds are over, and the deflation of footballs is behind us.  A few months reprieve from Cris Collinsworth, Jon Gruden, and all the other ex-NFL personnel who stumbled into their current careers due to their past, regardless if they had the talent or not.  For the next few moths Sundays will start to be occupied by baseball’s spring training, Sunday afternoon rides, and getting out of the house as the calendar tells us it is February, and only 10 weeks until spring, or spring like weather everywhere.  And churches everywhere will not have to compete with the NFL for Sunday attendance.  For those who remember the Sabbath and keep it football, they will be left with one less reason or excuse to attend church on Sunday.  But as I was watching yesterday, it dawned on me that the NFL has become not only a religion to many, but also a denominational influence in our daily lives.  And for many run their Christian schedule around it, which explains Saturday night service attendance increasing on days the Chargers play at 1030am, or  like last Saturday night which was Super Bowl Eve.  But let’s take a look at the NFL, and its influence on us, and see if maybe it has become a religion, and we just don’t know it.  Or we do, and don’t care....
Sunday is considered the Sabbath, and football consumes Sundays, all day, like many used to spend in church.  You sit mesmerized listening and watching intently, taking communion over chips and soda, or something harder, and even more religious.  Like today’s media, you can hear it while traveling in your car, stream it on your computer, or go in person.  Where they demand a fee for your attendance, pass the donation plate please.  Like any old line denomination they have very set rules, a leader, and a board who makes the rules, and they are there to administer punishment when someone screws up.  In less it is one of them, and any lie out of Mr. Goodell’s mouth is considered truth.  Until the next lie counteracts it.  You either play by their rules or you don’t play at all.  Membership is available to only a chosen few, all others just follow.  Blindly.  Official product endorsements are sold, like indulgences, and the funds go to the mother, I mean father church, the NFL.  Which does not pay any taxes, set up just like it is a religious organization.  You either play by their rules or face ex-communication, unless you are popular, have a good attorney, or are Mr. Goodell.  All things are done for the good of the league, individuals must adhere or their membership is revoked, they are ex-communicated and must worship elsewhere.  Rules and codes of conduct are laid, and changed as social conditions prevail, and then their gospel is is rewritten to accommodate them.  Elders are present on the field to administer and enforce the rules, companies pay huge fees to be associated with them, and they worship the NFL, and its leaders all are held to a higher regard, but not necessarily a higher standard.  They have become like the infamous Borgias of Catholic church fame, who once claimed they could do anything with the papacy as long as they were pope.  A family tradition handed down.  But sadly like many forms of religion breaking off from God, they have become a cult.  Their way or the highway, unless you can buy your way back in.  Between the fans, the players, the owners, and all the endorsements, the NFL has chose to remember the Sabbath, and to keep it holy, if thy name is NFL.  With players becoming heroes, then gods to many who emulate them, parading around like they are Pharisees, even the signing of their name commands a fee, and their yearly rally ends in something regarded as Super, with only the wealthy able to attend.  Seems more than one cult claims entrance to their heaven based on works here on earth, and that their members prosper in earthly wealth to prove their holiness.  Yet on the day of judgment, what they did on the field and off, and who they worshipped will not keep them from hell.  “But we gave huge sums to help build fields for kids, we donated our time when available, and even the kids we fathered to their unwed mothers we never forgot, we paid our child support.”  How special one defensive back, calling himself the best, was available for a phone call when his girlfriend was in labor.  He may become a father, does he have what it takes to be a dad?  From Ray Rice and others who abuse the women in their lives, now we have ads telling us it is wrong, one ride along on a Saturday night can reinforce that.  You don’t have to be a star to be a loser.  On or off the field.  If only OJ had known God instead of self adoration, two people may be alive today.  I wonder how big the screen was he watched the Super Bowl on?  Or Aaron Hernandez, whose new locker room is an 8x10 cell.  With only a home uniform for his new home. 
Yet many will continue to worship at the feet of the NFL, forgoing true worship and missing out on a true God, just to be entertained.  To follow a sport with so many rules to not get hurt, but yet so violent it spills over into their daily lives.  And for three hours on Sunday its fans worship their team, yet cannot find an hour to worship God.  As I watched the players hugging and touching the Trophy yesterday, I saw how far we have really fallen as a society, but also God’s grace at work.  A trophy with a man’s name on it, worshipped and adored, yet a man who died for us all forgotten.  But He is patient that none should perish, even sports stars.  And when they or we turn our backs on him, he still stays close, the spirit telling us we need Jesus, despite the ads telling us we need the NFL.  In a game where gambling is illegal, but yet the odds are made every week for every game, duplicity rules, and like a double minded man, it is unstable in all its ways.  Just like a cult...and we have all fallen for it.
Fortunately we have mercy, offered for when we screw up, the condition needed to obtain it.  No instant replay, or overturned calls, Jesus gets it right the first time.  No two minute warning, when he is in you rlife you are aware of what is going on, and he matters more than time.  And forgiveness, with no fines, indulgences, suspensions, or blackouts due to the inability to fill the home team’s stadium.  God is willing to listen, and meets you where you are. He is for every one, not just the chosen ones, and we even find him in the NFL, as some are strong in their faith and choose God first.  Ambassadors placed among teams, just like many in prison minister to other inmates, and those on the street minister to others.  God is not a franchise, nor Jesus a team you try out for, your sin makes you eligible, his forgiveness and acceptance available to all.  Rookies, veterans, and even those who never played the game.  His law is love, and his season never ends.  And while the NFL struggles with concussions and looks for a new way to protect, or more rules, Jesus offers the helmet of salvation, the belt of truth, and the breastplate of righteousness, in a size that fits the person perfectly.  With no number or name on the back for identification purposes.  He knows our name....and also the score. 
In the Super Bowl only one team can win, the other considered a loser.  Everything else it took to get there no longer matters, yet in life we all can win with Jesus.  He plays no favorites, and when our playing days are over we retire to heaven and get a new body.  Ask Joe Namath the importance of new knees, or anyone with a concussion if all the pain and fame is worth it.  And now that the season is over, let me offer an invite to church.  To meet the real star, the real hero of heaven.  Long after the season ends, the playing days are over, and the Raiders move to LA, or will it be the Chargers, Jesus will still be Lord of all.  King of Kings, and still offering love and forgiveness to all.  Leaving the choice up to you.  Maybe the NFL isn’t listed on a cult list, but it sure has become cult like.  Mirroring the things of God, but with no true God involved.  Accepting a facsimile, instead of the truth.  My season seat is reserved in heaven, right on the 50 yard line by God.  Where you sit in eternity depends on whose team you follow today.  As for me and my team, we will worship the Lord...what does a man profit if his team wins the Super Bowl but loses heaven?  How sad to get to the Super Bowl and lose.  Or win and fall farther away.  No matter the sport, the wages of sin are still death. 
love with compassion,
Mike
matthw25biker.blogspot.com