Prophecy

Displaying items by tag: sport

Friday, 13 March 2020 05:59

Raised from the Ashes

Football team tragedy is a parable for our times

Published in Israel & Middle East
Friday, 08 November 2019 04:11

World Cup Joy!

Why I am still proud to be South African

Published in World Scene
Friday, 19 July 2019 04:02

Cricket Wins Many Converts

So could the Gospel, if only it was broadcast more widely

In the midst of a grave political crisis, it was a welcome respite to have the nation’s spirits so gloriously lifted by our somewhat miraculous triumph in cricket’s World Cup.

Although initially favourites to break our longstanding duck1 in the competition, we ended up having to snatch victory from the jaws of defeat at Lord’s. And before the heady champagne effect wears off, I believe we must grasp the vital spiritual lesson it teaches us.

The game that has become part of England’s DNA was beginning to lose its drawing power, thanks partly to greedy media moguls determined to milk as much money as possible from TV rights while denying a new generation access to the delights of the sport.

Even for me, Sunday’s sensational final was the first live television cricket I have watched for many years, as I do not subscribe to Sky. Now there are hopes of the game’s revival following what is surely the most scintillating thriller of a match ever staged in front of cameras. Yet its long-term future is only guaranteed, in my opinion, by its return to regular terrestrial TV.

At any rate, my hope is that this remarkable contest will help reinstate the game’s place at the centre of our culture – along with other important facets of our national life such as our identity as a Christian nation.

Revival Ahead?

I have written before of cricket’s link with the great 19th Century missionary enterprise in China, when CT Studd, England’s greatest player in the early 1880s, gave up his fame and fortune for the Gospel. And there have been others, like Bishop David Sheppard, who also gave up bat for pulpit.

As much-loved broadcaster Henry Blofeld wrote in the Daily Mail2“The dear old sport I love may be about to undergo a revival” – so my prayer is that this will be mirrored by a revival of Christian faith.

Cricket may be about to undergo a revival – so my prayer is that this will be mirrored by a revival of Christian faith.

A glimpse of such a prospect emerged during a recent stay in a Cotswold village, where I simply drooled over the perfectly-manicured serenity of its cricket pitch, but also took a walk across the fields before stumbling upon a tiny church which two lovely ladies were decorating with flowers. They waxed lyrical over the evangelical fervour of their vicar who was filling these country chapels with eager new disciples.

As Blofield noted in his report, “people who never watched the game before are now hooked.” I can certainly vouch for that as my wife Linda, who would normally roll her eyes at the mention of cricket, was as excited as I was. We were literally sitting on the edge of our sofa as the game built up to an almost unbearably tense crescendo. What a showpiece for the sport!

Denied Access

Well, the Christian Gospel is equally as thrilling – if not more so. It’s just that most of the estimated billion viewers of the cricket spectacle have not yet been truly exposed to it, having neither seen nor heard the true nature of the length and breadth, and of the height and depth, to which God has gone to rescue us from the shame and defeat of sin and degradation: how Jesus was nailed to a cruel execution stake so we could go free; how he was miraculously raised from the dead and is coming back in power and great glory to restore peace and justice to our broken world.

And just as many have been denied access to the glories of cricket over the past decade, a huge potential audience has been denied access to the real Gospel because the ‘movers and shakers’ of our brave new world have chosen to ‘take it off the air’, leaving those desperate for real answers to their many troubles having to feed off the hopeless message of secular humanism.

Jesus told us to make disciples of all nations and Paul, specifically with his fellow Jews in mind, asked: “How can they believe in the one of whom they have not heard?” (Matt 28:19; Rom 10:14).

Lasting Satisfaction

When all the cheering is over and the excitement has died down, many cricket fans will still be left feeling empty and unfulfilled, searching for another ‘fix’ that will inevitably fail to offer lasting satisfaction.

But the Gospel does. The Apostle Paul, in quoting the Prophet Isaiah writing 700 years earlier, declares: “No eye has seen, no ear has heard, no mind has conceived what God has prepared for those who love him” (1 Cor 2:9; Isa 64:4).

Few get more excited about a good cricket match than I do. But believe me, there is nothing to compare with what God has prepared for those who love and follow him.

The Christian Gospel is equally as thrilling – if not more so. But most people have not yet been truly exposed to it.

Zero to Hero

It was ironic indeed that it was New Zealand-born Ben Stokes who played a key role in England’s historic victory over his Kiwi compatriots – and also that England’s triumph was in fact led by its Irish-born captain Eoin Morgan. The Irish border may be something of a sticking point in our Brexit negotiations, but this monumental achievement owes much to our Irish connections.

As for Stokes, he’s had a troubled past, most notably with his involvement in an ugly punch-up a few years back, but with exemplary determination and courage he has been lifted from zero to hero.

In a similar way, our beloved country that helped spread the glorious Gospel throughout the globe has fallen into disgrace after turning its back on the very commandments which built up our great civilisation. Only that same Gospel can restore us!

 

References

1 A duck is a cricketing term for failing to score – in this case for failing to win.

2 Daily Mail, 15 July 2019.

Published in Church Issues
Friday, 19 August 2016 14:08

Great Britain's Identity Crisis

Does Team GB's Olympic success prove that Britain is still 'Great'?

In the aftermath of the Brexit vote, Britain is undergoing something of an identity crisis. Our news media are populating our screens with stories that reassure us in some way that Britain still has lots to offer.1 We do have potential, we do have a future – we are still Great Britain!

Olympic Fuss

Newspapers and TV screens are filled with Olympic success. Never have our athletes done better! Next week they will be coming home with pockets full of gold and silver and bronze. Our ranking in the medal tables has exceeded all expectations. Team GB has done brilliantly, but has the media coverage been excessive? It is as if the rest of the world has stopped turning for two weeks!

Five-year-old Omran Daqneesh, rescued in Aleppo. See credits below.Five-year-old Omran Daqneesh, rescued in Aleppo. See credits below.Of course, it is the 'silly season' for news when politicians are all at their beach resorts trying to forget Westminster, the economy, the world and all the other things that fill their minds through the rest of the year. But do we risk shutting our eyes to the horrors of war still taking place in Syria? Dare we turn a blind eye to the little boy in the ambulance in Aleppo, his blood-stained face in deep shock, too traumatised even to cry – his home just blown from around him by a Russian or a Syrian bomb?

Perhaps, as a nation, our confidence has been so greatly shaken during the past three months that we are trying to focus upon something which increases our sense of security and self-worth. The removal of the EU crutch by the Brexit vote left us suddenly feeling wobbly and vulnerable, in need of something else to grab onto to steady ourselves. The Olympics came at just the right time!

The news media has seized the moment to rejoice in a new wave of patriotism2 – it's a bit like the last night of the Proms as we watch our athletes getting gold and the world listening to our national anthem! Is this heralding a return to the old nationalism – the patriotic sentiment that much of the media were ironically so keen to dismiss during the Referendum campaign as old-fashioned and backward-looking, compared with the glamourous, cosmopolitan lifestyles promised by the EU?

Suddenly Britain's national 'greatness', our position relative to all other nations, has become all-important again – at least for the Olympic fortnight.

Our national confidence has been so shaken during the past months – no wonder we are trying to increase our sense of security and self-worth.

The Search for Fulfilment

It is human nature to seek security and safety, identity and fulfilment – and this is true at a national level as well as for individuals. For Britain, we are at a very special juncture in our history: trying to come to terms with the imminent removal of that which has given us a major sense of security and identity - of 'who we are' as the United Kingdom - for more than 40 years of EU membership.

Of course, the shock of Brexit might ultimately be good for our island's entrepreneurial spirit – forcing us to go it alone and prove that we Brits 'have what it takes' to succeed in the modern world, instead of riding on our past colonial successes or our membership of the EU bloc.

But ideally, the shock will also encourage people to ask deeper questions about our direction as a nation, rather than just grit their teeth and struggle on.

Blessed Assurance

Whether they are quite conscious of it or not, many people are feeling shaken and unnerved by the current volatility – politically, economically, socially, culturally - both at home and abroad. All bets are off; our previous 'way of life' can no longer be taken for granted. Nobody knows what the future holds.

Given this state of affairs, it is not surprising that the mainstream media is scrabbling around desperately for something else to lean on, something seemingly stable. But as the nations are shaken, God's loving intention is that people turn to him – not to some other definition of identity that revolves around our own strength and prowess as human beings. Ultimately, we were designed to seek and find our fulfilment in the God of Creation, before anything and anyone else.

Many people are feeling shaken and unnerved by the current volatility – all bets are off.

There may be a strong sense of anti-climax when the Olympics are over but if those who do have a faith in God can use this opportunity somehow to present a more hopeful vision for the future, we could see the nation gaining a new sense of purpose and direction – a newly-strengthened identity in God! We should not overlook the fact that a huge amount of prayer for the nation preceded the Referendum - the opportunity is there now for Christians to share their faith in God with others.

The only ones who have access to true stability and peace in these difficult days are those who have found their ultimate security, fulfilment and protection in the immovable Rock of Ages, the Lord Jesus. Our fellow Britons will not find genuine stability from any other source – so we MUST make sure that they see him in us! We have a mandate to declare and live out the truth that God alone holds the key to all unknown – and will be a sure foundation for all who trust in him.

 

References

1 Perhaps they are assuming that those who voted Remain are still in the depths of despair, and/or hoping that those who voted Leave have since changed their minds!

2 See similar analysis from Alan Cowell of the New York Times, 18 August 2016.

Published in Society & Politics
Friday, 29 May 2015 15:28

The FIFA Saga

Is there deeper significance in events on and off the football field?

The dramatic arrest of FIFA officials in the luxury Baur au Lac hotel, overlooking Lake Zurich on charges of corruption took the football world by surprise. But allegations of corruption have been levelled at FIFA for many years. In 2011 an independent panel convened to deal with these allegations proposed a number of measures, but their recommendations were ignored. The surprise this time was due to the intervention of American law enforcement agencies investigating crimes of money laundering and corruption involving banks based in America.

Controversy and Injustice

The refusal of 79 year old Sepp Blatter to step down as President of FIFA after 17 years in office is, perhaps, the greatest scandal. Even if he himself is totally innocent of corrupt practices, he has presided over an organisation that has a terrible reputation. It would seem logical to say that as head of the multibillion-dollar organisation he ought to have known what was going on. He is either corrupt or incompetent and in either case he is not the man to clean up such an influential International Association.

Football is no longer just a game: it is a highly lucrative international industry offering huge wealth to both sponsors and players, and is therefore vulnerable to massive corruption. But there are also enormous differences in the rewards paid to players. In some of the developing countries such as Uruguay and Costa Rica professional players earn only a $150 a month1 whereas in Europe they can earn $150,000 a week! FIFA should be addressing such vast injustices.

The controversy surrounding the President of FIFA has highlighted differences in economics, culture and practices between European nations and those in the developing nations. Sepp Blatter has spent the past 17 years promoting high-level international football (with its huge financial rewards) in Africa and South America, where he has won many friends who have benefited and want him to continue as President.

FIFA already presides over huge injustices, such as massive global disparities in footballers' wages. The latest allegations of bribery and corruption just add insult to injury.

'Shrewd' Business in the Bible

Jesus told a parable in Luke 16 about a shrewd businessman who knew that he was going to be dismissed for incompetence so he called a meeting of all the firm's debtors and reduced their debts so that when he lost his job he would have many friends who owed him favours. The point of the parable Jesus said was that worldly people know how to manipulate financial transactions to their own advantage. Righteous people should take a lesson from this and make sure that their lives produce spiritual fruit for eternal life. This is of far greater importance than ensuring a comfortable lifestyle on earth.

Shaking the Establishment

Daily Herald article, 1963

For Christians, it is important to note the spiritual significance of what is happening in the commercial world, and especially how it throws light on how God is working out his purposes today. We have already seen the shaking of the banks and the exposure of corrupt practices, the shaking of the political establishment in the Western nations, the shaking of newspapers and journalists, celebrities and many others. Now football is the latest of the world's big institutions to be shaken.

For many fans, football plays a large part in their lives and has almost become a religion. When Spurs won the league and European Cup double in 1963, the team paraded through the streets of Tottenham North London, with their fans displaying placards saying "HALLOWED BE THEIR NAMES" and "O COME LET US ADORE THEM" (see right). At the Wembley cup final it is traditional to sing the Christian hymn 'Abide with me', though it is doubtful if many in the crowd sing it to the glory of God. Maybe this is the reason why football is the first major sport to come under judgement!

What we are seeing today is in line with the Bible's prophecy of a great shaking of the nations recorded in Haggai 2:6-7, where it is said that this will be accompanied by a great shaking in the world of nature. In the New Testament the writer to the Hebrews interpreted this great shaking as preparing the way for the Kingdom of God; the end of the age, which is generally believed to be the second coming of Jesus (Heb 12:26).

We are living in an incredible period of world history with nations in every part of the world being shaken. As each great event hits the headlines, corruption is revealed as the norm, and dishonour the standard, in the lives and careers of many. As we make a stand for faith, let us stand in the love and strength of Christ, which provides a new way- a way of justice and righteousness -for those who choose to accept him.

 

References

1 Reuters, 'This should've happened long ago', First Post, 28 May 2015.

Published in World Scene
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