I believe that you are on to something…that we need to be a lot more critical of our national sports culture and most importantly…our personal habits/mindsets on various sports venues/activities in our individual lives. Here is something from the Catechism:
2289 If
morality requires respect for the life of the body, it does not make it an absolute value. It rejects a neo-pagan notion that tends to promote the
cult of the body, to sacrifice everything for it’s sake,** to idolize physical perfection and success at sports**. By** its selective preference of the strong over the weak, such a conception can ** lead to the perversion of human relationships.
Church teaching clearly does not condemn all sports activities…even the Vatican has a soccer league…but maybe the local Churches (dioceses), need to give us a sort of “examination of conscience” question/check lists similar to the Ten Commandments style/type of examination for Confession…to let us see if we have “crossed the line”…when it comes to our Christian principles.
Here is what first opened my mind on this topic.
Rosary*** – ***
Mysteries, Meditations and the Telling of the Beads
by Kevin Orlin Johnson; Pangaeus Press (1996); pgs 264-267.
Here is a sample of some of what he says…paraphrased:
He says that St. Luke’s Greek word for **agony **(in the garden) … means
struggle…not pain or torment…and in the Greek-speaking world that same word meant…
sport…! He notes that
Saint Augustine preached against sport and
bishops constantly exhorted Christian emperors to end the Olympic Games and close the stadia…**Tertullian
(Father of Church) and Novatian wrote whole books on sports and its utter incompatibility with Christian principles. ** Saint Thomas Aquinas wrote whole articles on the vices that sport expresses as aberrations, violations of Christian principles of life, and in fact sins. **Preachers **of the Middle Ages spoke unanimously against sport and so did lawmakers…but the best they could often do was to put in some rules to govern the “struggle”!
Hard to imagine all the fuss back then…when now…even priests will open/close Mass with some lighthearted/jovial comments…about the local pro/college sports team’s success or lack thereof in a recent event!
Like I mentioned…maybe a personal examination of conscience is the best approach to check ourselves…I know that I need to do it!
Pax Christi
P.S. Rolltide…! (this is my truth-teller comment).