Pro Athletes Putting Their Faith in Action
By Ralph Gould
Remember the story where a successful young business executive told his
pastor that he had some good news and some bad news? The good news, he
said, is that I have just got a raise and am now making $200,000 a year.
The bad news, he continued, is that I can't tithe anymore because $20,000
a year is just too much to give. After gulping in disbelief several times
the Pastor said, "Well, John, I think we should get down on our knees and
ask the Lord to reduce your income so that you may tithe again."
"Living without giving is like missing two-foot putt."
That’s the belief of Chi Chi Rodriguez, the popular PGA Seniors Tour
golf champion- the smiling face under that familiar Panama hat.
That’s also the belief of many professional athletes in all major
sports according to a recent flurry of stories in major newspapers and on
network radio and television news programs.
It has long been established that religion and faith in God play an
important role in the lives of both collegiate and "pro" athletes on a
personal basis. Now, however, the advent of more and more professional
athletes making $1 million or more a year has added a new dimension to the
athlete’s faith. According to the news stories more and more of these
professional athletes are practicing tithing, the Biblical guideline to
give at least 10 percent of one's income back to God.
One of the newer participants in the "giving-back-to-God" trend is
Darryl Strawberry, the Los Angeles Dodgers’ slugging outfielder whose
published 5-year-salary is $20.25 million. "It’s not my money; it’s the
Lord’s money," said Strawberry in a national news story. Think of this- a
tithe, or 10 percent of Strawberry’s salary is more than two million
dollars! Strawberry’s teammate, star pitcher Orel Hershiser, is another
tither, a player who is not timid about giving God all the credit for his
phenomenal success on the baseball diamond and in his private life. In a
radio interview with Dr. James Dobson (Focus on the Family) recently
Hershiser said he feels great accountability to be a role model to young
people. He believes that athletes have a responsibility to leave a good
impression on the youth of America.
Chi-Chi Rodriguez, a rags-to-riches golfer, is concerned with
underprivileged kids. His pride and joy is The Chi-Chi Rodriguez Youth
Foundation for troubled and abused youth in Clearwater, Florida. Chi-Chi
says, "It’s not the kids who have a problem, it’s society." And Chi-Chi is
trying to do something about it. Among many other things Chi-Chi and
golfing legend Jack Nicklaus get actively and personally involved in the
"chi chi and the bear (Nicklaus) kids klassic golf tournament" to benefit
the kids and the foundation. Dave Winfield, outfielder for the Toronto
Blue Jays, a Lutheran, has also established a Foundation to help
disadvantaged kids. And Glenn Davis of the Baltimore Orioles is supporting
two youth homes as a reminder of his troubled childhood. Teammate Gregg
Olson, all-star relief pitcher for the Orioles and the 1989 American
League Rookie of the Year, is not the least bit shy about telling about
his faith. As reported in The Lutheran, July 1990, Olson, whose home
church is Holy Cross Lutheran (ELCA) in Omaha, Nebraska (where his mother
and father still attend) said emphatically, "You know whatever else
happens, God’s always going to be there."
The list of well-known Christian "giving" athletes is a long one and
Howard Johnson of the N.Y. Mets, Tim Burke, Montreal Expos and former
Cleveland Indian pitcher Doug Jones are all "high rollers" salarywise and
top givers in major league baseball circles. New York Yankee relief
pitcher Lee Guetterman cites Biblical references to his giving habits and
he doesn’t stop at 10 percent of his $1 million a year salary. Reportedly,
Guetterman gives 10 percent to his home church and another 5 percent for
other’s needs- a total of 15 percent, or beyond tithing.
This faith in action is not restricted to just baseball players.
Football, basketball, hockey, soccer, track and field athletes are
included in a long list of "giving" athletes. There are Christian-based
Bible study groups and team chaplains in just about every major team sport
including the oft-publicized Baseball Chapel where reportedly some 40
percent of all players participate in this league-wide service. And on the
college level there is the well-known Fellowship of Christian Athletes
which attracts high caliber athletes like a friend of mine, Earl Campbell,
Heisman Trophy winner and former Houston Oiler back who was recently
elected to the Football Hall of Fame.
Barry Sanders, the running sensation of the surprising 1991 Detroit
Lions NFL football team it’s said, tithes to his home church in Wichita,
Kansas. And Reggie White, the Philadelphia Eagles lineman who devours in
the NFL, is a tither and a vocal Christian who makes no "bones" about it.
Steve Largent, record-breaking pass-catching end, now retired from the
Seattle Seahawks NFL football team, is now on the staff of Focus on the
Family working to strengthen the values of the Christian family -- a
committed Christian.
A recent newspaper column emphasized that the Super Bowl NFL football
champions, the Washington Redskins, are a spiritual team. The columnist
reports that in a chapel service before the Big Game there was not one
reference to the game itself — not one prayer for victory, or even one for
no injuries. The entire time, said the writer, was spent "exalting the
name of Christ Jesus our Lord."
Redskins coach Joe Gibbs never thinks that God takes sides in football,
but his faith prompted him to create a home for delinquent boys called
Youth For Tomorrow. And Darrell Green, a five-time All-Pro Redskin has
created a foundation, "Quest Learning Center" to work on the academic
skills of kids with computer-assisted instruction, and to teach them about
Jesus. Green says, "My heart is about Jesus Christ, not about football. My
first call is to love my neighbor as myself."
Unpublicized to a great extent are all of the things professional
athletes do to help others in charitable events. Players have many
different ways of expressing their faith, most of which we never hear
about.
We may never know what all of the Christian athletes give, or in the
many ways they give, nor is it any of our business to know how much money
they give, but we do know that many of these athletes practice Christian
humility and put their "faith in action" on the playing field and off.
These highly-skilled athletes are thankful for their God-given abilities
which makes them so great. And they understand, too, as we must, that the
important thing is not how much you give, but how you give. I’m sure they
are well aware of the Widow’s Mite story in Luke 21:3-4: "Truly I tell
you, this poor widow has put in more than all of them, for all of them
have contributed out of their abundance, but she, out of her poverty, has
put in all she had to live on."
The bottom line is, that contrary to popular opinion, many professional
athletes are "givers" not "takers" and I, for one, salute them.